Before we called it love, before we named it anger, it was only a tremor in the chest — wild, wordless, alive. This poem is about what happens when language touches emotion — and what it quietly takes away. Emotions— deep, fresh, and tender like green shoots breaking through rain-soaked soil— arrive without grammar. They rise quietly, carrying the scent of earth, the tremble of first light, the fragile insistence of becoming. But language waits. It waits with its sharp tools— definitions, categories, conclusions. It gathers these wild stirrings into its boiling cauldrons, heats them, thickens them, pours them into shapes the world knows how to store. “Love.” “Anger.” “Jealousy.” “Desire.” Neat words. Solid containers. And something raw begins to disappear. The tremor before love becomes a declaration. The ache before grief becomes a statement. The unnamed hunger before desire becomes confession. Language smoothens the rough edges, trims the unruly corners, ...
Capturing the Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life....
This space is dedicated to my father, who taught me to be bold, to stand up to power, and to remain faithful to one’s convictions—even when standing alone. What began in 2024 is a digital relic I carry forward: a space where my voice exists unedited. When thoughts feel too much for the world, this blog becomes a home for them. This is me—unfiltered, unfinished, and becoming Architect of Ideas, Sculptor of Minds and Storyteller of the Everyday.