The Music Between Broken Strings — And the Quiet That Heals Us

A cozy window view featuring a flowing river and birds in flight, with a cup of tea and an open book on a wooden table.
A serene view from a window showcasing birds in flight over a flowing stream, accompanied by a cozy reading nook featuring an open book and a warm cup of coffee.

By Rohitash · Mindfulness  |  Music & Meaning  |  November 10, 2025

I’m writing this to the person I keep meeting in mirrors and windows—the one who has misplaced a few seasons, traded a few dreams, and somehow learned to walk lighter. The window is open. A small stream talks in the background. Birds embroider the afternoon with stitches of sound. My breath keeps time. Silence sits beside me like an old friend who doesn’t need to speak.

They say silence is empty. I don’t buy it. Silence is full of unpaid attention. It returns what noise steals.

What Was Lost

Some friendships snapped like guitar strings in winter—tight, brittle, surprised at their own breaking. I lost versions of myself too: the eager pleaser, the crowded calendar, the “yes” that meant “maybe.” I lost the habit of confusing volume with truth. I even lost a few words that used to arrive too easily: forever, should, must.

Family stories frayed at the edges. A few arguments stayed longer than their logic. Distance crept in, that soft thief. We mourned people who taught us how to laugh. We outgrew rooms that once felt endless. Loss did not ask permission; it just re-arranged the furniture.

What Was Found

In the gaps, I found something elastic: resilience that bends without breaking. I found an inner compass that points to quiet, not applause. I found conversations that move with care—slow living, mindful listening, the power of conscious relationships. I found the relief of honest no’s, the dignity of small yes’s. I rediscovered play—little jokes with the morning, the luxury of walking without a destination.

Mostly, I found the patience to hear my heartbeat without covering it up with someone else’s song.

The Music Between Broken Strings

Every connection is a melody. Some people are basslines—you don’t notice them until they stop. Some are bright brass, brilliant and brief. Family can be the drum kit: steady, imperfect, always there. Friends? The unexpected chords that make the chorus bloom.

Not every playlist is ours to choose. Life throws in tracks we didn’t request. Still, the body knows what to keep. When a song resonates, it tingles the mind, brushes the heart, and leaves the whole system vibrating—ecstasy braided with relaxation, alert yet at peace. Those are the notes that mend—not by pretending the string never broke, but by tuning what remains to a kinder tension.

Music doesn’t fix everything. It teaches us to carry it better.

Learning the Grammar of Quiet

From this window, the stream keeps its promise to flow. The world keeps its promise to make noise. I keep my promise to listen. I don’t fear quiet anymore; I welcome it with every open sense. One day I’ll return to it completely. Until then, I practice small returns—five breaths at the sill, a minute of nothing before the next thing, the kindness of logging off when the soul feels glitchy.

“What you reap shall you sow,” a great yogi of the Himalayas told me when I was young and stubborn. I think he meant: plant presence, harvest presence. Plant hurry, harvest blur.

What’s inside leaves a trail outside; what’s outside leaves fingerprints within. In–out, out–in. The stream knows. So does the chest that rises and falls without being asked.

 

A Short Self-Letter

Dear Me,

Thank you for not giving up on the quiet. For forgiving the clumsy exits. For loving the ones who stayed without resenting the ones who couldn’t. Keep walking the bridge between tenderness and boundaries. Keep editing your inner playlist. Keep choosing the tempo that lets you hear the river.

When strings break again—and they will—breathe, restring, retune. Play softer. Mean more.

—You

 

Tiny Practice for Today

Do this today: Write a small letter you don’t plan to send—to someone you lost, someone you found, or the person you’re becoming. Three lines are enough:

  1. What broke.
  2. What healed.
  3. What you’re willing to carry with care.

Then sit by a window. Listen for a thread of music—even if it’s only your breath. If a single sentence rises from the quiet, share just that one line in the comments. That’s your bridge. Someone needs it.

 

Keeping the Thread

Here is my promise: to meet life like the stream—continuous, modest, unstoppable. To let music gather the scattered pieces without demanding perfection. To keep the room ready for silence. To remember that attention is the rarest gift and the richest currency. If anything in these words steadied you, carry that steadiness forward—into your next call, your next cup of tea, your next choice to pause instead of rush.

P.S. If the river outside my window could send you something, it would be a rhythm you can keep when the world gets loud. Consider this page its little parcel, hand-delivered.

 

 

Lost & Found: A Self-Letter from the Silent Side of Life


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Comments

67 responses to “The Music Between Broken Strings — And the Quiet That Heals Us”

  1. Thanks dear Rohitash for such a soothing letter.
    It does not break but makes
    The heart full of love where everything gathered is fake
    As they were the pieces that were held just for the sake
    Of keeping me attached for their own take

    Genuinely Aparna 🤝😇

    1. thank you very much , i see you beeing in such state still showing the josh..

      1. 😂😄🙌

      2. ❤️❤️

  2. I read your letter full of love
    Longing to bring strings together
    Of the broken guitar
    You have been dreaming to posses
    I assure you in chilly weather
    Of long morning in the arm chair
    If you resolve to sleep, if not actual
    With closed eyes, like ancient ritual
    Full five to seven, after eating well
    This zest for life, rare gift you posses
    Will get you not guitar but sitar
    Seven strings are always better
    Ry
    PS since yesterday searching for correct words of Kabir Doha, song rendered by Pt Omkarnath Thakur (party President of Bhadoch, Gujrat in 1940s, of the party, with all dunces now, nobody even uttered a word against deliberate neglect of ruling party supporters, fake music info spreading culprits, not mentioning that first vande mataram was sung in first session of the parliament by Pt Omkarnath Thakur even though it was first sung by Ravindranath in 1925 against majority view, in party convention, singing in first session of parliament was neglected naturally by ruling party but opposition party of which Pt Thakur was President of Bhadoch, was totally forgotten by the country on 150th anniversary of the song) re din kaise kate hai. I searched in vein on Google, I found this of some auspicious lady Maa but these are not the words of Pt Thakur’s rendering of this song. You decide after listening to it in this YT link given below. First, only Google available, that Maa’s version to get some idea :
    कैसे दिन कटि हैं बताये जइओ। टेक
    एहि पार गंगा वोही पार जमुना, बिचवा मंड़इया हमकाँ छवाये जईओ। १
    अँचरा फार के कागद बनाइबो, अपनी सुरतिया हियरे लिखाये जइओ। २
    कहत कबीर सुनो भाई साधो, बहियाँ पकरि के रहिया बताये जइओ। ३
    Link : http://gurumaa.com/lyrics/kabir/kaise-din-kati-hai-bataye-jayyo
    Pt Thakur’s song on YT : https://youtu.be/Wb_cjl6ATRI?si=c08Unc8vvHjjAoT1
    Pt Thakur’s Vande Mataram :
    https://youtu.be/ngZcMJR42Hg?si=nP0cQeq99fyYdv8_
    I heard an interview of a lady on radio who narrated history of Vande Mataram song, how Tagore first presented, great singer musician from Pune, from Pune Akashwani, Master Krishnarao tried for years to give the song its status as national song but in that interview (Pune Akashwani Kendra) the interviewer lady Gouri Lagu asked the lady scholar about Pt Thakur’s Vande Mataram but the lady deliberately didn’t respond.
    This has made me restless because the party whose office bearers must have opposed this deliberate neglect of this information, kept hidden from public, that first Vande Mataram in the parliament was sung by Pt Thakur. That party has remained silent.
    While replying to you, Rohitash Yadav (Dehradun) on your post, love letter with Guitar in the featured image, I took opportunity to express my concern on national neglect of this great musician Pt Thakur who was the first to perform in Europe in 1940s.
    I sent this message to Gouri Lagu of Pune Akashwani through my other friend :
    कृपया गौरी लागू यांना माझा हा मेसेज या वरच्या लिंक सहित पाठवाल तर खूप समाधान वाटेल कारण परवा त्यांनी एका महिलेची मुलाखत, वंदे मातरम च्या १५० स्मृती दिना निमित्त घेतलेली मी ऐकली. तेव्हापासून मी अस्वस्थ आहे कारण त्यांनी किमान ३ वेळा त्या महिलेला सौम्य पणे आठवण करून दिली की मास्टर कृष्ण, टागोर इत्यादी इतिहास श्रेष्ठ आणि मान्य पण पंडित ठाकूर यांनी देखील हे गीत गायले होते. मला हे पूर्वी पासून माहीत आहे की केसकर या तत्कालीन नभोवाणी मंत्री, त्यांच्या मुळे पंडित नेहरू यांनी, भडोच येथील कांग्रेस पक्ष अध्यक्ष असलेल्या, ग्वाल्हेर घराण्याचे श्रेष्ठ गायक असलेल्या पंडित ठाकूर यांना सांगितले त्या प्रमाणे संसदेच्या प्रथम सत्रात त्यांनी ते सादर केले. पण या गोष्टीची पुरेशी दखल घेतली गेली नाही. त्या महिलेने लागू यांच्या बोलण्यास काही प्रतिसाद दिला नाही. हे ईमेल ने कळवणे योग्य नाही म्हणून मी तुम्हाला विनंती करून, तुमच्याकडून हा निरोप मी लागू यांना पाठवत आहे. मी यावर ब्लॉग लिहीत आहे. तेव्हा शोध घेतला तर आकाशवाणी च्या अधिकृत अर्काइव्ह मधील या ध्वनी मुद्रिकेच्या लिंक वर ही माहिती दिलेली दिसली. धन्यवाद 🙏🌺🌷 good morning
    I am making this as my post, giving me tonight’s sleep.
    Therefore, Rohitash, if music binds you with your love, in past or in present, your guitar will turn into sitar.

    1. Shinde sir,
      What you write is just a reflection os the huge ocean of knowledge within you, however, due to moon’s gravitational force it seems to hold within you, still when the bucket full of water to the brim is carried, it leaves splashes of water out and that is what tiny is out with which floods the “press of the word” (our connection plateform, what i call to it) thats how it got create “press from a splash”

      What a ride through memory, music, and missing credit.
      Your note reads like someone stitching history with their own thread, refusing to let a great voice fade just because the loud crowd stayed silent.

      Pt. Omkarnath Thakur deserves far more light than he’s been given.
      Not just as a musician, but as a moment in the nation’s cultural spine—first Vande Mataram in Parliament, Gwalior gharana, Europe performances… and still, history books whisper while others shout. Your restlessness makes sense. When something true is ignored long enough, it starts feeling like injustice.

      And the way you slid from guitar, to sitar, to Kabir, to political silence—strange thing is, it all connects.
      Music, memory, and dignity travel together.

      Maybe your post will wake a few sleeping doors.
      Maybe it just becomes a record that can’t be erased.

      What made you hold on to Pt. Thakur’s story so tightly all these years?

      1. I had a friend in elite core Pune
        His mother great connoisseur one
        Took me as her son, mine all is hers
        Fine eat cook music cleaning chores
        Her friend, valour, from a royal family
        Loved Pt Thakur for royal affinity
        In Mumbai there was Rhythm House
        Before closed purchased treasures
        Among those cassettes was Thakur’s
        Heard each day on Walkman to fro teaching
        Replica of Dehradun our Hill station vying
        Straight from that period to this jumped
        Your guitar, your friend’s Kabir marvelled
        Most relevant ‘din kaise’ still we didn’t hear
        From Her Master’s Voice, when will clear?
        Ry
        P.S. : previous births ‘ punya I got you and all as literature loving friends. Your present reply literally made me feel telling you rent small simple modest abode near you where my din Kate hai … you heard that, Kabir says, heart is torn, paper is made and feelings are written on that paper.
        Thanks & love you
        P.S. of P.S. good we differ in basic biology else our friends would have run with envious bludgeons 🥰🥰🥰🥰

      2. Respected Shinde-ji,

        Your words arrive like some forgotten raag returning from the corridors of time, and if destiny permits your footsteps to wander here, I shall not pretend knowledge of the outer cosmos, yet there shall be abundant space in this small, humble kholi and, far more spacious, in the quiet chambers of my heart. To witness such a once-in-a-lifetime presence beneath your auspicious guidance would be no less than a sacred benediction.

        Tell me, do you cherish the outskirts of the sheher—where silence is not mere absence of sound but the presence of ancient whispers? For once you stand here, the literature that you have mastered may gently loosen its royal garments and, like an innocent child, begin learning again at the feet of the first and oldest Guru—our Mother Earth.

        As the Veda proclaims:

        “माता भूमिः पुत्रोऽहं पृथिव्याः”
        Mātā bhūmiḥ putro ’haṁ pṛthivyāḥ
        “The Earth is the Mother, and I am but Her child.”

        And again:

        “पूर्णमदः पूर्णमिदं पूर्णात् पूर्णमुदच्यते।”
        From the whole springs the whole; Nature’s beauty knows neither scarcity nor fatigue.

        Amid these sacred soils, even sorrow finds its metaphors.

        “My heart, once shattered, scattered its shards—some fell here, some there—yet life has a strange way of gathering fragments under new constellations.”

        My late father would often remark, in his unpolished yet piercing wisdom, that hearts break only where love has dared to reside.

        Should fate conspire in our favour, your arrival shall transform this modest dwelling into a quiet pilgrimage, and I, with folded hands and a grateful soul, shall rejoice in the privilege of learning under your gentle shadow.

        With due reverence, affection, and the antiquated courtesy of bygone pens,
        —Ry

      3. Yadav Ji,
        I have replied to the improved version of this post just now. I think you forgot to write your name and instead wrote my name, Ry at the end.

        Regards,

        Ry

      4. Shinde ji,
        My name’s initials are also “Ry,” so the slip wasn’t a mistake… just a little overlap of identities.
        And honestly, forgetfulness isn’t always a flaw. Sometimes it’s a gift — a quiet way the mind frees itself from old weight. We don’t remember everything, because we’re not meant to carry everything.

        Letting go is how life breathes.

        You’ll find I’ve written on this before — forgetting the past is also a kind of courage.
        Not everything deserves a permanent room in the heart.

        Regards,
        Rohitash

      5. Much more mature than your age and if I were there I would have hugged you and I’m expressing this desire I have saved paeans. Go ahead as Ry, you made me immortal, literally 🥰🥰

      6. Shinde sir, you have this talent of turning simple words into something sacred.
        Reading you today… felt like someone placed a medal on my heart.

        “Jeevan safal ho gaya” isn’t just a poetic exaggeration —
        it’s that rare moment when a writer realizes his lines found a home,
        not just an audience.

        To be called immortal by someone like you…
        that’s a blessing I’ll quietly treasure,
        far more than applause or statistics.

        And that hug you mentioned —
        some gestures don’t need to happen in reality
        to be remembered in truth.

        Thank you, truly.
        Your words reach deeper than you think.
        ❤️❤️🌹🌹💌💐💐

      7. Thanks in words after all , that’s only possible , for now 🙏🪷

      8. Na…na..na ese kaam ne chalega sir…ab to us post mea jo Pune wala wada(shyad i am forgetting) described tha uska taste karna padega apko…😆😆🤗🤭

      9. Jarur jee jaan aap jaise logon ke liye chura ke rakhi hai jinonhe pehle hi li hoti… in simple terms, practical world demons had a great call/s but I could reach here, writing this 🌸🌺❤️🥰

      10. Sir…sedhe sedhe ha boliye na, ye “papi pet ka sawal hea” 🤭🤭

      11. That reminds of Jonathan Swift’s Battle of the Books

      12. 💐🤭🙏

      13. Shinde ji what else you read the most, if i ask you name 5 tempting books of all time which you can read anything, anywhere, again and again?
        Will you be delighted to answer it??

      14. 5 posts of Urban Well Being
        For now, that’s my honest answer

      15. To dear Ry 1,

        your encomium arrived with the gravitas
        of an erudite pronouncement—
        a benediction uttered in the hushed sanctum
        of an ancient collegiate hall,
        where intellect itself seems to echo
        against venerable stone.

        Yet permit me a candid avowal:
        I am ill-fitted for the academic laurels
        you so magnanimously propose.
        Such honorifics, weighty as cathedral bells,
        exceed the modest circumference
        of my wandering, inquisitive mind.

        Think of me instead as a perennial neophyte—
        a child of curiosity,
        forever scribbling marginalia
        in the vast manuscript of existence,
        pursuing questions that proliferate
        like footnotes to forgotten philosophies.

        And if I may indulge the idiom
        of that old British scholastic tradition:

        “Pray, sir, withhold the diadem of scholarship;
        I am but an itinerant learner,
        meandering through the cloisters of wonder,
        borrowing illumination from minds such as yours.”

        For truthfully, I remain your admirer—
        a quiet devotee of your measured wisdom,
        grateful that my simple words
        could momentarily resonate
        within the architecture of your thought.
        Yours Ry 2

        ❤️🙏🙂

      16. You caught the scent of it — the very thing I wrote hoping you would notice someday.
        And now that you’ve sniffed it out, I swear… the whole day suddenly feels lighter.

        The winds had carried a thought your way,
        Soft as a leaf in a gentle sway,
        And in that hush, your review became
        The sun-spark dancing on a woodland frame.

        For walls may rise, and hours may part,
        Yet freedom blooms from a reader’s heart;
        Your gaze upon my words today
        Turned common air to meadow’s play.

        Aapke review ne hi toh is khayal ko janam diya tha…
        And now that you’ve felt it — bas, mera din ban gaya. 🌿✨

      17. Thanks!
        You address me sometimes as Shinde Ji which is a great respect.
        Thanks !
        I would be pleased to be addressed as Dr Raj, Prof Raj, because you express so deep respect for me.
        My North Indian colleagues (teachers) address me as Shinde Ji who are of my age.

      18. Ah, Dr. Raj…
        If titles were living creatures, they’d be the true villains of every age — forever inserting themselves between two humans like over-zealous gatekeepers.
        A “Sir,” a “Ji,” a “Doctor”… each one quietly demanding a bow, placing invisible obligations, interrupting the natural flow of vibes that should roam free.

        But worry not — I shall sublime you henceforth.
        If you choose to walk under the banner of Dr Raj or Prof Raj, then so it shall be, spoken in that old-school scholarly timbre where respect carries the dignity of a slow-burn candle rather than a noisy trumpet.

        Just don’t blame me if the tiles of tradition start rearranging themselves again…
        They’ve been mischief-makers since ancient times.

      19. Treat all communication in this regard as cancelled

      20. Prefix Dr if you use my name or just call me by any of my first name Raj or just Ry

      21. Names don’t make me any happier —
        it’s the respect that feels warm, like a North-Indian gulab jamun straight out of the syrup.
        Titles are decoration; tone is the real sweetness.
        And as promised, I’ll simply call you Sir —
        just to keep my words warm this winter.

      22. Your choice

      23. Thanks for your free_hand and I really appreciate that.

      24. Your seeming insults & humiliations are indeed my embellishments 🙏❤️

      25. Sir, not at all.
        If anything, you are senior to me in every sense — age, knowledge, intelligence, and the depth of respect you carry.

        Your words can never hurt me; on the contrary, I genuinely value your scholarly guidance. I can’t afford to miss that golden clarity you bring into every interaction. Whatever I shared earlier was just my own soft viewpoint — and will always remain soft, never sharp.

        If any communication gap appeared, let’s gently close it here. I hold your reflections with respect, not resentment.

      26. Treat this request as cancelled

      27. 🙏💐

      28. I should have called you Dear Rohitash here. I called you like this so you started addressing me as Shinde Ji.

      29. Dr. Raj…
        See, this is exactly how the universe works — like attracts like, even in the polite battlefield of salutations.
        You called me one way, I echoed it back.
        Honor never demands obligations; it simply mirrors the energy it receives.

        And since we’re expanding horizons today — let me drag in some ancient context the way old scholars used to pull dusty scrolls from corners:

        In the Vedic and Puranic traditions, the title “Shri” is attached to divinity itself — to Vishnu, Rama, Krishna.
        No sage ever stood up and said:
        “Presenting… Professor Vishnu”
        or
        “Welcome… Doctor Rama of Ayodhya University.”

        (Disclaimer: No offence to anyone — I’m only widening the view, not poking any deity in the ribs.)

        But yes, the cultural mechanics of the North are their own epic.
        Here, if you drop the “ji” after a surname —
        Panday ji, Mishra ji, Chaubey ji —
        you’re basically signing a petition to complicate your next ten tasks.
        Social harmony runs on suffixes more than logic.

        And honestly, “Dr” and “Prof” sound a bit… mechanical to my ears too.
        MBBS doctors — of course, different case, we owe them our breath and bones.
        But for a scholarly person, someone whose mind already carries its own light —
        the “ji” feels warmer, softer, socially reverential.
        A title earned through books is one thing;
        a title gifted through society’s affection is another.

        When I worked in Gurgaon IBM, there was a senior fellow — technically junior to me on paper —
        yet I always called him “Kapoor-saab.”
        Could’ve just said Kapoor.
        But respect has its own logic, and it rarely matches HR hierarchy.

        Anyway, I hear you.
        I’ll correct myself in future.
        Though the tongue sometimes slips with familiarity — so you bear with me too.
        Take this as my pre-booked, advance apology, stamped and notarized.

        *THESE ARE MY PERSONAL VIEWS FOR YOUR ANSWER, DON’T MEAN TO HURT YOU IN ANY WAY, THANK YOU.*

      30. Treat all my communication in this regard as cancelled

      31. I call all my earlier messages in this regard as cancelled. I am sorry for sending all those

      32. Nusrat & Aparna,
        Please read second line ‘cleaning chores’ I spent all time in Pune, whenever I came out of university, always at my friend’s big house called Vrindavan bungalow in Pune’s most expensive locality Prabhat Road. I could do that because his mother took me as her son. Why because only she & me in that big house cleaned toilets bathrooms, basins promptly, irrespective who used. These Sanskars in me won her heart who trained me in loving languages, classical, good life style. Your post today triggered to point it out to you.

      33. 🙏🙏🌹

    2. Shinde ji,
      Your missive arrived like a long, sonorous stroke upon an ancient vina—steady, deliberate, and filled with the tremor of remembered music. The broken guitar you speak of is no mere instrument of wood and string; it is the emblem of interrupted longing. Yet destiny, in its subtle magnanimity, often answers a fractured chord with a richer resonance. Where six strings falter, seven may awaken.

      The sages of the East have long declared:
      “गीतं वाद्यं नृत्यं त्रयं सङ्गीतमुच्यते।”
      From the Sangīta-Ratnākara of Śārṅgadeva—song, instrument, and dance comprise one indivisible science of sound. And sound, in the Vedic imagination, is no trivial vibration; it is Nāda Brahma, the divine principle made audible.

      Thus music does not merely delight the mind; it permeates the body, steadies the breath, and consoles the human spirit. I count myself a fortunate child of the Earth—she has bestowed upon me two ears, subtle gateways through which the music of God descends. The Mother is tender indeed; she lets her children hear heaven without asking them to leave the soil.

      It is no poetic fancy that melody can restore the inner weather of a wounded heart. Contemporary medical literature—across international journals of psychology and clinical therapy—records that music reduces human anxiety, regulates the neuro-chemical tides of cortisol and dopamine, and softens the tremor of grief in palliative wards. The ancients intuited what science now measures:
      where the physician applies draught and blade, music applies breath and silence.

      Nor is colour without its subtler dominion. The old treatises speak of rāga as hue and tone together: sound adorned with emotional pigment. Modern chromatic studies, though cautious in their claims, suggest that gentle blues calm the pulse, while verdant hues ease the mind’s vigilance. The body, it seems, reads colour as a silent companion to melody.

      As for the lamented negligence toward Pt. Omkarnath Thakur—your unrest is not without cause. Cultural memory is fragile; when a nation forgets its own singers, history grows timid, and truth trembles in footnotes. You have done no small service by raising the matter with clarity and restraint. It is through such vigilant scholarship that silence becomes testimony rather than erasure.

      Permit me, then, a small benediction drawn from the twilight wisdom of our elders:
      “रागः शान्तिप्रदो नित्यं, यथाकालं यथाश्रुति।”
      A raga, rendered in right measure and proper hour, is a minister of peace.

      So, dear Shinde ji, be not disheartened by the fractured guitar. If love has chosen you as its listener, you shall yet hold a sitar. Seven strings, tuned with quiet resolve, have been known to heal what the world has failed to remember.

      1. Yadav Ji,
        I can’t believe in one life and at such tender age one can achieve such a great scholarship. I am happy to note that your term ‘lament’ correctly predicted the failure of this post because there is no response from the supreme national leader or state leader of the party you forgot to mention in this reply (to whom I addressed the tweet of which link I provided in my post) or any one of the WordPress readers.
        This shows the great strength of the writer who can foresee things..

        Regards,
        Ry

      2. Shinde ji,

        What is age, but a fragile count of years?
        Wisdom knows no fences, nor asks for permission to bloom.
        When the keepers of duty grow silent,
        it is the awakened soul that must strike the bell,
        lest the night grow louder than the truth.

        Some ears pretend to sleep,
        some hearts are slow to stir,
        yet words born of sincerity
        travel farther than replies and acknowledgments.

        In time, even stone learns to listen.

        Regards,
        Rohitash

      3. Dr Spooner came to help in such a challenging situation of weak wit (of me 😉) with wit (able in every respect of new Ry) when confronted.

        Professors in Oxford, Cambridge are supposed to play the role of preachers, in that once Dr gave a sermon and instead of Jesus or Lord he said Socrates.

        He finished the sermon, after climbing down the pulpit, went again & said, wherever I said Socrates, take it to be Jesus or the Lord.

        Similarly, I have responded to your earlier comment. Take that as my response to this comment too.

        Ry 1

      4. Most esteemed Shinde-sir,
        thy utterances descend like antique Oxfordian homilies —
        keen of edge, erudite in marrow,
        and perilous to faint-witted disciples such as this humble scribe,
        who must unravel each syllable ere slumber dares approach.

        Thus, with deferential boldness, a minor entreaty:
        pray, forbear from conjoining thy commentaries into a solitary vessel.
        It is my singular prerogative
        to inherit them severally —
        like epistolary missives long withheld,
        alighting with unpremeditated grace.

        For half my diurnal span evaporates in pursuit of a commensurate rejoinder —
        consulting lexicons as one consults oracles,
        interrogating sundry platforms,
        and nursing innumerable goblets of adrak-infused draughts,
        beneath the merciless glare of winter’s obdurate sun.
        Responding to thee hath transfigured itself
        from pastime into praxis —
        a quotidian art of mindful labour.

        Grant me, therefore, this modest felicity:
        permit thy pearls to arrive as all wisdom doth —
        not in cumbersome aggregates,
        but in solitary, lucid drops.

        With scholarly reverence,
        Ry

        P.S. Thy stringent scrutiny and the restitution of my initials
        hath restored the breath that strayed from my lungs.

      5. You did all to me what you in this most allusive, ambiguous, connotative, annotative super comment, only disagreement is dim witted or faint witted you, have done to me.
        Kudos & hugs. 🫂 🥰🪷🌺🌸❤️Ry1

      6. Ye to apka badappan hea…”I am just a Lerner sitting next to the shore watching tides come in and go, picking up colorful stones left over at the shore by the water”
        , Like a curious child”
        🙂🙏🙏💚💚💐💐

      7. You are Tennyson plus Arnold together as far as sea images are concerned

      8. Haha…ap bhi kaha se kaha pahuch gaye

  3. This piece felt like a quiet conversation with my own soul. The way you described silence — not as emptiness but as full of “unpaid attention” — stayed with me. Thank you for reminding us that stillness can be strength.

    1. Mahananda,

      You read between the breaths, and that’s where the real message was hiding.
      Silence isn’t a gap — it’s nourishment. The old Vedic seers called it mauna, a doorway where the soul stops pretending and finally speaks in its own language. When the mind rests, the spirit eats.

      “Unpaid attention” has its own beauty. The world keeps shouting for likes, eyes, validation… but the things that truly change us don’t demand applause. A quiet sunset. An unsent letter. A thought that stays even when the noise has moved on. When something holds you without asking for anything back, it leaves a deeper mark.

      You noticing that… says more about you than the comment itself. Some people read words. A few feel them. And the rare ones — like you — make them come alive.

      Strange how silence can make two strangers understand each other a little too well.

      💐💐💐💓

      1. “Your words feel like calm water — still, yet full of life. Thank you for understanding the silence so beautifully, Rohitash. 🌿”

      2. Nanda,
        sometimes I feel it’s not the words… it’s the eyes that read them.
        Beauty lives in the heart of the beholder, and maybe your heart heard something I didn’t even write loud.

        Most people will just see a calm line on digital paper.
        You… catch the pulse beneath it.
        That’s the quiet signal I send, and only a few ever notice.

        Thank you for reading the silence, not just the sentences.

  4. […] You may read a deeper reflection here:👉 My Post […]

  5. तुम्हारी चुप और हमारा लहजा
    कभी मिलें गे तो बात होगी
    हमारे लफ्जों से बात बनकर
    लिखोगे जब तुम कलाम होगा
    उदास लम्हे में हंस के कहना
    कभी मिलें गे तो बात होगी
    Rohitash,this post touched the chords of my heart.

    1. Nusrat ji,
      कुछ अल्फ़ाज़ यूँ भी गिरते हैं जैसे बरसात के बाद पहली ख़ुशबू…
      आपने कहा दिल को छू लिया — शायद इसलिए कि टूटी चीज़ें ही सबसे प्यारी सच्चाई लिखती हैं।

      Ek aur…
      “जो दिलों की ख़ामोशी पढ़ ले, वो लफ़्ज़ कहाँ बाज़ार में मिलते हैं,
      हमने भी दर्द को सजाया है, तब जाके ये अशआर बनते हैं।”

      आपके दिल ने महसूस किया, यही काफी है।
      बाक़ी दुनिया को तो बस पढ़ना आता है… समझना नहीं।

      1. अति सुन्दर

      2. Dhanyawad…Aap kuch aur farmayenge…🙌 Irsaad..

  6. Mohabbat dharam apna hou
    Nafrat sey hamay nafrat hou
    Bolo wah wah

    1. Ab kia bolu…apne to sab kuch bol dia …itne mea hi🙌🙌

  7. the sense of calmness that flows… quietly through your words…. speaks so much to personal growth…
    beautifully written, Rohitash
    🤍🙏

    1. Dear Reader,
      Your words feel like a hand placed gently on the mind… quiet, but understood.
      If my lines carried calmness, then maybe they were just reflecting the peace you already hold inside.

      Some readers notice the meaning,
      a few feel it,
      but very rare ones complete it.
      You sound like the second kind. 🤍💛💚

      Thank you for reading not just the sentences… but the silence between them.

      1. I like how you say that…”the peace you already hold inside”… maybe…

        my pleasure…🤍

      2. Yes dear kind Reader, it is…it is inside that’s how it resonates with the outside world so fine tuned. My words through my writings resonated with your ears and got your nodes matching with mine , so you are here.
        Kind Read Thanks
        🙌

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