Kissa Kursi Ka Life has a quiet way of moving on—swiftly, almost unsettlingly so. When someone leaves this world, the pause is brief. Rituals are performed, memories are shared, and soon, routines begin to reclaim their space. The absence remains, but the world does not stand still. It continues, as it always has. Perhaps it was always meant to be this way. In the larger scheme of existence, the eternal cycle of creation, preservation, and dissolution—Brahma, Vishnu, Mahesh—unfolds without interruption. One creates, one sustains, one dissolves. No single presence halts this rhythm. Everything that arrives is meant, eventually, to move on. Placed against this vast continuum, human life appears fleeting—almost minuscule. And yet, within this brief span, we attach ourselves deeply to roles, positions, and places. We begin to believe that these define us. Kissa Kursi Ka. In some homes, it appears in the quiet anticipation of inheritance—where the transfer of responsib...
WHEN PILGRIMAGE FEELS EMPTY — AND WHAT IT TEACHES US We travel miles believing that somewhere, at the end of the journey, a moment is waiting for us—a moment of stillness, of connection, of something deeply divine. I set out on such a journey through Kashi, Banaras, Hanumangarhi, and Ayodhya. These are not just places; they are living centres of faith. I went with a simple intention—to be present, to feel, to connect. But the experience was not what I had imagined. In Kashi, devotion was everywhere, yet the experience felt rushed. The crowd moved relentlessly, leaving no space to pause. There was no stillness—only a fleeting glimpse, a few seconds, and then you were carried forward. I saw the deity, but I could not stay with the moment. And without that pause, the connection felt incomplete. At Hanumangarhi, even with a more structured entry, the space became overwhelming. The crowd pressed in, and instead of feeling devotion, there was discomfort—almost suffocation. Fa...