Sunday, May 12, 2013

Many Little Stories in Mysore

A birds-eye view of Mysore


One place to visit once in a lifetime as an ardent follower of Buddhism is Mysore the sore cleanser of the life, they say. It is one of the centers of religious discourses and higher studies. Therefore, the place is much worshiped and known all over. The golden temple is the main attraction in the locality. Popularly established by the late Penor Rinpoche, the greatest Tibetan saint and lama, the monastery holds hundreds of monks, thousands of devotees from across the world. Though, the Nyingmapa sect of religion is practiced mostly, but there are many other monasteries in an around; like Dalai Lamas, Shedras, nunneries, etc for an assorted group of people.

It was three of us to stay there for a night. Our visit was mainly to see the late kudung/body of Penor Rinpoche. Not only we were sanctified by the sacred kudung, but we also visited many illustrious temples. Our Lopen, who was known to junior Sangay explained every significant history of everything. We were impressed. Everything had a story. A small stone displayed was said to be the heaviest that no one could lift. And there was grief-stricken, a very crossed/crying Guru Rinpoche, and there was a depiction of the helland it went on. It was only a chorten a wish-fulfilling chorten that most people circumambulated. There was a story behind this, like everything. Visit and know. It is worth it.

Monks were not supposed to eat meat, but it killed me when our guide monk comfortably ordered chicken kabab. I felt pain in my stomach. I was really in the wrong place to order chicken myself in front of him, instead, I ordered mushroom Manchuria. Sangay instead preferred onions slices than chicken Kabab. We told that sangay should buy kilos of onions from Mysore. True. With the change of time and places, we like different things.

And Tshering is no ordinary guy, a person who in the beginning was the most on the go, sleeps in reality. Tshering got a kind of sleeping disease upon reaching Mysore. Tshering didnt talk much, because he had a sore on his tongue. I told him not to kiss too much. Our guide Lopen told us that one gets impregnated by sleep, or freshen our mind, because of the power of the religious sanctity. I guess Tshering had been carrying all religious holiness and sacredness that made him so tired and sleepy. He slept a day, a night. I was like cock, every time waking him up to go and visit monasteries.

And there was a group of girls, who had come to see monks in the monasteries. They were having a good time with monks, supposedly trulkus. Yes, now about trulkus, one of the monks told me that Mysore is the factory of trulkus. Hundreds of trulkus are just trulkus. The late Penor Ripoche being very compassionate and humane accepted whoever came to him saying trulku. Even if you have gone declaring yourself as trulku, the Rinpoche would have recognized. This was what some monks told me. No, I dont want to also. I said to them. I have seen so many fake trulkus walking out with unimaginable things; money, women, rape, murder, etc. I told them. A good example was what we/monks had seen just in the monasterys guest house, a moment ago. Trulkus were sleeping in the same room where a group of girls were sleeping.  Why do women like monks? It really burns my eyes.

And Tshering had a headache every time someone talked about how unfaithful some women were. And with his headache, he went to sleep, peacefully. It killed me.

Friday, May 10, 2013

English Sounds/Meanings


The cat is on the mat
But the man on the mat said,
The mat is on the cat.

The hat is on the mat
But the man on the mat said,
The mat is on the hat.

The bat is on the mat
But the man on the mat said,
The mat is on the bat.
I bet these will make me mad
If it was not a dream.





What is the difference in sounds?
What is the difference in meanings?

Monday, May 6, 2013

Here Again


Here again
Born again
To chisel over again
To carve
To shape, to groom
And to fit in the room.

Born again
To write and live
To write the un-written muses
To embark an anew novice voyage
To slice and dice the life
A new beginning!

 Here I am
No matter what
Finding my voice
And affirming my identity
I’m trying
I may be the ugliest
I may be bad
But I’m here.

Here again
And to hear again
To be with you
And forever
If not, in the lines
Preserved.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Rains Washed Away My Happiness


Torn clothes and shabby tresses
Unpleasant dry dirt of mud stinks over the room
Oh, his bed and dear dust under it.
He sleeps on a thin torn carpet
And his pillow a rag of clothes
His Baago hut hurts him
Is he that poor?
Shedding tear has become part of his life
Tears have furrowed his cheeks.

Each day to meet maize corn and radish
Radishes have made his life
Now, can anybody compare him to…?
Has anyone dwelled like him?
With many black dots in life.

Cumulus appeared over orchard
Leaves rustled and blew along the ground
Heavy storm-
soon huge rain rained and fruits fell
The door opened and closed of its own
The rain-hit for two days
The earth vomited out on the third day
The lamp went off,
 and now is the only memory
The thoughts revolve, without stop;
That was a year passed from now,
When the family was about to have food
Gone were the affections from the wife and children
Gone were the riches
Gone were the wonderful times
All buried to death; in a jiffy;
Families, things, animals, homely home
Swept and thrown away by the landslide.
The man cried and still cries…
Hollow
Sometimes rain can be bad, he says.
This lonely desolation, this distorted assimilation
Is hard to feel and he breaks down.
Is he now living life in the dark?
Waiting for the death?

Things gone and gone forever
So he went near his small field
The field left by that misfortune
His hands gripped to a sped
He began to work in the rain,
And often sleeps in the potato field
Covering with another sack
Such a dreadful life overtook him.

Now birds sing in the sky
He feels sort of sad but glad as well
The sun had gone down already
Will it rise tomorrow?
He is living in the midst;
To survive or not to see the sun
Or strive more
To swim and swing against the nature
The hopes of brilliant tomorrow
Takes him through another rough day
He believes in his age-old faith
And that’s where he lays his life.



 
Man creates and builds, nature destroys everything. The poem says that the ultimate of everything is nature; wealth, health, and happiness. Nature provides and also robs everything that you have.