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On Motherhood
As a Writer-At-Large and primarily as a mother, I wrote about Kanu dappika, the longing of a mother to see her children in A Mother’s Words for the Ache of Missing Her Children. I beamed in joy when they literally and metaphorically were touching grass in: They’re Touching Grass! Small Joys of Parenting Gen Z. I revisited an old poem to talk about intergenerational reckoning at: Child Bearers of the World – What Remains. I wrote so many articles about digital education for parents including ones like these: Internet Safety for Parents: Protecting Kids in the Digital Age – Essential Tips & Strategies.
On Living
Live like a Carpe Diem type of person and stop waiting for permission. Here’s the philosophy meets praxis moment: Live Out Loud. I wrote a living will on how I want to be remembered as. I actually mostly wrote it as a device for my children and loved ones to hold on to, in case they miss me. If I Die Tomorrow, Let This Be My Final Message to You. And since no one wrote me an essay for my birthday, I wrote myself one LOL. Read it here at: The Festival in My Heart: How I Learned to Live Between Rage and Grace. I also want to challenge to live a superb life of service and satsang. And I write about it here. Let’s Reimagine the Übermensch: Creative Freedom in Service to Something Greater
On Humor
What’s life without humor. I found proof that my foul mouth makes me admirable. Here’s how I Found Out I’m A Saint. How can I call myself a writer and not lament on how others are living their lives. So I wrote about Kris Kardashian as: News for the Unemployed: Kris Jenner Got Plastic Surgery and Now Looks Like Kim’s Twin. LMAO.
On Crossing The Line
I started dwelling into something I’ve never done before. Write NSFW poetry. Yup, totally won’t be amusing my mother with any of those ideas. Talk about being a dissapointment child LOL. Jokes apart, let’s not pretend that we have lines we don’t want to cross. Find the anthology here at: These Poems Are Not Safe for Polite Company. I wrote Don’t Kiss Me. Yet. to see if it will set the sheets on fire. Based on feedback I’ve received, it seems it did. One of my favorites is a prose poem I wrote, Arrested By Your Gravity: A Philosophical Freefall Into Desire. Hope you like them.
On Nostalgia
I went to my home town only once this year, but wrote about it a million times. Here at: What a Street Food Vendor Taught Me About Vijayawada’s Soul, here: How I Travel to My Village Poranki Anytime Without a Passport and here: Nostalgia in Ruins: Watching My Childhood Home Fall and My Memories Rise. I also wrote about Bengaluru because its living rent-free in my heart. You must visit. And wrote about the Magestic Nile and all the lessons it taught me with its grace and free spirit.
On AI
Like everyone else who’s tuning into even 1% of the news these days, I obsessed about AI. At work and at writing and in my daily life, I tried my hand at it. I wrote about its impact on writers at: When AI Gets Flirty and Writers Stay Human in The Digital Era. I prompted it and found out it understands my voice to a great extent. ChatGPT Wrote a Story in My Voice and It Is Scary Accurate. I tried to understand how it was changing relationships for children, teens and adults in: When AI Becomes More Human Than Humans: Relationships, Intimacy, and the Age of the Promptstitute. Finally, I ask the ethical question that bothers me the most. Who Owns Ideas Anymore? How AI Is Hijacking the Internet’s Original Thinkers.
On Arts
Everyone has an origin story. Here’s mine on becoming a writer. Read it at, The Night I Claimed My Voice and Never Looked Back. I wrote about the fabulous words of Rilke at: Life, Art, and the Power of Solitude: Letters to a Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke. I wrote about the Hunger Diaries and the unbearable pain of the autobiography of Mavis Gallant’s The Hunger Diaries: A Writer’s Struggle, Sacrifice, and Passion in 1950s Spain. I started learning Carnatic music and started understanding what I was singing. Read it here at: Karpura Gauram Karunavataram – Shankara’s Timeless Mantra on Shiva, Shakti, and Non-Duality.
Thank you for your readership and engagement.

Books Fall From The Sky In China Town SFO
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On How To Write.
Writing Hacks, Compelling Story Telling And Essays On Life
“To me, a short story is a conversation between writer and reader, since only the writer can speak, she must take care to respect the reader, to avoid telling him what to think, to say as little as possible and imply the rest with metaphor, ellipses, allusive dialogue, pauses.” ~ Edith Pearlman on Writing
Human Slop: How This Fellowship-Winning ‘Satire’ Shows the Literature World’s Low Bar
Hey, sorry this needs a content warning. I'm about to review an unpalatable vulgar fictional story by a writer who has won a $75k/yr fellowship prize for this gem. A full 2-year creative writing fellowship at Stanford, nonetheless. The opening paragraph reads like...
Inside Social Media Lawsuits: How Meta, YouTube & AI Are Harming Teens
Life As a Chaos Machine I was on a beach, when I couldn't move, listening to The Chaos Machine by Max Fisher. The book makes painfully clear that Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook leadership knew their platforms were harming young minds. Internal research linked...
AI Safety Leaders Destroyed by AI Agents: The Ironic Collapse Everyone Saw Coming
This past Sunday evening, in all her candor, Summer Yue, the Director of Frontier AI Safety at Meta posted on her profile: Nothing humbles you like telling your OpenClaw “confirm before acting” and watching it speedrun deleting your inbox. I couldn’t stop it from my...
When Dreams Abroad Turn Heavy: The Tragic Story and the Silent Mental Health Crisis of International Students
A Promise And Brilliance Lost “I'm a Master’s student in the Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering department at University of California, Berkeley, with an undergraduate degree from IIT Madras. I'm passionate about deep-tech innovations in soft and active...
Success vs Failure: Why Boredom, Stillness, and Slow Mastery Create the Most Powerful Humans
Success vs. Failure Billy Oppenheimer, a writer, once described picking up Robert Greene from the airport. For the uninitiated, Greene is the author of The 48 Laws of Power, a must-read for those who love power and want to dominate the world. Of course, the...
Why Being a Generalist Is the Ultimate Power Move in the Age of AI, Uncertainty, and Reinvention
The Case for the Generalist Years ago, I had created a username called wannabepolymath. I wasn't sure which single thing interested me most because I wanted to learn many different things. As I read more, I felt a growing urge to explore new fields, seeking...
Skyfaring In Luxor, Egypt: A Sunrise Hot Air Balloon Ride Over the Valley of the Kings
At 5am, we got ready for our sunrise hot air balloon ride. We were each handed a small bag of breakfast items to take with us at the lobby of our cruise. A few of us ate a muffin or a slice of bread but were mostly not hungry at that early. We were then picked up by a...
The Evolution of Love: Marriage, Survival, and Personal Reinvention in a Changing World
A Society Experiences Growing Pains I took this picture of a wall hanging in the lobby of a hotel we were staying at in Granada, Spain. Somehow, the couples whose heads are disintegrating felt like a fitting image for the essay on marriage I was writing. I’ve...
The Prophet and the Poet: Tupac’s Humanity, Legacy, and Why His Words Still Heal Generations
For the longest time, until it just became too dirty for me to wear, I would wear my Tupac shirt whenever I had to run an errand or just take Yogi, our dog, out for a walk. I can't find a picture of mine readily, but I’ll update this space once I find one of me...
I Walked In as a Tourist and Left Feeling Like I Belonged Somewhere I’d Never Been Before
Selling Our Soul to The Arts I arrived in SFO as a tourist, but the moment I walked into SFMOMA, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, it felt like I belonged there. I was suddenly in the company of over 50,000 artists’ works. The Grand Atrium’s minimalist...
The Integrity Exit: Why Mrinank Sharma’s Departure Matters
Two days ago, Mrinank Sharma resigned from his role as an AI safety engineer at Anthropic. He had been with the company for two years. “The world is in peril. And not just from AI, or bioweapons, but from a whole series of interconnected crises unfolding in this very...
The Nihilist Penguin: Why Werner Herzog’s Lone Penguin Speaks to Our Need to Reject the Herd
The "Nihilist Penguin" and the Man Who Found It Like many of you, I was captivated by Herzog's lone penguin. The one that breaks from the herd and heads in the opposite direction. This singular image of defiance seems to be the hallmark of its observer who...











