Falling Into A Saqqara Tomb
Silly me, when I visited the Djoser Step Pyramid complex of the Saqqara necropolis (ancient Egyptian burial ground city), I was worried I would fall into a catacomb, one of those recesses between the ancient Egyptian tombs. Little did I know I would be falling hard for a 4,300-year-old royal scribe carved in stone in his own tomb.
As part of our tour, we visited the Teti Pyramid area, which is part of the larger Djoser Step Pyramid complex. It contains many tombs of royal scribes and administrators who served the court and were later buried here.
We walked around while little kids spotted us and shouted, “India, India!” Our tour guide took us to the Tomb of Kagemni, belonging to the royal scribe and Vizier Kagemni, who worked for Pharaoh Teti.
Inside the Tomb of Kagemni
Inside the tomb, you begin to understand the life and times of Kagemni, his rituals, beliefs, and worldview. His massive mastaba tomb is famous for its exceptionally detailed, lively reliefs depicting everyday life: fishing in marshes, hunting, force-feeding geese and hyenas, cattle herding, dancers, and offerings.
As with any tomb, it was meant to honor him in death and sustain him in the afterlife through magic and memory.
And then I came upon him. OMG.
A relief of a tall Egyptian man in a gorgeous kilt and broad collar. Damn, that power can only come from literacy, not brute force.

Kagemni, The Royal Scribe
The Reed Pen: Real Power in Ancient Egypt
In ancient Egypt, the reed pen signified power. In their society, birth mattered, but literacy mattered more. Only a tiny fraction of people could read and write.
If you held a reed pen, you were recording taxes, tracking grain and labor, writing laws and prayers. Symbolically, the reed pen stood for intellect, order (represented by ma’at the goddess with an ostrich feather for truth and balance), and immortality.
The Egyptians believed that to be forgotten was to die again. So they had scribes inscribe tomb texts, offering formulae, and most importantly names that would be spoken forever. Through their words, scribes didn’t just survive life, they outlived it.
The royal scribe had the most upward mobility. If he was good, he could become an overseer, a vizier (a high-ranking official), or even a governor.
Becoming a Scribe Was Brutal
But how one became a scribe, after enduring brutal training and rigor, was something else entirely.
They started young, around five to seven years of age. Schools were often attached to palaces, temples, or administrative offices.
Students learned through rote memorization, endlessly copying lists of signs, words, and formulae. They learned hieroglyphs for monuments and sacred texts, and hieratic, a faster, cursive script for daily administrative tasks.
Punishment for infractions was severe. An Egyptian teaching proverb translates to: “A boy’s ear is on his back. He listens when he is beaten.”
Scribes used water reeds that grew along the Nile. A piece of reed was softened in water, then cut and shaved with a knife to form a flat, pointed nib with a small slit to hold ink. Ink was made from soot (carbon black) mixed with gum arabic and water to create black ink, with other colors also available. Think of the glorious colors we often associate with Middle Eastern art, lapis lazuli and red jasper.
As students, scribes first practiced on broken pottery and wooden tablets before moving on to writing on papyrus sheets. As part of their training, they were also taught how to sit, stand, and hold the body while writing. No wonder they are depicted as calm, seated, or gently striding. ❤️❤️
Scribes Had the Best Job in the World
The Instructions of Dua-Khety, also translated as The Satire of the Trades, is usually remembered for its sharp, almost merciless mockery of every profession that isn’t scribal.
And that’s partly true. But there’s a deeper intention in the text that we can’t ignore.
The opening is satirical, describing all other professions as withering away in toil. Bricklayers freeze in the wind, potters suffocate in clay, washermen scrub clothes beside crocodiles, craftsmen rot, ache, and bend until their bodies give out. It’s dark, funny, and unforgettable.
Then the second half suddenly morphs into a manual for character and wisdom. Khety, as a father, guides his young son on the journey to scribal school. He no longer merely discourages other trades, he begins shaping the inner life of a scribe.
He teaches restraint, attentiveness, precision of speech, ethical behavior, and social awareness. He speaks about how to listen, how to carry words faithfully, and how to move through power without arrogance.
Copied for centuries by children in scribal schools, The Instructions of Dua-Khety was not just career propaganda. It was formation. It taught young minds that education is not only a way out of physical hardship, but a way into ethical adulthood.
Even more than 4,000 years later, its core message still holds in a world of relentless distraction. Mastery of words or coding, if that’s the language you’re into, is not merely power. It is protection, purpose, and a way of living with intention.
Education is not abstract or an elite privilege. It is literally our path to stability, respect, and influence.
Because I want my words to last another 4,000 years, maybe I should start writing them with a reed pen.
Coming Back to the Present (Sort Of)
Once I walked out of Kagemni’s tomb, I went underground into Pharaoh Teti’s pyramid. There, in the sweltering, musty chambers, tourists crowded together while men made small talk and asked for money in exchange for taking photos with tombs and hieroglyphics.
I did my best to avoid one man who was following me offering to take my picture, and he told me I looked like I could be the queen of this place. And for one dollar he seemed persistent but harmless. So, hell yeah, I posed LOL.
Kagemni might have ruled the Old Kingdom of Egypt with a reed pen. That Egyptian man in Saqqara was gorgeous, but he didn’t tell me he would worship the earth I walked on.
Still, his pen penetrated my heart, and he has left it there. ❤️
– 0 –
About The Article Author:
Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.
One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.
Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.
Travel Around The World
Travel isn’t always pretty. It isn’t always comfortable. Sometimes it hurts. It even breaks your heart. But that’s okay. The journey changes you. It should change you. ~ Anthony Bourdain
A Speck on the Sahara – Read by Rachana
https://youtu.be/ob4pSskh2pg Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Sipping Tea In The Sahara One early morning in late December, we set off on a three hour journey from Cairo to Dahshur. As we passed village after village, lush green fields...
I Stumbled Upon a Baby Shower in a Café. It Became a Reminder That Joy Finds Us Anywhere.
It's safe to say it's been a while since I've attended a baby shower. I don't even come across infants on a regular basis. I last saw a baby (almost 1 year old) was at a party this past Thanksgiving. My friend had a grandbaby in 2025. So, that's that. And also...
Living in America’s Melting Pot While Confronting the Housing Crisis No One Talks About
It’s safe to say that even in America, as a true blooded Indian, I live in my own world of Indian food and Bollywood style parties. What little I understand about how everyone else lives is mostly through shows like Friends, Seinfeld, Sex and the City and movies like...
One Road Trip, Many Spains: A Soulful Journey Through Art, Faith, Food, and Freedom
A Slow Drive Through Spain’s History and Heart I have a million essays planned about Spain. I’ve already written about some gorgeous places HERE. We went on a 16-day road trip through Spain, starting in Barcelona, traveling to the tip of Catalonia, looping...
A Dream Mehendi in Sitges: An Indian Wedding Celebration Where Tradition Meets Mediterranean Magic
In Sitges, a coastal town in Spain's Andalusian region, we once attended a beautiful mehendi function. A mehendi event is a pre-wedding celebration where family and friends gather to decorate the bride’s hands and feet with henna. Henna (or natural tattoos) is...
Wandering Through Spain: Siestas, Weddings, and Andalusian Wonders
Losing My Way In SpainHi, welcome. In these essays, I write about the fascinating landscapes of Spain, Spaniards and their siestas, and the fierce art of flamenco. Through road trips, weddings, whitewashed villages, and seaside camper days, this is my attempt to...
A Speck on the Sahara: Sipping Tea Above Egypt’s Bent and Red Pyramids
Listen to the audio version of this poem on HERE. One early morning in late December, we set off on a three hour journey from Cairo to Dahshur. As we passed village after village, lush green fields dotted with beautiful villas belonging to farmers, we...
Walking With the Ancients: Egypt’s Temples, Art, and Timeless Lessons for Modern Life
Eternal. Enduring. Egypt. Egypt — to me, the most beloved and beautiful of things. ~ Salah Jahin, Egyptian poet
Homesick for the Stars – Read by Rachana
https://youtu.be/AHm4v2h1PhU - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Homesick for the Stars This essay is about travel, wanderlust and our perennial need for discovery. I wrote this while staring at a glorious sunset. As the golden hour sky...
The Abu Simbel Temple: Egypt’s Timeless Wonder and a Tribute To Global Heritage Preservation
These Words Won't Be Enough Abu Simbel is located in a remote town three hours away from Aswan. Our cab driver picked us up from our cruise boat on the Nile that was stationed at the Aswan harbor. Our cab was flying at 140 kilometers an hour as I fell in and...
Between Two Worlds: An Indian American Woman’s Honest Take on Identity, Culture, and Belonging
Observations, Opinions, and Cultural Critique Cultural Essays from a Life Lived Between Worlds
Finding Peace on a Walk Across America: What a Dog, the Deep South, and a Buddhist Monk Teach Us
How Do We Find Peace? “By practicing mindfulness. Mindfulness is the medicine we all need.”This was the answer given by a Buddhist monk at the Walk for Peace event yesterday in deep south Georgia. And what a moment it was. A group of dedicated Buddhist monks,...
Writer-At-Large – The 2025 Indian-American Documentary – Final Part
Continued from Part I HERE JULY My son sent me pictures of the Harvard university library from his visit to Boston and I lamented to him that it's the right place for me, and then got back to my life here in ATL. After all, I had to wash all our Indian...
Writer-At-Large – The 2025 Indian-American Documentary
Not Your Average Recap The last time I did a pictorial essay of this nature was in 2014. I had then talked about bathroom selfies I had taken, although they didn't make me look like Kim Kardashian. But, more on that some other time. Earlier today, I wrote how...
A Year in Writing 2025: Art, Emotion, and the Ideas That Shaped My Inner World
- 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...
Lessons in Effortless Living from the Nile: How Flow, Impermanence, and Surrender Shape a Meaningful Life
Certain experiences sharpen our sense of being alive, like revisiting our day while journaling at night, the fleeting jolt when a stranger’s gaze catches yours across the room, or wandering cobblestone streets in a new city. The Nile, too, is such an...
Scandinavian Crime Fiction That Excels In The Art of Being Moody and Riveting
- I work with a lot of Danes, and I find them quietly fascinating. They're humble, economical with words and rarely interrupt in meetings. Even if they are the subject matter experts, they don't find the excessive need to show off their merits like some of us...
Homesick for the Stars
When I stumble into landscapes like these, I can't help but laugh at the audacity of man — thinking we can tame this beastly beauty of nature and dare to call it "mine." Let everything happen to you: Beauty and terror. So I do. I stand still in trembling reverence at...


















Love the article.
Ha ha, thanks so much amma ;-)