I am writing to introduce you to my travel essays because these are pieces I’m most proud of. I’m attaching a few lines from some essays here. Hope you enjoy them and visit the place vicariously through my words.
“I still get goosebumps when I think about the wonderous gigantic library I had visited in Alexandria, Egypt. This modern library built in 2002, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, can accommodate 2000 readers in its main reading hall on any given day. It’s located on the gorgeous Mediterranean shore of the port city of Alexandria.
As I walked out of the library, I noticed the concrete bust of Alexander. Was he really this gorgeous in real life? Along the perimeter of the library, there was a wall of inscriptions from many world languages. As I lifted my head, the sunset splashed its colors across the Mediterranean sky, clutching at my heart. I can’t possibly leave this city, how can I?”
Read more about the meeting place of words and the Mediterranean HERE.

“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 geometry draws you in immediately, creating a quiet sense of reverence before you even encounter the art.
A good artist does not impose meaning, they create space for interpretation. Art can arrest us without force and command respect without noise. It may not always pay the bills, but what would life be without words, sound, art, and the artists who weave them together for us?”
Read how I went as a tourist to SFO but felt instant belonging at this place HERE.

“I have a million essays planned about Spain. And here’s one. We went on a 16-day road trip through Spain, starting in Barcelona, traveling to the tip of Catalonia, looping around to the southern coastal tip of Andalusia, and finally ending in Madrid.
We traveled through Valencia, Toledo, Seville, Córdoba, Málaga, Ronda, and of course, Granada, where the Alhambra showcases the influence of the Islamic, Jewish, and Christian cultural blend. Sitges is the gay capital of Spain. You’ve got permission there to be queer, artistic, and unapologetically yourself.”
Read more on I went on a road trip in Spain and felt the vibrant spirit of the people in their siestas, seas and flamenco HERE.

“In the evenings, you come across uncles who are drowning their sorrows in the Rasna Bar or the Bratt Bar, where cocktails cost five times what they do in the Rasna Bar. And your night cap will come in the form of the ultimate jugaad*, the birthright of every Indian, when you see an electric car charging port that can give any true-blooded American a heart attack.
* Jugaad: there’s no problem that doesn’t have a solution mindset LOL”
Read more on how I travel to my hometown even without using a passport HERE. Read more of my India Travel Diaries HERE.

“In the mornings, at 8am, I would get in my rental car to go to work a few miles away. And every day I would pass by the grim looking homes along the downtown center of Wilmington. At a particular traffic light, I would always see what must have been the remnants of someone’s eviction process.
I would stop here and stare at this long enough for the ones in the back to honk at me as the light would turn green and I had to leave that spot. I would wonder to myself everyday, where is this child who rode that toy jeep now?”
Read more on the nature of America’s Melting Pot and the housing crisis no one wants to talk about HERE.

“He told a heartbreaking story about his divorce, about chess friends from a Connecticut library, and about the homeless chess players in downtown Atlanta, one of whom he lost to mental illness during COVID. He spoke of men with full stomachs and empty ones, wrestling over chess matches on the streets of a city that both feeds and starves its people. And he said that even on his darkest days, the sun rose twice for him. I’ll carry that mantra forever, and I wish you would too. We really do have so much to be grateful for.
Every story was a daring leap to restore our faith in humanity and our shared togetherness of survival.”
Some stories funny, all unforgettable. Read more about the night of stories at Moth, Atlanta, HERE.

If you liked what you read, you might like my travelogue series where I write about the places I’ve visited and the people I’ve met. You can find the full anthology HERE.
Thank you for reading.
– 0 –
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
Visit Vizag in 2022: Explore the City of Destiny’s Stunning Beaches, Parks & Hidden Gems!
[gallery...
Vijayawada: Where Durga Defeated Mahishasura – Unveiling the City of Victory’s Rich Heritage
[gallery...
Discover the Magic of Dervish Dances and Rumi’s Poetry in Istanbul’s Communal Spirit
https://youtu.be/1eoqIE3g_VI - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Yesterday I was clever, I wanted to change the world. Today I’m wiser, so I’m changing myself. – Rumi - The steep roads of old town Sultanahmet-Sirkeci in...
Why Clean Water Remains a Luxury in Flint, Michigan – The Shocking Truth in 2021
https://youtu.be/RWXWWHcPAtI - Want To Listen To The Article Instead? - Growing up in India, I used to see street fights for a bucket of potable water. Even at a young age, I had understood that we were the privileged few that had ready...
Rumi’s Muse: Discover the Magical Whirling Dervishes of Istanbul
- Yesterday I was clever, I wanted to change the world. Today I'm wiser, so I'm changing myself. - Rumi - The steep roads of old town Sultanahmet-Sirkeci in Istanbul, Turkey, might look like a strange place for spiritual surrender. But, that's...
10 Irresistible Reasons You Must Visit Puerto Morelos Mexico (Travel Guide & Hidden Gems)
People vacation at the El Cid all-inclusive resort for 250$ a night, while locals live on 2$ a day in the fishing village of Puerto Morelos. In the December of 2017, vacationers read books like Gone Girl, Wonder, Origen, The accident, And after the fire, See me,...
Isla Mujeres, Mexico
There's heaven on earth in a place called the Island of Women, Isla Mujeres. * Travel Around The World
Holiday Season in Atlanta
* Love: Love. Love the one that's in the mirror, love the one you met just today. Love every person that has lived before, is traveling with you, whom you have heard about and even whom you have never met. Aggregate all your grace and gratitude and spread it...
Becoming One With Nature During Our Visit To Colorado
I visited Colorado and this is what happened. The lake and its vast silence must be humming with life under the surface. The mountains in the distance look at me as if they're asking, "Why did it take you this long to find us?" Two dried up tree limbs spring out of...
The Anonymous Manifesto – Ep. 7 – From a North Carolina Girl to a World Traveler – II
Continued from Part I * Heart: That's awesome, you approached him? GD: I did. And he had never played tennis in his life. And he came and played it like he had been playing it all his life. (Laughs) So, that kind of started the relationship. * Heart: Tennis or...
Athens, Greece – Apr, 2012
*Travel Around The World
Dubai, UAE
Travel Around The World
St. Simons, Georgia
Travel Around The World
Dear Refugee, My Life Must Go On.. – A Poem By Rachana
- 0 - The translated Telugu version: ప్రియ శరణార్థీ! నా జీవితం ఇలా నడవనీ.. This poem appeared originally in The Saaranga Magazine HERE. - It's not too unthinkable,sipping licorice tea in my cardigan,And day dreaming of a life of civil liberties....
Cruising Through Cozumel, Mexico – Dec, 2016
Travel Around The World
When the Indian-American Mom Goes to Dirty Sixth
- As I walked past The Velveeta Room, I saw the chalk board at the entrance with the words, Stand-up comedy night, showing at 11pm. I asked the old white guy, possibly a biker dude by day, who was cutting tickets standing at the entrance if I could take a quick...
India 2016: My Village’s Point of view
- Shot on iPhone * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * - 0 - Travel Around The World
Writer-At-Large – Once in a While, Listen to Those Throaty Crickets
* One of America's favorite pastimes, primitive camping (add electricity and bathrooms for an extra fee), has turned me into a renegade city dweller. For a couple of days, I remained off the grid, but still managed to snap a few pictures to revisit the place I...

















