There are some obvious human relationships: parent-child, siblings, lovers, friends. Then there is the kind Vighnesh Hampapura elucidates in this essay: one with an actor removed in time, land and language becomes the guiding lamp to an aspiring theatre performer.
M. Mohankumar’s verse focuses on a relationship gone awry – it speaks of two factions engaged in a pointless dispute, as in Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels.
Chandramohan Nair can’t help feeling that he didn’t measure up to the affection and loyalty displayed by his courageous pet dog.
Our photo feature for this month puts the spotlight on old people in different kinds of relationships and features photographs taken by Shruti Parthasarathy and Sriram Sabhapathy.
Structured in the form of a monologue, a poem speaks to the poet who has ‘created’ it. The poem has a number of questions by asking which, it attempts to understand its relationship with the poet, his world, his other creations, and its own sense of self-worth. Verse by Srinivas S.
As she lifted the container, brought it close to her lips, and took the first sip, a gush of vivid memories came alive. Anusha Singh discovers the true reason for her love for filter coffee.
Not all relationships are happy. Some are abusive where damaging things are said and done in the name of love. Shalu Bhati captures one such relationship in her poem.
Anupama Krishnakumar writes two pieces of flash fiction that explore the theme of relationships. Void is about a woman who is lonely, while Laptop is about a seventy-year-old man and his relationship with a laptop that his son gifts him.
A tree in a garden in Delhi has stood there for years and observed romantic relationships over a period of time. Rubina’s poem is from the perspective of the tree.