The second child is a mélange, an ambivalent mixture – one who wants to raise gooseflesh. Philip John writes a poem.
When you think of Indian roads, you think of traffic pouring in from all directions, plenty of honking and lot of smoke. Parth Pandya pens a poem.
‘One Road to Freedom’ traces the feelings of a woman who wants to break free from the world as well as her own mind that hold her back from achieving her dreams and being her own self. Jessu Goodfellow writes a poem, interpreting the theme, ‘On the Road’, in her own way.
One could have so many experiences on the road. Here’s one such. Anjana Prabhu writes a poem.
Vyoma Dhar Sharma has quite a lot to say to a woman. The thoughts take birth as poetry on paper. Learn to be a woman, she says, before they make a woman out of you. So, who is the real woman? Find out.
Kunti is a woman who bore a big burden and also one who rewrote destiny. In this context, Parth Pandya raises an important question through a poem.
A mother wonders how her daughter would perceive her and how she would read her past. Vyoma Dhar Sharma writes a poem that pours out the mother’s questions.
Latha Sakhya talks about the day in the life of a working mother. A woman is reduced to a keyed up machine while multi-tasking, points out Latha through her poem.
We are lucky to have this wonderful life and every second of our time in this earth is precious, says Gauri Trivedi. Read on to find out why she thinks each phase in our lives is a happy beginning and a happy ending in itself. The bottom line, she suggests, is to make every single day count.