Skip to main content

Whispering Wednesday





Today's Whispering Wednesday Word  is LIFE.Though all that has been said on life is not enough and there are endless things that one can say about, but I would like to share a few lines written by Me on this:
जिंदगी से नज़र बचा के कुछ हसीं लम्हे चुरा लो,
ये जहान  है तुम्हारी राह ताकता की कब तुम इससे अपना लो।

Loosely translated it means: Averting the gaze of life steal some beautiful moments, the whole world is waiting for you to claim it.
Sharing one of the most perfect picture I could find to describe my madness for life because this is exactly how I feel about it:

Google Images

Popular posts from this blog

Books on Cinema

For a long time, cinema was a world I wasn’t allowed to enter. I grew up in a home where movies were banned. No television, no glimpses of silver screens, and no songs echoing from old classics. For nearly a decade, cinema was a forbidden word like a secret behind a closed door.  And yet, like all things that carry truth and longing, it found its way to me. Stories have a way of finding you, slipping through cracks, whispered between pages, caught in melodies. Sometimes through the corners of borrowed books, sometimes through whispered summaries from classmates, sometimes just through the magnetic pull of posters and songs I wasn’t supposed to hear. 

Book Review: The All Seeing Digital Eyes by Neville J Kattakayam

Introduction Source: Amazon.in ISBN:9781720184133 Genre:  Non-Fiction Publishers: AshNel Inc Price: Rs. 220/- (I got the book for review from the author)

Book Review: The Story of Eve: Selected Poems by Zehra Nigah

Few voices in Urdu poetry have carried the weight of history, resistance, and deep personal introspection quite like Zehra Nigah. One of the first women to break into the traditionally male-dominated world of Urdu poetry, Nigah’s work stands as a testament to the power of words to illuminate, question, and challenge. The Story of Eve: Selected Poems, translated by Rakshanda Jalil, brings together some of her most powerful nazms and ghazals, showcasing both her literary elegance and her unflinching gaze at the human condition, particularly through the lens of gender, social injustice, and political turmoil.