DAY 47





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: MY 90 DAY WRITING CHALLENGE

My sister called me today and was upset about her life spiraling out of control, with school, work, the things that can take over, even her, the hippie at heart that she is…

I understood that sometimes that’s all you need. Your sister to lean on, talk to, make you laugh.

I just wrote a part of my story where this happens…Amla is the sister that when she feel this way, leans on Asya for support, for guidance, for love. And when Asya does it, Amla realizes that this is their bond.

And in my real life, I can see how real that bond is.

DAY 44





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: MY 90 DAY WRITING CHALLENGE

Just a little poem I wrote…not related to my story, but about sisters. And a little poetry here and there keeps the writing goddess in me happy :)

Sisters.

Like you I have our mother’s eyes,

Almond shaped,

but your’s have more brown in them than mine,

Like you I have our father’s nose,

Long and slender,

Like your long legs from our grandfather,

My broad shoulders from the same ancestor.

Like you I like reading novels,

You curled up in bed,

Flipping pages,

As I snuck a peak behind your bedroom door,

Just to see what you were reading.

Like you I love music,

But

Found my own beats, making me…

Different than you,

but

always

it was something I never wanted to be,

different than you.

I wanted

To laugh like you,

Smile and tilt my head back,

The way everyone around you loved to see you do.

I wanted to smell like you,

And sprayed your lilac perfume from your dresser when you weren’t home.

And then,

I started becoming less and less like you,

I liked patchouli instead of lilac,

Squinted my eyes when I laughed,

Like our grandmother, instead of you,

and I was

different than you.

But you crept up…

In my walk,

And someone would say, “You walk just like your sister, I thought it was her from behind”

Or the way we answered the phone,

“Is that you?”

They would ask on the other line.

“I thought…

You were your sister.”

And when you moved,

Far away,

I felt you near me,

Inside,

When I cried that night,

And you called me,

“Are you okay?” you asked,

“I was upset how did you know?”

“Just because…” you said.

You’re my sister, my heart knew.

DAY 31





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: MY 90 DAY WRITING CHALLENGE

Writing about one of your biggest fears is hard.

In my story, I am writing about the characters’ mother becoming very ill…

I am always worrying about my parent’s health and my worst fear is losing one of them suddenly, the way my grandfather was taken away from our lives.

Today after writing about her becoming sick, I had to take a moment and stop as I felt my heart become heavy for Amla and Asya.

DAY 17





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: MY 90 DAY WRITING CHALLENGE

Writing about something that emotionally moves you is harder than I had anticipated.

I thought, there would be raw emotion that would be easy for me to put into words, since that’s how I write, from my heart.

But I keep writing and stopping, keep writing something and deleting it, keep trying to put things into words that I feel so much.

I tried getting myself to detach myself, emotionally, from what I was writing.

It felt impossible. I will have to just try and do it the way I know, writing from my heart.

Africa.





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: Sima: Diary of an Indian Girl

Mostly, Sima remembered their smiles. The shy way they averted their eyes when she asked them their names, their ages. The way they were surprised when they replied with a Christian name and she insisted on knowing their Ugandan name. The children’s faces, their timid voices, their silent appreciation when she treated them or educated them, stayed with her, had filled her heart, expanding it in a way she never knew possible, in a way that made her ache, a true, to the bone ache- the way she felt when she watched documentaries on human rights issues, the way it came to her when she passed begging children on the streets of Delhi. But this time, it stayed with her for longer than before.

When she first arrived, she was excited, scared, but finally there. She was there, she thought and it was the first time she was somewhere that felt so beautiful, both outside and even, within herself. Luwero was in no way Spain or Hawaii or Costa Rica,  the places  she had been where awe was easy to find in sparkling blue waters or cliffs surrounded by gardens. Here, she found it in the pink painted doors of mud buildings, in the mango and jackfruit trees that surrounded her, in the mothers holding their babies in vibrant green, blue, red, yellow blended cloth.

When people asked Sima, “What was it like?” It was hard for her to put into words the emotions, the images softly painted in her memories, the smells that she was sure filled her mind’s corners. The roads of Luwero reminded Sima of India, giving her the same nostalgia- the smell of raw gasoline from the boda boda motercylce taxis, the long paths that let dirt fill the air with each step, indian style chapati food stalls on the sides of roads.

She thought of the history of her own people in Kampala, from India, building businesses in a new city, living amongst a culture so different and similar to their own, adding their own influence with food, indian restaurants and temples that scattered the city, even still. She felt a familiar grounding when she saw Gandhi’s statue at the Nile and felt the history of her ancestors connect her to a place that at first seemed far away from anything she had ever known. She thought of the Indians who had been rushed out of the country by a corrupt government to return back to India, with dreams shattered; ties broken.

When she went back to NY and California, she tried to fall back into place with her everyday- planning her wedding after her recent engagement, dinners with her family, meeting friends. She planned her trip to India for wedding shopping, but researched NGO’s she could volunteer for during her free time. She saw her upcoming journey with a new set of eyes and a freshness in her heart that made her feel ready for anything.

It was at night when she thought of the frustration she felt for Uganda. The ongoing political situations, the hardships the women she met faced everyday, the stories of war, of the Congo, of young boys taken to be Rebels, of young girls being raped without any protection or justice for their pain from society. She thought of  the fate of the children, mainly, the girls, that she treated or educated for oral hygiene, but spoke to about dreams, likes, dislikes. What is your favorite color? What school subject do you love? What do you want to be when you grow up? Questions that perhaps no one had ever asked them, their responses vivid and full of life. Her fears for them seeped into her heart, stayed and stayed with her at night, into the morning when she woke up.

You can leave Africa, but Africa never leaves you. She had heard the quote said by a volunteer in the guesthouse she stayed in during her time there.

Africa, in fact , had stayed with her like the volunteer had said, and with it, brought a whole new chapter for Sima. She found peace in helping people who needed it the most. Perhaps, she thought, it was her dharma. She was ready to let her heart unfold to this place where spirituality went hand in hand with her purpose, her dharma, as she often heard her grandmother speak of finding as one.  And Sima knew that now that she had found it, in her heart of hearts, it was something that would never leave her.

“in the fall, i miss you.” A Haiku Poem





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: Poetry/Spoken Word

New wind blows gently with scents of you

Leaves change colors

Refreshing heart, soul, mind

Ocean at 3 a.m.





Posted by: Puja  :  Category: Poetry/Spoken Word

Felt like the ocean was my heart

Kept walking

and with every step,

water fit perfectly between my toes.

Sand kept me grounded

And I was one

with my heart.

Turned my head

to find you,

you didn’t take your shoes off,

Like I did,

but it still felt amazing,

because it was mine.

And I loved every second, minute of my heart.

Walk right by

And don’t notice

how beautiful

this ocean is.

Never stopped

to watch the waves

crashing.

It was powerful

And gentle

like my love.

A black and white photograph

White waves against black sky,

felt surreal.

And I turned around,

my heart called you

to come

beside me.

Come inside my heart,

it’s so warm,

it loves everything around it,

it will calm your fears of us,

please, just step in

my waters.

But you were

 Far

And couldn’t see me.

Ocean sounds

drowned any noise around me and in me.

And somehow,

I didn’t mind,

didn’t feel lonely,

felt right.

The way I was.

Just walking in the ocean

of my heart.