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The Whisper and the Noise

Preface

We live in an age where noise has become the default setting. Between the constant ping of notifications, the rush of daily demands, and the churn of inner restlessness, silence feels almost alien. Yet across cultures and centuries – from ancient Indian epics to biblical wisdom – the message remains consistent: clarity comes not in thunder but in stillness.

This essay is an attempt to listen for that whisper, to explore how our awareness of mortality, our sense of purpose, and the connections that anchor us can draw us back from distraction toward presence.

The Permission to Be Happy
Why do we hesitate to give ourselves permission to be happy? As though naming joy might somehow jinx it?

The hesitation runs deep. Part fear of impermanence, part guilt, part habit. We hold back from joy because we know it cannot last. Yet by refusing happiness out of fear, we become the very thing that destroys it.

Mortality has always been our teacher here. The rainbow captivates us precisely because it fades. A flower that never withered would lose its poetry. Every culture that has imagined immortality has ultimately cast it as a curse. In Greek mythology, Tithonus was granted eternal life but not eternal youth, condemned to age forever. Tolkien’s immortal elves grow weary of Middle-earth. In the Mahabharata, Ashwatthama is cursed to wander the earth forever, wounded and unable to die.

Endless life corrodes meaning. It’s death – not life without end – that sharpens the edges of beauty and gives weight to our choices.

The Complexity of Justice
The Mahabharata resists easy moral equations. When Ashwatthama, in his rage, slaughters innocent children in their sleep, Krishna curses him to immortality and eternal suffering. Was this justice or excess?

The epic offers a haunting perspective through Barbarik, a warrior blessed with the ability to see the entire war unfold. When asked who truly won, his answer cuts through all heroic narratives: no winners, no losers – only the divine play (leela) of forces beyond human comprehension.

The story suggests that our actions matter, that we choose freely, but within a larger script we cannot see in full. We are both authors and characters in our own stories.

The Sound of Silence
The Bible, too, wrestles with questions of fate and free will. Abraham dares to negotiate with God over the fate of Sodom. Jacob wrestles with an angel and wins a blessing. Even Jesus, in the Garden of Gethsemane, trembles at the edge of his destiny, asking if this cup might pass from him.

These stories suggest that even the divine responds to human voice and choice. This is why prayer matters – not necessarily to change outcomes, but to still the noise within us.

The prophet Elijah discovered this when he sought God’s voice. He looked for it in the dramatic – the wind, the earthquake, the fire. But God spoke instead in what some translations call “a still, small voice,” others “the sound of sheer silence.”

Drowning in Noise
The tragedy of our time is that silence has become unbearable. We’re drowning in notifications, social media feeds, and endless distractions. Dopamine has become our drug of choice, and stillness feels like withdrawal.

For many in their twenties and thirties, the idea of sitting quietly without a phone, without stimulation, without the constant input of information, can trigger anxiety. We’ve trained ourselves to equate busyness with productivity, noise with life.

Yet the whisper still waits. Some will stumble upon it in meditation apps, others in long walks or early morning quiet. Some will discover it in the forced stillness of illness or loss. The only authentic way to point others toward it is through example. As Gandhi understood: “My life is my message.”

Living Your Philosophy
This is what the ancient concept of dharma really means – not rigid moral rules, but living your deepest understanding without attachment to results. Your legacy isn’t yours to control; it’s a gift that unfolds in ways you’ll never fully see.

In the end, even our carefully constructed identities fall away. No role, no title, no reputation follows us beyond this life. What remains isn’t performance but presence – the quality of attention we brought to our days.

The Tethers That Hold Us
Beneath all our masks and achievements, what actually steadies us are the tethers we hold – the relationships, roles, and routines that give shape to our days.

For a twenty-five-year-old, these might be career ambitions and new relationships. For someone in their forties, perhaps the rhythms of parenting and professional identity. For those approaching sixty, maybe the roles they’ve inhabited for decades.

When these tethers are suddenly cut – through job loss, divorce, children leaving home, retirement, or health crises – the experience can feel like freedom or like freefall. Often both.

Depression frequently hides in these spaces between old tethers and new ones. The shock of detachment before fresh anchors are found. The disorientation of no longer being who we thought we were.

Learning to Float
The task isn’t to cling forever to what once held us, but to learn how to move gracefully from one tether to another. And sometimes, when the time comes, to float untethered without panic.

This is where silence becomes our teacher. Where our sense of purpose – our dharma – provides an inner compass when external guideposts disappear. Where the whisper can still be heard above the noise of change and uncertainty.

Enough
If there’s a thread running through all of this, it’s that life is never fully ours to control. Happiness slips away if we grasp too tightly. Our carefully planned legacies reshape themselves in other hands. Tethers loosen, identities shift, chapters end.

Yet in each transition, something deeper remains: the whisper that cuts through noise. To live fully is to learn to hear it – in joy and loss, in stability and change, in holding on and letting go.

And perhaps, if we listen long enough, we’ll discover that this whisper – this capacity for presence, for stillness, for hearing what matters beneath what clamours – is enough.

The noise will always be there. The whisper is always there, too. The question is: which one are you listening to?

 
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Posted by on 07/09/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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The Seasonal Gods of India

Each year, as the monsoon wanes, India’s festival season begins with Ganesha, remover of obstacles, patron of beginnings. Idols of clay and plaster appear in homes and neighbourhoods, worshipped with song, incense, and celebration. For days, devotion builds in colour and sound. Then, as abruptly as it began, it ends. The idols are carried to rivers and streams, immersed, and left to dissolve – abandoned!

To the casual eye, it can look like desecration. Images of broken idols floating in grey water invite outrage online, as though faith itself were discarded. But this mistake lies in confusing vessel with presence. The ritual of visarjan is no careless disposal; it is dissolution by design. The form is given up so that the formless might remain. The seasonal god arrives, is honoured, and departs – to return again. What looks like an ending is in truth the rhythm of impermanence, enacted in clay.

Yet the story is never this simple. Alongside Visarjan’s graceful cycle lie its distortions. Broken idols and faded images, unwanted at home, often end up under banyan or peepal trees. One becomes many, until a heap gathers at the roots. Out of fear of “doing wrong,” responsibility is deferred – to the tree, to the crowd, to the municipality. Passers-by, uneasy at the sight, begin to fold their hands. Incense appears, offerings follow. Soon, what began as avoidance becomes sanctity – a new shrine, sometimes even a temple, emerges.

Here devotion and superstition blur. One practice embraces impermanence, the other clings to permanence at all costs. One teaches release, the other multiplies clutter. Both, however, expose our deep unease with letting go.

This, perhaps, is the real paradox of India’s seasonal gods. They return each year not only to bless but to instruct – to remind us that reverence is not ownership, and that endings are part of every beginning. If we miss the lesson, what remains is not faith but residue: polluted rivers, encased trees, idols turned debris.

The gods themselves are not abandoned; it is we who risk being left behind – clinging to form, unwilling to see the wisdom in its passing.

Where we cling, the sacred withers; where we release, it returns.

 
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Posted by on 06/09/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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Hope and Faith

On gifts that surprise us and choices that sustain us

Faith and hope rarely follow a straight line. Sometimes we step out first, trusting what we cannot see. At other times, we are caught off guard by grace that breaks in unasked. This essay explores the double nature of both hope and faith – as gift that surprises us, and as response that sustains us.

Faith and hope are often spoken of in the same breath, yet their relationship is neither simple nor straightforward. Across human stories, the spark of trust and the flame of hope appear in different ways.

Sometimes faith looks proactive, like the one who leaves behind security to step into the unknown, trusting a promise they cannot yet see. At other times, faith follows encounter: the hesitant soul who needs repeated signs before they can act, the runaway who resists their calling until cornered, the sceptic struck down by an experience they cannot explain, the young woman entrusted with a destiny she never asked for, the weary wanderer revived by a whisper, the ordinary worker startled by a glimpse of the transcendent in the middle of the night.

These patterns suggest that faith is not always something we generate by effort. Sometimes it is discovered through action, yes – but just as often it is bestowed, breaking in unsought, sheer grace.

Hope follows the same rhythm. At times, it comes as gift – like breath filling empty lungs, a sudden infusion when all seems lost. At other times, it must be lived as response – a deliberate choice to keep breathing even when the air feels thin.

The gift keeps us from mistaking hope for little more than positive thinking. The response keeps us from waiting passively for rescue. Together, they show that hope is both surprise and practice: the grace that startles us into life, and the choice that sustains us once awakened.

Faith and hope, then, are not steps in a tidy sequence. They are cyclical, intertwined, often exchanging places as life unfolds. Sometimes faith births hope. Sometimes hope pulls us into faith. Sometimes, both ignite at once in the encounter of the unexpected.

The deeper mystery is not which comes first, but that both are somehow woven into us – gifts we receive, yet also calls we must answer. We are knit together with hope and faith, stitched through with the possibility of beginning again.

So is it hope or faith that prepares us for tomorrow’s sunrise? Perhaps both, but not in the same way. Hope lifts our eyes toward the horizon and whispers, there will be a tomorrow. Faith steadies us through the darkness and allows us to live as though the light is certain. Hope projects. Faith sustains. And together, they make it possible to endure the night and greet the dawn.

Note: This essay stands alongside my earlier Hope trilogy, where I explored hope in its fragile, collapsing, and transcendent forms. Here, I extend the reflection to its kinship with faith – not as a fourth instalment, but as a companion piece. Both hope and faith, I suggest, live in the same tension: sometimes discovered through our own response, sometimes given as unlooked-for gift.

 
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Posted by on 04/09/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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The Transcendence of Hope

We usually think of hope as something fragile, a flame flickering in the draft of circumstance. It rises with desire, collapses with despair, and rarely survives the blunt weight of disappointment. This ordinary hope is conditional – it ties itself to outcomes, to what we want or fear, and so it falters when the world refuses to obey.

But beyond this fragile traffic of wishes lies another form – a deeper, more defiant current I would call transcendental hope. This is not the hope of “things will turn out well” or “my time will come.” It is the hope that stares into mortality itself and still insists: there is continuity here, even in endings. Not because the facts promise it, but because the human spirit refuses annihilation.

The Limits of Hope
Ordinary hope is both necessary and insufficient. Necessary because it keeps us moving – the patient hopes for recovery, the student for success, the lover for recognition. Without it, life would stall. Yet it is insufficient because it is always tethered to conditions. When the result fails us, hope dies. And so we lurch between desire’s anticipation and despair’s collapse, like a speck of dust on a pendulum that never rests.

The Collapse into Hopelessness
Hopelessness is not simply the absence of hope – it is hope turned against itself. It says: nothing will change, nothing will come, there is no point in even trying. In hopelessness, we surrender to death in advance, living as though endings have already claimed us. Yet even here, something tells against despair: hopelessness feels unbearable precisely because we are knit together with hope.

The Leap to Transcendental Hope
There is, then, a third possibility. A hope that no longer clings to outcomes, that does not live or die with desire. Transcendental hope is not transactional – it is existential. It is the quiet faith that meaning endures even when the body fails, that continuity survives even when the chapter closes. Some traditions speak of afterlife, others of rebirth, still others of legacy and memory – but all circle the same intuition: what we are does not vanish into nothing.

This is why transcendental hope trumps even death. It does not pretend we will live forever. Instead, it whispers: what you are continues in others, in memory, in love, in courage. If you could, so can they. Mortality is no longer the extinguishing of the flame, but the passing of fire into other hands.

The Quiet Triumph
To live with transcendental hope is not to deny pain or loss, but to refuse their finality. It is to see desire and despair as siblings, and to know they are children of something greater. In the end, transcendental hope is less about the future and more about the continuity of being. It assures us that death’s reminder – today me, tomorrow you – can be transformed into invitation: today me, tomorrow you, carrying it further.

And that is its quiet triumph: hope turns mortality into continuity.

 
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Posted by on 03/09/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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The Economy of Hope

Hope is often mistaken for a private possession, something an individual either carries within or lacks entirely. But in truth, hope behaves more like a currency: inert when hoarded, alive only in circulation. A wad of money left in a wallet is meaningless until it is shared or spent. So too with hope – it finds value only when given away.

Hope as Projection
Human beings rarely sustain hope in isolation. More often, they project it outward – onto children, parents, partners, colleagues, even pets. The paradox is clear: the act of giving does not deplete them. It energises them. Their spirit is replenished in the smile, the sigh, the flicker of recognition in another’s eyes. Hope proves itself to be a renewable force, multiplying the moment it is released into the world.

Hope is not diminished when shared – it grows stronger.

The Peddlers and Gatekeepers
Yet, some have learned to exploit this currency. Religious preachers and televangelists peddle heaven for a “seed” offering. Political leaders promise golden tomorrows in exchange for loyalty today. Gurus, coaches, and institutions claim to be custodians of the beyond, holding the keys to fulfilment.

These figures appoint themselves gatekeepers of hope, controlling its supply and exacting a price from those who yearn for it most. In their hands, hope becomes debt – not gift.

In the false economy of hope, people are left poorer in spirit even as they pay for its illusion.

False vs True Economies
This is the tragedy of the false economy: when hope is commodified, it is corrupted. What ought to be a shared promise is reduced to a product. By contrast, the true economy of hope resists ownership. It multiplies only when shared, never when sold.

The difference is stark: between a parent reassuring a child in the night and a preacher selling eternal life in exchange for coin.

Innocence and Experience
William Blake’s vision offers a lens. In Songs of Innocence, hope appears abundant and unquestioned, the natural inheritance of a child who trusts the world will provide. In Songs of Experience, that same hope is tempered by scars, hedged with scepticism, shadowed by disappointment.

Both forms matter. Innocence keeps hope alive; Experience protects it from naïveté and exploitation. A mature economy of hope requires both – abundance and discernment, promise and caution.

The Arc of Influence
At the level of the everyday, each person carries what might be called an arc of influence – a sphere in which their presence radiates outward. Within this arc, hope can be offered in a thousand small ways: a word of reassurance, a gesture of loyalty, the quiet presence that steadies another.

Unlike money, the more hope circulates within this sphere, the more abundant it becomes. Those who receive it reflect it back – in trust, resilience, gratitude – sustaining the giver in return.

Hope is the only wealth that grows when spent.

Closing Reflection
In the end, the question is not whether one has hope, but whether one shares it. When hoarded, it stagnates. When sold, it corrupts. When given freely, it multiplies.

To abandon hope, as Dante’s Hell demands, is to abandon the very possibility of the future. To circulate hope is to affirm that tomorrow is still open, still alive with promise. The true economy of hope belongs not to peddlers or gatekeepers but to those who dare to give it away.

 
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Posted by on 02/09/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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Religion Sans Miracles

Beyond miracles: ethics, endurance, and the theatre of belief

In this two-part essay, I explore how faith reshapes itself once the promises of spectacle and certainty are stripped away.

For as long as human beings have told stories about the divine, miracles have been the headline act. Seas part, the sick rise, food appears, avatars descend. Even today, the promise of sudden breakthroughs sustains entire industries of televangelism and prosperity preaching. But here’s the uncomfortable thought: what happens if we strip miracles away? What remains of religion once the spectacle is gone?

This is a multi-page essay. Please use the buttons below to navigate.

 
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Posted by on 28/08/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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The Stadium as Temple

Modern Rituals: How We Worship Without Religion (Part 1/10)
A series on the sacred echoes in secular life.

This series has been moved to a new page.

 
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Posted by on 25/08/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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Whispers from Within

In a world that’s always in a rush, thank you for choosing to slow down… even just for a few minutes.

Today’s reflection is a personal one. And perhaps, in being personal, it will also feel familiar to you. It’s about slowing down. Not just as an antidote to stress or burnout—but as a sacred act. A spiritual practice. A way of being in conversation with life.

You can call “it” whatever you like—God, the divine, the universe, conscience, soul, inner voice, guardian angel, spirit guide… Whatever name you choose, it cannot be ignored. Nor can it be summoned by force.

In the 21st century, we’re too busy to listen. Too full of noise to notice. And yet, again and again, I’ve found that if I simply slow down and listen—really listen—everything begins to make sense.

Let me take you to an ancient story.

In 1 Kings 19:11–13, from the Hebrew Bible, the prophet Elijah is told that God will reveal Himself. Elijah waits through a windstorm, an earthquake, and a fire—but in each case, the text says, “the Lord was not in it.”
And then… comes a gentle whisper.
A still, small voice.

That’s where the sacred was found—not in the dramatic, but in the quiet.

That passage has stayed with me.
Because I’ve come to realise: most of life’s real answers come that way. Not through explosions or miracles. Not through certainty or spectacle. But in whispers. In pauses. In hindsight.

And for that, we have to be still enough to hear.

I can’t claim to have all the answers. But I do know this:

Every time I’ve ignored that quiet voice, I’ve regretted it.
Every time I’ve honoured it, I’ve grown.

Even when I didn’t understand it in the moment.
Even when it felt like a delay.
A hurdle. An inconvenience.

With time—often with hindsight—those moments made perfect sense.
They weren’t denials; they were detours.
Realignments. A gentle hand on the shoulder saying, “Not yet. Not this. Slow down.”

And over time, I began to trust that voice.

I no longer rush decisions.
When I’m in doubt, I slow down.
When I’m confused, I stop pushing.
And I wait for the clarity that comes not from logic—but from listening.

In that sense, I’ve come to believe that life is a conversation.
Not a race. Not a test. Not a checklist.
But a dialogue—with something larger than myself.

Some call it grace. Others call it divine timing.
But whatever the name, there’s a rhythm to life that doesn’t always match our calendars or ambitions. And if you listen, you start to notice it. To move with it, rather than against it.

So, when something doesn’t work out, I ask:
“What is this trying to teach me?”
“What if this isn’t punishment or failure, but protection or preparation?”

And more often than not, it is.

It’s a pause I didn’t know I needed.
A delay that creates space for a deeper alignment.
A ‘no’ that protects me from a path I don’t yet see clearly.

That’s not passivity. It’s not fatalism.
It’s discernment.
It’s the kind of wisdom that doesn’t come from control—but from communion.

We live in a world obsessed with speed.
Quick decisions. Instant responses. Fast results.
But spiritual clarity doesn’t operate at that frequency.

You can’t hear a whisper if you’re shouting.
You can’t see clearly if you’re sprinting.

And so, I’ve made peace with moving slowly.
In fact, I’ve come to see it as revolutionary.

To say:
“I don’t need to chase clarity. I only need to make room for it.”

That is my practice.
That is my philosophy.
That is my way of staying in touch with what truly matters.

And you know what?
You don’t need a temple to do this.
You don’t need a guru or a theology or a schedule.

All you need is a little space.
A little silence.
And a willingness to listen.

Because listening—true listening—is a spiritual act.

It’s how we return to ourselves.
It’s how we remember that we are part of something greater.
It’s how we stay open to mystery, to grace, to meaning.

And it’s how we live—not just react.

So, if you’re facing a crossroads right now…
If you’re restless, uncertain, overwhelmed…

Try this:
Don’t decide just yet.
Don’t push for clarity.

Just pause.
Slow down.
Make space.

And listen.

What you need to know is already within you.
But you won’t hear it until the noise settles.

The whisper is there.
It always has been.
And when you’re ready, it will speak.

Until then, rest in the silence.

Let it hold you.

Let it guide you.

And trust that everything is unfolding… just as it should.

Thank you for sharing this quiet space with me today.

If this reflection resonated with you, I hope you’ll take a few minutes to stay in silence, to breathe, to listen.

Because sometimes… that’s where life really begins.

Until next time, stay still… and stay true.

 
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Posted by on 18/05/2025 in Uncategorized

 

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