I'm about to celebrate the first anniversary of my association with Sulekha. Blogging with Sulekha has been a very enriching experience. I started blogging in 2001 with Blogspot. A couple of years later I switched allegiance to Indiatimes blogs in order to woo more Indian readers. I did get more readers but of a different 'generation'. Finally in the leisure of the last summer vacation I stumbled across Sulekha and discovered some of its mature bloggers and readers. And now in the leisure of the present summer vacation I'm enjoying the luxury of taking a look at the past, which is perhaps the only immortal thing we have in our life.
There are many Sulekhites who are eminently memorable. Raj Arumugam comes to mind first of all. "There are two crucial aspects in life: positive thinking and oneness," says Raj in his profile on Sulekha. His writings bear witness to his positive thinking and his sense of oneness. What has fascinated me most is his view on seeing without judging.
see friend, while everything else prescribes to you
and leads to argument and division -
poetry is seeing directly
Those are Raj's lines. [http://rajarumugam.sulekha.com/blog/post/2008/04/and-what-does-poetry-do.htm] And he writes precisely with that intention of showing us what he sees without passing verdict on it. He perceives the amazing variety of the smorgasbord that reality is with all its rich colours and flavours.
Raj reads and digests your blog thoroughly before making a comment on it. He also has a special talent for discovering something good even in the most banal-looking article. That's an admirable quality in a teacher. I hope to inculcate that quality in me.
Raghuram Ekambaram is another Sulekhite who fascinated me with the power of his convictions and the vastness of his knowledge. He is scientific to the core. Utterly logical. I should find myself at the opposite pole. I love literature (which is seldom concerned with logic) and find little charm in science except for its usefulness in understanding physical reality. I was a student of science (maths, to be more precise) once upon a time. But I was bowled over by literature. (What a shift it was from Calculus and Real Analysis to Camus and D H Lawrence!) Then what did I find so charming about Raghuram? People of deep convictions are very rare in today's world. Raghuram is one of those rare creatures, member of a vanishing tribe in today's world.
One who can make statements like, "You may call it (his spirituality) spiritual ignorance or arrogance. Amen to that", and "Am I bold enough? Yes. Am I an atheist? I am not sure. I am straddling atheism and agnosticism, but in my own way. I deal with the issue in a utilitarian sense. Of what use the concept of God is to me? Here is where I go blind" deserve a salute.
[A warning to Raghuram, however: As Shakespeare said there is something common to the poet, the lover and the lunatic - a wayward imagination. That imagination may make people like me look a little too incoherent at times to a man of science.]
DMR Sekhar captured my fancy with his short poems which have the quality of the Japanese haiku. Take this, for example:
raging fire [http://dmrsekhar.sulekha.com/blog/post/2008/02/raging-fire.htm]
the truth will spread out
even if ye hide it
as if a raging fire
await a nightmare ye, liar.
Later on, DMR moved away from that beautiful form of self-expression to history. Eventually his blog pieces started becoming rare. He told me the reason. I hope he will overcome that problem and start giving us those brilliant short poems again.
D Sampath is a very gifted writer. Every line of his stories (or real life experiences, as he projects them to be) is a treat to the soul. They take you to his farms, home, kitchen, workplace, just anywhere and let you have a few hearty laughs. No wonder he has such a large number of fans. His writing enchants you.
Padmaja is a Sulekhite who caught my attention with her very generous comments on some of my blogs. A self-effacing person, ["I am one of those ordinary persons that you come across in your day-to-day life," confesses her profile statement] she writes beautiful poetry. The beauty of her lines is not confined to their rhythm and cadence; the feelings in them often carry a sublime quality.
Indu breezed into my world with a request for my contribution to her Page 3 column on women's day. Finally when her Page 3 came alive on the network I was flabbergasted by the patience and meticulousness she had put in to make the contributions from diverse sources read like a fluent, logical piece. Hats off to her tremendous potential.
There are many other Sulekhites whom I won't forget. Kamekish, for instance, is the first Sulekhite that I met personally. He was generous enough to accept my invitation as a judge for a national debate competition at my school. It was his constant preoccupation with contemporary matters that drew me to his blogs.
Dawn and Dew is a blogger who accepted my invitation and joined Sulekha. Some of her comments on my blogs have meant much to me. Binumuscat and Geekunnel have been generous with their comments on many of my articles. Binu writes with her pen dipped in her blood. No, blood doesn't always stand for revolution; it has much deeper hues. Gee's poems have a peculiar charm, the charm of simplicity and grace, realism and optimism.
Shajan is another very intelligent blogger at Sulekha. I find his obsession with science and religion worth paying attention to. Thomas Cherian's stories have realism coupled with interesting twists and turns.
This is not an exhaustive list of Sulekhites that I read. I just mentioned those who had some particular impact on me. There are two other bloggers who are not currently very active. One is Kayzzaman, whose poems are divine and earthy at the same time. They are not at all easy to understand, but are worth spending time on. Due to some personal reasons, he is unable to write much nowadays. My best wishes are with him. The other is Mr Raghunathan Kadangode, who too has withdrawn from Sulekha for personal reasons. Reading his elaborate writing that can digress with graceful elegance was a unique experience.
A final note: The number of blogs shown on my profile page is not correct. Since my Sulekha post page stopped opening after I had posted about 100 articles, I downloaded Windows Livewriter. Each article posted using Livewriter is counted as two by Sulekha for some mysterious reason. My actual contribution to Sulekha is much less than the number shown. About a score of them have been featured by Sulekha so far and I congratulate myself for that achievement. Thanks to Sulekha and to all the readers who have been patient with my ideas, some of which are not very orthodox. I do look forward to an even more creative engagement with Sulekha in the future. Close
Matheikal Sb.Thanks.
DMR Sekhar.
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dear matheikal,
i feel privileged that you should mention my name in the list of people whom you liked...
i have always admired your blogs and found you sometimes humorous , sometimes pasionate, some times informative and some times very philosphical.All those you have mentioned are also good friends of mine....do continue to write with the type of directness you have been exhibiting and the care you have shown. happy anniversary...
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thanks....matheikal. That you found me worthy to mention. Especially when it comes from some one as erudite and learned like you...it makes a difference
Thank you sir and take care
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Dear Matheikal
thnx a lot for including my name in your list of friends!!!!!!so happy to have a wonderful friend like you!!! I'm grateful to you dear!!!!!
Regards
geekunnel
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Congratulations, Matheikal! You are one of those bloggers whom I would love to visit again and again. I admire the way you handle the subjects with an open mind and matured approach. I had always marvelled at your sharp writing acumen and have a fear to comment which would expose my ignorance.
I value your every comment imprinted on my blogs. They are precious to me.
I am honoured for including my name too (though it doesn't deserve), Matheikal. I don't know how to thank you more. Keep writing more and more.
With kind regards,
Padmaja
P.S. By the way, two days back only I changed my 'About me'. Now it reads - 'A visitor on Earth'.
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Dear Mat
Surprised to see this Blog. Thank you very much for writing my name in this list. This is like a life line for me. I am grateful to you for this. Your clarity of vision is an excellent energizer in this bleak, depressing world.
Regards
Binu
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Dear Matheikal, Congratulations for completing one year of your Sulekha Blogging. Writing is the basic human necessity as basic as speaking if you accumulate some wisdom. And I am happy that you are doing this with your vigor and generosity and have completed many years doing i.e since 2001.
There was a time when wisdom was available to only few people. Today, thanks to these blogsites and other features of networking, wisdom has become a common stuff. It is available easily and cheaply. But then, there is a constraints of complacency. We may become stale in having wisdom if we are unable to creat some dynamic wisdom sources as well as bring some dynamism in existing wisdom. Hope you are able to do it in the days to come.
Change is essential. Change become challenge when we confront with conservativeness and traditions. Hope we allow change to flow like a river water. Never be contented with the stone thrown in ponds.
It had been pleasure meeting you, talking to you and overall reading your views. Hope, dynamism soaked wisdom keep flowing through your pen and appear in your blogs.
Always confront ideas, not individuals.
Congratulations again and wish you all the very best.
kamekish
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Matheikal, I am honored by your reference. Thank you. I have always found your posts incisive and intelligent. I should work much harder to reach the level of clarity you and others you mention display in writing.
-shajan
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Matheikal
Thanks for the generous blog; it's important for each one of us to make cross-references and to acknowledge one another for that truly gives each of us a pat on the shoulder that we all occasioanlly need to re-assure us that what we are doing is being appreciated.
Yes, it's a pity that Sekhar is not continuing with his short poems (he is modeled on his favorite poet Sri Sri) and I look forward to the days when he will start again with his wonderful short poems. I do miss him a great deal.
That I and many others return constantly to your blogs shows the high regard in which we hold your writing and thought.
I'll try and visit the other bloggers you've mentioned; and as the blogger purefriendship says, certainly there are many whose meaningful expressions are unique in its own way.
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Dear sir,
Since I truely took to sincere writing (because earlier I was just a light-hearted amateur), I felt the same transformation (as you quoted T.S. Eliot), though not much, in my nature. I'm quite certain about this fact.
And when I said I couldn't find any comment on my writing I myself clearly understood that I don't deserve any and so I wrote, "I couldn't contribute much to my score of writings, it seems". I was partially disappointed and partially sportive too to ask for a comment on an incomplete task with silly niceness!
Truely speaking, I felt I couldn't write much in time to deserve your comment at this hour and not for your very comment before I could write anything. Please don't apologise, sir.
I still have to learn a lot about writing. So I choose to deny any recognition in this field before reaching any milestone. Thanks.
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