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Showing posts from 2025

New Poetry Book: Whispers Between Silence and Light

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  Amazon:  Whispers Between Silence and Light  Whispers Between Silence and Light Every once in a while, life slows down just enough for us to hear what we’ve been missing. For me, that happened over the last few years—walking quiet trails, sitting by rivers, watching the light change on mountains. Somewhere in those moments, this poetry collection began speaking to me. The poems in this collection arrived during tiny pauses in life—those in-between spaces where thought slips into feeling. The space before the first whisper , as one of the opening pieces calls it: “ There is a space between silence and light— not quite absence, not yet form— where breath listens and the heart speaks without sound.” That’s really where this book was born. Not in dramatic moments, but in the gentle ones. The book is divided into six sections—awakening, dreams, love, memory, the earth, and finally, the quiet within. Each section carries pieces of my own journey, but I wrote them hopi...

A Pilgrimage - Walking on Camino Frances

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The Beginning of a Calling Almost a decade ago, I stumbled into the world of Paulo Coelho, beginning with The Alchemist . His words struck a chord—an elegant blend of spirituality, self-discovery, and emotion that felt both intimate and universal. One book led to another, until I had read nearly all of his works. Even today, when I find myself restless and searching for my next read, I return to Coelho—or sometimes to Herman Hesse’s Siddhartha —as if to steady myself. Among his books, The Pilgrimage left a lasting imprint. In it, Coelho recounts his walk along the Camino Francés to Santiago de Compostela, a journey of endurance, faith, and reflection. I could almost see myself there, step by step, breathing in the silence of old paths. Some time later, I watched The Way , the film where Martin Sheen walks the Camino to complete the journey his son could not. That story deepened the pull. The idea of a pilgrimage was no longer just in books or films—it began to live inside me. Since...

Story of Zero ("0")

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The Story of Zero For centuries, Western scholars believed that the invention of zero (“0”) came from the Arab world. But only in the late 20th century was its true origin traced back to ancient India—a revelation that piqued my curiosity about how the Indo numeral system spread.  This blog is not a scholarly paper. It reflects my understanding, based on readings, especially two books: 1) Finding Zero by Amir Aczel, which I read in 2023, and 2) The Golden Road by William Dalrymple in 2025. My goal for this blog was to write a simple story that I can remember.  The Finding Zero book discusses the search for early evidence of an artifact of “zero.” For a long time, a temple wall in Gwalior, India (876 CE) , held the distinction of displaying the oldest known inscriptional zero. The inscription clearly shows a '0' in the numbers "270" and "50".   The Bakhshali Manuscript (content believed by some to be from the 3rd or 4th century CE) : This ancient mathemati...