Saturday, March 28, 2026

Years Later: What the Ashram Changed Without Announcing It

Some places announce their influence immediately. They demand gratitude, loyalty, or return visits. The Sri Aurobindo Ashram does none of this. Years can pass before one realizes that the Ashram never really stayed behind in Pondicherry—it relocated, almost unnoticed, into the texture of ordinary life.

This piece is written from that distance.


V. Afterward

(Poem written years later, remembering the Ashram)

I no longer remember the exact room,
only that it faced inward.
The color of the walls has thinned in memory,
but the pause remains.

Years have added noise—
deadlines, arguments, responsibilities
that insist on being addressed immediately.
Yet something in me does not rush anymore.

I did not carry back beliefs.
Those would have cracked under use.
What stayed was a habit—
to wait a moment longer
before responding.

Sometimes, without warning,
a crow’s call arrests me mid-thought.
Not for its sound,
but for the space it opens behind it.

Incense appears in stranger forms now:
dust after rain,
old paper,
the warmth of sunlight on cotton.
The body remembers before the mind agrees.

I have not returned to the Ashram.
It did not require upkeep.

What changed was quieter than conviction—
a rearrangement of attention,
a trust that stillness is available
even when not invited.

The place did not make me different.
It made difference less urgent.

And that, I have learned,
is a form of freedom.


What Actually Changed Internally

Looking back, it becomes clear that the Ashram’s influence was structural rather than emotional.

It did not:

  • produce permanent calm

  • remove conflict

  • replace doubt with certainty

Instead, it altered how inner events are handled.

1. A Changed Relationship with Urgency

Before, every thought demanded response.
Afterward, some thoughts were allowed to pass unchallenged.

This is not detachment in the classical sense, but delayed reaction—a skill rarely taught, but deeply transformative.


2. Silence Became Portable

Silence ceased to be something that required a protected room. It became something that could briefly appear:

  • between two sentences

  • before an email reply

  • in the moment just before irritation solidifies

This is perhaps the most Aurobindonian outcome: not withdrawal from life, but a subtle mastery within it.


3. Spirituality Lost Its Costume

Years later, the symbols have faded:

  • no particular posture

  • no borrowed vocabulary

  • no urge to narrate the experience

What remains is functional rather than expressive. It works quietly. It does not advertise.

The Ashram did not make one “spiritual.”
It made one less compulsive.


Remembering Without Nostalgia

Nostalgia romanticizes the past. Memory, in this case, performs a different task—it reveals continuity.

The Ashram is remembered not as a destination, but as an initial condition:
a place where something unnecessary was first allowed to drop.

That is why years later, the memory still matters.

Not because it was intense.
But because it was precise.


Closing the Circle

The five poems trace a human arc:

  1. Arrival without knowing

  2. Practice amid sound

  3. Belonging through repetition

  4. Departure without attachment

  5. Integration without effort

This was never about Pondicherry alone.
It was about learning how not to carry everything forward.

The Ashram did not follow me home.

But something it removed
never returned.

Friday, March 27, 2026

The Last Silence: Leaving Pondicherry

 Leaving Pondicherry is rarely dramatic. There is no final benediction, no ceremony to mark departure. The Ashram does not insist on closure. It lets people leave as they arrived—quietly, with their own thoughts slightly rearranged.

For many, it is only after boarding a bus, watching the pastel streets dissolve into highway dust, that the experience begins to cohere. What seemed uneventful acquires weight. What felt like “nothing happening” reveals itself as a kind of preparation.

This fourth poem belongs to that moment.


IV. Departure

(Poem from someone leaving Pondicherry)

The sea stays behind,
still doing what it always did.
The Ashram gates close
without sound or ceremony.

My bag is lighter than when I came—
books unread, questions unresolved.
Only the smell remains, faint but persistent:
incense folded into cloth and memory.

The crow’s voice follows me farther than expected,
echoing somewhere between stations,
between what I sought
and what I did not know I was given.

I leave without answers.
This surprises me less than it should.

The silence I sat with does not come along—
but something steadier does:
a way of pausing
before reacting,
before deciding,
before speaking.

Pondicherry recedes.
The world resumes its volume.
Yet somewhere inside,
a room remains unlocked.

I do not promise return.
The place did not ask for that.

It taught me only this:
how to carry stillness
without needing to explain it.


Why the Ashram Never Over-Explained Meditation

To understand why leaving feels this way, it helps to know how meditation was historically approached at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram.

Unlike many spiritual institutions, the Ashram never formalized meditation through rigid rules or techniques. This was deliberate.

1. No Mandatory Method

Sri Aurobindo explicitly avoided prescribing a single meditation technique. In letters to disciples, he often warned against mechanical concentration or forced silence. Meditation, for him, was not a posture or a method but a state of receptivity.

“Silence is not made; it comes.”

As a result:

  • There were no mantras imposed

  • No compulsory visualizations

  • No insistence on posture beyond basic stillness

This explains why first-time visitors often feel uncertain: nothing is being done to them.


2. Silence Was Preferred Over Instruction

Historically, even in the Ashram’s early years (1910s–1930s), group meditations were conducted with minimal verbal guidance. Instructions were often limited to:

  • Enter quietly

  • Sit still

  • Leave without discussion

This restraint was intentional. Sri Aurobindo believed excessive explanation fed the mind rather than quieted it. The Mother later continued this approach, emphasizing atmosphere over technique.

Hence the characteristic Ashram experience:

  • The bell rings

  • People sit

  • Birds intrude

  • Incense burns

  • Nothing is corrected

And yet something works.


3. Discipline Without Display

While the rules were few, they were strictly understated:

  • Silence was observed not as a moral rule but as a supporting condition

  • Photography, talking, and casual movement were discouraged—not punished

  • Regularity mattered more than intensity

The Mother once remarked that outer discipline existed only to protect inner freedom. This is why the Ashram feels structured but not authoritarian, serious but not severe.


Why Leaving Feels Different from Arrival

When people leave Pondicherry, they often report the same paradox:

“Nothing happened—but I’m not the same.”

This is not accidental. The Ashram was never designed to produce peak experiences. It was designed to re-train attention, slowly and almost invisibly.

The four poems together trace this arc:

  1. Arrival without knowing

  2. Sitting amid sound

  3. Learning to stay

  4. Leaving without needing

The Ashram does not hold you.
It teaches you how not to cling.

And that lesson, once learned, travels well.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

A Third Silence: The First-Time Visitor Arrives

Most people who come to the Sri Aurobindo Ashram do not arrive as seekers in full possession of faith. They arrive with guidebook knowledge, half-remembered quotations, and expectations borrowed from photographs. The Ashram, however, does not immediately announce itself as sacred. It allows misunderstanding. It permits awkwardness. It does not rush revelation.

For a first-time visitor, meditation here is not yet vast or integral—it is uncertain. The body fidgets. The rules feel unspoken. The silence seems deliberate, almost watchful. And yet, something begins to work quietly, beneath analysis.

The poem below captures that first encounter.


III. The First Sitting

(Poem from a first-time visitor)

I do not know where to place my hands.
Others seem to have learned this already.
The floor is cool, older than my questions,
and the room smells faintly of flowers and smoke.

A crow calls—too loudly, I think—
and I wonder if this is allowed.
No one moves.
The sound stays, then softens,
as if it, too, has been instructed.

Incense drifts past like a suggestion,
not asking belief,
only breath.
I inhale without deciding to.

My thoughts line up neatly at first,
eager to perform:
Be still. Be spiritual. Notice something important.
They tire quickly.

Time behaves differently here.
Not slow—
just unambitious.

I expect a moment, a signal,
some interior confirmation.
Instead, there is only sitting,
and the surprising effort it takes
to do nothing well.

A bird hops across the courtyard,
unconcerned with my arrival.
Someone coughs.
The crow calls again.

And then—nothing changes,
yet something has loosened.
I do not feel elevated.
I feel… placed.

When the bell rings,
I stand as instructed,
carrying with me no insight I can quote,
only a quiet certainty
that I will sit again.


What the First Visit Teaches

Unlike the earlier poems—one vast, one sensorial—this third poem is about initiation without drama. The Ashram does not overwhelm the newcomer with revelation. It does something subtler: it removes urgency.

For the first-time visitor:

  • Silence feels constructed, not natural.

  • Sound feels awkward, not sacred.

  • Stillness feels difficult, not peaceful.

And yet, that difficulty is precisely the threshold. Sri Aurobindo’s path was never about immediate consolation. It was about education of consciousness, and education always begins with discomfort.

The visitor leaves not transformed—but oriented.


Three Poems, One Movement

Read together, the three poems trace a quiet arc:

  1. The resident enters vastness.

  2. The practitioner integrates sound, smell, and life.

  3. The visitor learns how to sit without expectation.

This is how the Ashram works—not by revelation, but by repetition. Not by spectacle, but by return.

The crow will still be there tomorrow.
So will the incense.
So, perhaps, will you.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Two Silences at the Ashram: One Within, One Alive with Sound

Anyone who has sat in meditation at the Sri Aurobindo Ashram knows that silence there is not the absence of sound. It is a quality—sometimes vast and inward, sometimes textured with the everyday life of the place. Dawn brings with it the cawing of crows, the sharp questions of mynas, the soft stitching of sparrows across the morning air. Incense burns somewhere nearby, reminding the body that devotion is not abstract—it has weight, scent, and residue.

The two poems below explore these two modes of Ashram meditation.
The first leans inward, toward the Aurobindonian vastness of consciousness.
The second remains outward-facing, letting sound and smell become gateways rather than distractions.

Together, they reflect how the Ashram teaches not escape from life—but its transformation.


I. Meditation as Vastness

(An inward, Aurobindo-inspired mode)

At the Ashram, Before Dawn

In the stillness where the breath of Time grows thin
I sit, a listening flame in human clay.
The walls are quiet with remembered prayers,
Stone holding silence like a sacred vow.

Thought loosens its bright knots of urge and will;
The mind’s swift horses stand, their hooves at rest.
A wider hush descends, not empty, no—
It thrums with presences unseen, immense.

From inward depths a nameless light ascends,
Not born of sense nor shaped by mortal sight.
It lifts the heart beyond its fragile self
Into a vastness calm, awake, and kind.

Here ego’s small arithmetic dissolves;
The soul remembers older truths than words.
A rhythm greater than my pulse takes hold,
A cosmic patience schooling human time.

I feel the slow arrival of the Real—
Not thunderous, but steady as the dawn.
It asks no flight from earth or flesh or pain,
But bids the Infinite inhabit form.

So in this house of earth and aspiring light
I learn the art of patient becoming—
To let the Eternal work through mortal days
Until the soul stands naked in the sun.

This is meditation as expansion. Sound recedes. Sensation thins. The world is not denied, but gently exceeded. This poem follows Sri Aurobindo’s characteristic movement: from mind → soul → cosmic consciousness → divine embodiment.

It is a silence that contains everything.


II. Meditation as Presence

(A sensory, grounded counter-poem)

Morning at the Ashram Courtyard

A crow breaks open the silence—
harsh, insistent, unmistakably here.
Another answers from the neem,
black punctuation in the pale sky.

Mynas rehearse the day’s first arguments,
sparrows scatter like loose thoughts,
and somewhere a bell completes
what the birds began.

I try to still the mind,
but the world keeps arriving—
wingbeat, echo, footstep, breath.

Incense drifts in, uninvited,
resin and ash,
a sweetness that clings
to cotton clothes and memory.

Smoke curls upward,
writing prayers no one needs to read.
The body inhales devotion
before belief can interfere.

The crow calls again—
not as disturbance now,
but as reminder:
this too is the mantra.

Nothing withdraws.
Nothing is excluded.
Awareness learns to sit
in the middle of the noise

until sound itself becomes still.

This second poem refuses transcendence by subtraction. Instead, it practices Integral Yoga by inclusion. The crows are not errors in meditation; they are collaborators. The incense does not merely sanctify the space—it anchors awareness in the body, in breath, in the present moment.

Here, meditation does not lift us away from life.
It teaches us how to stay.


Two Ways of the Same Path

These poems are not opposites. They are successive deepenings.

  • The first reflects the Ashram’s inner architecture—its philosophy, its silence, its long work of consciousness.

  • The second reflects its lived reality—the birds, the smoke, the courtyard, the imperfect and breathing now.

Sri Aurobindo’s yoga was never about escaping the crow’s caw or the smell of incense. It was about arriving at a state where nothing is outside the practice.

The Ashram teaches this quietly, every morning.

You only have to sit long enough to notice.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

When Systems Save Lives—and When They Break Them: Sweden, Bureaucracy, and the Fragility of Fairness

There is a certain moral comfort in stories like The Swedish Connection. They reassure us that even within rigid systems, individuals can bend rules to produce humane outcomes. That bureaucracy—often dismissed as cold and mechanical—can become an instrument of quiet heroism.

But what happens when the same kind of system produces the opposite outcome?

A recent real-world case forces us to confront that question—not abstractly, but uncomfortably.


The Swedish Connection: What Really Happened

The Netflix film The Swedish Connection is based on the real-life diplomat Gösta Engzell, a mid-level Swedish official during World War II.

Historically:

  • Engzell headed the legal department dealing with visas and immigration
  • Initially, Sweden restricted Jewish entry, aligning with a cautious neutrality
  • Around 1942, after learning about worsening conditions, Engzell helped shift policy
  • His efforts contributed to rescuing tens of thousands of Jews (approximately 30,000–40,000)

The film captures a real and important truth:

Bureaucracy, when interpreted creatively, can save lives.

But it also simplifies and dramatizes:

  • It portrays Engzell as a reluctant individual transformed by a moral awakening
  • It condenses complex institutional processes into individual decisions
  • It adds narrative elements (such as specific characters and urgency arcs) for storytelling

So while the core is true, the film is not a documentary but a dramatized lens on systemic action.


The Bengaluru Founder: What Actually Happened

Now contrast this with a recent case:

Abhijith Nag Balasubramanya, an Indian entrepreneur who built a startup in Sweden.

What is factually supported:

  • He founded Hydro Space Sweden AB, a microgreens startup
  • Built the company rapidly and created local jobs
  • Sold the company and returned to India after visa issues
  • Publicly stated he was forced to leave due to Sweden’s migration system

His main allegations:

  • Authorities lacked business understanding
  • Documentation requirements were unclear
  • Grounds for rejection changed during the process
  • The system was hostile, dysfunctional, and even xenophobic

How Reliable Is His Case?

This is where nuance matters.

What strengthens his credibility:

  • His company existed and operated
  • Multiple outlets report consistent details of his claims
  • Others have reported similar experiences anecdotally

What limits full verification:

  • The story originates largely from his own public account
  • There is no official detailed response from Swedish authorities
  • Immigration decisions depend on specific legal and financial criteria not fully public

This means we are seeing a well-documented personal account, not a fully adjudicated or independently verified case.


A More Balanced Interpretation

There are several plausible explanations, which may overlap:

  1. System failure
    Poor communication, rigid interpretation, or administrative inconsistency
  2. Regulatory mismatch
    Startup success does not necessarily align with visa eligibility criteria
  3. Incomplete public information
    Some requirements may not have been met but are not visible in reporting

The Deeper Contrast: Same System, Different Outcomes

Now place both stories side by side:

  • Engzell (World War II): People allowed in through flexible interpretation of rules
  • Modern founder: Person forced out through rigid application of rules

Same structure, opposite outcomes.


The Real Insight: Bureaucracy Has No Moral Direction

The key lesson is uncomfortable:

Systems do not produce justice. They produce consistency with their incentives.

In Engzell’s time:

  • Incentives shifted under moral pressure
  • Individuals took risks
  • Rules were stretched

In the modern case:

  • Incentives reward risk avoidance
  • Officials minimize error rather than injustice
  • Rules are followed defensively

From Moral Courage to Procedural Safety

The transition from Engzell’s world to today reflects a broader shift.

Then:

  • Responsibility was personal
  • Decisions were visible
  • Moral stakes were explicit

Now:

  • Responsibility is distributed
  • Decisions are procedural
  • Moral stakes are abstracted

The result is a system that is more consistent, but not necessarily more humane.


The Orwellian Layer

This is where George Orwell’s warning becomes relevant again.

The system does not say:
“We are excluding you unfairly.”

It says:
“You do not meet criteria.”

The language is neutral. The outcome is not.


The Fragility of Fair Systems

We often assume countries like Sweden operate in ways that are rational, transparent, and meritocratic.

But this case suggests something more complex:

A system can be structurally fair and yet experientially arbitrary.

Not because of corruption, but because of:

  • Interpretation
  • Incentives
  • Institutional culture

Final Reflection: Who Benefits from Flexibility?

The real question is not whether the system works.

It is:
Who gets the benefit of flexibility, and who faces rigidity?

In one era:

  • Flexibility saved thousands of lives

In another:

  • Rigidity ends careers, companies, and aspirations

Closing Thought

The Swedish Connection suggests that humanity can survive within systems.

The Bengaluru founder’s story reminds us that humanity is not guaranteed within systems.

The difference between those two realities is not structural.

It is human.

Decided quietly, interpreted invisibly, and experienced very differently depending on which side of the system one stands.

Iron Balls at Dusk: Watching Pétanque in White Town

At dusk in White Town, when the heat loosens its grip and the bougainvillea shadows lengthen across Rue Suffren, the street quietly becomes a court. A small circle is traced with a toe. Three iron balls clink softly in a cloth bag. Conversation pauses—not fully, just enough. Pétanque is about to begin.

The rules are simple, almost stubbornly so. A small wooden ball—the cochonnet—is tossed first, landing somewhere between fallen leaves and the uneven memory of the road. Players stand with both feet inside a circle and throw their heavy metal balls underhand, trying to land them closer to the jack than their opponent’s. One point for each boule closer than the nearest rival ball. First to 13 points wins, though in White Town, time often wins first. There is no referee. Disputes are settled by laughter, argument, and finally a tape measure pulled from someone’s pocket.

The game arrived here quietly, as many French things did. Pétanque was formalised in southern France in 1907, when a former boules player, unable to run, invented a version that required players to stand still (pieds tanqués—feet planted). French administrators, soldiers, and settlers carried it to colonies, but in Pondicherry it did something unusual: it stayed. Long after tricolours were lowered, the iron balls remained.

Old residents still recall evenings when French clerks played beside Tamil dockworkers, language barriers dissolved by the physics of a well-thrown boule. There were no clubs, no uniforms—just streets, sand, and shade. That informality survives. Today, the players are mostly older men, though occasionally a younger passerby is handed a boule with a nod that says, try.

Globally, pétanque has traveled far from its Provençal roots. It is now played in over 100 countries, with international federations, world championships, and televised matches. Thailand, Madagascar, Laos, and Vietnam field formidable teams; pétanque is even recognised by the Global Association of International Sports Federations (GAISF). In France, it can be fiercely competitive. In Pondicherry, it remains gently resistant to that seriousness.

As darkness settles, the streetlight flickers on. The final throw lands with a dull, perfect thud. Someone wins. Someone disagrees. The balls are gathered, the circle erased by passing feet. What lingers is not the score, but the sound—the soft iron music of a game that crossed oceans and decided, here, to grow old slowly.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

From Ashram to City: A Living Timeline of Aurobindo, the Mother, and Auroville

Some histories unfold quietly and then vanish.

Others fracture, reinvent themselves, survive crises—and continue anyway.

The story of Sri Aurobindo, the Mother, the Ashram, and Auroville belongs firmly to the second kind. It is not one story, but two intertwined experiments: one inward and disciplined, the other outward and audacious.

To understand it, it helps to see it unfold.


A Textual Visual Timeline (Bird’s-Eye View)

1872 ──┬─ Birth of Sri Aurobindo | 1905 ──┼─ Revolutionary politics, Bande Mataram | 1910 ──┼─ Aurobindo arrives in Pondicherry (exile) | 1914 ──┼─ The Mother arrives; inner recognition | 1920 ──┼─ The Mother returns for good | 1926 ──┼─ Ashram formally begins (Siddhi Day) | 1950 ──┼─ Death of Sri Aurobindo | 1968 ──┼─ Auroville inaugurated | 1973 ──┼─ Death of the Mother | 1988 ──┼─ Auroville Foundation Act (rescue & autonomy) | 2008 ──┴─ Matrimandir inner chamber completed

Two decisive “hinge moments” shape everything:

  • 1926 — the Ashram becomes a living institution

  • 1968 — Auroville leaps beyond the Ashram form


Act I: Exile Becomes Foundation (1910–1920)

Sri Aurobindo arrived in Pondicherry in 1910, not as a spiritual teacher, but as a political exile. British India was no longer safe; French territory was.

Pondicherry was small, peripheral, and unfinished—qualities that mattered later.

In 1914, Mirra Alfassa arrived. Their meeting was understated outwardly, decisive inwardly. Neither proclaimed a movement. No ashram existed. Yet something irreversible began.

World War I separated them. When the Mother returned in 1920, she returned to stay.

🧳 ✨ Europe → Pondicherry (search) (recognition)

Act II: The Ashram Takes Shape (1926–1950)

1926 — The Turning Point

On 24 November 1926, Sri Aurobindo withdrew almost completely from outer life. He handed responsibility for everything visible—people, money, buildings, discipline—to the Mother.

This is the true birth of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram.

It did not grow like a monastery.
It spread house by house across Pondicherry.

🏠 🏠 🏠 🏠 🏠 (Ashram without walls)

During this period:

  • disciples arrived from India and Europe

  • education, work, and daily life were reorganized

  • the Mother became administrator, teacher, guardian, and anchor

In 1950, Sri Aurobindo died. Many expected the Ashram to dissolve.

It didn’t.

That survival proved something essential: the work had become institutional without becoming hollow.


Act III: From Discipline to Experiment (1950–1968)

After 1950, the Mother faced a question the Ashram could not answer:

How does transformation move beyond protected, inward spaces?

Her answer was not reform—it was creation.

Auroville was conceived as:

  • non-religious

  • non-national

  • non-hierarchical

  • future-oriented

On 28 February 1968, Auroville was inaugurated with soil from 124 nations.

🌍 + 🌱 + 👥 = Auroville

If the Ashram refined consciousness, Auroville would test it in life.


Act IV: Crisis After the Mother (1973–1988)

In 1973, the Mother died.

The center disappeared overnight.

Auroville entered its most fragile phase:

  • internal power struggles

  • ideological splits

  • conflict with the Ashram

  • risk of land loss and fragmentation

For fifteen years, Auroville hovered near collapse.

Then, in 1988, the Government of India passed the Auroville Foundation Act, granting statutory protection and autonomous governance.

⚖️ → 🛡️ Law becomes shelter

This moment saved Auroville—not by freezing it, but by stabilizing it enough to continue evolving.


Act V: Parallel Maturity (1990s–Present)

Since the 1990s, the two experiments have matured side by side.

The Ashram today

  • inward

  • stable

  • textual and disciplinary custodian

  • deliberately non-expansionist

Auroville today

  • decentralized

  • ecological and social laboratory

  • globally networked

  • perpetually unfinished

In 2008, the inner chamber of the Matrimandir was completed—a quiet marker of long endurance rather than triumph.


Why This History Matters

Most movements fracture when:

  • founders die

  • authority vanishes

  • experiments fail

  • ideology outpaces reality

This one survived because it split its risk:

  • the Ashram preserved depth

  • Auroville risked breadth

Together, they form a rare historical structure:
one root, two branches.


Closing Image: A Living Experiment

🌳 🌿 🌿 Ashram Auroville (depth) (future)

The story is not over.
It was never meant to be.