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:
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produce permanent calm
-
remove conflict
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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:
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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:
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Arrival without knowing
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Practice amid sound
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Belonging through repetition
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Departure without attachment
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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.