Summa Iru: Formal Renunciation for The Dissolution of the False Self


All my life I have been ending ignorance — reading, thinking, writing, seeking. Now the loose ends are nearly tied. Come July 16, my 62nd birthday, it will be summa iru: not a thing I choose, but what happens when the false self, strung together from my relationships, finally dissolves. The more I carve out this “Me Time,” the more I begin to disappear. Nothing defines me; nothing tells me who I am. And so the old question arises almost naturally — “Who am I?” — a question one can sit with, alone, and stand a very good chance of answering.

My Latest Book Available Now on Amazon — The Mind Itself Is a Digression: Poems, Reflections, and Dialogues of a Restless Seeker


Kindle eBook In India: https://www.amazon.in/dp/B0H4X9NFMB In USA: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H4X9NFMB Paperback In USA: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0H58FG4VK The mind itself is a digression — or … More

Nava-Dvara Pura: Why the “Nine Gates” Body Metaphor in Indian Philosophy Is Inherently Patriarchal


The ancient Vedic concept of Nava-Dvara Pura — the human body as a city of nine gates — is one of Indian philosophy’s most sophisticated metaphors for embodied consciousness. But there is a profound problem hiding in plain sight: the template body is male. The female body possesses a tenth gate, the vaginal canal, yet the tradition universalizes nine as the human count, silently erasing female anatomy. Worse, in the Bhagavata Purana’s Puranjana allegory, the female principle appears not as the soul inhabiting the city, but as an object encountered within it — intelligence subordinated to a male sovereign.