A Vote Against Humanity

Humans are a disease.

A slow one at first. Then hungry and progressing. Then proud of our hunger, and proud of the way we finish up the environment and everything else around us.

The word consumption once meant illness. A sickness that eats the body from the inside. People wasted away and finally disappeared. People were consumed by Tuberculosis, Leprosy, or even by Alcohol. Today the word has changed its meaning, but not its nature. Now we call ourselves consumers. We wear the word like a badge of honour. In truth, we are doing the same thing. We are consuming the planet. And like any disease, we are doing it without care for the host.

Some months back, I was reading a book on nature and a thought stayed with me. What if there was one council for all living beings. Not countries and borders, but species. A United Organisation of Organisms (UOO). In their first general body meeting, a simple vote is called. One species must be removes from the planet so the rest can survive. There is no debate. No anger. Just facts. Forests speak through what is left of them. Rivers show their poisoned waters. Birds arrive in fewer numbers. Insects barely show up at all. Still a vote is cast and the vote is crystal clear. Unanimous! Do I have to spell it out ? Yes, we are that bad a disease.

Look around for the signs. Air in Delhi NCR burns the lungs. Many Indian cities live under a grey sky. Children grow up knowing smog more than blue. Guests come to my homestay from pollution-choked cities, looking for a breath of fresh air, and then want to sit around a bonfire in summer clothes just for the sake of ambience. Does the smoke in the hills magically disappear?

Rivers carry foam and waste, instead of life. We burn coal and oil that took millions of years to form and finish it in decades. The climate shifts, seasons lose their rhythm, and we act surprised. We wonder that we are quite environment-conscious and have even a balcony full of plants growing in planters, how can we be the cause?

Oceans are filled with plastic. Fish eat it. Birds choke on it. Whales die with stomachs full of our rubbish. Forests are cut to build houses no one needs. Mountains are broken for minerals we throw away after a few years. We replace phones, clothes, cars, and other consumer electronics, while the land that feeds us grows tired and empty.

We are afraid of darkness, so we flood the night with light. Birds lose their way. Insects vanish. Silence disappears. We kill predators and then complain about imbalance. We poison soil and then ask why crops lack strength. We take and take, and when something breaks, we ask for more.

Maybe we are waiting for a big ending. A large meteor from the sky? Something that forces a pause. Something strong enough to stop us or wipe us out. The earth does not need saving. It will heal in time. The real question is simpler and harder. Can we stop behaving like a disease? Or will we keep consuming until there is nothing left but ourselves?

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Sanctity of Nights

The night is a sacred interval in the daily rhythm of the earth. It’s the time when soil cools, leaves rest, insects shift their quiet labours, humans sleep (or should sleep), and nocturnal creatures emerge to do the work that daylight does not allow. The onus is upon us humans to protect this darkness. As it so happens, we are the only species who are destroying it.

Light pollution is not merely a matter of wasted electricity or harsh city glare. It is a steady, invisible disturbance of ancient biological and ecological cycles. Wildlife suffers first. Birds migrate by the stars and become disoriented by bright skies. Nocturnal predators lose their advantage, while prey species live in a state of constant, unnatural alertness. Even insects, the smallest engineers of our ecosystems, spiral endlessly around bulbs rather than carrying out their quiet work of pollination and soil renewal. These are just a few examples out of thousands and thousands that are affected.

Human beings are also not spared from this disruption. Our bodies are attuned to darkness. Artificial light at night interferes with melatonin, the hormone that governs sleep and repair. When this rhythm is broken, the consequences accumulate slowly but surely. Sleep becomes shallow, mental health suffers, and long term risks rise, including metabolic disorders, depression, obesity and certain cancers. What seems like harmless brightness is, in truth, a subtle form of biological stress.

From a farmer’s point of view, even the land feels the weight of this constant illumination. Plants rely on night length to regulate flowering, dormancy, and seed setting. Soils cool and breathe under darkness. When artificial light blurs the boundary between day and night, even these silent processes begin to shift, and over time, the resilience of the land weakens. The harvest suffers.

In organic farming, we try to work with natural systems rather than overpower them. Protecting the sanctity of night is a continuation of the same philosophy. Light should be low and purposeful. It should fall only where it is needed and nowhere else. Fields, hedges, orchards and forest edges should be allowed their rightful darkness. The night is not a void to be conquered, but a living space that deserves respect. In my place, the lights are intentionally of low intensity that the nearby surface is visible, almost like under a full moon, but nothing more. No extra lights and nothing to light up the whole of the premises. That’s a waste.

There is also a quieter loss from light pollution, one that is harder to measure. When the stars disappear behind a veil of artificial glow, our view of the universe is obscured. For most of human history, the night sky was a shared inheritance. Constellations were calendars, stories and maps. Today, light pollution severs that connection, not only robbing ordinary people of wonder, but actively hindering astronomy and our ability to study the wider cosmos. We lose both knowledge and humility when we can no longer see beyond our own rooftops.

Then there is the simple matter of waste. Light pollution is energy thrown away, increasing the overall carbon footprint. It is money spent to illuminate empty roads and empty sites, vacant fields, and sleeping buildings. It is needless carbon in the air and needless strain on already stretched resources. In a world where so many still live with limited access to power, this excess is not just careless, it is unjust.

Now, people from cities who have bought pieces of land in this village are beginning to build their houses and projects here. Along with them, they have brought the city habit of flooding the night with unnecessary light, born more from discomfort with darkness than from any real need. Just today, I messaged three of them requesting that they switch off their bright outdoor lights. The most telling part was that one of those homes was empty, and another construction site had no work going on and not even a soul in sight. No one was there, yet the lights burned on through the night, illuminating nothing, protecting no one, and quietly erasing the natural darkness that this place has long lived by. The third person was actually present and seemed quite unaware of the harm such lighting causes. Thankfully, he switched off his outdoor lights after reading my message. I may come across as stern or even ill-mannered when I send these reminders, but it feels necessary. Someone has to speak for the night before its quiet beauty is lost.

When I stand in my orchard after sunset, with only a few small shaded low-intensity lamps at a distance, I can hear the land breathe. Crickets rise in their steady chorus. An owl passes in silence and lands on my roof. Nightjars care be heard. The trees feel taller, older, as though they remember a time when the world understood how to sleep. The sanctity of night is not a romantic idea. It is a practical truth. Darkness is as essential as sunlight. Without it, wildlife falters, human health weakens, energy is squandered and our gaze is trapped on the ground instead of lifted to the stars. To protect the night is not to move backwards. It is to live wisely, in rhythm with a world that still knows the value of rest, mystery and deep, healing dark.

I hope people reading this will start turning off the lights and maintain the sanctity of nights.

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Spirituality Begins Where Nature Is Respected

While walking around and tending to the orchard here, I feel the presence of nature in every breath I take. At this altitude the air carries the scent of pines and herbs, The place sings with the sound of dry leaves in the wind mixed with the bird songs. When I walk through the orchard in the early morning the frost still clings to the leaves during winter months and the sun rises slowly over the ridges. In those moments something within me becomes still. The nature speaks in its own gentle way and I feel held by the ground I walk on.

Living in sync with the orchard has become a source of deep spiritual nourishment for me. The rhythm of the seasons here is slow and yet persistently ongoing. Trees take their time to bloom. Soil responds with patience. Migratory birds return each year with familiar songs, while many of them stay back here all the time. When I tend to the new plants or mulch the beds or observe the way water moves across the slope I am reminded that nature has its own wisdom, and we are far from understanding it. Everyday is a new learning. This way of living has shaped my own inner life. I have become more grateful and more aware of the quiet lessons that the earth shares. The more time I spend in my orchard the more I respect the living world around me for it reveals the beauty and intelligence of creation and guides me towards a deeper spiritual understanding.

I often see people flocking to the hills in search of peace, spirituality, and natural beauty only to destroy the very essence of what they claim to seek. They build large concrete structures and clear every tree from a slope and somehow believe that this will bring them closer to nature. How does this work for them I fail to understand. A place without trees without soil that breathes and without birdsong cannot offer true calm. It becomes a hollow shell of the hills with a replica of cities they are trying to escape, rather than the living landscape they came to experience.

Over time I have come to believe that people who destroy nature cannot truly be spiritual. Anyone who is spiritually awake understands that every living thing has its own place. And this applies to most religions that I know of and even those people who call themselves atheists. They recognise that the land is not something to exploit for quick gain. It is a home that shelters us and feeds us and teaches us. When someone removes trees without thought or damages natural streams or exhausts soil it reveals a disconnection from life itself. True spirituality cannot grow where there is disrespect for the earth.

For me, every part of the orchard offers companionship. The apple trees and pear trees, the herbs that grow in sheltered spots, and the wildflowers that appear during spring or after the rains – all feel like members of a living community. When I work with them rather than against them I feel a sense of belonging. My spiritual energy feels lighter. It becomes easy to let go of unnecessary concerns and return to a simpler and more grounded way of being.

My orchard continues to guide me. The more time I spend among the trees and the soil the more I grow as a person. The more closely I observe the natural rhythms here the more balanced and peaceful I feel. Nature is not separate from my spiritual path. It is the heart of it and this orchard is my teacher or my guru every single day.

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Wind Chimes and Prayer Flags

There is something very soothing about the sound of windchimes in the wind. When everything around is quiet and when the only other sound is the rustling of leaves on the trees, the chimes become gentle companions. With every soft gust, the last remaining leaves fall from the deciduous trees. A lone blue whistling thrush hops about in a small patch where the morning sun has already begun to warm the earth before the frost returns in the evening. In this simple scene the wind moves through the chimes and creates a tender music that feels like a whispered teaching and a message of happiness.

Yesterday I visited Nainital and from a busy tourist market I brought home a new set of windchimes and some Buddhist prayer flags. Buying from such places is often more expensive yet these families must also survive and flourish. I also did not mind spending time with the shopkeeper. His parents had migrated from Tibet in their youth. He showed me many beautiful things from colourful porcelain to small metal charms most of which were far beyond what my pocket could allow. I chose only a set of chimes and a string of flags. Over a cup of tea he spoke to me about their meaning and the conversation settled into my mind like a gentle blessing and also as food for further thought.

This morning, once the blue whistling thrush had warmed itself in the sun and flown away, I went to the clearing where my old chime was hanging. It is smaller than the new one and has weathered many years of harsh seasons. I removed it gently and placed the new larger chime in its place. The new chime has a deeper voice yet chimes less often because of its weight. The older chime has been like an old friend and it felt right to hang it on a peach tree further down in the orchard. Now when I’ll sit in the winter sun I will hear the deep meditative sound from the new chimes and while working near the peach I will be able to enjoy the playful notes from the old ones.

I then took out the prayer flags. They are small pieces of cloth on a string with prayers printed on each one. They have five colours that represent the five elements. The belief is simple. When the wind flows through the flags the prayers travel outward and spread harmony. A blessing is not meant to be held. It is meant to flow. Against the dark green oaks and the bare branches of apples and pears these colourful flags stand out and add a quiet touch of brightness and happiness.

Among the flags was another version similar to the prayer flags with the famous mantra Om Ma Ni Pad Me Hum. I hung it under the pergola I had built for grape vines. The soil may not favour grapes but the space is lovely in the second half of the day. The mantra has many interpretations. According to the Dalai Lama it means that through intention and wisdom we can move along the path of life and gradually cultivate a pure body speech and mind. Some explain each syllable as a reminder of generosity, ethics, patience, diligence, renunciation, and wisdom. All these meanings are beautiful. Sitting under the mantra I often feel a sense of awe at the clarity of the beings who shaped these teachings. In my own life I hope I can touch a small part of their peace.

There is no work to be done in the orchard today, so the day will be spent meeting a friend and mostly by catching up on some reading. I have been reading a thoughtful account on Tibet which ties in beautifully with my conversation with the shopkeeper yesterday.

Walking back to the sunny spot with the new chimes I notice that the thrush has not returned so I settle down without disturbing anyone. The breeze moves through the flags, spreading the prayers around, then reaches the chimes which respond with a thoughtful quiet sound. In that moment I feel the gentle rhythm of my life here. A slow life. A mindful life.

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Choosing Text Over YouTube Clutter

There are people who read and people who watch. I have always belonged to the first group. Reading is how my mind blooms. Words arranged on a page help me understand life with a clarity that videos rarely offer. I do watch a quick tutorial now and then for a DIY task to see how a tool moves or how a brush cutter can be serviced at home. Beyond that brief moment of usefulness, videos do little for me. When I learn through text, something settles more deeply. I can return to a paragraph, breathe with it and allow its meaning to grow at my pace, not at the hurried rhythm of a video creator.

These days, when I look something up online, I am naturally drawn to text-rich websites. Pages filled with steady words, detailed explanations and thoughtful essays feel like a quiet room where my mind can sit down. Even simple blogs offer such charm. Many of them are written with a sincerity and lightness that make them both entertaining and informative. A good blog post can make me smile, teach me something new and ground me all in one gentle stretch of reading.

In comparison, much of YouTube feels like a marketplace where noise wins over meaning. Low-content videos dominate the space. The format encourages speed, constant posting and a strange pressure to stay visible. In that race for attention, depth is often the first casualty. I too have a mini channel for marketing cottages but that is there just for the sake of being present on the platform. One of my friends who started a YouTube channel is doing well and I genuinely wish him success. Yet even then I cannot watch more than a few minutes of his channel too. It is not him. It is the medium. Many so-called creators speak fast, start with the irritating ‘hello friends’, poor pronunciation and language, add dramatic thumbnails and offer very little substance. They may be financially successful, far richer than many authors, yet for me the true respect lies with those who write. A writer spends years shaping one idea into a steady form. That effort carries a weight and an integrity that quick videos rarely match. And this is not just youtube, the low quality content has infected almost all social media. Instagram which once featured beautiful photographs is now run with low class reels. Happening on Facebook and Twitter (X) too.

On the rare days when I watch something, I choose an ad free OTT platform. I avoid the low quality and often crass content on those platforms where many creators do not even know the difference between the sound of sh and the sound of s.

Mubi appeals to me because it feels curated, like walking through a well-kept library, though I find it expensive considering how rarely I watch films. Netflix works too because its navigation is simple and clean. Anything cluttered, noisy or filled with interruptions loses me within minutes. I do not even own a television any more and I do not miss it. It has been over 15 years now.

The written word has always been more rewarding for me. Even when a beloved book becomes a film or a series, I find the original text far more entertaining. The imagination stays alive longer that way. The joy lingers. There is a certain grounding that only the quiet companionship of words can provide. Though to be clear, these films are far ahead of the low class content I mentioned earlier. I have no intention of comparing there to them. These films are definitely a different class, even if I find books usually better.

Among my guests and friends, I am grateful that many prefer thoughtful reading over the endless scroll of low-grade videos. We often exchange book recommendations and good long-form articles. I once dreamt of a small neighbourhood book club but it faded before it began. Perhaps one day it will find its season.

So if ever you want to share something enriching with me, send me a link to a well-written blog, a text-heavy article or simply the title of a book. Do not send videos from Facebook, Instagram or YouTube. I have stepped out of that world and I am happier for it. Reading keeps my mind steady. It keeps me mindful in a world that constantly pushes distraction. And most of all, it gives me space to breathe.

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Company of Books

Though I have been steadily reducing my material possessions and trying to live more simply, there is one thing I still keep adding to my life. Books. They remain one of my quiet indulgences.

Whenever I am in Almora or Haldwani, the two towns closest to me, I spend a long time wandering through the few surviving brick and mortar bookshops whenever I can. Yes, we still have a handful of them here. There is an old fashioned joy in browsing. The smell of books sometimes faintly musty sometimes sharp and new is a pleasure only fellow readers know. Even if the books are sometimes priced higher that online stores, I still buy. That’s instant gratification and the fact that I would also paying for the facility of being able to hold the book, get a feel of it, see if the fonts are readable by me. With advancing age and presbyopia setting it, I sometimes struggle with very small fonts.

In fact books have become important enough for me to realise that my favourite holiday is no longer a hill station or a beach visiting monuments or tourist attractions but a visit to the Delhi Book Fair. For me the best part of any holiday is to find a comfortable corner and read for as long as I like. It can be in a faraway beachside destination or a quiet corner at the nearby railway station. If someone brings me simple good food now and then and perhaps a coffee or a juice depending on the weather I feel perfectly content. These are my modest needs.

Books are woven so deeply into my life that whenever I give gifts they are almost always books. I choose them with care thinking of the person who will receive them. At times I suspect I spend far more effort than the occasion demands and far more time than the other person might even notice. But I enjoy the process and that is reason good enough for me. And while purchasing for them, I also sneak in a couple of books for myself.

My wife sometimes scolds me when I leave my books by the bedside. The fortunate thing is that when we go to the book fair she is as excited about buying new books as I am. I do use an e-reader but the printed page still feels more comforting. Someone needs to tell me which one has a greater carbon footprint. Do paper books burden the planet more or does an e-reader use up more energy and resources in its making. A friend once said the e reader is worse. Perhaps it is. In truth I use both. The kindle travels with me because it is light and can hold many books. Some titles are not available in print and the kindle is then the only choice.

All this means that books occupy every space they can find. In bookshelves and almirahs in old cartons by the side of the bed and even under it. Some lie on tables and a couple have even found their way into the greenhouse. Neighbours borrow them and I do not mind as long as they return them and keep them free of food stains. Yet there are gaps on my shelves where borrowed books never came back. Already been over three years now. It is a small thing for them to forget but it stings a little each time I notice the empty space. I often think of buying those copies again but then I wonder if it is needed. I have already read them. Still the thought of not having them a part of my life troubles me a little. They were old companions with whom I had spent some good time and I had hoped to revisit them some day. Should I buy them again?

Two questions that fellow readers often ask me are what genres I read and what I am reading at the moment. The truth is that I read across a wide range. Philosophy and religion. Fiction and murder mysteries. Self help and general non fiction. Even comics and graphic novels. I follow my curiosity and that list is long. As for what I am reading right now, I usually avoid answering. People can be rather quick to judge and I have no wish to explain or defend my choices. When I am travelling I often cover a book with brown paper (like school kids do) so that the details are not visible. It keeps the book clean and it keeps curious eyes away. Or I simply read on the kindle which is even easier.

Recently I had guests who asked how I spend my free time. My first response was – What free time? Later I realised what they meant. They were asking what I do without television films malls or evenings spent out. I told them that I have books. People have written so much of value that one lifetime feels too short to read even a small part of it. I am not sure if my next life will give me this same love for the written word or a chance to read as much as I want to.

My answer surprised them. One of them could not imagine anyone reading books in an age where the mobile phone rules and videos keep everyone busy. Her surprise amused me for the love of books has stayed with me for as long as I remember. It is an old friend and it will remain so for many years to come.

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Melted Butter on Toast

There are free days and then there are freeeee days. Today was one of those long, gentle days that seem to stretch on quietly. The kind of an autumn day when the late morning sun still feels hot, yet the hills look friendly, and there is no hurry to do anything at all. The wind was cold but welcome under the bright sun.

A few days ago, a friend had shared a clever idea about how to make butter soft during these cold mountain days. He had seen it on social media. You heat a glass with boiling water, empty it, and then place it upside down over a small dish of butter. The warmth trapped inside the glass is supposed to soften the butter nicely.

Today, the idea came back to me just as some people staying with me mentioned toast with salted Amul butter and jam. Jam is never a problem here. Every summer we make jars of it using fruits from our orchard. The old way of cooking slowly, without any chemicals, keeps the taste of real fruit alive. However, butter, on cold winter days is not so friendly.

So I decided to test the butter trick. I poured some hot water into a glass and some into the French press for my coffee. After a minute, I emptied the glass and placed it over the butter. Then I waited. And waited a little more. Nothing happened. The butter sat there, cold and firm, refusing to change. Maybe the air was already too chilly for such an easy trick to work in our hills.

Not ready to give up, I tried two other methods. One bowl of butter went to rest in the sunny part of the greenhouse. Another went into a smaller bowl floating on hot water, as suggested by one another person here. The greenhouse butter after some minutes softened just enough to spread on hot toast. The one sitting over the hot water melted completely and turned into something that might one day call itself ghee. May be it could be dripped directly over the toast in the way people use honey, but this version of butter was also not for me. So I decided the greenhouse method was the best, at least for my use during this autumn weather.

Someone once told me that instead of spreading butter on toast, one should keep it on the plate and dip the toast into it, like cultured souls picking some chutney with samosas. A rather refined way of eating, I was told. I tried it, but my toast broke in the middle, and the butter won that round. I have never tried it since then. Even dipping a Parle-G in Chai to wet it perfectly is much easier than this method.

These days I try not to eat too much butter. For health reasons, I sometimes use olive oil instead. It took a little time to get used to, but now I quite like the taste. Still, nothing can quite replace the comfort of butter on a good piece of toast.

My favourite way to enjoy butter is with a fried egg. I toast a slice of bread till it turns deep brown, just a little short of burnt. Then I place a half-fried egg on it, and put a couple of small cubes of butter on top of the egg. The butter slowly melts and coats the egg, sometimes soaking parts of toast too, creating a simple yet rich flavour. When the yolk or butter drips on the plate, the corner of the toast is there of course, to scoop up every drop, in the polite manner of civilised people who are secretly trying to lick their plates clean.

Today was indeed a quiet, slow day. I sat back and enjoyed each bite of toast with butter and apple jam. No eggs though. The coffee was warm, the hills were calm, and the world felt at peace. It was a simple moment, yet full of contentment.

It reminded me that joy does not always come from grand moments. Sometimes it comes from something as small as soft delicious butter on crispy brown toast.

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The Wrath of Wrappers

Cleanliness, they say, is next to godliness. But judging by the litter on the roads, fields, and that one mysterious spot behind the maggi point, I think we may be closer to chaos than to God.

One of the largest challenges I see around me is the menace of garbage. The most basic need for cleanliness is simply not taken care of. After years of observing, I’ve noticed an interesting pattern, almost like a cultural ritual we all silently participate in.

While driving on roads, I frequently see people in other vehicles open their window and toss out an empty plastic water bottle or a packet of chips. Out of sight and out of mind, I suppose. The intent to keep their vehicle clean is clearly there, but the intent goes out of the window along with that bit of garbage. I still fail to understand why people do this. It’s disgusting, and quite hard to explain to my family and myself. Maybe there’s a belief that the road has a magical self-cleaning mechanism we just haven’t scientifically documented yet.

Pedestrians aren’t far behind. Schoolchildren munching on chips throw their empty packets wherever gravity takes them. Juice boxes, candy wrappers – all go flying into the great outdoors. Don’t the schools still teach “cleanliness is next to godliness” or has it been replaced with “cleanliness is the someone else’s problem”?

The attitude continues well into adulthood. The juice gets replaced by liquor, chips by chakhana or snacks to accompany alcohol, and candy wrappers by tobacco pouches, but the littering remains perfectly consistent. If there’s one thing our nation is united in, it’s the art of flinging waste.

Once, I visited a home that had a huge pile of garbage hidden neatly behind it, out of sight of course. Their solution was simple and proudly shared with me: they burned it every once in a while. I suppose that’s one way to make problems disappear literally into smoke. Not something I am going to follow though.

Some years back, waste collection bins were placed at various spots around the village. Hope glimmered for a brief moment. People began using them, and I thought, “Finally, some progress.” But the bins were never emptied. The height of the dumps kept increasing until one day I noticed that they too were burning merrily away. The universal solution had been implemented again.

Burning seems to be the easiest way out. To my utter disappointment, I even see villagers collecting weeds and burning them to clear their land. I won’t even start on the perils of exposing the soil completely, but to burn organic matter that could have been composted to enrich the very same soil? That, to me, feels like a tragic waste of good resource.

I don’t see an easy way out. Maybe some large-scale change and strong policies will be required to make cleanliness a real priority. People need to understand one very basic truth – a place is not clean because it is regularly cleaned, it is clean because it is not dirtied in the first place.

Over the years, I’ve tried to lead by example. I pick up litter when I see it, carry reusable bags, and have slowly managed to convince friends and family to stop treating dustbins like decorative pieces. I wouldn’t be surprised if the homestay team has invented a nickname for me that includes the word cleanliness and possibly madness.

This change management is still a work in progress, but small victories matter. Some of the local shopkeepers now keep baskets for waste, and couple of children proudly show that they don’t litter. Some time back, a few local villagers, some schoolchildren, and I decided to clean up the area around the local temple and the pathways leading to it. It was a satisfying effort, and lasted for about twenty-four hours. By the next morning, someone had thoughtfully opened the garbage bags before they could be taken to the waste collection point and helpfully spread everything around again. Later I learnt that this noble act of sabotage was the result of a political disagreement between the people who had helped with the clean-up and others who were offended at not being included.

On a personal level, I’ve also adopted three basic habits. All biodegradable waste is composted. In my efforts to live more minimally my buying has reduced, which means less packaging and less waste. Most of the food I eat also doesn’t come in packets from supermarket shelves. That also reduces waste. And whatever plastic or non-biodegradable waste I do generate, I compress it and take it to the dump site. It’s not a perfect solution, but it’s better than burning it or letting it litter the hillsides.

Sometimes, when I see someone tossing a wrapper, I don’t shout. I simply hand it back with a smile and say, “You dropped something.” Once, I even cleaned an entire roadside patch myself in an attempt to clean the area. People started littering there on the very next morning. If litter has been found on the remotest places humans have been to, this was expected.

Right now, there are a few of us who still care enough to pick up litter whenever we see it. Maybe someday, for every hand that drops waste, another will reach out to pick it up, and eventually the hands that litter will stop altogether. That day will truly be worth celebrating.

Change begins in small pockets, and I’m trying to make sure my little corner of Uttarakhand stays clean enough for the next generation to enjoy without needing a hazmat suit. If I can convince even five people a month to think before they toss, that’s progress. And maybe one day we’ll reach the mythical land where using the dustbin isn’t just a concept but a routine, and minimalism is a way of life. Until then, I’ll keep my gloves and garbage bag ready, and my sarcasm sharp.

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Simply Being, Not Doing

Today was a lazy day, the kind when everything seems to move slowly, like a leaf caught in a slow breeze. I spent the first half of it wandering through the orchard, not to work or plan but simply to see how everything was shaping up. I made a conscious decision to leave my secateurs behind, so that I would not be tempted to prune when the trees are preparing for their winter rest. This was to be a leisurely, watchful stroll, a gentle conversation with the land.

As I moved between rows of trees, I could almost sense their faint awareness. The apples, the pears, the plums, all felt like murmuring a gentle greeting, with their leaves still carrying traces of autumn’s warmth. The sunlight, filtering through the canopy, fell in soft golden patches on the ground. I found a quiet spot where the sun touched my back and stood there for a while, soaking in its mellow warmth. The air had a nip to it now, the season was tilting towards winter, and the sun felt like a familiar friend returning for a short visit.

Soon, my solitude was shared by the birds. The black throated tits were the liveliest, darting, chattering, and jumping from one branch to another with an energy that made the whole orchard feel awake. A nuthatch, unconcerned by the commotion, was busy checking out the bark of an oak, hopping upside down with perfect balance. Its quiet persistence was a delight to watch. Then came the greater yellownape, announcing its arrival with a sharp call before settling on a young pine. It began to tap and probe the bark as if conducting a careful inspection. What a striking yellow nape it has !

For a while, I stood still, listening. The orchard had turned into a natural aviary. The soundscape was rich with calls, chirps, rustles, and the occasional breeze moving through the pine needles. It was easy to lose track of time in that world. When I finally decided to go back, more than two hours had passed.

On the narrow pathway, a wildcat was stretched out lazily, relaxing in a patch of sun. It looked up briefly when I approached, blinked once in mild irritation, and shifted a little, just enough to make space but not enough to suggest it cared much about my presence. There was something amusing about its quiet confidence and laziness. It too was having a slow, easy day, much like the rest of us.

Back near the cottage, I picked up a book and settled under a tree. The hours that followed passed gently, with the rustle of leaves and the occasional song of a bird breaking the silence. The windchimes swayed in the breeze, adding their delicate notes to the afternoon. The book I was reading did not say anything particularly new, yet it carried familiar wisdom, things I already knew but still needed to hear in another’s words. Sometimes, that is the kind of reading one needs, not for discovery but for quiet affirmation.

Later, I found a forgotten packet of biscuits in the cottage and made myself a cup of hot milk tea. The combination was simple, but deeply satisfying. I was not hungry enough for lunch, the tea and biscuits were more than enough.

As I sat outside, sipping slowly, two voices drifted in from a distance. One man was speaking about the many sacrifices he had made to get something done. The other gently reminded him that his wife too was making sacrifices in her own way, quietly, steadfastly, holding the family together. Their exchange lingered with me. It made me think how often life works like that, everyone doing their part, often unseen, yet essential to the whole.

By evening, the air turned colder, and I moved back indoors. The wind had picked up, carrying a chill that hinted at the nights to come. I sat for a while by the window, watching the last light fade behind the hills and the distant snow-peaks change colour, from pastel pinks to deep orange.

It had been a slow day, yes, but full of quiet companionship. The orchard, the birds, the cat, the sun, and the soft murmurs of human life, all had played their part. I smiled to myself. Not every day needs to be full of doing. Some are meant for simply being, listening, watching, and remembering that everything around us, in its own way, is alive and trying its best to thrive.

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My Corner of Hope

The hills were never meant to fall silent. They once sang with the soft beat of wings and the morning chatter of birds. The wind carried the scent of deodars and forest floor, and the sound of the leaves. Now those sounds are fading, replaced by the growl of engines and the echo of restless work. The mountains are weary. Their slopes are being cut open in the name of development, and the calm that once lived here is slipping away.

In the middle of this change, I have been trying to keep a small part of the old world filled with nature, alive. When I began, it was only a patch of land. Over the years I have planted a mix of trees close together so their branches could meet and form a green ceiling. I let herbs, grasses and flowers grow freely below, while doing away with tilling. I wanted the land to decide its own shape. Slowly the orchard began to turn into a living refuge. Some of the planted trees are now tall enough to provide me shade whereas the new ones still need some nurturing now and then.

Now the space feels alive in every nook and corner. Butterflies flutter around in the morning light. Ladybirds hide under tender leaves. Magpies screech from the tall branches. Owls come at night and watch quietly from the trees and at times jump around on the roof of my house. Blue Whistling Thrush wakes me up with its early morning melody. Small tits and finches arrive each day and fill the air with their soft songs. Many of them have nowhere else to go. They have been pushed away by deforestation, dust and noise. Here they find a sanctuary, a little peace, a place to belong and flourish again.

Each season paints its own picture. Spring hums with colour and motion, with flowers and blossoms all around. Summer deepens the shade and slows the air, the fruits add colour. Autumn lets the leaves fall gently to feed the soil. Even winter, cold and silent, carries a calm breath beneath the frost.

Yet beyond this small sanctuary, I see how much has changed. There is a growing disregard for the world around us. People seem careless even with their own surroundings. Piles of construction material lie scattered on the roads, blocking drains and turning the surface into broken tracks once the rains arrive. Vehicles are parked without thought, narrowing the way for everyone else. At night, blinding headlights shine into the eyes of oncoming travellers, as if no one remembers that the beam can be lowered to let the other pass safely.

The noise too has become constant. Construction carries on at hours when silence should belong to all. Heavy vehicles move around at late hours. Loud music and shouting spill into the open air. Garbage is thrown without care. Even words have grown rough. Many people come here from crowded cities to escape the dust and pollution, yet they end up creating small versions of the very places they wished to leave behind. The gentleness that once defined these hills is slowly slipping away.

While the hills deteriorate, I am trying to create a space that stays green and kind. Here the nights are dim so that the owls and insects can see. The trees grow thick to shelter birds and butterflies. Flowers bloom to feed the bees. I keep the air quiet and the rhythm slow so that life can breathe freely again.

Sometimes it feels like a losing battle. The noise and neglect beyond the orchard never cease. Yet every time I see a butterfly rise from a leaf or hear a bird sing before dawn, I am reminded that nature still endures. Each tree I plant is a small act of faith. Each flower that blooms is a quiet promise that not everything is lost. I sometimes think of this orchard as a small prayer for balance. Every tree planted is a note in that prayer. Every bird that returns is an answer. Even in moments of doubt, I believe that these acts of care matter.

I may not be able to change what happens outside my orchard, but I can keep this one corner alive. Hopefully one day, when all this restless construction comes to an end, the peace that once filled these hills so completely will return. It may come slowly, like the first light of morning, but I believe it will come. The hills will find their calm again, and life will sing here as it once did.

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Reducing Food Miles

Every meal has a story. But few of us pause to wonder how far that story has travelled before reaching our plates. The tomatoes in a salad, the rice on a steaming platter, the coffee in a morning cup, each may have journeyed thousands of kilometres across states or even continents. That journey, while invisible to the eye, leaves behind a trail of carbon, a footprint that tells the tale of how our choices connect with the climate.

When food travels long distances, often called food miles, the transportation process burns fossil fuels. Planes, ships, lorries, and trains together form a vast global web of movement that makes modern diets possible. While it feels convenient to have kiwis in summer or apples in monsoon, the energy cost of refrigeration, packaging, and shipping is immense. A single air-freighted mango from another hemisphere can carry more carbon weight than the fruit itself. And, I am not talking about agricultural practices here that further use up fossil fuels.

It is said that on an average for every single calorie of food energy that appears on our plate, about ten calories of fossil fuel energy are spent to grow, process, package, and transport it. This imbalance is striking. The energy we consume in a meal is only a fraction of what has already been burned to make that meal possible. And that figure is a global average. If we add the fashionable foods that travel great distances, the situation becomes far worse..

The irony is that much of what we import can often be grown closer to home. Local produce, especially when cultivated through sustainable or organic means, arrives fresher and carries a far lighter environmental burden. Supporting local farmers not only preserves traditional crops and livelihoods but also reduces greenhouse gas emissions that result from long-distance logistics. The local vegetables and fruits may not look very beautiful always (since it is not grown to be exported) but usually it is much more nutritious. For my family and friends, I prefer to grow or buy from local markets whatever is available in our region. Locally grown fruits such as apples, pears, peaches, guavas, and papayas make far more sense than avocados, bananas, imported apples, or pineapples. Nuts like walnuts and chestnuts from nearby farms are much more sustainable than cashews or Californian pecans. The same applies to vegetables, lentils, grains, and meats. Freshwater fish from local rivers and lakes are better choices than seafood that has travelled thousands of kilometres.

When guests at my place ask for South Indian dishes or seafood, I smile and gently explain that we are located in the northern part of India, far from the sea. In fact, as the crow flies, China is closer to us than the nearest Indian shoreline.

It is easy to underestimate how far the web stretches. A restaurant salad might contain lettuce from the hills, olives from Spain, and cheese from Italy. Each ingredient carries its own hidden emissions from the fields where it was grown to the factories where it was processed and the warehouses where it was stored. By the time it reaches your fork, it may have emitted more carbon than an entire day’s electricity use at home.

Choosing local food is not about isolation; it is about balance. It is about rethinking what “fresh” means, not something wrapped tightly in plastic and flown overnight, but something that has grown in the same air you breathe. When we align our diets with the rhythm of our land and its seasons, we not only lower our carbon footprint but also rediscover the rich diversity of our own region. Few years back, I used to enjoy mangoes and watermelons in the peak of summers, now even in winters I see watermelons that have flown all the way from equator. Bananas, green or ripe, are now available round the year, but at what cost to the environment?

The same holds true for water. Drinking from local mountain streams carries no carbon guilt, while bottled water has its own carbon miles attached to it. To make matters worse, microplastics in bottled water and the disposal of empty bottles add further environmental cost.

Our food here may taste different, but it is delicious, nutritious, and perfectly suited to this region. Lentils like Bhatt and Gehat, combined with locally grown rice and millets, and cooked in traditional ways are flavourful. Local meats make wholesome and mouth-watering dishes. One simply needs to be open to experiencing the cuisine that belongs to this land.

Next time you sit down to eat, ask quietly, how far has my food travelled? The answer might surprise you. In that awareness lies the first step toward a more sustainable and more rooted way of eating, one where nourishment extends beyond the body to include the earth itself.

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Only What They Do – Comfort of Basic Tools

There are days when I find myself yearning for the basics, for a simplicity that seems almost forgotten in our world of constant hurry. Complicated things rarely bring me peace. What I long for are objects and experiences that carry honesty, that speak clearly of their purpose. Nothing more, nothing less !

Take the telephone for example. I would rather have a simple line phone with a rotary dialer, where each turn of the dial made a small clicking sound, than the sleek glass screen of today’s smartphones. There was something steady about waiting for the dial to spin back, as if time itself moved a little slower and more patiently. Each call was for a purpose. Today, messages race past, impersonal and fleeting, lost in a flood of forwards and nonsense. I use a smartphone out of necessity, for work and connection, but I must be one of those rare breeds that keep my landline too, for the small and steady joy it brings.

I would pick a traditional radio over a bluetooth speaker any day. A radio isn’t perfect, it crackles, it drifts, sometimes I have to adjust the antenna, but that is exactly the charm. It connects me not just to music but to voices, to the warmth of someone speaking across invisible waves. As I write this, I am enjoying some nice old Kumaoni music on 100.8 Mhz.

The same goes for books. A paperback has weight, smell, and the joy of turning a page. A Kindle may hold a thousand titles and even a dictionary, but it can never replace the comfort of holding a single book. Some say that a Kindle suits someone like me since it saves paper, yet that deserves a deeper thought when one considers the carbon footprint of the device and the ebooks themselves. I seem to be digressing here (a word my friend favours and one I have grown fond of myself). There is something quietly grounding about holding a simple paper book, feeling its weight, turning its pages, and breathing in that earthy, relaxed comfort.

I prefer an alarm clock that is simply a clock, with hands that glow faintly in the dark. It wakes me when needed without dragging me into a maze of notifications. No apps, no settings, just a simple instrument doing what it has always done. Sometimes the gentle ticking lulls me to sleep, and at other times it distracts me. On those rare nights, I simply hide it under a thick pillow.

Today I went to the nearby market in search of a torchlight. I wanted the kind I have always used, a steel body, battery-powered, reliable. The shop offered flashlights with Bluetooth speakers, solar chargers, radios, and even one with a remote control. After much searching, I found a simple battery-powered torch, though in plastic. It may not shine like the new gadgets, but it does exactly what it should.

And lights. How much more human it feels to walk up and flick a switch, to feel the click under my finger, than to ask Alexa to brighten or dim the world for me. The act itself is grounding, immediate, personal.

No Internet of Things for me for everyday stuff. No voice assistants or apps trying to govern every small detail of life. Give me the basics, tools that do their work and then step aside. A fridge or microwave with a Wi-Fi connection is beyond my understanding. Why does my weighing machine need to remind me to drink water? IoT may make sense for applications in security services or healthcare, but not in everything at home. I do not need a kettle that sends me a notification when the water boils.

I like canvas bags with a couple of pockets that last a lifetime, sturdy and dependable, instead of polyester bags with countless zips and compartments, and even absurd little slots to attach USB devices. Give me a plain, honest bag that wears with age and gathers stories, rather than a flashy one that falls apart in a season. And then there are the inventions that try too hard. Smart toilet seat covers? Are you joking? Definitely not for me. A chair should be a chair, not a massage parlour with a control panel. Even spectacles come now with Bluetooth and cameras. I would rather keep my reading glasses simple, the way they are meant to be.

Somehow, I never could come to like a mini Swiss knife. I never found it useful. I would rather have a proper set of knives in the kitchen and a proper set of screwdrivers in the toolbox. And when it comes to opening a bottle, nothing beats the solid iron openers that vendors once used in cinema theatres and circuses. They would make music on the glass cold-drink bottles with them, a playful prelude before opening the cap. That kind of bottle opener has just one purpose – to open bottles, and it does it with quiet dignity.

Simple things with a purpose work better than tools that seem to give lots of additional facilities. Simplicity is not about being old-fashioned. It is about breathing easier, about letting life go on without an extra layer of fuss. Simplicity brings about a feeling of being grounded, of peace, and also of relaxed happiness. In choosing less, I feel I choose more – more presence, more calm, more of what matters.

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Home Shaped by Simplicity

When I began to build my house I learnt quickly that there is no end to expenses. Everything imaginable and even much that is not can be bought nowadays. It is peak consumerism, an endless parade of comforts that people chase as though enslaved to them. My thought was simpler. I wanted a modest and cheerful dwelling where only a few essentials found their place. A shelter that would guard me from the elements yet not cut me off from the living world outside.

So my house rose from stone, wood, and cement, plain in its making but sturdy enough to stand against the extremes of weather of the region. It does not gleam with marble nor boast expensive fixtures. Its beauty lies elsewhere, in sunlight falling through unadorned windows, in the scent of spices drifting from the kitchen, in the company of books whose pages carry the mustiness of time. It is neither spartan nor palatial.

The roof above me is all I need. It shields against snow and rain and offers shade from the harsh summer sun. Yet the house never seals me away from the seasons. In winter I wear woollens indoors, unlike in centrally heated rooms where the air feels curiously untouched by weather. That small choice, layering oneself rather than warming the entire house, feels truer to the rhythm of nature and lighter on the earth’s carbon footprint.

My home itself is furnished sparingly. There is little more than what is required yet nothing feels wanting. It is functional, comfortable and cosy, never a place to flaunt but always a place to return to. Perhaps it suits me because I spend much of my time outdoors beneath the trees, listening to the birds’ scattered notes, or wandering through my orchard on the narrow paths I have laid, stopping at places to sit and reflect, or caring for the flowers growing in the planters placed here and there. I spent my money on planters, a greenhouse, and garden furniture. On my to-buy list are some more items like a couple of hammocks, some more chairs, and maybe a swing too.

Inside, comfort comes not from show but from placement. A rocking chair that soaks in the afternoon sun during winters. A lamp that spreads its soft light across evenings. Windows framing the orchard where bulbuls and thrushes pause on their way through. Most of the bedrooms in my house face south, welcoming the low sun in the cold months. Unlike the guesthouses that turn rooms to the north for the spectacle of snow peaks, I have placed my desk there instead. While working I can look up at the valley and the distant summits, allowing the mind to breathe a little between tasks.

Even in upkeep I follow the quiet philosophy of Wabi Sabi. A patch of peeled paint need not be hidden at once, it can rest there as an honest part of the house’s story. The house breathes through its imperfections. The light filtering through the smallest cracks in the door, curtains stirring with the mountain breeze, the tapping of birds on the roof above. Sometimes when the rain falls hard, I love the sound of it drumming on the roof. It lulls me into a kind of gentle trance and often carries me into sleep. The younger generation even has a name for such things now, something they call ASMR, though I simply know it as the old and timeless comfort of rain.

And perhaps the greatest comfort lies not in what the house contains but in what it teaches. I enjoy life without depending on any particular thing. When I travel I do not miss my own material comforts, the lack of them never troubles me. What unsettles me instead is the opposite, the weight of excess, the overstuffed rooms of hotels, the polished consumerism in homes of friends. It is there amidst too much that I feel least at ease.

This house is no showpiece. It is lived in, warmed by laughter and by the steady passing of days. In a world that measures worth by what is new and shiny, my home stands quietly apart. It reminds me that comfort can be shaped from small things and happiness can be found in the simplest of moments. The glow of a lamp on a winter evening, the scent of coffee rising from the kitchen, the hush of wind moving through the trees outside, all weave together into a life that is both humble and abundant.

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Operation Vermicompost

Since yesterday, I have been on a quest for something that sounds deceptively humble – vermicompost. Pantnagar’s agricultural university sells it, and I thought it would be a simple errand. Drive down, buy some bags of worm magic, and return triumphant. But no. This little adventure has turned into a full-scale logistical opera, complete with phone calls, negotiations, last-minute changes, and the occasional dramatic sigh.

We make our own compost and vermicompost, of course. But our orchard is largish and the soil is still in that hungry teenage phase where it eats everything you give it and asks for more. One day, when the soil matures and the orchard becomes self-sufficient, I hope to simply watch the worms and homemade compost do the work while sipping coffee in peace. For now, I am still the desperate middleman between hungry trees and reluctant trucks.

The university sells vermicompost in 40-kilo bags. Great for economies of scale, terrible for the back. I can squeeze a maximum of six bags into my car before the suspension starts to weep. This year, I estimate we need another 50 to 60 bags on top of what we produce ourselves. Buying the stuff is not the problem. Getting it from Pantnagar to our hilltop orchard, however, is starting to feel like organising a small military campaign.

My idea was to combine orders. A large project near us wanted 100 bags (40 quintals). A neighbour fancied 25 bags (10 quintals). I bravely volunteered for 75 bags (30 quintals). What a treasure that would be – mountains of rich black vermicompost, all quietly wriggling with life. We finalised a collective order of 80 quintals. Then came the truck problem.

Small pick-up sized trucks can’t carry that much. Mid-sized trucks can, but they quote prices that make you wonder if they plan to sprinkle gold dust on each bag. I started making calls like a stockbroker in a market crash. One contact promised to arrange a truck but quoted a rate so high that the neighbour with the modest 25-bag order threatened to retreat. Meanwhile, the university sales counter, blissfully unaware of our growing drama, had already started packing the bags and putting workers on overtime. Backing out was no longer an option.

The neighbour with the smallest order suggested reducing the order to 50 bags and hiring a smaller truck. That would have been easier, if slightly disappointing. But before I could agree, the big project people called in a panic. “Don’t go ahead without us!” they said, as if I was about to elope with the worms.

Enter the fourth player. A friend-of-a-friend offered to arrange a truck—if we added another 20 quintals for his personal use. Suddenly our modest 200-bag mission ballooned to 250 bags (a whopping 100 quintals). By then the word was out, and a fifth person called. He wanted to know if I could manage another 10 bags for him. At this point, the compost was practically multiplying faster than the worms themselves.

I even found a small trucker willing to take on the job at what sounded like a bargain until he revealed the catch. He proposed making multiple trips over the next month, ferrying just five to ten bags at a time. To sweeten the deal, he offered me a “special rate” of one bottle of alcohol after every trip. Technically quite affordable in rupees but completely against my principles and definitely a recipe for logistical chaos. I politely declined.

After endless calls, counter offers, and quiet calculations about who would pay for what, a truck was finally secured. The person with the largest order graciously agreed to cover the cost difference for the smallest buyer. Not the tidiest ending, but if all goes well the bags should start their journey tomorrow. The final order tally as of now stands at one hundred bags from the big buyer who will also shoulder the extra transport cost, seventy five bags of mine, and twenty five bags from the neighbour who gets a slightly gentler shipping bill. And to top it all off, I will also have to make a trip to Pantnagar to pay in cash, then chase down the others to collect their share. Truly, the worms are easier to deal with than humans.

All this drama just to move a few tonnes of worm poop from Point A to Point B. Farming, once again, proves that it is never only about soil and plants. It is about the delightful chaos that sneaks in when humans and their opinions enter the picture. The quiet lesson for the future is simple but sharp: never assume that a clever plan to share costs or create mutual benefit will automatically win hearts. Most people are not quite ready for the act of cooperation for mutual benefit, yet. Getting a seed to sprout in a drought sometimes feels easier than getting a group of grown adults to agree on a truck. I will get my vermicompost tomorrow, and I am not losing hope in cooperation. Perhaps in the future these joint efforts will fall into place more easily.

ADDENDUM: Day 2: The vermicompost reached me. Yet to settle the amounts.

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Rains and Reckoning

In almost every monsoon season, the local news carries familiar stories: roads swallowed by torrents or buried under sudden landslides, as the mountains yield reluctantly to the force of unending rain.

Over the years, my experiences have slowly shaped some firm and deeply considered views on this. Feel free to disagree with me.

Excessive rains are not new to these mountains; they have lashed the land for centuries, shaping valleys and rivers in their wake. What is changing, however, is their intensity. The climate crisis is amplifying these events: as temperatures rise, clouds hold more moisture, releasing it in sudden, violent downpours—the cloudbursts that now strike with greater frequency and force. The climate crisis has also affected the way monsoons and western disturbances act, integral to rains in our subcontinent. Now, there are times when these excessive rains go on incessantly for days at a stretch.

The real danger arises when nothing stands in the way of unchecked water. Rampant deforestation, which I see unfolding all around, is one of the chief culprits. A man I know felled nearly an acre of orchard to raise a sprawling mansion, later boasting of his love for nature by placing a few fern planters on his balcony, a hollow gesture, almost mocking the earth he stripped bare. Without trees to bind the soil, the ground loosens, and with the rains, it tumbles down in landslides that block our roads and smother our valleys. Trees do far more than hold the soil; their canopies soften the lash of torrential rains, while their roots keep the ground porous, allowing it to drink in water. Strip them away, and the land’s resilience crumbles with them.

Much of the deforestation in these mountains stems from two forces. First, the relentless push for ‘development’: the widening of roads, the raising of massive buildings, the carving of land in the name of progress. Second, the lure of profit through illegal logging, where timber finds eager buyers to feed the frenzy of construction spreading across the Himalayan states. Together, these forces gnaw away at the very forests that shield and sustain us.

Next comes the mindless blasting of rock and the gouging out of soil with heavy earth-moving machines. Such assaults inflict irreversible scars on the land, leaving the surrounding slopes fragile and hollow. Then, it takes only a few spells of heavy rain for the weakened ground to give way, and the damage unfolds swiftly and brutally.

Even the smaller village roads are too often littered with construction material, while their drains lie choked and neglected. With nowhere to go, the rainwater spills across the roads, eroding them, and then carves out new paths of its own sometimes cutting through orchards and fields, sometimes into homes, leaving damage in its path. While planting some bramble saplings at one end of our orchard, I noticed muddy water flowing from a higher point. On investigating, I discovered it was caused by a blocked drain beside the road on the top, another small reminder of how neglect can ripple through the land.

Another troubling pattern I have observed is the rush of construction right in the beds of streams and rivers. From buildings to roads, heavy structures rise in these fragile basins, with blind and ill-formed faith that retaining walls will hold back the waters. Perhaps they do for a year or two, but such arrogant presumption is a sure recipe for disaster. Increasingly, I see this everywhere. When the torrents come, swollen by deforested slopes and streams choked with debris, the floodwater shows no mercy. It tears through everything in its path, sweeping away the very buildings and roads that humans so confidently placed in its way.

Migration and development have always been part of human history, here as elsewhere. For centuries, people have moved and built anew. What must concern us now is the unchecked, mindless development that leaves behind only scars of destruction. True development is essential: good schools, reliable hospitals, livelihoods, and better connectivity are the needs of the people. But the path forward must be sustainable. Safe, clean, comfortable, and affordable public transport serves the hills far better than carving multi-lane highways for a car-centric economy. Small homes and vernacular architecture blend with the terrain in ways that massive concrete blocks never can. And above all, we must protect our forests, trees cannot be felled with such casual disregard. After all, this is the land that once gave birth to the Chipko Andolan; perhaps it is time we ask ourselves what became of that spirit.

Each time, the slopes crumble, fields are swept away, and roads vanish under mud and stone. Yet, amid the destruction, the people here rebuild with quiet determination, and the forests and rivers slowly reclaim their balance. It reminds us that nature carries on, quietly strong and patient, and if we pause, pay attention, and live with care, we can endure too. In this rhythm of loss and renewal, there is a gentle teaching: resilience is born not of force, but of humility, patience, and respect for the world we are part of. If we learn from it, we too can find our place within the enduring flow of life.

True progress is mindful development that honours and protects the natural world..

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Challenges and Contentment

Living in the hills, in a village far from any major town, is a constant reminder that life comes with its own limitations—yet within those constraints lies a quieter, more meaningful rhythm of living.

There is no e-commerce or doorstep delivery here. Shopping still happens the old-fashioned way—with a list in hand and a dedicated trip to the market. There are no last-minute orders promising delivery in minutes. Instead, life encourages forethought: from planning meals for my guests to deciding which seeds to buy for the vegetable garden, everything is thought through in advance and purchased with care.

We don’t have a multi-speciality hospital nearby, which makes it all the more important to look after our health and keep a stock of basic medicines. I try to go a step further with an annual health check-up and routine blood tests. Daily walks are part of my routine too, though on rainy days, discipline often gives way to the comfort of hot, fried pakoras. After all, who can resist them when the clouds are pouring? And if there is a piping hot tea along with it… that’s sheer bliss.

There are no good schools nearby, so my children attend one in another town. The nearest bookstore is nearly two hours away, which means I usually buy books in bulk. E-books on Kindle have been a blessing, especially now that we have reliable high-speed internet. Recently, a small shop opened just three kilometres from our home, offering some good stationery items. I hope they expand their range, it would make life a little easier.

We don’t have courier services here. EMS Speedpost still functions, but mostly for letters, not parcels. A few villagers still receive handwritten letters, a gentle reminder of a time when the postman brought news from distant family and friends, wrapped in paper and ink. Those closest to me have long since moved to instant messages and emails. Practical, yes, but it lacks the warmth of words arriving in an envelope.

For vegetables, we largely rely on what we grow ourselves or what our neighbours cultivate in the village. Occasionally, I do buy from the local shops, but by the time the produce reaches them, much of its freshness and flavour has already faded. Whenever possible, I prefer to buy directly from farmers who grow vegetables locally. There’s a simple joy in choosing produce still glistening with morning dew, knowing it has travelled only a short distance from the soil to my kitchen. It’s both a practical choice and a small way of staying connected to the rhythm of life here.

Being far from the town has its quirks. When our internet lines go down, we can be cut off for days at a stretch. In a way, it’s a blessing, forcing an unplanned digital detox and a pause from the constant buzz of online life.

Once in a while a fresh government circular appears or some local village discussions stir up a little dust. These things are part of life in any community, especially in the hills where everyone knows everyone. I notice them, the way one notices a change in the wind. Since I am simply another part of this landscape, I acknowledge what comes and then let it pass.

Transportation costs are high, so getting bulky items delivered requires careful planning. Often, neighbours pool their orders, or someone heading to town will pick up supplies for others along the way. While I enjoy my own company, I’m fortunate to have many friends nearby, friendly, reliable, and always willing to lend a hand.

A few days ago, I noticed some bottles of a light beer that a friend of mine particularly enjoys. I called him to let him know it was available. (I could have bought one for myself, but presently I have decided to stay away from beer. Not sure about how long it will last.) Another friend who visited a few days ago from Almora, brought along some packaged snacks, knowing they aren’t always easy to find here. When I travel to Bhimtal, another nearby town, I often end up carrying more groceries and supplies for my neighbours than for myself. It’s a small effort, but it brings me a quiet sense of happiness.

Living far from towns brings its own rhythm and lessons. Daily life encourages self-reliance: emergencies, minor repairs, or sudden shortages require patience, planning, and sometimes a touch of creativity. Spirit of cooperation flows automatically among most of the people here. Social life here is intimate and meaningful: friends and neighbours support each other, and small gestures, like sharing vegetables or helping with chores, create a sense of belonging that city life rarely offers. Leisure is found in the simplest pleasures: a walk through the hills, tending the garden, reading a good book, or simply watching the seasons change. Seasonal challenges, from heavy rains to snowfall, test resilience and adaptability, reminding us to anticipate, adjust, and sometimes simply accept nature’s limits.

Life here may be slower and constrained, but within these limits lies a subtle richness: a chance to plan thoughtfully, value what we have, and savour the small, everyday victories that make living in a village uniquely rewarding.

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Rainy Day – Contemplations

Today is a rainy day! It has been raining cats and dogs incessantly. Kids are at home. No one is going anywhere. No outdoor work being done. Even the birds are hiding away.

For people like us, every working day holds weight. When the skies keep us indoors, the pause comes with a price. I’m yet to build the kind of passive income or diverse revenue streams that would let me savour a rainy day without glancing at the accounts. The wisdom from financial gurus and management coaches—that money isn’t the key to happiness—rings true, yet I’ve found that the lack of it can still cast a shadow. A cushion of savings is not just a safety net for emergencies; it’s also a promise that my children can pursue good education without hurdles.

Rainy days, though beautiful, bring a subtle ripple to our livelihood. News of landslides or floods in distant hill regions—though far from our orchard—often slows the flow of guests to our homestay. And while our corner of the world remains lush, safe, and welcoming, perception travels faster than facts. Out in the orchard, rain keeps me from tending the trees, and even the simple joy of turning fresh fruit into jams and preserves becomes a challenge.

Yet, in the gentle drumming on the roof and the veil of mist over the hills, I’m reminded that life’s rhythm is not solely about output—it’s also about stillness, reflection, and the quiet work nature does beneath the surface to prepare for tomorrow’s abundance.

There’s beauty in the balance. The streams run fuller, the trees drink deeply, and our rainwater harvesting tanks brim to the edge, spilling over in generosity. Somewhere underground, the water table rises, storing life for the seasons ahead. Nature, it seems, is already sowing the promise of the next harvest.

When there are fewer guests at our homestay, it gives my team and me a chance to rest. We manage everything with just a small group of people, so these rainy days feel like a welcome break. I see one of them sitting in a corner, strumming a guitar, the soft music mixing with the sound of rain. Another, who usually works with me in the orchard, is in the greenhouse, holding a hot drink and quietly watching the raindrops slide down the glass.

Once I finish this post, I plan to settle down with a book on security analysis for some deep reading. Later in the afternoon, I might switch to something about orchard care, and in the evening, lose myself in a classic Agatha Christie murder mystery. No TV, no mobile. They are the biggest time trap.

With the rains, scents seem to linger longer. The bookshelves carry that warm, welcoming musty smell of old pages. Outside, the ground feels fresh and clean, and walks around the orchard are wrapped in a moist, earthy fragrance—something you can breathe in and feel, but can never quite put into words. It’s not the sharp, raw scent of the first rain on dry soil, but more like a well-soaked potpourri of pine needles and oak leaves. From the kitchen drifts the tempting aroma of fried snacks. perhaps pakoras, or maybe it’s just my wishful thinking playing tricks on me.

Even though worries about financial stability linger quietly in a corner of the mind, it becomes easier to simply enjoy the moment, to live it without overthinking. With just a little conscious effort, the rest is taken care of by the weather itself, and by the gentle mix of raindrops’ pitter-patter and a light sonata in C minor drifting through the air from the radio.

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Sun, Rain, and the Magic in Between

This morning, the air was quite warm and the sun shone brightly, casting golden light across the orchard. The sky was a soft, endless blue, with not a cloud in sight. It felt like a small gift—this rare, clear summer morning. Up here, nestled in the hills, such days are few. Most of the year is spent wrapped in woolens, with the cold clinging to our windows and the mist curling into every corner. Even at the height of summer, warmth like this feels borrowed, fleeting. Though it was a little towards the hot side but still the day felt nice.

But as the hours slipped by, the mood of the day began to shift. Wisps of clouds crept in from the edge of the sky. A weather front was creeping in. The sunlight, so confident in the morning, began to retreat and return in quick flashes, as if it were playing a quiet game of hide and seek. And slowly, the warmth gave way to a gentle breeze, and the brightness softened into a cool, grey hush. After a warm—actually, slightly hot—morning, the shift in weather felt like a welcome relief. I had no complaints about the sunny start to the day, but this sudden change brought a certain comfort that felt even better.

Now, as I sit in the comfort of my little greenhouse, it has started to rain. Soft at first, like a whisper on the roof, then steady—each raindrop adding its note to a melody that only a quiet hillside can offer. The sound is soothing, like an old lullaby, and I find myself almost drifting off. But I try to stay awake. There’s something about this kind of rain that feels too precious to sleep through.

The smell of pakoras has just reached me—spicy, familiar, mouthwatering. There’s also the unmistakable aroma of milky chai rising from the kitchen, curling through the air and finding its way to me. What is it about rainy evenings that makes chai and pakoras feel like a celebration? Deep-fried to a golden brown, the pakoras are best enjoyed hot, dipped in a tangy sauce or chutney. And chai—sweet, creamy, and spiced just right—is the perfect companion. It’s as if the rain invites them, calls them to the table. And the chai has to be milky and sweet, no other variations work !

Yes, they’re indulgent. Not something for every day. But on a slow day like this, when the world outside is washed clean and the mountains are wrapped in mist, such small cheats feel earned. After all, when most days are filled with homegrown greens, grains, and mindful meals, a plate of pakoras and a steaming cup of chai is a kind of joyful rebellion.

So here I am, listening to the rhythm of the rain, looking at the misty valley in front, the first bite already melting in my mouth. It’s going to be a quiet, comforting evening—one of those that makes you pause and feel grateful. For the sun. For the rain. For the food. And for the slow, simple life that gives space to enjoy all.

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Forest Fires and Natural Springs

Every summer, our forests are ravaged by widespread fires. With the exception of 2020—the year of lockdowns—these devastating incidents have cast their dark shadow over our region, year after year.

One major cause is the growing belief among villagers that burning forests, particularly pine forests, will create fertile ground for high-quality fodder grass. This notion seems to be a recent phenomenon. Just a few decades ago, when the Chipko Movement began in Uttarakhand, villagers—especially women—stood in fierce protection of trees. They embraced them, forming human shields to prevent logging. There are countless photographs of them encircling and hugging even the pines. Back then, they did not subscribe to the myth of burning forests, despite the fact that animal rearing was far more widespread than it is today.

A few days ago, I was speaking with a friend who spent most of his childhood in a village near Nainital and now lives in Haldwani. We discussed the worsening forest fire crisis and why villagers today seem indifferent to it.

One crucial factor is the shift in water dependency. A few decades ago, villagers relied on natural springs, which required a delicate ecological balance to sustain. The groundwater recharge system depended on capillaries and channels that allowed rainwater to percolate instead of running off. The dense roots of trees, particularly their fine root hairs, helped regulate this process, ensuring that water emerged from the hillside and trickled down as tiny brooks. This natural system provided clean, uninterrupted water.

However, with the proliferation of water tankers, submersible pumps, and government water supply schemes, easy access to water has led to a dangerous disregard for these ecological processes. Villagers no longer see the connection between forests and water security. Garbage is dumped along brooks. Pathways once maintained for flowing water are now neglected. Trees are indiscriminately felled. And when forest fires break out, few people care—unless the flames threaten their doorstep.

While a piped water supply is essential for every farm and household, the growing neglect of natural resources is alarming. We must reflect on our actions and foster a deeper respect for our environment. Schools could play a pivotal role in addressing this issue by educating children about forest fires—their causes, impact, and prevention. Raising awareness is one of the most powerful ways to support our forests, which suffer the brunt of these wildfires every summer.

As I sit beneath an apple tree just beginning to blossom, I find myself worrying about the absence of rain and snow in the region. The sky is clear—too clear—offering no promise of relief. In the distance, across the valley, a plume of smoke rises from yet another forest fire. The climate crisis is already taking its toll, and we humans seem determined to accelerate it. More forest fires mean less rainfall in the coming season, and less rain sets the stage for even more fires—a relentless, destructive cycle. The thought of it weighs heavily on me.

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Winter Heating: The Case for Wood Burning

With winter fast approaching, I recently had a conversation with some of our neighbours about a familiar dilemma: to burn wood or not. Many of us face this decision every winter. On one hand, there’s the obvious smoke rising from burning wood, and on the other, the hidden but significant carbon footprint of alternative heating methods.

Trees naturally absorb CO₂ as they grow, and when wood is burnt, the same amount of CO₂ is released that would have been emitted if the tree had decayed naturally. This process creates a carbon-neutral cycle, provided the wood is sourced sustainably. In such cases, heating with wood doesn’t contribute to an increase in atmospheric carbon. A point to ponder is that buring wood does speed up the release of that stored carbon compared to natural decay.

In contrast, heating with electricity generated from fossil fuels introduces carbon that would otherwise remain locked underground. The extraction, mining, and burning of these fuels release significant amounts of CO₂. Additionally, electricity losses during transmission from power stations to homes add to the overall carbon footprint. Even if the electric heater itself is efficient, the upstream emissions often result in a larger environmental impact than burning wood.

A common concern about wood burning is the visible smoke, especially in ecologically sensitive areas like the Himalayas. To mitigate this, it’s crucial to burn well-seasoned, dry wood, ensuring the fire’s energy isn’t wasted on drying the wood. Excessive smoke is often a sign of high moisture content. Using high-efficiency wood stoves or fireplaces also helps by directing more heat into the room rather than letting it escape with the smoke.

As for my personal preference, I take a different approach. Rather than relying on either wood-burning or electric heaters, I prefer dressing in warm layers and minimising the need for artificial heating altogether. It’s a simple, energy-efficient way to stay comfortable through winter.

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Slow Life, Climate Crisis, and Climate Action

As I worked in the garden today, I couldn’t help but notice that the buds on our fruit trees are already starting to swell, a surprising sight for early January. The Climate Crisis is making its mark on our fruit orchard, evident in the unusual warmth during the day. This concerning observation holds significant implications for the upcoming fruit season. Most fruit trees rely on a minimum number of chilling hours during winter, which is the cumulative time spent in sub-zero temperatures. However, the higher-than-usual day temperatures disrupt this essential dormancy period. The warmth sends a signal to the trees, urging them to awaken prematurely, ultimately resulting in a diminished yield of fruits for the upcoming season. Moreover, the buds, now beginning to swell, face the added threat of frost during the chilly nights. The abrupt drop in temperature can lead to the unfortunate demise of these vulnerable buds, compounding the challenges for our orchard.

This isn’t just bad news for us; it’s a stark reminder that the climate crisis is no longer a distant concern but a present reality impacting our daily lives. Urgent action is needed. It’s time for all of us to come together and address the climate crisis before it further jeopardizes the delicate balance of nature.

The first crucial step toward a sustainable future is reducing our reliance on fossil fuels, a challenging yet achievable task. Opt for public transport whenever possible, and consider taking trains for short distances instead of flights. Embrace adaptability rather than depending solely on heating or air-conditioning to combat extreme weather conditions. It’s essential to recognize that seemingly ordinary items like clothes, footwear, and electronic devices contribute to the exploitation of our planet’s resources and fossil fuels.

This is where the concept of slow living comes into play. Living mindfully and adopting a minimalistic approach means consuming fewer goods, thereby reducing our impact on Mother Earth. Personally, I extend the lifespan of my belongings, wearing shoes until their last day of service and accepting minor imperfections in clothing. Why rush to replace a functional mobile phone, camera, or computer with the latest models?

The looming Climate Crisis demands immediate action, and it will undoubtedly influence everyone’s life in various ways. Let’s start a conversation about these issues when we meet next. Together, through small, mindful choices, we can pave the way for a more sustainable and resilient future.

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Hot Chocolate on a Winter Evening

Hot chocolate, to me, is the epitome of pure enchantment. It’s astonishing how readily available cocoa is, yet the art of crafting a truly exceptional cup of hot chocolate seems to elude many. Picture this: a perfect winter evening unfolds with a steaming mug of hot chocolate cradled in my hands, an aged book—preferably a gripping murder mystery set in the bygone British era—and the comforting crackle of a warming fire.

To elevate the experience, the hot cocoa must transcend the mundane; it should be an alchemy of rich cocoa and milk, not merely a casual mixing. The cocoa should be brewed and not just mixed in hot milk. And let’s be clear – a sin it is to present hot chocolate without a generous infusion of sweetness. Extra sweetness, to be precise, transforming each sip into a heavenly indulgence, with the warmth penetrating to the very core.

For the ultimate feel, I insist on brewing my hot chocolate to piping hot perfection. While marshmallows and chocolate pieces aren’t obligatory, their presence in the velvety depths of the drink is nothing short of delightful. And the ritual wouldn’t be complete without a woolen blanket draped over my legs, cocooning me in warmth and comfort.

This moment of bliss demands simplicity. No accompaniments of cookies or cakes intrude upon the sanctity of the experience. Just an oversized mug cradling the essence of pure, unadulterated hot chocolate. The world outside fades away as I savor each sip, the magic of cocoa dancing on my taste buds, and in that serene simplicity, my evening is truly made.

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Narrow Roads are Better !

There are very few people like me who love these narrow hill roads. I have my own reasons.

From a broader perspective – Keeping roads narrow in hilly terrain offers several benefits for both the environment and the overall tourist experience. Firstly, narrow roads are less intrusive on the natural landscape, minimizing the need for extensive land clearance and environmental disruption. This approach also ensures that mountains are not stressed by heavy traffic, reducing soil erosion and preserving the delicate ecosystems that often thrive in these areas. Moreover, the narrow roads discourage casual, short-term visitors, making it more likely that only tourists planning to spend more than a couple of days in the region will embark on the journey. This not only lessens the environmental impact but also attracts travelers who are more likely to appreciate and respect the natural beauty of the hills, contributing to sustainable tourism and the long-term preservation of these majestic landscapes.

As for the agricultural activities, sustainable developmental work, and for the essential services, narrow roads have never been a deterrent.

While it’s true that new roads may be necessary in remote areas, the concept of constructing multiple-lane highways should be strongly discouraged. Instead, our focus should be on preserving these delicate hills, safeguarding their ecological integrity, and enhancing the quality of existing road infrastructure. By doing so, we not only protect the natural beauty of these regions but also ensure a more sustainable and responsible approach to infrastructure development.

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Slip Slidin’ Away

The rainy season is a truly delightful time of year. Everything around is wrapped in lush greenery, while fluffy clouds drift gently across the sky. The steady patter of rain on our metal roof creates a soothing soundtrack, making it the perfect time to catch up on small repairs around the house or care for our flourishing orchard. This season, we took on a new project—building a quaint little greenhouse. As we worked the soil, I discovered the surprising and playful versatility of clay. Its stubborn yet yielding nature brought an unexpected sense of fun to the work.

Sticky clay mud during the rainy season is nature’s way of reminding us that even the most glamorous of red carpets can turn into a slippery runway of humility. It’s the great equalizer, transforming elegant stilettos into modern art installations and transforming our once-pristine sneakers into avant-garde sculptures of mud and misery. So why fight it? Embrace the stickiness, dance with the mud, and remember that in this soggy, squishy battleground, we’re all just trying to find our footing in the chaos of puddles and poetic imperfection.

Ah, yes, I must confess I’ve had a few impromptu mudslide dance-offs while tangoing with that supremely slippery wet clay. But you see, that’s all part and parcel of our nature-loving escapade! The true magic emerges when the sun sets, and I can finally take our nth number of shower, and then a soothing cup of lemon tea. Simon and Garfunkel’s Slip Slidin’ Away, plays in the background, in a low volume. That sense of accomplishment, coupled with the aroma of damp earth and the symphony of crickets, transcends language, reminding us why I willingly dive into these mucky adventures in the first place.

Now, I eagerly await the completion of our greenhouse project, secretly hoping that my family doesn’t catch wind of just how much I relish frolicking around in the embrace of that delightfully wet and slippery clay. It’s my muddy little secret, after all.

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Coffee or Tea

Always faced with this delightful dilemma – Tea or Coffee?

With the rain hammering a rhythm on the roof when the chill starts to set in and if accompanied by a slight pang of hunger, my inclination veers towards the comforting embrace of coffee. To me, the epitome of a perfect coffee lies in the art of brewing it in a Turkish kettle, producing an aromatic yet balanced flavour without excessive bitterness. A touch of frothy milk on top adds a creamy touch, though, on days when hunger eludes me, I gladly skip the milk altogether. My taste tests with various coffee roasts from different companies have revealed that sadly, I am not a connoisseur. I can discern subtle distinctions when sipping them side by side but that is about it. The brewing process, the amount of coffee used, and my mood at the time all seem to play a part in crafting that unique cup of coffee for the moment.

Tea, on the other hand, holds a special place in my heart as the ultimate comfort drink. A precise combination of tea leaves and water, brewed at the right temperature, creates a sublime experience that I thoroughly enjoy. I prefer my tea without any milk, relishing the pure essence of the tea leaves. However, if milk must be added, the village-style ‘chai’ steals my affection, generously infused with milk and accompanied by a piece of jaggery on the side. As for the British tradition of adding a few drops of milk to tea, we villagers humorously call it “poor men’s tea,” recognizing the contrast in flavours and traditions.

In the end, whether it’s the invigorating allure of coffee or the comforting ritual of tea, my choice depends on the weather, my mood, and the simple joys each beverage brings to my life. I am addicted to none but I do enjoy a good cup when I can.

Enjoying every sip, savouring the moment, living mindfully in the present. That is what I strive for.

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A Book Under A Tree

A friend once asked why I hadn’t written in so long. I told him it’s slow living. I write when I feel like it or when something reminds me. At other times, I’m quite content just living quietly, without hurry.

Over the past few months, I’ve found a few quiet spots where I can sit, lean against a tree, and lose myself in a good book. Reading outdoors, with the sounds and scents of nature all around, feels very different from sitting inside. The world outside often vies for my attention. If it’s more interesting than the book, I drift away and forget to read. But when the book grips me, everything else fades. Sometimes a bird passes overhead or a soft breeze stirs the leaves, and I look up for a moment before returning to the story.

At first, I used to worry about insects crawling near me or a hare sneaking up from behind while I sat reading. I would keep glancing around, half-alert, unsure of what might happen next. But over time, I’ve come to appreciate their quiet, mindful way of life. The insects go about their work without the least concern for me, as if I’m not even there. The hares, curious but cautious, will peek from the undergrowth, size me up, and then return to their own world, usually raiding my vegetable patch in search of cabbages. I’ve stopped worrying. Let them have their feast; I’ll have mine in the form of peace and a good book.

That’s what this slow life is all about. Watching, listening, and simply being. No rush, no fuss. My friend, these are just a few of the reasons I’ve come to love this unhurried way of living. It’s not about escaping the world, it’s about learning to sit with it, quietly, and letting it unfold around you.

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A Lazy Day

Usually, I am an early riser. Today, just before the dawn, a drizzle started. The pitter-patter of the rain was so hypnotizing that even after waking up, I once again slept off for about an hour. Later our resident blue-whistling thrush, who has the nest just outside our window, started to sing. It was then when I got up. No fancy alarms can compare with the voice of this bird.

Everyone else is also asleep, so slowly I crept into the kitchen and put the kettle to boil. I am not a tea or coffee connoisseur but on rare occasions, I do enjoy an early morning cup of good tea. With the tea in my hand, I stepped out. The wind was chilling, and the rain that fell had already frozen to ice. Still, standing here, with tea in my hand, and a view to admire, makes it worth the effort.

Today, I have a list of chores to do. First and foremost, stack some wood in case the temperature falls further and I am unable to manage without heating. This is a challenge I give to myself. How far into the winter can I manage without lighting a fire ! It is good for the environment and good for my own resilience. Next chore is to spread some compost over the new planter beds. With drizzles like today and the upcoming snow season, the compost spread now gets time to work its magic in spring. Someone has rightly said, how beautiful a garden or orchard looks in the season, depends on how much hard work has gone into it during the winters.

Slow living also requires some work to be done. The best part comes after sweating out a little. That afternoon nap, that book in the evening, with the soft music in the background, or a chit-chat over some drink.

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My Journal

Today, I have started writing a small diary here. No photographs, no videos, but just simple thoughts that flow.

It seems like just yesterday that my friend and I were sitting in one corner of the deck, late in the evening, sipping our drinks and brooding over the simmering lights on the distant hill across the valley. A moment to savor. The cool breeze and a ‘who-who’ of an owl somewhere nearby. We talked about how villages do give peace of mind, but at a cost. The finances go for a toss. Job opportunities and businesses usually don’t do so well in such faraway places. But, at least, there is some amount of happiness. I can sit quietly and think over things, read a book, and chat with a friend without bothering with the internet or phone.

Such moments are priceless. Even though this was many months ago, I can still remember those lovely moments and live them again. The discussion seems lively and recent. The time was early autumn and the evening wind was starting to develop a pleasant winter nip. After a warm day, such an evening was well awaited.

This is what slow life is and this is what he told me to start journaling.

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