226 episodes

Sunil Bhandari is a poet by compulsion. His words heal his wounds, makes him understand stars, makes him resolve pain. His first book of poetry ’Of love and other abandonments’ was an Amazon bestseller. This podcast is of his poetry.

Uncut Poetry Sunil Bhandari

    • Arts

Sunil Bhandari is a poet by compulsion. His words heal his wounds, makes him understand stars, makes him resolve pain. His first book of poetry ’Of love and other abandonments’ was an Amazon bestseller. This podcast is of his poetry.

    Grief Strikes Where Love Struck First

    Grief Strikes Where Love Struck First

    When someone we love dies, everything changes. The normalcies of routine possibly give an outward sense of balance, but the turmoil inside resembles wreckage. We sink, wish to remain sunk, everything around us seems trivial - almost as if we can see through the artifice of the world, unable to tell everyone how they were missing out on the most important things in life, as they fought over the the insignificant, the trivial.
    And as is our wont as good people - we remember the good and the rest is subsumed in a closed vault inside our soul.
     
    And I wonder - what is ever normal?
     
    And I wonder about this connect of love, the dependence, the care, the thought, the absolute faith.
     
    Are we emotional limpets to love? Do we grow stunted in love? Is care just an euphemism for dependence? Is the gift of attention a form of smothering?
    Is what we call love just an emotional crutch?
     
    When someone we love passes on, we can see our worlds contract, we see ourselves stand diminished, and we can suddenly see with incredible clarity how much we are an accumulation of all that we’ve now lost. In a strange way, we know we’ve become representatives of who and what’s lost, the protector of the flame.
     
    And then we realize how love is always a completion. We come as sketches and it’s who we love who fill us with the colours which make our lives iridescent, and us a 3D rendition of life itself.
     
    We are lucky if our beings have overflowed with a loved one's presence, cantankerous and problematic as they might have been, because deep inside every such relationship is the kernel of care, the warmth of which fills our life - it burns when it breathes, it glows like a flame when it’s gone.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems which talk of passing on  - 
    What Do I Leave Behind?
    The Final Goodbye (or why lovers decide to die together)
    An Epitaph Made of Light & Air

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -

    The Long Travel to Terra Two by Kalak

    • 6 min
    Dreaming of You

    Dreaming of You

    A lot of what we are, the comfort of living, the beauty of how we view the world, is when we know we are cared for, and the ones closest to us are people we have implicit faith in.
     
    To know that love is a thought away, that nothing will take away the presence of the person we care for  the most, is to know that the primary foundations on which our esteem, worth and respect lie on, is immutable and unmoving. And in a broad sense, it gives us permission to fly - or not - with the full knowledge that we will be saved and savoured irrespective of whether we succeed or we don’t.
     
    Faith is potent force. Its presence, though amorphous, is what really makes life’s meaning tangible, as our relationships get cast in something which is akin to a permanent state of being. We are better because we know we are not alone. However much the physical distance from the ones we love.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems on distances between lovers - 
    In the Drift We Will Find Our Certainties
    Lost Atlas of Belonging
    These Darned Long Distance Relationships

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -

    Summer Morning (full version) by Musiclfiles


     

    • 3 min
    Life for Rent

    Life for Rent

    So much of our life is a reaction. As if it is determined by someone else’s priorities and emotions and needs, and we become byproducts of their ambitions and needs.
     
    It could be anybody - a father for whom we become the fulfillment of failed dreams, a lover whose hauntings of failed relationships find shelter in our quiet nooks, a brother who leans on us when he needs validation or unquestioning support. The list goes on.
     
    And we act as obedient support systems - loyal, available, eager to help. Even when we know we are asking for trouble, even when we know it is not in our best interest, even when we know life has something else in store for us.
     
    But we still become someone else’s agenda.
     
    And we suffer for it. Because we get sucked into universes we did not want to be part of, but of which we become reluctant denizens. And our lives change.
     
    And instead of making our own lives, with our own mistakes and compulsions and realisations and hurts and sinews and wounds, we become carriers of other people’s needs, bridges to other needs, derivatives of others dreams.
     
    Till we build the courage to look inside ourselves and force ourselves to learn to say - no, no longer, no more.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems which talk of the strange dilemmas of life - 
    Adventures in Two Worlds
    Things We Gather
    I Like The Ordinary Life

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -

    Sleepers by Sascha Ende
    Strange New Worlds by Sascha Ende

    • 4 min
    The Art of the Lonely Good Deed

    The Art of the Lonely Good Deed

    We are often given chances in life to go beyond ourselves. These could be random happenstances, things which only we notice, and which we may choose to ignore - or not. 
     
    If we pay attention and choose to clutch at those moments and do something tiny, unwittingly we invite, if not the appreciation at least a nod, from the universe. Maybe nothing changes, maybe nobody notices, but here’s the thing - we change, in tiny degrees but enough to shift something inside us.
     
    The quietness in this is important, the element of shy boldness is a prerequisite, the lack of noise is a given. We should do, we should move on.
     
    So, what does this unheralded, unspoken of, often unnoticed, act do to us?
     
    I think, apart from the loud gifts of DNA bestowed onto us, we are also a growth of things we do, an amalgam of all the traces left behind in us of the deeds we do stolidly or impulsively.  But something shifts inside us. Something tell us - we are better for it.
    To be a good human being does not need headlines or acknowledgment, as it is sufficient in itself. And this goodness radiates out, and people who know nothing of it, also wonder and gravitate towards this basic element which shines through. Because this is a secret which nobody can see but everyone can sense. And makes people dip into their better selves.
     
    The fire grows, as it were, with just a sense of the flame. And the world is a better place for it.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems on good deeds which fall on us like soft rain - 
    A Legacy of Kindness
    Maybe, a Little Kindness
    Why We Should be Happy with Berry Jam on Table Edges

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -
    Artemis by Sascha EndeFree download: https://filmmusic.io/song/6934-artemisLicense (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
    &
    String Impromptu Number 1 by Kevin Macleod

    • 7 min
    Politics on the Dining Table

    Politics on the Dining Table

    There is nothing worse than politics dividing family.
     
    I have seen people develop distaste for their dearest and closest because of being on opposite sides of the political divide.
     
    Something which is (mere) belief, takes on an expanded definition to include a commentary on character, and acts as an unsubstantiated and unsavoury revelation. And with astonishment we exclaim “What! You support —-?” As if it was the ultimate excretion and misdemeanour.
     
    In the city I stay in, everybody is a political guru. Some emotionally, and some after study and observation. And it often becomes a battle of belief vs intellect. And conversations and emotions go haywire. And become deeply divisive.
     
    And being a highly political nation, where as a people we consume (and practice) politics with gusto, finding someone close being not even close to our political beliefs is dismaying - and often unacceptable. How, then, can a conversation not be a battle? How can we not conclude that the other is at best insensitive or at worst a cretin (kreet n)?
    The hypocrisies are inherent in the premise. All dining table discussion on politics are nothing more than air. We criticise with the depth of our beings, lean left whilst having expensive wine, talk of one god whilst deeply suspicious of another’s religion.
    How much do our politics - and religion - diminish us, how it makes our worst define us, how much something which is nothing more than a reaction to headlines makes us be judgemental of the ones closest to us.
     
    In a life which is so short, and so completely beautiful, we deliberately lean into what we think defines us, when at best it is an amorphous state - changing as we understand more, read more, feel more, see more.We bring tragedy merely  because we give importance to the transient.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems which talk of how politics adn religion determine our lives - 
    In Search of a God
    Mr Hoskote, have you visited Kashmir recently?
    The Tragedy of the Other

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -
    Liberty Quest by Sascha EndeFree download: https://filmmusic.io/song/293-liberty-questLicense (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
     

    Heavens Gate by Frank Schroeter

    • 6 min
    Adventures in Two Worlds

    Adventures in Two Worlds

    We live multiple lives. Each one of us have variations, but everyday our paths fork out. And we move from the secure to the stormy; from standing naked to being armoured; from garnering the blessings of the universe to ploughing through the detritus of the denizery.
     
    Often we are able to navigate this transition in the simplest way possible - we remain the same in every world, raw and uncluttered, ready to take the blows for being us. But more often then not, we tweak our selves to the scenarios in front and archetypes expected, to fit in, to flit through, without too much damage to the world or ourselves.
     
    But it’s not always easy, definitely not for the sensitive soul, which wants to remain true and get by peacefully. And I say to such people - go gently, be true. For there is a reward at the end of every struggle to fit in or not - to be recognised for being authentic. And the universe invariably converges its rewards towards such people, albeit slowly, dreadfully so.
     
    I learned to stay in two worlds as two people for a long time. And it was extremely strenuous apart from being incontrovertibly inauthentic. Until I could no longer be what I was not. I have no memory of the inflection point, the moment when something inside me said “I will implode.” But I dropped pretences. And I lost friends. And I got peace.
     
    I seeked lesser commitments, I could speak my mind with ease, I could say no with complete peace of mind, and I walked guiltless.
     
    The drainpipe of my worlds became a bridge, and both my worlds converged into one.
     

    If you liked this poem, consider listening to these other poems on the struggles we face in our daily lifes - 
    I Like The Ordinary Life
    What Stretches in Front
    The Passing of Autumn

    Follow me on Instagram at @sunilgivesup.

    Get in touch with me on uncutpoetrynow@gmail.com
     
    The details of the music used in this episode are as follows -
    Misty lights by Rafael Krux

    Melodic Interlude Two by Alexander Nakarada

    • 5 min

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