From Broken To Bhairava

Venkatesh A is the author of The God in the Ruins: From Broken to Bhairava, a transformative poetry collection tracing the journey from fractured identity to fearless self through the fierce lens of Indian spirituality and the archetype of Bhairava. Winner of the 21st Century Emily Dickinson Award. The collection is available now. 

Before the temple, there is always the earthquake. Before the lotus, there is always the mud. And before a man can truly meet himself, everything he has pretended to be must first be taken from him. This is not a modern idea. The ancient ones knew it. Shiva knew it. And now, in the quiet and devastating beauty of his debut poetry collection, so does Venkatesh A.

The God in the Ruins: From Broken to Bhairava is not a book you simply read. It is a book you survive. And when you come out on the other side of its twenty one poems you do not feel fixed. You feel found. There is a difference. Fixing implies something was wrong with you. Finding implies you were always there, buried under everything you were told to be.

Venkatesh spent thirty years being buried. He built what he calls the architecture of approval, a life constructed brick by careful brick from the expectations of parents, society and the most unforgiving critic of all, his own need to be seen as worthy. The house was immaculate. The performance was convincing. And somewhere inside all of it a man was quietly suffocating, living in rooms built for someone else, performing happiness for an audience that never stopped watching.

When it finally broke it did not break gently. There was a fracture, sudden and total, the kind that leaves you sitting in the wreckage of a life wondering how something that looked so solid could have been so hollow all along. The people around him saw a breakdown. They offered sympathy in the way people offer sympathy when they do not quite understand what they are looking at. Venkatesh saw something else entirely. He saw, for the first time in thirty years, the floor. And on that floor, underneath everything that had collapsed, he found something that had not broken. Something ancient and fierce and entirely his own.

This is where Bhairava enters the story.

In the vast and luminous landscape of Indian spirituality there are gods who comfort and gods who challenge. Bhairava is not the former. He is the most formidable manifestation of Shiva, the annihilator of fear and falsehood, the one who stands at the threshold of your greatest terror and does not look away. He does not arrive with flowers. He arrives with fire. And the fire is not punishment. It is the most radical form of love that exists, the love that refuses absolutely to let you remain smaller than what you truly are.

Venkatesh did not find Bhairava in a temple. He found him in his own destruction. When every carefully constructed identity had been stripped away and he stood finally and terrifyingly alone with himself, he discovered that the self he found there was not the broken one. The broken one had been the performance. What remained was something indestructible, waiting with infinite patience for the noise to stop.

The collection maps this journey across three movements. The first, The Shattering, does not look away from the pain of losing a life you built with your own hands. These poems inhabit grief honestly, sitting in the silence of a man who has watched everything he thought he was dissolve. The second, The Crucible, is where the fire does its necessary work. In one poem Venkatesh describes his anxiety as a noisy tenant named Fear who redecorated his life in beige, draining colour from every room. In another he describes years of collected validation, the approval, the gold stars, the quiet pride of being considered reliable and good, only to realise none of it was safety. All of it was weight. An anchor disguised as achievement, holding him in place at the bottom of a life he had never actually chosen.

Then comes The Emergence. It does not arrive like a sunrise. It arrives the way dawn actually arrives, quietly, without announcement, until you look up and realise the darkness is gone. The confidence in these final poems is not loud. It is the deep stillness of someone who has stopped performing and started existing. The energy of Shiva after the great dance of destruction is complete. Not emptiness. Pure and absolute presence.

What makes this book extraordinary is that Venkatesh does not write from the comfortable distance of someone who has arrived. He writes from the road, as what he calls an awake man, not an enlightened guru but a human being who, at great cost and with great courage, stopped pretending to be asleep.

In the tradition of Shiva nothing is wasted. Not the pain. Not the collapse. Not the years spent building the wrong life. The ruins are not a monument to failure. They are the foundation of everything real.

The God was always in the ruins. Venkatesh A simply had the courage to go looking.

TITLE : The God in the Ruins : From Broken to Bhairava

BOOK: Amazon.in

Award: 21st Century Emily Dickinson Award