Anniversary! - A Short Story

Photo by Hutomo Abrianto on Unsplash

Forever, it has been a count of firsts! The first kiss, first hugs, first gifts, first purchases, first frosty winters, first unseen & unending fight — a quarter-century.
Finally, as they took a walk down the memory lane, marking their first glorious anniversary discussing how life went past grappling.

Here & now, it was time for another year of firsts — first night in unshared bedspreads, the first vacation without each other, first celebration alone, the first anniversary by themselves.

It was a glorious first anniversary, which was cut out of their marriage as a sign of separation as they did not feel belonged.


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.

Tea for Two - A poem

Photo by δΊ”ηŽ„εœŸ ORIENTO on Unsplash


A ray of sunlight shaping up to my feet
At the dawn of an early hour
Boiling leaves within the dark of a kettle
Making way for us to settle
Across a tiny table
seeing the gleaming eyes
and the echoing giggle

A cup of tea for you and me
Dipping a cookie melted in love
of the sweetness of the tea
Finding bliss and harmony
engaging in pure and creamy
a taste that was rhythm in the symphony!


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally Published in Blue Insights

A Witness of Time! - A poem





Young and true, once upon a time
Love in the heart, mine and thine!

Beauty and youth, innocent and wild
Tied up in the mind making her blind!

As time passes by, a reason to bewail
The agony of life sinks in making her fail!

Wilting the flowery heart
A bitter symphony to impart!

With callous memories, ruined with malice
Sinking deeply into her veins!

Making her bones go brittle
And leaving scars on her soul!

Slowly withered in nature like a dead flower
With cruel claws that capture and rupture!


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published on A Cornered Gurl 

Days of Future Past - A Short Story

Photo by Marin Barisic on Unsplash

It was a normal day and I was bored beyond belief. I was waiting for the package of spray paint to come in since I love experimenting with different colours and medium. Finally, I heard the doorbell go off and I sprinted to the door. When I opened the door, the package was delivered by the agent. I shrug and take it inside. As I open the packed carton box, I realize it is not the right set of spray cans I was waiting for. Irked, I put it on the carpet spread across the hall and sat on the couch, pondering what to do.

I was annoyed with the spray cans muddle. They weren’t even what I ordered! In discontent, I sat across the room thinking. I thought to myself, why not go around the city, to study street art, to get some inspiration, before I get to explore my creative side, this time with jumbled up paint can spray art.

Street art has been a whining baby, crying for attention every time I set my eyes on it, not seeking for a passing change, but for a permanent shift in the heart of our culture and belief system. It was time, I dive in deeper into this notion I have about street art.


I lock the house and set myself for a long walk. I go walking down to the inner city. It grew out of the cracked sidewalk like the jagged gap-toothed grin of an old junkie. The only splash of colour amidst the grime streets was coming from the lurid graffiti, alongside the littered sidewalks. The images I see, bleed right from the canister, emotions too vivid for words, too harsh to hear and too cruel to accept. These graphics imprinted on the walls of the streets, remind me of the book — History of American Grafitti, by Caleb Neelon and Roger Gastman, which spills out a definitive story behind the most influential art form of from the last century. It traces the evolution of this medium from its early freight-train days to its city boom on the streets and the modernization.

As I continue to make my way into the grime shady streets walking, I savvy, the graffiti is talking to every level of the brain, inviting deeper thoughts and realizations, shouting in the truest language of mankind. I see the light, there is a soul in the graffiti art, the pictures depicting troubles and hope, anguish the people living in this world are enduring. It was just depressing and melancholy.

I continued with my incessant walking and observe the spray paint dim in the setting sun, it occurred to me, graffiti didn’t have to be cynical, anti, dismissive, corrosive or detrimental, it could be creative too, by giving it an artistic angle or promote ideas, on social issues and concerns. If only the people could get a real artist to use spray cans, to do something like that on the street walls then maybe the vandals and the protesters would leave the walls alone, respect it even. I think it was worth a try. Certainly, better than supplying another clean canvas for the rebels, racists and the communists to spread terror.

That aerosol filled with spray paint, invented by a paint salesman from northern Illinois could neither control nor predict the impact of his innovations. Who knew would be with a blow-back, used in a manner, which rebels and protesters use to express themselves on the street art?


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published in The Weekly Knob

Don't have to wait - A poem

Photo by Ben White on Unsplash


You wonder where you are
with the heaviness in your heart
and nothing to say
feeling you have lost yourself!

Wild thoughts clouding your head
caught up in the surface than deep down
when you know are strong to survive this
by not letting dark control you!

Don’t let hope fade, slip through your fingers
Life is what we make it now
Don’t have to wait for the right time
We are all blind, we can’t see the end of future
Love what you have now
Do what you love now
Be alive again
Come to life
letting your heart glow!


©Shweta, 2020. All Rights Reserved.
Originally published on The Cotton Thread.

So.....I got published as a writer in Spillwords

Photo by Marcos Paulo Prado on Unsplash It’s published. My writing has been published. I have only published in Medium publica...