Past, Present & Future — The Sacred Triangle

‘Past was a dream, future is a fantasy, and present is all that ever matters.’

A lyrical philosophical tale spanning ancient Damascus to the desert mountains of Balkh, exploring humanity’s relationship with time through the teachings of a defrocked priest and the mystical wisdom of Maga, an enigmatic desert woman. The story weaves together the concept of the “sacred triangle” - where survival, love, and desire intersect within the singular reality of the present moment.

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‘Jawdat, please listen to me, son.’ My old father requested me, while we sat on the dunes, watching the long worms of caravans, leaving and entering Damascus.

‘Jawdat, my darling son, everything in this universe speaks. The mountains, the deserts, the oceans, and the clouds - they all speak. But to understand them, you have to first learn their sacred language.’ My father said in his usual poetic manner.

He was a strange man - my father. He was a priest once, but not anymore. Once he started questioning the power of the gods, he was soon ousted from the ranks of the holy. The other priests thought him mad, and I shared their opinion. But strangely, his unceremonious ousting from the temple did bring us two closer. We started sitting together and eating together, and took long walks in the golden deserts surrounding the ancient city of Damascus.

It was only when I started listening to him with attention that I realized something. He was not mad. Instead, he was blessed with a miraculous ability to see the invisible and look past the obvious. He had seen the true light, and his wise words vibrated with the rationale of his beliefs.

‘What about the light father?’ I asked him.

‘What about it?’ He looked at me with confusion.

‘Does the light speak too?’ I asked thoughtfully.

‘Yes, it does, and so does the darkness.’ He nodded his head, and his eyes reflected the expanse of the clear blue sky.

‘The darkness?’ I was confused. ‘Darkness is nothing. Even pure darkness is the absolute absence of light.’

‘Not at all, Jawdat.’ He smiled knowingly. ‘Where light is all energy, darkness carries neither matter nor energy. But still it exists. And its independence from energy ensures that darkness travels through time without any transformation. This intactness of darkness makes it wiser than the light.’

‘But what do they say? What do they tell us - the light and the darkness?’ I asked without completely understanding his line of reasoning.

‘The light tells us that life is a sacred triangle.’ He bent down and drew a triangle in the sand with his brass-tipped staff. ‘The first corner of this triangle is survival, the second corner is love, and the third corner is desire.’ He drew the ancient symbols for each of these elements - a smaller baseless triangle within a circle for survival, a crowned heart for love, and a snake for desire.

‘And where does this triangle reside? Does it remain suspended within the confines of the soul?’ I asked him as to me, the soul encompassed all.

‘No, my son!’ My father said, drawing a circle enclosing the sacred triangle and the three symbols within. ‘The scared triangle with all its three elements, exists within a real moment of time.’

‘All moments of time are real, Father.’ I laughed.

‘No, Jawdat!’ he looked at me sternly. ‘The past is obscured in the dust of time, and the future is just a vague possibility. Only the present is real. So it is in the present that the sacred triangle hangs and resides. And that is something that the darkness tells us.’

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I scooped up some sand in my palm and looked at it closely. The grains were all together, yet separate and individual. Some shone with a sparkling brilliance, while others were just grey and black speckles. I clenched my fist, and the sand slipped out. I tried to hold it in, but it all drained out.

I looked up and found the old woman watching me intently.

‘Tell me, O’ Maga, the wise one!’ I asked her, watching her silver hair blowing with the night wind.

‘What is the most significant of the past, the present, and the future?’

‘Hmm!’ She raised both her hands and tied her hair in a loose bun with her ringed fingers. The reds and greens of the rubies and emeralds flashed from within the silver threads. ‘What do you think, child? What do you believe is the most significant of these three?’

I looked up at her. She was silent, but there was a subtle smile dancing at the corners of her mouth.

_____________________________________________________

The old woman was strange. Maga - that’s what she told me her name was. And I was beginning to believe that Maga was the embodiment of the sacred triangle for me.

I found her in the desert. Rather, it was she who found me. My caravan was attacked by the robbers two nights out of Balkh. I was deeply wounded and was left for dead by the other survivors. How many days and nights I spent in the cold mountains, I do not know. Each sunrise brought along a new intensity of misery and thirst, while each night burnt me with her cold, freezing fingers.

Then one evening, something cold and wet was pressed against my blackened and dry lips. Slowly, a few drops of water trickled onto my thorny tongue and down my parched throat. I slowly opened my eyes. My head was resting on her folded thigh, and her kind face was smiling down at me. She had drenched her black scarf in water and was moistening my lips.

Gradually, I came back to life. She had snatched me away from the clutches of death. At first, I thought she was just a vision - an illusion and product of my deranged mind. But the revival of my strength assured me of the reality of her existence.

We were inseparable thereafter, though Maga did not need my company at all. She was old but still wild enough to carry a curved dagger, hidden within the folds of her black robe. She apparently needed neither food nor water. I had never seen her eating anything except that sometimes she chewed on some dried roots and mushrooms.

Maga was my scared triangle - in that there was no doubt. She was my survival when I needed to cling to life. She was my warmth when I was tortured by my loneliness. And one night she became my desire, when my senses were heavy with lust and my body was craving human touch. I expected myself to be disgusted in the morning. But when the sun rose, I found my heart filled with only love for her. So yes, she had become my sacred triangle.

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‘So what do you think, child? Maga asked, breaking my reverie.

‘Huh?’ I looked at her questioningly.

‘What is the most significant of these three, the past, the present, or the future?’

I thought hard before presenting an answer. ‘My past has made me what I am, and my future is pulling me into itself. But I am breathing in the present. So perhaps, the present is the most significant of all.’ I brushed off the dust on my hands and looked up at her.

‘Yes!’ She smiled with her kohl-lined eyes. I peered back into them, and the reflection of the bright moon peered back at me. ‘Past is only a dream and the future is a fantasy. Only the present is real - as real as it can be.’

‘But what if the present is also a dream?’ I asked.

‘That is possible too, of course.’ She smiled at me. ‘But you are living this dream…aren’t you?’

‘Yes, I am.’ I confessed.

‘Past is important because it started with your birth, and the future is important because it will end with your death.’ She spread her hands, and the night wind blew her long robe in a trail of grey shadows. ‘But what is enclosed in between these two absolute realities is a series of moments. Each of these moments becomes the future, the present, and then the past, in turn. But it is only when the moment exists in the present that it matters the most. Because it encompasses the entirety of your existence.’ She finished her brief lecture and smiled at me.

‘Maga?’ I asked her, ‘Do the dead regret not living in the moment?’

‘That is something only the dead can tell you, child.’

I sat down on the cold sand, and she rested her head on my shoulder. I smelt the sandalwood smell of her silver hair and closed my eyes peacefully. The night was melting fast around us, and the moon was diving below the horizon. Soon, it became just a yellow shadow in the West.

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‘Jawdat!’ Maga whispered in my ear, and I opened my eyes.

The night had enveloped us completely, and the desert was all silent. The wind had died down, and the lonely stars were sparkling silently - witnessing our present.

I looked at her, and she directed my gaze towards a few stars lining the horizon. Some of them gradually detached from the others and slowly crept nearer until they became a short trail of moving lanterns. The dead night air sighed again and brought the murmuring of the wavering wails to our ears.

Shadows were hiding behind the lanterns. Slowly, the shadows started assuming human forms. It looked like a funeral procession, creeping along the soft sand with deliberate steps. By then, the wail had become a rich mixture of grief and tears, the heralds of some unspoken tragedy.

I saw the wooden box, solemn in its quiet grace, riding the shoulders of wailing mourners. Though it jerked and rolled with each step, its occupant was very much dead and lifeless.

‘Jawdat!’ Maga again whispered my name and then muttered some words under her breath.

I felt my body dissolving into the darkness. I became the night wind and caressed the wet cheeks of the tired mourners. I tasted the bitterness of tragedy and then stole into the dark coffin. I became the darkness itself and crawled underneath the dead eyelids. And the dead spoke to me:

‘Touch my lips, which have kissed a hundred beauties,

caress my eyes, that have dreamt a million dreams

Feel my heart, that preferred passion over duties,

and run in my veins, that once pulsated with extremes

But no more, my friend, no more, no more,

I breathe no more, I am dead for sure

I am a lonesome traveller, walking a dark path,

my fate is unsure, my end is all vague

There is no light in my eyes, neither joy nor wrath,

my heart silently suffers - loneliness is the deadliest plague

I was a man once, but now I am just a bundle of flesh,

the flesh that is beginning to rot and stink

I wish I could start my whole life afresh,

I wish I had more time to ponder and to think

Look at my wife, beating her chest in grief,

but her tears are drying up really very fast

Tomorrow she will live again, for this tragedy was brief,

I was her joy in the present, but now I am her past

Listen to the shuffling steps that belong to my weary sons,

they are burdened with sorrow, but their hearts are filled with hope

Tomorrow they will rise again, for death only stuns,

for their future is bright, as they will slowly climb the rope

Listen, my friend, and listen carefully,

my time has come, and yours will come soon

Listen, my friend, and listen attentively,

I am now dead, and you too will die soon

Life is a dew drop, vanishing once kissed by the sun,

dust on a moth’s wings, only ash once kissed by a flame

So live your life, live it to the full; have all the joy, have all the fun,

for in the end, there’ll be nothing left but regrets and shame’

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‘Did you hear the dead man’s words?’ Maga asked me.

‘Yes, I did.’

‘And what have you understood?’ ‘That past was a dream, future is a fantasy, and present is all that ever matters.’

The King Who Wears a Crown of Frost

Introduction

A haunting contemplative poem exploring the universal human experience of loss and its profound impact on our existence. Through vivid imagery of a mythical King who rules over all lost things from his frost-crowned throne, this introspective piece examines how loss shapes identity and the hidden wisdom that emerges from pain. The poem delves into existential questions about where lost loves, dreams, and parts of ourselves go, creating a powerful metaphor of an island kingdom built from collective human grief. A thought-provoking exploration of sorrow’s transformative power and the bitter fruit of understanding that grows from life’s inevitable losses.

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So many things are lost, almost every day;

a child may lose a toy, or an adult, his heart

We may misplace ourselves if we go astray;

if our choices in love are not very smart

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We lose what we love, what we hold dear;

we lose what we hate, what we so despise

No criteria - we may lose a smile or a tear;

we may lose our madness or what makes us wise

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We lose so much; our lives are tainted by loss;

wretched beings with their backs all stooped

We lose so much, we are defined by our loss;

garlands of failure, our tragedies all looped

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Where do all these lost things go, once gone?

This is the very thought that makes me curious

Do they cease to exist beyond their last dawn?

Do they become shadows, silent yet furious?

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Perhaps there is a dark island, far, far away;

filled with deep sorrow, it is eternally cursed

A sea of knowledge, all silent and grey;

pulsing with regret, an unquenched thirst

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On that island, there is a colossal hall of grief;

therein weeps a King, wearing his crown of frost

His legacy is so vast, and yet he fears no thief;

his, is the treasure of all that has ever been lost

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He laments not the loss, yet his tears are true;

he mourns the tragedy of loss, dying in vain

Loss is a tree that bears fruit, if only we knew;

the fruit of wisdom, rotten and bitter with pain

In the Memory of Wolves & Gypsies

The ancient gods woke from stone to answer my questions about wolves and gypsies, then fell silent again—having shown me humanity’s unforgivable crimes.

A haunting narrative poem about encountering ancient stone gods atop the Bostan mountain, who come alive to share their grief over humanity’s destruction of wild freedom. Through smoking rings and shared sorrow, the gods reveal the fate of the great grey wolves—hunted to extinction—and the nomadic gypsies—persecuted until their music died forever.


I saw them once, the ancient gods,

majestic in stone, holding their golden rods

They were sitting atop the Bostan mountain,

laughing and drinking from an olden fountain

They were there, bathing in the golden light,

knitting random clouds - grey and stark white


I begged for attention, and their laughter froze,

they all looked down and beckoned me close

‘Come sit with us, child, let us smoke for a while,

for you have travelled far, a lonely prince in exile

Your face looks young, yet your eyes look old,

sparkling with a hunger for knowledge and not gold’


I sat with them and smoked for long,

I drank with them and rang their gong

Our rings of smoke danced and played games,

while a great fire burned, the wind stoking its flames

I loved their company and heard their tales,

I walked with them and traced their memory trails


‘Pray tell me, O godsyou are ancient and so old,

where are the wolves, the dwellers of dark and cold?

The wolves that howled, the wolves that reigned,

who loved their freedom and could never be chained?

One could smell their shaggy fur and see their burning eyes,

riding the northern winds, howling their haunting cries’


On hearing my question, the old gods grew all sad,

their mirth grew cold, and their eyes were no more glad

‘The great grey wolves, who were so grand and so bold,

whose stories were woven and were repeatedly told?

The wolves have long gone, their howls are silent forever,

they were hunted by your kind, so merciless and so clever’


We smoked some more and blew more rings,

and thought of death, the end of kings

We drank some more and drank our fill,

and thought of time, our hearts so still

Our sadness made us silent, and our silence ruled the day,

respecting all the dead wolves, our laughter held at bay


‘Pray tell me, O godsso ancient and so wise,

where are the gypsies, with their wild, green eyes?

The ever-free gypsies, who roamed and ruled the plains,

and their powerful shamans, who could call the rains?

I can smell their fires and I can hear their harps,

their songs echoing loudly, rolling down the scarps’


On hearing my question, the old gods grew all silent,

their silence grew somber, and the wind turned violent

‘You ask of the gypsies, who once roamed the great plains,

with wings under their feet, they who hated all chains?

The gypsies have long gone, their music is dead forever,

persecuted by your kind, you have no tolerance whatsoever’


Hearing their accusing answers, seeing the real truth,

tears filled my eyes, and I forgot my own youth

‘If the gypsies have all left and the wolves have all gone,

why are you still here, with your faces sad and drawn?

If the howls are no more and the music is all dead,

why are you still here, with eyes filled with dread?’


The gods fell quiet, with their whispers all hushed,

I looked at them in farewell, my spirits all crushed

I intended to apologize, I wanted to seek forgiveness,

I wanted to just leave, ending all business

On the rich canvas of life, I saw my race, a stain,

but the old gods had all turned to stone again

Past, Present & Future – The Sacred Triangle

‘Did you hear the dead man’s words?’ Maga asked me.

‘Yes, I did.’

‘And what have you understood?’

‘That past was a dream, the future is a fantasy, and the present is all that ever matters.’


Read more: Past, Present & Future – The Sacred Triangle

‘Jawdat! Please listen to me, son.’ My old father used to request me, while we sat on the sand dunes, watching the long lines of caravans leaving and entering Damascus.

‘Jawdat my darling son! Everything in the universe speaks. The mountains, the deserts, the oceans, and the clouds – they all speak. But in order to understand them, you have to first learn their sacred language.’

He was a strange man – my father. He was a priest once, but not anymore. Once he started questioning the power of the gods, he was soon ousted from the ranks of the holy. The other priests thought him mad and I shared their opinion. But strangely, his ousting from the temple did bring us two closer. We started sitting together and eating together and taking long walks in the golden desert surrounding the ancient city of Damascus.

It was only when I started listening to him with attention that I realized something. He was not mad. Instead, he was blessed with a miraculous ability to see the invisible and look beyond the horizon. He had seen the true light and his wise words vibrated with the rationale of his beliefs.

‘What about the light father?’ I asked him.

‘What about it?’ He looked at me with confusion.

‘Does the light speak too?’

‘Yes it does and so does the darkness.’ He nodded his head and his eyes reflected the expanse of the clear blue sky.

‘The darkness?’ I was confused. ‘Darkness is nothing – even pure darkness is the absolute absence of light.’

‘Not at all, Jawdat.’ He smiled knowingly.

‘Where light is all energy, darkness carries neither matter nor energy. But still, it exists. And its independence from energy ensures that darkness travels through time without any transformation. This intactness of darkness makes it wiser than the light.’

‘But what do they say? What do they tell us – the light and the darkness?’ I asked without completely understanding his line of reasoning.   

‘The light tells us that life is a sacred triangle.’ He bent down and drew a triangle in the sand with his brass-tipped staff.

‘One corner of this triangle is survival; the second corner is love; and the third corner is desire.’ He drew the ancient symbols for each of these elements – a smaller baseless triangle within a circle for survival; a crowned heart for love; and a snake for desire.

‘And where does this triangle reside? Does it remain suspended within the confines of the soul?’ I asked him. To me, the soul encompassed all.

‘No, my son!’ My father said, drawing a circle enclosing the sacred triangle and the three symbols within.

‘The scared triangle with its elements of survival, love, and desire, exists within a real moment of time.’

‘All moments of time are real Father.’ I laughed.

‘No, Jawdat!’ he looked at me sternly.

‘The past is obscured in the dust of time, and the future is just a possibility. Only the present is real. So it is in the present that the scared triangle hangs and resides. And that is something that the darkness tells us.’


I scooped up some sand in my palm and looked at it closely. The grains were all together, yet separate and individual. Some shone with a sparkling brilliance, while others were just grey and black speckles. I clenched my fist and the sand slipped out. I tried to hold it in but it all drained out.   

I looked up and found the old woman watching me intently.

‘Tell me O’ Maga, the wise one!’ I asked her, watching her silver hair blowing with the night wind.

‘What is the most significant of these three: the past, the present or the future?’

‘Hmm!’ She raised both her hands and tied her hair in a loose bun with her ringed fingers. The red and greens of the rubies and emeralds flashed from within the silver threads.

‘What do you think child? What do you believe, is the most significant of these three?’

I looked up at her. She was silent but there was a subtle smile dancing at the corners of her mouth.


She was strange – the old woman. Maga – that’s what she told me her name was. And I was beginning to believe that Maga was the embodiment of the sacred triangle for me.

I found her in the desert. Rather it was she who found me. My caravan was attacked by the robbers two nights out of Balkh. I was deeply wounded and was left for dead by the other survivors. How many days and nights I spent in the cold mountains, I do not know. Each sunrise brought along a new intensity of misery and thirst; while each night burnt me with her cold freezing fingers.

Then one evening, something cold and wet was pressed against my blackened and dry lips. Slowly, a few drops of water trickled onto my thorny tongue and down my parched throat. I slowly opened my eyes. My head was resting on her folded thigh and her kind face was smiling down at me. She had drenched her black scarf in water and was wetting my lips.

Gradually, I came back to life. She had snatched me away from the clutches of death. At first, I thought she was just a vision – an illusion and product of my deranged mind. But the revival of my strength assured me of the reality of her existence.

We were inseparable thereafter. Maga did not need my company at all. She was old but still wild enough to carry a curved dagger, hidden within the folds of her black robe. She apparently needed neither food nor water. I had never seen her eating anything except sometimes I saw her chewing on some dried roots and mushrooms.

Maga was my scared triangle – in that there was no doubt. She was my survival when I needed to cling to life. She was my warmth when I was tortured by my loneliness. And one night she became my desire when my senses were heavy with lust and my body was craving human touch. I expected myself to be disgusted in the morning. But when the sun rose, I found my heart filled with only love for her. So yes, she had become my sacred triangle.  


‘So what do you think child? Maga asked breaking my reverie.

‘Huh?’ I looked at her questioningly.

‘What is the most significant of these three: the past, the present or the future?’

I thought hard before presenting an answer.

‘My past has made me what I am and my future is pulling me into itself. But I am breathing in the present. So perhaps, the present is the most significant of all.’ I brushed off the dust on my hands and looked up at her.

‘Yes!’ She smiled with her kohl-lined eyes. I peered into them and the reflection of the bright moon peered back at me.

The past is only a dream and the future is a fantasy. Only the present is real – as real as it can be.’

‘But what if the present is also a dream?’ I asked.

‘That is possible too of course.’ She smiled at me. ‘But you are living this dream…aren’t you?’

‘Yes! I am.’

‘Past is important because it started with your birth, and the future is important because it will end with your death.’ She spread her hands and the night wind blew her long robe in a trail of grey shadows.

‘But what is enclosed in between these two absolute realities, is a series of moments. Each of these moments becomes the future, present, and then past. But it is only when the moment exists in the present that it matters the most. Because it encompasses the entirety of your existence.’

‘Maga?’ I asked her. ‘Do the dead regret not living in the moment?’

‘That is something only the dead can tell you, child!’

‘Hmm!’ I sat down on the cold sand and she rested her head on my shoulder.

I smelt the sandalwood smell of her silver hair and closed my eyes peacefully. The night was melting fast around us and the moon was diving below the horizon. Soon it became just a yellow shadow in the West.


‘Jawdat!’ Maga whispered in my ear and I opened my eyes.

The dark night had enveloped us completely and the desert was all silent. The wind had died down and the lonely stars were sparkling silently – witnessing our present.

I looked at her and she directed my gaze towards a few stars lining the horizon. Some of them gradually detached from the others and slowly crept nearer until they became a short trail of moving lanterns. The dead night air sighed again and brought the murmuring of the wavering wails to our ears. 

There were shadows hiding behind the lanterns. Slowly, the shadows started assuming a human form. It looked like a funeral procession, creeping along the soft sand with deliberate steps. By then, the wail had become a rich mixture of grief and tears, the heralds of some unspoken tragedy.

I saw the wooden box, solemn in its quiet grace, riding the shoulders of wailing mourners. Though it jerked and rolled with each step, its occupant was very much dead and lifeless.

‘Jawdat!’ Maga again whispered my name and then muttered some words under her breath.

I felt my body dissolving into the darkness. I became the night wind and caressed the wet cheeks of the tired mourners. I tasted the bitterness of tragedy and then stole into the dark coffin. I became the darkness itself and crawled beneath the dead eyelids. And the dead spoke to me:

Touch my lips, which have kissed a hundred beauties;

and caress my eyes, which have dreamt a million dreams

Feel my heart, that preferred passion over duties;

and trace my veins, which once pulsated with extremes

But no more, my friend; no more.

Now I am a lonesome traveler, walking a dark path;

my fate is unsure, my end is all vague

There is no light in my eyes, neither joy nor wrath;

my heart silently suffers – loneliness the deadliest plague

I was a man once, but now am just a bundle of flesh;

the flesh that is beginning to rot and stink

I wish I could start my whole life afresh;

I wish I had more time, to ponder and think

Look at my wife, beating her chest in grief;

but her tears are drying up really fast

Tomorrow she will live again, for this tragedy was brief;

I was her joy in the present, but now I am her past

Listen to the shuffling steps that belong to my weary sons;

they are burdened with sorrow, but their hearts are filled with hope

Tomorrow they will rise again, for death only momentarily stuns;

for their future is bright as they will slowly climb the rope

Listen my friend…….and listen very carefully;

my time has come and yours will come soon

Listen my friend…….and listen very carefully;

I am now dead and you too will die soon

Life is the dew drops, evaporating fast once kissed by the sun;

dust on the wings of a moth, turning to ash once kissed by the flame

So live your life, live it to the full; have all the joy, have all the fun;

for, in the end, you will be forever alone with your own regrets and shame

‘Did you hear the dead man’s words?’ Maga asked me.

‘Yes, I did.’

‘And what have you understood?’

‘That past was a dream, the future is a fantasy and the present is all that ever matters.’

#English #fiction #story #life #death #regret #tragedy #happiness #joy #tears #family #past #present #future #triangle #desire #wisdom #time #sacred