triveni spotlight: 21st July 2025
- Anju Kishore
- Jul 21
- 2 min read
triveni spotlight A FEATURE EVERY ALTERNATE DAY hosts: Anju Kishore and Mohua Maulik GUEST EDITOR: Priya Narayanan
21st July 2025
triveni spotlight July 2025
childhood home
from a crack crawls
an icy wind
Antonietta Losito
Haiku Commentary, May 2019
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What is home? Who is home? Where is home?
For James Baldwin, an expatriate American writer living in France, home is both an absence and a presence. While on the one hand, he says, "You don't have a home until you leave it and then, when you have left it, you never can go back," he writes in his biography that "You never leave home, you take your home with you… You better. Otherwise, you’re homeless."
But home is not only a notion, it is a real physical place. When Gaston Bachelard talks about home as ‘the non-I that protects the I’ or Martin Heidegger talks about home as a place where man dwells, they refer to the physical structure that protects and provides the stage for one to perform acts of dwelling and homemaking. Home is also the objects that surround us. As George Carlin remarks, the feeling of home comes from being surrounded by 'our stuff' and how we are never quite comfortable in someone else's house because there's no space for 'our stuff'.
Home is family for Robert Frost, who looks upon it as a place where, 'when you have to go there, they have to take you in’. Contrastingly, home for naturalist John Muir is in the lap of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, not the ranch where he raised his family. For bell hooks, home symbolises safety for, 'it is when I’m at home, facing my body that I’m most free of race… As soon as I walk out the door, race is waiting… to grab me’. But home can also be dangerous—a site of abuse, violence, oppression, and alienation. Yet, as June Jordan says, ‘everybody needs a home, so at least you have someplace to leave’.
And so, home encompasses a mélange of meanings. Be it migrant labourers who seasonally leave and return to home, nomads who create and re-create home at every pit-stop in their life journey or the jet-setting uber rich who might have multiple homes in multiple cities, home is an enduring idea where one invests both material and emotions.
What does home mean to you?
Priya Narayanan
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Our thanks to Priya Narayanan, this month’s guest editor for her selection on a theme that is at once emotional and practical. We hope you will enjoy in your own ways, both the journeys these haiku take you on as well as the home-coming. Don't forget to share your thoughts in the comments section.
_()_ triveni spotlight team

childhood home
from a crack crawls
an icy wind
This haiku can be interpreted in many ways. Maybe the poet is by an ill-fitting window or door and icy air is coming in. A simple description of what’s happening. It could be in the present. Years after the poet left home, she returns for a visit, or it could be a memory. Either way, there is that crack and the cold air. A house in need of repair. Just a picture with no hidden meanings. But it it?
What was the home like when the poet was a child? Did it need repairs even then? Was this a happy home? We like to think that all children have happy…