Moon samples, poetry, and community | Newsletter for friends #08

Hello friends,

I’m writing to you from my beloved home city Mumbai, where I’ve at long last come to rest and enjoy some time with my parents. I hope you’re having a refreshing break as well this year end. It’s once again been three months since I dispatched the previous newsletter. Life has been incredibly productive and satiating on some fronts; below is a snapshot of some notable things I’ve been up to alongside some pictures from my trip to Hong Kong. I’m grateful that I can embrace a calmer digital life on this personal blog of mine by connecting with people directly instead of drowning in the slurp—and now slop—of social media. Click the links you’re curious about—that’s what the Web is for. :)

Liked reading

He was won over by their expressions, because he knew that the eyes of ordinary people were the best reflection of the level of civilization in a time and place.
The child who is decked with prince’s robes and who has jeweled chains round his neck loses all pleasure in his play; his dress hampers him at every step. In fear that it may be frayed, or stained with dust he keeps himself from the world, and is afraid even to move.
Mother, it is no gain, thy bondage of finery, if it keep one shut off from the healthful dust of the earth, if it rob one of the right of entrance to the great fair of common human life.

Poetry on Space

I celebrated 5 years and 10,000 subscribers of my Moon Monday blog+newsletter with globally published poetry on space. 🌙

Seven uni-verses (booklet)

By Jatan Mehta. Poetry on all that space evokes.

Read for Free →

Publishing Seven uni-verses in an independent manner has also helped me lay the foundation for the next phase of my space writing: Merge the worlds of blogs and books.

Writing

Space, personally

Roughly 2.8-billion year old lunar sample brought to Earth by China’s Chang’e 6 mission in 2024. Image: CNSA / CAS / HKU
  • I made some original memes about my poetry booklet:

I created these not just to promote the booklet’s open access approach but to also have some fun. After all, I write for you, not social media or SEO, so why not be more humanly whimsical sometimes?

Life and Pictures

  • Bangalore has great communities around human micro-cultures, which make the city’s growing woes bearable, and sometimes worth it. Reading at the beautiful Cubbon Park as part of Cubbon Reads, participating in blogging meets at IndieWeb Club BLR, and attending bookclubs & events at Atta Galatta have become my monthly doses of sanity, serenity, and community.
  • Poem: Words
  • You don’t peek at Hong Kong, it peaks at you:
  • There are natural vistas at the edges of Hong Kong:
  • The crescent Moon gracing the Hong Kong skyline, making some humans happy in the process.

So these were highlights from my very happening last quarter of the year. What have you been up to? Did you read something nice lately? Reach out to me.


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