“The pen is the tongue of the mind.” — Miguel de Cervantes “Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart.” — William Wordsworth “A writer is someone for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people.” — Thomas Mann
Introduction: My Companion in Ink
Since my school days, I’ve had a habit—some might call it eccentric, but to me, it’s sacred. A pencil and notebook always lie beside my pillow. In the quiet hours, when dreams still linger and the world hasn’t fully returned, I often find myself scribbling thoughts that seem to arrive from somewhere deeper than consciousness. Even in drowsiness, my fingers move, and the pencil obeys. It’s not just a tool—it’s a companion.
Over time, I’ve come to realize that the pen I hold is not lifeless. It has a pulse. It responds to my breath, my silence, my imagination. It listens before it speaks. It waits—not in drawers or gift boxes, but in the space between thought and expression. This piece is a tribute to that pen. Not just mine, but every writer’s pen that has ever dared to breathe.
The Awakening
It lay inside a gift box once—sleek, polished, admired. But admiration is not the same as animation. A pen does not live in display. It waits. Quietly. For fingers, for breath, for the trembling edge of thought.
When I hold it, something shifts. Not in the pen, but in me. It’s as if the pen has a pulse, a quiet eagerness to create. It doesn’t ask for brilliance. It asks for presence. It listens to my silence and responds with words I didn’t know I had. Sometimes, it writes before I’ve even thought. The ink moves ahead of imagination, as if the pen remembers something I’ve forgotten.
This connection isn’t new. Since my school days, I’ve kept a notebook and pencil beside my pillow. In the middle of the night, half-asleep, I’ve scribbled thoughts that surfaced from dreams or the subconscious. Even in drowsiness, my fingers move, and the pencil obeys—not out of habit, but out of some deeper link. It’s not just a tool. It’s a companion. A quiet co-conspirator in the act of creation.
The pen doesn’t measure achievement. It measures attention. It doesn’t rush. It waits for me to slow down enough to hear the words hovering at the edge of breath. It’s gentle, patient, and strangely alive when in my hand. When I’m tired, it stays poised, ready to continue. When I hesitate, it nudges me forward.
But it’s not only gentle. It can sting. When the world around me feels like it’s bending under control, when silence is demanded, the pen becomes a voice that cannot be gagged. It writes with clarity, sometimes with fury. It’s not afraid to challenge, to provoke, to resist. It becomes the pulse of truth when truth feels endangered.
There’s a strange intimacy in this relationship. The pen, when held, seems to breathe with me. It’s different from when it lies untouched in a drawer or wrapped in a decorative cover. Then, it’s dormant. But in my fingers, it awakens. It becomes an extension of thought, of feeling, of something deeper than either.
I’ve come to believe the pen has a soul. Not in the mystical sense, but in the way it reflects mine. It’s noble, quiet, and fierce when needed. It doesn’t seek applause. It seeks honesty. It doesn’t perform. It participates.
And so I write. Not to finish, but to begin again. The pen is never done. It waits—not in velvet boxes, but in the quiet between thoughts. It waits for the next silence, the next truth, the next breath.
It waits to breathe again.
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(The writer is a retired officer of the Indian Information Service and a former Editor-in-Charge of DD News and AIR News (Akashvani), India’s national broadcaster. He has also served as an international media consultant with UNICEF Nigeria and contributes regularly to various publications.) (Views are personal.)
Krishan Gopal Sharma





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