✍️ By Subhasri Devaraj
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| Image Courtesy: Author [Subhasri Devaraj] |
No traffic. No notifications. No noise.
Just the soft chill of Margazhi, a quiet doorstep, and a small agal vilakku waiting to be lit.
This is how many Tamil homes begin the day in Margazhi — not loudly, not in a hurry, but gently.
A head bath before sunrise.
Hair wrapped in a wet towel.
Bare feet touching the cold stone floor.
Kolam drawn slowly, line by line, sometimes white, sometimes filled with colour — because Margazhi is also about joy.
The lamp is lit using another lamp.
That moment matters.
Not rushed.
Not decorative.
Just enough light to say: the day has begun, respectfully.
There’s something grounding about this ritual.
Before work, before responsibilities, before the world demands attention — there is silence.
And in that silence, the mind settles.
Margazhi mornings don’t try to impress.
They don’t perform.
They simply exist.
And maybe that’s why they stay with us for life.
A small note
The simple agal vilakku used in these early mornings makes a difference — steady flame, no fuss, no distraction.
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🧠 Disclaimer:
✋ No AI Here:
This blog post was written 100% by me, Subhasri Devaraj, without the use of AI writing tools.
Every word is real, personal, and written from scratch — just like a proper conversation over filter coffee. ☕
No bots. No auto-generated fluff. Just me, talking to you
⚠️ No content here is copied or auto-published. I don't post anything I wouldn’t say to a friend.
📌 Copyright © 2025 — Subhasri Devaraj | The Heartlogue
All rights reserved. Please do not copy, republish, or reprint without permission
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