In every turning of history, in every question of the soul, there lies a rhythm, the pulse of ideas seeking form, of words struggling toward clarity. My work is born in that space between philosophy and the world: where thought meets action, where the abstract collides with the urgent. Trained in the discipline of philosophy yet immersed in the living currents of international relations and geopolitics, I write not merely to explain but to illuminate, to find meaning amid complexity, to uncover coherence in what first appears chaotic.
I am drawn to cycles, of power, of nations, of human striving, and to the timeless effort to step beyond them. My research often traces the lines where cultures intersect, where politics reveals its philosophical underpinnings, and where the stories of people and nations mirror our deepest existential questions. Whether writing on India–China relations, on the tides of diplomacy, or on the subtle shifts of ideology, my aim is not just to inform but to awaken reflection: to invite readers to think slowly, deeply, and differently.
What I bring to every piece of writing—whether an essay, a policy brief, or a long-form exploration, is a commitment to clarity without simplification, depth without obscurity, and lyricism without indulgence. Research is, for me, an act of attention; writing, an act of care. And so my portfolio is less a catalogue of work than a field of dialogue, between the ancient and the modern, the analytical and the poetic, the personal and the political.
To engage with these writings is to step, however briefly, into a space where knowledge is more than information and words are more than instruments: they are vessels of thought, carriers of imagination, and instruments of freedom.