01/06/2026
Some places are visited. Others move through you. For me, Vrindavan was the latter.
This photo was taken after an afternoon there. Right in front of us stood a temple. All around, a city that seemed to revolve entirely around devotion.
Everything stopped at prayer time. Streets were closed, the simplest routes turned into small pilgrimages, and sometimes we even had to climb over barriers just to reach our destination.
We walked barefoot through streets that felt like an extension of the temple itself, as if there were no real boundary between the sacred and the ordinary.
What struck me most was not what we saw, but what ceased to exist. In a world where we photograph everything, Vrindavan is the place from which we have the fewest pictures. And it wasn’t a conscious choice.
The intensity of the experience was such that the urge to take out a phone simply disappeared. There was no room for distraction.
Only presence.
Pure presence.
That is why this image means so much to me. It doesn’t capture a postcard smile or the carefree energy of a holiday. It reflects something far more difficult to put into words: the emotional exhaustion that comes from being immersed for hours in an atmosphere of constant spiritual intensity. As if every street, every chant, every temple bell, and every encounter demanded that you be completely here and now.
I see tiredness in my face, yes. But I also see silence. I see someone who has stopped analyzing, planning, and chasing the next moment. I see someone who, for a few hours, simply was.
There are places that teach you something.
And there are places that remind you who you are when all distractions fall away.
Vrindavan was one of them.