The means to get there seemed unremarkable at first. Four screens. Some static, if beguiling, colour. Tables, chairs. Headphones. You are invited to move the mouse and figure the fruits and flowers that have secrets hidden in them, searching for the erogenous. Touch it, and it comes alive. Fruits swell and open up, shedding seed, tumescent shapes shift and morph allusively…citric, tarty, tangy and bulbous, phallic and vulvate. Birds chirp, music plays, someone reads out the lines…you recognise Devdutt Pattanaik, Ruchir Joshi, Nisha Susan and Paromita herself among the names. It swallows you up, an immersive whole, like cinema, yet different. The poems mesh radical and sublime, classical, folk and modernist. “i want to 377 you so bad/till even the sheets hurt…i want to/mouth you in words neck you in red/i want to beg your body insane into sepals….” (Akhil Katyal) Or, this from the Kavyaprakasa, 6-12th c: “The goddess Lakshmi/loves to make love to/Vishnu/from on top/looking down she sees in/his navel a lotus/and on it Brahma the god/but she can’t bear to stop/so she puts her hand/over Vishnu’s right eye/which is the sun/and night comes on/and the lotus closes/with Brahma inside.” Can erotica….? Ask nothing. Just be the rabab, be plucked and bowed, by presence and absence, screech with the cicadas and hum with the whistling trees. And know the universal is not to be found on some other plane, in the transcendental, but is planted deep in us. We are trees with interlocking roots. We are rhizome.