She was more pragmatic and did not hanker after matching of minds. She called her husband, ‘Jaan’ and ‘Jaanam', over the phone, (Life, dearer than life respectively), bent on keeping romance alive in her marriage. Her husband seemed to lack her joie de vivre somehow, though he smiled sweetly and was very accommodating and chivalrous to all his wife’s friends. Zara had also moved into the city just over a year ago, but courtesy of the high places her husband moved in, and the upscale residential area they lived in, they got invites to exclusive club gatherings and soon had a coterie of affluent friends. At her daughter Leia’s birthday, I met many of them. Zara prefaced every introduction with a description of my writing abilities or my status as an amateur poetess. Looking back, it feels like in high society a poorer person needs a calling card, and a valid pass key to establish her credentials. I thought at that time, she was being innocent, charming, and naïve in assuming everyone was interested in poetry or in a would-be writer. Now after a few years of negotiations in every layer of society, I have come to a conclusion. True, not everyone likes poetry, but they do like a poet in their guest list.