Key Points

Siddhant Chaturvedi just shared a deeply personal Instagram post that's getting everyone talking. He posted gym photos and trekking shots alongside pages from his diary. The actor wrote original poetry about lost desires in our auto-correct society. He previously showed his poetic side by performing Shailendra's famous verses with guitar.

Key Points: Siddhant Chaturvedi Shares Poetic Post on Lost Voice Auto-Correct Era

  • Shares intimate gym and trekking photos from daily life
  • Writes about dreams erased fearing someone might see
  • Reflects on misfit shirts waiting in cupboards
  • Earlier performed Shailendra's poetry with guitar accompaniment
2 min read

Siddhant Chaturvedi gets poetic, existential in social media post, talks about lost voice in times of auto-correct

Bollywood actor Siddhant Chaturvedi gets existential in new Instagram post, sharing original poetry about lost desires in auto-correct society with personal photos.

"What did you bring…which got lost? Thus thousands of desires are sold in the market… Just one pen which got lost in this 'auto-correct' society. - Siddhant Chaturvedi"

Mumbai, Aug 26

Bollywood actor Siddhant Chaturvedi, who was recently seen in ‘Dhadak 2’, is getting existential, and exhibited his poetic side.

On Tuesday, the actor took to his Instagram, and shared a series of pictures from his routine life. The pictures feature the actor during his gym time, his bare upper body, him going up a trek, and pages from his diary.

He also wrote a poem in the caption, as he wrote, “What did you bring…which got lost? Thus thousands of desires are sold in the market… Just one pen which got lost in this “auto-correct” society. A couple of pens are also lost on which dreams were written and erased. In the fear that ‘someone might see’. That ‘misfit’ shirt which was lying in the cupboard”.

He further mentioned, “Waiting for that one day, this was something old of mine which got lost, just like that all desires are bought today in the pockets of ripped jeans. The dreams which were embarrassing in the pages. today are printed in the newspapers”.

Earlier this month, Siddhant decided to spend a poetic Sunday by coming up with his own rendition of renowned lyricist Shailendra's popular poetry, 'Kal hamara hain'. The 'Dhadak 2' actor recited the beautiful poetry with a guitar, enhancing the meaningful words even more.

Siddhant said, "Gham ki badli mein chamakta ek sitaara hai... aaj apna ho na ho par kal hamara hain. Humko gairon ka nahin apna sahaara hai, aaj apna ho na ho par kal hamaara hai. Gardhishon se haar kar o baithhne waale, tujhko khabar kya apne pairon mein bhi hain chhaale, par nahin rukte ke manzil ne pukaara hai, aaj apna ho na ho par kal hamaara hai".

"Ye kadam aise jo saagar paat dete hain, ye wo iraade hain jo parwat kaat dete hain, swarg in haathon ne dharti par utaara hai apna ho na ho par kal hamaara hai. Sach hain duba sa hain dil, jab tak andhera, par is raat ke us paar phir savera hain. Har samander ka kahin to kinaara hai, aaj apna ho na ho par kal hamaara hai”, he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Not gonna lie, I usually find celebrity posts cringe but this is actually meaningful. The part about dreams being embarrassing in pages but printed in newspapers today - that's our generation's story right there.
A
Ananya R
Love how Bollywood actors are showing their artistic side beyond films! Siddhant's Shailendra rendition was beautiful too. More of this please, less of the typical influencer content. ❤️
M
Michael C
As someone who follows Indian cinema from abroad, this is the kind of content that makes me appreciate the depth in Bollywood beyond just song and dance. The existential reflection is universal.
K
Karthik V
Respect for keeping poetry alive! In our education system, we're so focused on STEM that we forget the power of words. Good to see young actors valuing this art form.
S
Sarah B
While I appreciate the sentiment, isn't it ironic that he's posting this deep thoughts on Instagram - the very platform that promotes the auto-correct society he's criticizing? Just a thought.
N
Nikhil C
"Waiting for that one day" - that line got me. We all have that one thing we're saving for the right moment. Maybe we should just use it today instead of waiting. Thanks for the reminder, Sidd

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