The first inhalation is a revelation. The scent unfurls, weaving tendrils through the air, embracing your senses. It is earthy, ancient. The fragrance of sandalwood, jasmine or perhaps patchouli, each note distinct yet harmonious. You close your eyes, or even engage in something else, and you realise you’re not merely in a room, you’re also in a sanctuary.
The smoke curls upward, tracing patterns. It dances, pirouetting with grace, as if choreographed by unseen hands. The incense knows its role: to transport you beyond the mundane, to beckon memories, to corral ideas, to bring you a pleasurable peace.
The agarbatti’s utter silence as it ‘performs’ is strangely, comfortingly in opposition to all the world’s noises. It permeates your thoughts, urging introspection. Oblivious to your musings, it continues its fragrant sermon.
As the stick consumes itself, leaving a neat trail of broken ash, it also provides you a lesson in impermanence – a reminder that beauty often arises from fleeting moments. Only the sense of scent is absolute.