"Physics teaches discipline, poetry teaches liberation"
My early attempts at understanding physics
My name is Anuj Londhe, and I’ve always seen the world through two lenses: one of logic, and one of lyricism.
I fell in love with physics when I stumbled upon a tiny equation tucked away in the “additional info” section of my textbook at age 15. It was the relativistic mass formula — a quiet rebel that challenged everything I thought I knew about matter and mass. That single spark sent me down a rabbit hole of time dilation, length contraction, and the strange beauty of Einstein’s universe. I knew then: physics was not just fascinating — it was destiny.
At the same time, I’ve always written. Poetry came naturally to me — not as an escape from science, but as its companion. While physics taught me discipline, poetry gave me liberation. One sharpens my mind, the other expands my soul.
I’m currently pursuing a BSc in Physics at Fergusson College, Pune, where I spend most of my free time immersed in quantum mechanics, field theory, and the occasional Shakespeare sonnet.
Outside of the classroom, I serve as a science communicator and coordinator at the Indo Science Education Trust (offcial Space Tutor of ISRO), where I work with school students across India to simplify science and space concepts.
And when I’m not talking about theories or equations? You’ll probably find me listening to jazz, scribbling a verse, or watching sitcoms.
In everything I do, I try to blend the rigor of science with the freedom of art — because I don’t just want to study the universe. I want to speak its language.