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When The Anchor Is Lost — The Deeply Human Literary Story Of Dr. Pomita Ghoshal

When The Anchor Is Lost — The Deeply Human Literary Story Of Dr. Pomita Ghoshal

Dr. Pomita Ghoshal’s journey as an author is shaped by intellect, emotional resilience and a profound understanding of the fragile complexities of the human existence. Being a physicist by profession and a deeply reflective storyteller by instinct, she occupies a rare space where scientific precision meets emotional depth. Currently serving as an Assistant Professor of Physics at the LNM Institute of Information Technology (LNMIIT) in the pink-city of Jaipur, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal has built an accomplished academic and research career spanning multiple prestigious institutions across India and abroad. Yet beneath the discipline of equations, theories and the research papers lies a writer who is deeply attuned to human vulnerability, memory, grief and love.

 

Born and brought up in the beautiful city of Lucknow, her academic journey reflects a remarkable dedication and excellence. She earned Gold Medals for securing the highest marks in both her B.Sc. from I.T. College, Lucknow in 1998 and her M.Sc. in Physics from Lucknow University in 2000. Her intellectual achievements continued with outstanding performances in national competitive examinations, including clearing GATE in 2001 with 97.71 percentile and qualifying the CSIR NET examination the same year. She later completed her Ph.D. in Physics through HRI and Allahabad University in 2007, followed by  prestigious postdoctoral research positions at institutions such as TIFR Mumbai, SISSA in Trieste, Italy, and PRL Ahmedabad. Her selection for the INFN Post Doctoral Fellowship at SISSA further reinforced her standing within the global scientific community.

 

Over the years, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal has contributed extensively to the field of Physics through more than twenty research papers and articles published in  international journals. Her academic pursuits have always been driven by curiosity, discipline and a commitment towards understanding the deeper structures that govern reality. Yet, even while immersed in science, her emotional and creative sensibilities remained equally alive. Literature, psychology, music, films and reflections on human nature have long nourished her inner world. During her school and college years, she displayed a natural affinity for storytelling and language by frequently writing stories and articles and excelling in English literature and communication. Her writings appeared in journals, magazines such as Target and more recently on Medium, quietly sustaining a parallel creative journey alongside her academic and scientific career.

 

At the heart of Dr. Pomita Ghoshal’s life, however, lies a deeply personal as well as transformative story of caregiving, love and loss. Having lost her mother as a child and with no siblings, her father became not only her parent but also her emotional anchor, companion and lifelong source of love. Their bond defined much of her life and when he began his difficult descent into dementia and aging, she became his sole caregiver through the years marked by exhaustion, tenderness, helplessness and unwavering devotion. Watching a fiercely independent and brilliant man gradually lose fragments of himself to memory and decline profoundly altered her very understanding of identity, responsibility and  human endurance.

 

Out of this intensely personal experience emerged her deeply moving memoir, “When I Became My Father’s Mother — A Daughter’s Journey Through Dementia, Love, And Letting Go.” More than a memoir, the book is an emotionally honest exploration of the act of caregiving in its most raw and intimate form. It traces the painful role reversal between a daughter and her aging father, navigating the quiet devastation of dementia alongside moments of unexpected grace and enduring love. Through vivid emotional honesty, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal captures the anxiety, despair, guilt, overwhelm and emotional isolation that caregivers often endure silently. Yet the narrative is not solely about suffering; it is equally about resilience, tenderness and the deeply human act of showing up for another person day after day, even when there are no guarantees of recognition or recovery.

 

What makes the book particularly powerful is its universality. While rooted in her personal journey, this out of the ordinary memoir extends beyond a father-daughter relationship to become a reflection on caregiving itself. Moreover, the book highlights the invisible emotional labour, the fragility of memory and the profound emptiness that follows when the person who once depended entirely on you is suddenly gone. Yes, it is a story about grief, but also about identity and about what really happens when one’s role as another person’s lifeline abruptly ends. Through her stupendous writing, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal offers companionship to that section of readers who are navigating similar experiences, gently reminding them that they are not alone in their struggles, confusion, or heartbreak.

 

Her voice as an author is marked by sensitivity, intelligence and emotional restraint. She writes neither to dramatize pain nor to seek sympathy, but to illuminate the deeply human realities that often remain unspoken. Her scientific background lends her writing a certain clarity and observational precision, while her lived experiences infuse it with emotional authenticity and compassion. Whether exploring caregiving, grief, memory, or resilience, she approaches her subjects with honesty and quiet grace. Not to mention, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal stands as both a respected academic and a deeply resonant literary voice. She is someone who demonstrates that intellect and emotional depth are not opposing forces but  complementary dimensions of understanding life itself. Through her work, she continues to bridge the worlds of science and humanity by offering the readers not only stories, but solace, empathy and the courage to endure life’s most difficult passages with tenderness and dignity.

 

Today, Dr. Pomita Ghoshal continues to publish on Medium, where her writing on the intersections of literature, psychology, human nature and the complexities of emotional life has found a growing and appreciative readership. She is nourished by reading, writing, music, films and she finds in Sudoku, a guilty pleasure that speaks to the same love of pattern, precision and the satisfaction of things resolved that animates her scientific work. She is a complete human being, one whose scientific brilliance, literary sensitivity and willingness to transform even the most painful of the human experiences into something of lasting value and genuine service to others, make her one of the most remarkable and inspiring figures to have entered the Indian literary conversation in recent memory.

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