Friday, November 28, 2014

11 years of domestication.


Eleven years of nomadic life with a man whose middle name is Inertia and two very boisterous lads who seem to be generously endowed with bottomless pots of energy, notoriety and mischief, home making can end up seeming more like a roller coaster ride than the routine drab called housework. Particularly in that aspect, I can vouch that marriage has certainly made my wife’s life more exciting! At the least, more exciting than what she experienced during her nubile days, that is her final days of freedom just prior to tying the fatal knot with your humble friend here.

In these eleven years, she has moved lots. She has experimented with cooking, failed at it, burnt her fingers (and I mean it literally) and finally I must confess mastered it. She has moved on from being a carefree girl to a sensible, accommodative wife to a responsible mother of three (yes, three if you include me too in it). She has mastered patience (managing two boys with diametrically opposite characters, wants and needs requires patience, and do not forget the third one orbiting around, that is me!). She is now an expert on kindergarten phonetics and all subjects up to grade V (and the grade jumps a step higher each year). She is becoming a gardener of sorts, a handyman around the house, an arts and crafts expert and a party gaming specialist.

So the question, what have these eleven years done to me? Like her, have they domesticated me too?

Well, if it is domestication, then I haven’t moved much. All I can say is that I have actually stopped moving altogether!

Before starting this family, I used to live in Navi Mumbai and work in Central Mumbai. I used to spend a lot of time commuting to work and at work itself, yet I used to find enough time to wash my cloths, iron them, polish my shoes, cook my food, clean my house and even do the dishes on weekdays. The weekend nights although were spent usually at a pub or clubbing with other bachelor friends or at their or my place boozing all night.

Nowadays, I work on a five days week shift and live at barely fifteen minutes driving distance from work, yet I do not do any of the above. Life has surely changed! Now, see I do not have to do them anymore. These chores just happen around me, automatically, without much asking. Let me also mention here that, it is not that I am burdened with my kid’s academics or grocery purchases, I don’t even drive the kids to their swimming or football classes; all those fall under her management. So, what has marriage really given me? Yes, it has given me a beautiful family and a strong and safe haven to park myself, but what apart from that?

I believe the most important thing that my family has given to me is freedom; freedom to either sloth or to go ahead and discover new findings and in the process find a new me. Whilst I agree, that I have mostly snoozed, the fact is, that whenever I have awoken up and walked, I have indeed discovered a new me. Starting with finding out that I could write, and write well enough so as to run my own blog page, and in the course, find out that laughing at myself didn’t hurt that much, but rather make a few of my friends suggest to me that I should write my own book (really? Yes!); finding out that however busy my day maybe, I could always find an hour to accommodate playing my favourite game of lawn tennis in it; finding out that it is never too late to start, so what if you are in your early 40’s and you have to learn guitar in a class full of primary schoolers? Go ahead and do it! Finding out that being fit doesn’t mean joining a posh gym, drinking protein shakes, carrying weights and running kilometres on a treadmill, it can also be achieved by sincerely doing four little four minute tabata workouts each day right here in your bedroom!

29th November this year, we are celebrating our 11th wedding anniversary. If we had both worked hard, by now we could have made our own cricket team, but alas, blame it on my laziness and on her busyness with the chores. Anyways, I have now bought myself a new bicycle, and on this wedding anniversary day, my lads and I have planned on our first bike ride. Hope in this new journey, each one of us will discover something new!

Friday, October 17, 2014

A Night Unplugged.


It lied there, in the corner under the stair for many days now, unattended, unused and smothered with a thin layer of dust.

Every time he treaded the stairs, he would give it a passing glance, laden with guilt and regret. Today, he decided that he would do a bit more. After dinner, he sneaked under the stairway, and carefully tip-toeing amidst the strewn happy meal toys and footwear he reached up to the case. He covered his nose, patted the handle with his son’s Superman costume cape and blew out a few specs of dust, pulled out the case and stealthily carried it to his bedroom.

Once in the bedroom, he placed the case softly on the cot, sat next to it and looked down at it. ‘What should I do next? Should I open it or should I not?’ he thought for a while, and then slowly placed his hand on the case, feeling it, like a young man feels and caresses the contours of his asleep nubile lover, careful not to wake her up. With pouted lips and trembling hands, he unzipped her case. His eyes smiled and his lips glistened as he pulled her out, a Yamaha F130 Guitar.

An Indonesian beauty she was, crafted with a mix of Meranti, Rosewood and Nato, a real treat for a rock lover’s soul.  He carefully lifted her by the neck and placed her on his lap.

Now, close your eyes and imagine a late romantic evening. You are in one of those outdoor Mediterranean restaurants by the sea, and on your lap, you have the woman of your dreams, with her back resting on your left hand, her eyes prying into yours, trying to find her answers. All you can hear is your breath, everything else around is still, even the sea and the wind has stopped, and as your mouths gets moist, the only thing that moves is your right hand, it flows down caressingly. Your fingers trace the contours of her waist, smooth and silky, like she has been buttered with B&WB’s Moonlight Path. You close your eyes, just to break free of the questions that her eyes are throwing at you. ‘Where were you all these days?’, ‘Do you really love me?’, ‘Are you going to dump me away again after you are done with me tonight?’ Your hand moves further up, on to her bare abdomen, and as your thumb runs over her navel, she cringes. Yes, just like that.

He plucks the strings and the strings let out a sound. The sound is melodious; as melodious as it can be, but he does not like it. It does not sound like how it does when his God, Mark Knopfler does it. He plucks again, this time again with the same result. After a few tries he goes back to the basics, just like how his Guruji at the Kalashetra taught him, G-A-B-C-D-E-F-G chanting in his mind and the strings go ‘Sa-Re-Ga-Ma-Pa-Dha-Ni-Sa’. He likes it, and as he does that, a gush of blood inundates his heart; he can feel it swelling, smiling and asking for more.

He draws himself to the back, makes a comfy backrest stretches his legs on to the bed and keeps playing. As he practices his basic guitar lessons from Good to Go to Mary had a little lamb to Jovian Sky, things happen in the bedroom that he is oblivious about. His kids run in, have a bout on who should kiss him goodnight first, break into a ruckus, and after mediation and two raps each from their mother, kiss him goodnight and run out just like how they came in. A few moments later, his wife, who had just put the kids to sleep in the adjacent room, walks in. She starts with her bedtime rigmarole of daubing and powdering. She lets her hair loose. Starts with admiring her curly tresses in the mirror, and almost faints at the sight of his dry and chapped feet. She reprimands him for not taking care of his body, anoints his feet with a thick coat of cocoa butter cream, dims the bedroom light, changes into her sleepwear, reads a few whatsapp jokes on her smartphone, laughs, giggles, talks to herself and then falls asleep. His foot feels good and cozy, so does his heart. His body relaxes, slowly the eyes shut, and he falls asleep with the guitar in his arms just next to his wife who is already snoozing, listening to his renditions.

By now, his wife probably was dreaming of Mary and her little lamb or maybe she was dreaming about having Mutton Mandi from her favourite Afghan Brothers Restaurant, but he was not.

He had already switched on to the Mark Knopfler – Unplugged channel on the Jukebox in his Dream Train. He moved from Marbletown to Romeo and Juliet to Get Lucky to Layla and many more, and many many more acoustic jugalbandis done jointly with other great God’s of Rock music. It was an amazing night, which started with a gig on a moonlit beach, and as the night grew bolder his God plugged in a red guitar called in his long lost buddies and started rocking, and then with every song that was played he grew younger. Money for Nothing, Sultans of Swing, Walk of Life, Brothers in Arms, Private Investigations ….psychedelic he roamed backwards through those streets you call past life, he saw people. People who were sometime close to him, someone who was a dear friend, someone who was a best friend, someone who was a lover, someone who was considered unimaginable to part away from, but all who are not part of his life now. All, who are not part of his 550+ friends on Facebook, but stored safely in that special part of his life called memories, people  whom he had not met for years, people whom he had met but, not like old times. People whom he would love to take back to his past, but maybe not in his future. People change, he said, he had changed, he knew. The song changed, and it finally ended it with Going Home.

He woke up with a tear in the eye. His wife had already packed the guitar back and kept it safely next to the side table. Today he had woken up unusually early, but he was not sleep deprived, he was fresh. He played an imaginary acoustic guitar as he sat on the potty seat, shook some booty while brushing teeth, banged his head in the shower, got ready for work and ran down the stairs singing ‘We gotta move these refrigerator, we gotta move these color TVeeeees…moova …. moova …..’. His wife, who was watching Food Channel on TV jumped up saying ‘What? You want to change the whole layout of this room? Are you okay? Did you sleep well sweetie?’  He just smiled, grabbed his smoothie flask held his wife by her waist, planted a kiss on lips, and said ‘I rocked baby, yesterday night I rocked’ and left.

He sat in his car, put on his sunglasses, turned the key on and turned his head to the porch, he saw his wife standing at the door, smiling and dazed, with questions in her eyes. That is when he knew he had to write this blog.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

On the way to School


For this Ramadan, I had decided that each week I would go out for a late night movie. The first week I had watched How old are you?, that was with my wife and kids. Last weekend I watched Bangalore Days. This weekend I waited for the movies to change, but alas, it seems that owing to their huge popularity, last week’s movies would continue this week too. In hindi, there was Humpty Sharma ki dulhaniya, but I was not too keen on that.

This weekend, after a sumptuous Iftar Party hosted by my college alumni, I was back at home, watching a late night Bhojpuri movie on DD Bihar. A movie, in which an off duty soldier takes some sort of revenge on his paternal uncle, that’s when it struck me, that last year same time around I had watched another soldier movie, The bridge over the river kwai, a 1957, Word War II classic at the Museum of Islamic Arts theater.

I quickly lunged on to my phone to check out the DFI (Doha Film Institute) app, to see what they are screening right now. They normally screen some awesome movies, some of which are even free of charge or charged as low as QR.1! The app showed two screenings, one was Amazonia, the movie about a capuchin monkey, born in captivity and now lost in the Amazon forest after a plane crash, and the other, On the way to School, a movie about four kids from different parts of the world who overcome dangerous obstacles and long journeys to attend school. Very soon, and to my dismay, I found out that, these screenings were scheduled for 10th and 12th July, respectively, that is last week. “Shucks!” I said, “Another case of slow updating of the app”. Frankly, I would have rather skipped the losers’ final at football world cup and watched On the way to School. But Alas!

In the moments that followed, I was on google researching about On the way to School. Frankly, I could not find much, except that there is another Turkish movie by the same name, and that, the one I was looking for is probably made in French, so now I have to find a print with English subtitles. Anyways my research had to be abandoned half way as torrent is blocked in Qatar and I would have to wait until the weekday to access it through my corporate account at work. (Now you know what I do at work! ;-P ) I could wait, but not enough, I found the movie trailer on YouTube.

Sometimes, watching the trailer is enough. It tells you whether the movie is worth or not the trouble, and this one is definitely worth it. Definitely worth taking the torrent risk!

The movie is about Jackson, Zahira, Samuel and Carlito, four children who live in four corners of the globe, that is, Kenya, Morocco, India and Argentina respectively, and all share the same desire to learn. They have understood that only education will allow them to improve their lives, and it is for this reason that, each day, they set out on highly risky journeys, through extraordinary landscapes, on their quest for knowledge. The film observes as these kids, barely 10 to 12 years in age, along with their siblings, overcome often-dangerous obstacles and enormous distances over treacherous landscapes, wild animals and even bandits on their journey to the classroom.

Here’s the link: http://youtu.be/eIsQ0B43Q9Y

Just reading about their lives, and watching a mere 90 minute clip, I was reminded of my parents and their usual rant about going to school. Their stories about they used to walk long distances to reach to the only school in the vicinity, how they struggled with their midday meal, how they suffered for they didn’t have the right books and all the blah blah. I was also pushed to think how fortunate I was. I had a proper school, a proper school bus picking and dropping me back every day, and what a fuss we kids made about it, and how fortunate my kids are, they have air-conditioned busses plying them from their doorstep to their air-conditioned classrooms, digital screens in the classes, a library, gym, swimming pool, playgrounds, canteen and what not. They have lots more than I had and I had lots more than what my parents had. Things have really improved with time, I thought.

That night, I was about to retire for the day, and as the last task logged in to my Facebook page to check for any last updates, and there it was; a close friend had posted the news of a 6 year old girl raped by two gym instructors in an international school. With that, my whole night was spoilt.

The next day, that is today, as soon as I woke up, I was on the internet trying to find out what the incident was all about. The news was all over TV. I found out that this incident had happened on 2nd July, and despite the parents of the child having lodged a complaint on 15th, and despite the fact that yesterday the Police Chief was in the school to talk to the protesting parents, no arrest has yet been made. Absurd! Absurd that the school failed to own up and act against the teacher who locked this little kid in a room under the pretext that she was a badly behaved child. Absurd that the school failed to own up and hand over the perpetrators to police.

Absurd and funny, especially in the light of the fact that few months back a leading journalist had molested a female colleague in lift in Goa, and despite the girl having not registered a police complaint, the molester was arrested and lodged in jail. In the aftermath, the Managing Editor of a prominent magazine had to resign from her position. The police was fast, just because some political parties had the will to push them into it.

Whilst the perpetrators of this heinous crime against a hapless 6 yr old roam freely, the school says, they are not responsible, the parents have to go on protesting for days long, they have to carry out a rally through the city, and all this time we are waiting. Waiting for the school to own it up, waiting for the law enforcement to act. All this while a little girl has to go through two medical tests and explain things to the police and other officials as if she is the culprit. Shame!

I wonder what is going on in the heads of all those school kids right now. What they think about their school? Like Jackson, Zahira, Samuel and Carlito, do they believe that School is a place where they need to go to change their life for a better, or is school a scary place that their parents send them to every day so that they behave well on the weekends, or is it some shit place that they just have to go to.

Pushes me to think, are we really fortunate to have all these facilities, these big buildings, playgrounds, libraries, these vast facilities run by emotionless morons?

Shame! Shame on our political system, shame on our law enforcement. Shame on those parents that brought up those criminals. Shame on the school that recruited them. Shame on our society that does not have a filter mechanism to drain out these kinds of people from our system. Shame!

Monday, March 24, 2014

The new girl at work


‘Humein koee gham nahin tha, Gham-e-aashiqui se pehle
Na thi dushmani kisi se, Teri dosti se pehle’
   Famous couplet from a Faiyaz Hashmi Ghazal sung by Mehdi Hassan

‘Change is constant’, and in a very literal sense that adage is true and has been applicable for my workplace.

The office of our big boss had been established for a little over a year now, and in this period his Secretary’s cabin has seen many faces come and go. In the past, at least six South East Asian aunts with varying high heels and bum sways have walked in, but just within less than two months of their appointment, have walked out of that cabin and their job.

Another change that has been taking place in my workplace has been the progressive increase in the number of Indian men on my project. By end of December last year, we had touched around one thirds of the overall team, and that typical crazy Indianism was all over the place.

One could spot them rubbing bellies, swaying and shaking heads as they discussed world politics in main corridor, next to the common printer or sharing lunchboxes in the meeting room or humming Bollywood numbers at the urinal and at times even ogling at the passing bum sways, gauging the thrust on the breasts and sharing a raunchy comment or two on the subject matter. So much was their ubiquitousness, that the group had collectively earned the moniker ‘Indian Mafia’. They were everywhere, and their swaying heads were into everything! They were from different parts of India, they had different accents and different food preferences, but they were a team. They were cohesive, united, close knit and connected to each other. They were a mafia with no proclaimed leader, where everyone was equal.  Where everyone was a part, and together they were one.

Then, the next change happened.

During one of those dull post lunch sessions when men at work are usually struggling to keep themselves awake after their usual heavy lunch, a tall pretty woman in a pink Anarkali and flat Kolhapuri’s with a familiar head sway, kohl lined eyes, a flowery herbal scent, a nervous lower lip, and a thick north Indian accent walked into the Boss’s cabin for an interview. Suddenly there was a fluttery of activity in our workplace. Forty year and plus old men scurried around like teenagers. And within half an hour, that is the time that she was in the cabin getting interviewed, the team fished out all possible information about her with an alacrity that could put Mossad and ISI to shame.

The Mafia now knew her name; they had browsed through her Facebook, Google+ and Linkedin profiles; they knew her husband’s name, her friend’s names, details about her siblings, the age of her kids, the name of her school, the courses she took, the movies she watched, the fact that she hadn’t read much, the places she had visited, the places where she had worked before, they even established contact with one of her old known colleagues and extracted out some more crucial information. And finally, as she walked out of the boss’s cabin, from the missing twitch in her smile, they found out that she had also got the job.

For the next two days, the Mafia went about with its usual activity. While on the workstation, they kept following her movements, browsing her various profiles on social networking sites tracking her like a Satellite tracks a plane in motion. During lunchtime, they discussed their new findings, joined the dots and kept developing its future strategy. Some Mafiosi even thanked God for the prospect of finally having an Indian patakha in the office, someone who would bring phulkas and homemade north Indian subzis for sharing. Someone with whom they could share Santa/Banta jokes on their WhatsApp Group chat. Someone, by talking about whom, they could make their wife jealous. While in the washroom, on the potty seat, some of them even secretly prayed. Prayed that she would join their gang, and that once joined she would stay there until the end and inject life into their otherwise dull and lifeless afternoons.

Two days later, it was the weekend. The Mafiosi dispersed back to their individual lives. Some went back to their families and its associated weekend chores, the others to the solitary confinement of their single room apartment along with their laptop computer and external hard drives loaded with 250GB of unmentionable downloads for refuge. 

When the new workweek commenced, the next obvious change had taken place. The Indian lasso was there in the office, occupying the revolving chair in the little cabin outside the big boss’s and next to the common printer.

The menfolk, who had walked in lazily and half asleep, as they normally did on the first day of each work week, found themselves suddenly charged up with some kind of invisible electrical source. They had suddenly been transformed into some kind of an electron. They were all supercharged now.

In the days that followed, one could spot them running from one end of the office to the other crossing by the big bosses cabin, collecting printouts, and in the process repelling any other particle with a negative charge (read, fellow Mafiosi) and sending out an attractive force and signal to the proton (read, new secretary) on the way.

Each one was creating his own unique magnetic field and devising new ways to attract the subject in the cabin. Whist the slowest one practiced an introduction in front of the mirror inside the Wash Room, which he could never deliver, another one dyed his facial hair and went ahead and got himself introduced, but failed to impress her. A third one offered HR to help guide her about the company’s systems and procedures, but, was curtly rejected. A fourth one offered pick up and drop services, just to find out that she had her own car and loved to drive. A fifth one donated his lunch and went hungry as she had not got her own box. She thanked him not knowing that the Chicken Curry  that he offered her was actually cooked in Coconut oil, to which she was allergic. Few others who were at loss of means and modes kept perambulating across her cabin pretending to take printouts that they had not sent. They even gave her their side glances and twitchy romantic smiles, but with minimal effect.

Suddenly the daily 9.6hrs at work seemed too short. Time was flying away at supersonic speed, and before one could plan and organize the next surprise encounter at the common printer or the kitchen or outside the women’s washroom, it was five days up. The first week had already passed.

And so passed the second and third weeks.

Slowly failure and rejection had started creeping under their skin, and the Mafiosi began directing their energies from wooing to accusing, derogating and damaging the other team member’s (read contender’s) reputation. The guns, were now, trained at each other. The group, in her presence, started having fun cracking jokes and creating stories out of the weaknesses and specific traits of the one absent. So much that she had now began enjoying it. By now, she knew each Mafiosi’s handicaps and weaknesses. Albeit, she never joined the mafia for their customary lunch sharing sessions, their WhatsApp chat group or any other such rituals, she kept receiving the attention that she sought and yet managed to keep unwanted attention at bay. That’s a shrewd desi lass!

Four weeks into her arrival, the mafia was showing signs of breaking up. Each Mafiosi began building walls around and across each other. The frequency of forwarded jokes on the WhatsApp group reduced. There were no more group discussions, no more analysis of the bum sways, and no more explicit ogling in the corridor. Cracks started appearing in the team and as it looked, death of the group seemed imminent.

Then one day, with just a day remaining to spring equinox, as I sat slouched into my office chair, pondering over the fate of my mafia, woolgathering, these famous words by a great imaginary philosopher and poet of a time bygone struck me. These words that were never said, these words that were never ever heard before: 
“A few frivolous moments and a woman are enough to break, what it took many men, ages to build”
I slouched a bit further. It was just another lazy sleepy afternoon.

Then, the next biggest change happened!

I heard footsteps ‘tick tock tick tock’ coming from the other end of the corridor. As it neared me, I smelled the scent of Euphoria by Calvin Klein followed by a fresh whiff of air on my face, flower petals started raining from the ceiling, an iktara played in the background.

I rushed to the entrance of my cubicle, and stood there stunned, mesmerized, and suddenly everything was slow-mo. The gaps between the tick and the tock increased. A four feet plus something tall South East Asian Chic, on a 8 inch high stiletto. Her cheeks and eyelids painted in Coral Goddess by Lancome, Revlon lashes on the eyes; lips inviting, pouted and laden with Maybelline’s Russian Red, a confident smile; giving side glances to all the Mafiosi lined up agape on both sides of the corridor, like a vista and falling off one after the other as she crossed. Her shoulder high hair let loose and bouncy; dressed in a crisp black suit on a knee high skirt covering her near perfect Barbie like measurements; a few jewelry here and there, sparkling, and yet struggling to keep up with the twinkle in the eye walked in, in to the boss’s cabin.

As she crossed me, with that ‘let’s get naughty smile’, like my other desi colleagues, I too fell flat in the corridor, on my back into the bed of roses below.

I lied down there, in the corridor, dazed, smiling, enthralled and stupefied. At the other end of the corridor,  the big boss’s Secretary stood outside her cabin, next to the common printer, in her green and pink combination salwar kameez with her left hand on her forehead, the right left akimbo, looking at us with that typical disgusted Indian Aunt look on her face, and murmuring north Indian expletives. She also heard three distinct sounds. Firstly, the sound of my HR Officer shutting the door of my boss’s cabin, then, as my podgy boss fell off his chair, a loud earth shattering sound, which shook our temporary office building and knocked us back into our right senses, and finally my HR Officer’s hyena like laughter.

In no time, the men stood up, huddled into a group, just like the Indian Cricket Team does before a crucial match, after which the office witnessed a similar scene from the past:

Suddenly there was a fluttery of activity in our workplace. Forty year and plus old men scurried around like teenagers, and within half an hour, that is the time that she was in the cabin getting introduced to my boss as the new Document Controller on the project, the team fished out all possible information about her with an alacrity that could put Mossad and ISI to shame.

On Spring Equinox, the new Document Controller joined the project. The office blushed with the sweet scent of flowers. Sunday mornings were no more drowsy, and afternoons were no more lazy. The mafia buzzed around the office like bees, especially into and around the Document Control Room, looking for old bygone letters and stationery items that they didn’t need.

They were back together, working as a team. They had no major expectations from her. They did not expect her to join them on their lunch table, and be party to their other rituals. All they wanted from her, was a smile, a hi, a hello, a handshake, a side-glance, a touch here, a flirty comment there, and they were getting plenty of it.


And then, on a lively afternoon, as I sat, easing myself on my favorite potty seat in the fourth cubicle from the washroom door, I heard these famous words from my great imaginary philosopher and poet of a time long gone by, words that were never said, words that were never heard before: 
“What one woman breaks, another woman joins together”

Sunday, March 16, 2014

A lesson on India…


Last Wednesday I had just returned from work and as it is when I am usually at home, had nothing much to do. On a normal day, I would just switch on the TV and laze while watching some of the theatrics on one of those Indian news channels. However, on that day, the High Command in our house had banned TV, so I was all the more useless. I had also pissed off most of my friends on my various chat lines and, was out of lives on Candy Crush, so actually I was totally out of any pastime activity too.

My High Command was tutoring the elder son, who was preparing for the last test of his year-end term for the 4th grade. The subject was EVS, and the scope covered all of India’s States and Union Territories and covered a myriad of data that included, but was not limited to their Capitals, Key Ministers, Important Places, Monuments, Heritage Structures, Temples, Hills, Valleys, Lakes, Rivers, Seas, Deserts, Ports, People, Languages, Food, Dresses, Art and Dance forms, Occupation, Agriculture, Weather and whatnots.

Too vast a syllabus for an exam that had an overall worth of only 15 marks and test duration of maximum an hour, I must say. Nevertheless, all of it had to be crammed into that tiny brain, and so, mom had imposed a ban on any kind of distraction in the living room, which came in the form of banishing the younger lad out of vicinity, a ban on television and a stern diktat on me to stay away from the study area. Therefore, I sat a distance away with a sort of fake disinterested look on my face, but could not help not listening in.

Both of them had individual halos hovering over their heads. The one over mom looked more like steam ejecting out of a locomotive and read, ‘Under High Pressure’, the face though was motely painted with streaks of a variety of emotions, despair, anger, agony and joy. Are all Indian mothers just like this?  The one over the lad was simple; it said ’This one last exam, then I get two weeks off…. Hurray!’, his face though had only one word written on it ‘Lost!’

Sitting there and prying over them as they struggled with memorizing what crops grow in Assam,  what language they speak in each state and which river flows from where to where, I thought, since I fare pretty well with those KBC questions and since I have all the wealth of information gained from watching so much news on TV channels, I might as well amuse myself by having my own parallel ‘Are you smarter than a 4th grader’ game.

I failed miserably. Yes I did.

Although I lost miserably, I learnt a lot that evening. In fact, more than what I would have after watching an hour or so of that animated and staged TV debate on Indian politics.

 
Did you know ….. that the southernmost tip of India is not the Vivekanada Rock, but a place called Indira Point in the Nicobar Islands? That the largest producer of milk in India is Uttar Pradesh and not Gujarat? That the largest port in India is at Kandla and not the Nahva Sheva in Mumbai? That the largest lake in India is the Wullar Lake in Kashmir, and all your life you thought that it is some lake in Rajasthan? That the capital of Assam is not Guwahati, but Dispur? That currently there are 28 states in India, and Delhi of which Arvind Kejriwal was the last Chief Minister, is not even a State? Such an overload of information, I must say!

Well, talking about the exam, Kevin did well. He lost just one mark, that too, because of his silly answer ‘Polar Bear’ as the capital of Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Talk about cramming; we guys had a nice laugh! Especially trying to figure out how Port Blair ended up as Polar Bear?

Now, whether you and I know or not, my wife does, and so does my nine year old lad. And so, I for one have decided that I will not contest with either of them when it comes to trivia about India. I shall therefore limit my general knowledge show off to the area of Indian Politics, which thankfully is still ever ambiguous and bluff worthy.

Thanks for reading, and as we part, one triva question for you. There are only two Indian states that have a literacy rate of over 90%. One is Kerala, which is the Second? If you know, write the answer in the comments box. And yes, no googling please.

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Death of a Pilot



This is to inform every one of the sad and sudden demise of a very close someone who was not just a friend, but more of a family member. He was also a Pilot.

The incident happened last month. We were proceeding for our vacation, and he had just dropped us to the airport and was taking around a few of our friends on a late night ride when the car met with a fatal accident. He was like that, he used to love taking friends and family out for long rides and he loved touring. Well, ‘Touring’ was his middle name!

He was a real big guy of Japanese-American descent and yet, he was so selfless.

How many times did he drop me to work and back?

My boys really loved him, he would help them fill air in their bicycle tires and footballs, take them for their football and swimming classes, and what not?

And how many times did he help my wife with her weekly shopping and her visits to the beauty parlor (Especially when she wanted to keep those visits secret, just to find out if I noticed and see if I complimented her for the change when I came back from work)?

And yes, those beautiful songs that he would play for us when he took us out on those long late-in-the-night drives?

I cannot forget those days. His memories keep haunting, not just me, but the whole family.

He will be sorely missed, again, not just by my family, or me but also by some of my office colleagues, whom he used to take out on those weekly lunch out every Thursdays.

On that fateful night, a local lad in one of those big American pickups (Yes, that ugly one with big protruding bums) drove in recklessly from the incoming carriageway, jumped the median and crashed into them. The crash was cataclysmic, if I must say, but luckily my friends who were with him are safe. They were taken to the hospital, and after preliminary observations and medications, released the next day.

He was a fighter; he did not let his soul depart right away. He fought until the last moment. Unfortunately, every car comes with a value tag, and as time passes this value depreciates. Sadly, for him the estimate placed on table by his specialists were more than what the insurance guys thought his worth was, and so, with a stone on my heart, I had to let him go.

Last week, I finished all the police formalities and got his death certificate. Last Thursday, during lunchtime I went to the insurers’ office and collected a cheque, which had a figure that was way less than what he was worth actually.

Since that incident, my wife has been relegated to driving a rented sedan.

The boys find it crammed; they hate it when they cannot play their in-car war games jumping from the second to the third row and back shooting at each other by taking cover behind the seats. Sadly, there is no third row in a sedan! However, the lads, as I found out are quite accommodating. Now they just sit on the back seat and kick each other, and are busy creating a ruckus of sorts. According to them, the rear seat size is so small, that when they sit next to each other, each feels like the other is kicking.

I am back to driving my old faithful, my nine year old Nissan-Tiida. On the highway, when a big four wheeler follows me and flashes its lights, I humbly move out and give way. I drive slowly in the second lane, sometimes third. No more ego trips for me.

Yes, no more ego trips, but in fact, I am feeling much better now.  I live in an area where my little house is nestled amidst huge villas owned by big Sheikhs. These Sheikhs have four wheelers that are bigger than some of those chawls in Mumbai, and yes, all of them have drivers too. Of which, most, if not all the drivers are handsome, young lads from Malabar. One of the advantages of driving a small car in this locality is that Grocers, Tea Vendors, Take away joint waiters and even lonely Qatari women won’t mistake you for a driver from one of those houses. For them, at last, I could be a genuine malbari who does a decent job for a living, and now they even believe me, when I say that I am an engineer who works on one of those huge construction projects.

 Jai ho!
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