Monday, November 5, 2012

Chinna-Chinna Aasai


Another blank HR form for some firm that wouldn't shortlist me thanks to my abysmal academic credentials in college lay staring at me; not really begging to be filled straightaway. Despite the multitude of things to be done on my things-to-do list (making one such list was on my things-to-do list; this is an infinite mirror loop), Parkinson’s law usually puts paid to the hope of doing anything substantial until last-minute panic takes over. Yet, as I scrolled down perfunctorily, a question the likes of which I had seen before when  scrolling down perfunctorily, caught my eye. 

“Please paste page 221 from your 300-page autobiography.”


While what I wrote in said moment of last-minute panic was some far-fetched story of changing the face of Indian sport and selling a few colas while at it, all I could really think of was the following murder of sensible literature.

They weren't exactly sofas per se. Cushions met at the corner of the room, making a cosy L-shape. The wall-sized windows above opened to hazy winter sunlight. Curled up in a quilt, next to the morning’s mutilated newspaper whose Sudoku had been finished in less time than it took to make the tea in the mug next to the aforementioned paper, I neatly took off the plastic covers, smelled the familiar scent of a paperback, and lost myself.

Remember that bit about living for your dream and a pocketful of gold? I'm yet to find that silver lining.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Jackfruit and tender coconut

“We’re going to have Naturals ice-cream. Not now, though. The wait will only make it sweeter. Crossword, then?”

Through the incessant pitter-patter on the plexi-glass roof covering our heads, I managed to get a nod through. The bruschetta and ensuing lasagne still bore their vestiges in my throat, and the taste of my first mocktail was still on the tip of my tongue. Dessert could wait.

Up in the bookstore, she wandered off far away from the bestsellers section, where I wondered what the latest mockery of overly-righteous reviewers’ predictions was. Hearing a call from shelves well out of my sight, I found her crouched near a rack taller than me.

“This is the one Ayn Rand book I haven’t read, you know. Never found it in the neighbourhood bookstore.”
“It’s supposed to be her most passionate set of essays, as I understand. If you thought The Fountainhead was intense, wait till you pick this up.”
“Oh, so you liked it?”
“Erm… I kinda, sorta, haven’t, ummm, read it.”
“Oh. Oh, OK. Confound it. Wodehouse section. You may do better there. Chop chop."

It happened, Lefty. Right before United CafĂ©.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Easy come, steady stay, easy go

As that Kishore Kumar song went, people have a lot to say to you before you join a management school. And mind you – it’s very different from what they told you before you applied for the school in the first place. In any case, my leg was pulled way too often about how every b-school graduate becomes a corporate bigwig trading a life for it, sells his/her soul for some never-ending stream of dough, and in general, loses stock of the good things in life. Vague as they may sound, a lot of those arguments do have some grounding. In the name of objectivity, what a lot of the graduates who form the sample space basing the aforementioned protestations do is narrow their choices; and you can’t really blame them for it. The rumble of the first year at these schools never gives you enough time to work through to your aspirations, and curricular requirements take you down Frost’s rosy paths from which there is coming back – though only after surpassing substantial mental barriers of status quo and complacency.

As vaguer than those arguments I may have sounded, I hope I made my point. What about me, though? I must admit I’m fast becoming a victim of the very booby trap that consumes most bright dreams here, but the much-maligned objectivity that’s attempted to be ingrained into every student here, is actually what brings me back to the fork where we ought to make my choice; to continue to marvel at happenstances as trivial as a failing monsoon bringing the slightest of drizzles, and the calmest of breezes, bringing hope to a tired mind trudging back through these storied lawns. And, best of all, it whispers a reminder, that there’s still a place where it can all be recorded, and maybe lived again, if the system consumes me.

For now, I continue to gape open-mouthed in wonder, and I know I’d be consumed when that stops happening.

Monday, May 14, 2012

The wheels just keep on turning

Five long years in R have made me see more than my fair share of goodbyes. No, not so much that I start personifying them as I'd once feared, but thankfully enough that I figured I must be inured to it all by now.

Or so I thought until this morning.

I think I should've said something wildly inappropriate, just to ensure I wouldn't be missed. But I guess that would be thinking too highly of myself. Wishful thinking, as she used to point out.

As it stands, another addition to Famous Last Words today reads- To Mango: See you soon. (between two coaches aboard the slowly moving Jan Shatabdi)

Why did my playlist just play Bookends?

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

In the wells of silence

It was the kind of time and place where saying "I'm a voracious reader" didn't make you popular among the ladies. But, I used to say it nevertheless; at least, it made my English teachers happy, and that meant more chances for me to point out to the rest of the class, nose high up, that the P in pterodactyl was silent. No one gave two archaeopteryx hoots.

It was in such a time and place where the Library period in school was one of the least popular, right alongside the compulsory Music/Dance/Art and Moral Science periods. Yours truly wasn't a huge fan either, but only because we only had less than forty minutes to ravage through the wealth of the library's bookshelves. Now, I might give the impression that I was this nerdy read-it-all type kid who'd assimilated all the masters' literature. That'd be more than slightly taking you off-track. I hated the Classics section. Call it bad timing, but trying to read The Tempest when I was six-and-a-half years old wasn't the most memorable experience (still no excuse for missing the Brave New World question in Gokhale's quiz the other day), neither was Little Women or Jane Eyre. The Hardy Boys got too predictable too soon, Nancy Drew was pretty gay even for third grade, school libraries don't nearly stack as much of Ruskin Bond and R.K. Narayan as they should, and the Tinkles, Amar Chitra Kathas and Champaks would barely last twenty minutes before you were done.

This meant an alternate job had to taken up often during library periods: make everyone else read. This meant critically analysing every kid's tastes, trying hopelessly to find that perfect romance for the girl whose roll number was right next to mine, keeping the class topper away from further academic reading, and generally taking a rap from the librarian for roaming around the library harrying everyone into reading, often too enthusiastically to her irritation.

So very often, I'd be shown through mime the Maintain Silence poster, but my low attention span would quickly take me to the one right alongside it. The first time I saw a Keep Calm and Carry On poster, I was immediately reminded of that old library, with its high, pasty, dull-yellow walls, the almost-ancient wall-clock, the Maintain Silence scream and the World Book Day poster alongside it. Celebrated across the world today as World Book and Copyright Day, it urged us into reading more. But to most heady seven and eight-year-olds of 1997, the day it was celebrated was more interesting, and ironically, it reminded them of one of the most critical reasons that took them away from reading. The 23rd of April was one day before one Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar's birthday.

Bad choice, United Nations. For India, at least. Happy 39th, Sachin. Thank you for everything, and it's only thanks to you, though, that at least I remember the other day I was talking about. Not too bad a choice, then, eh?

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Twit

For reasons I'd rather not bother you with, this page has stagnated, with every post only serving to play catch-up with the events of the months passed since the last. Not too long ago though, I'd be serving dollops of unnecessary insights into the recesses of this insane mind, almost-senile reminiscences of a colourful childhood and imaginary plans of romances never to be. That wordiness hasn't died completely though, as unfortunate followers of my Twitter feed would tell you with some disdain.

These months of inactivity here have seen an inexplicable transformation on that other page where I bug the world; from incredibly nubile puns, via drooling over the occasional classic United performance and drawling over the state of Indian cricket, to remarkably unfounded theories of India's human development vis-a-vis China. The very formal turn of phrase that the previous sentence illustrates the change in state of mind I've been through. The interviews I'd been preparing for didn't go as well as dreamt, but they left a lad who barely touched the Sudoku and Sports page every morning, going through every news article and opinion on the Indian Budget over three newspapers, and what's more, giving his own two bits in 160 characters (Yes, Shreyas, I do notice the inherent anomaly in that!).

Thankfully, though, that lovely grant of eight grand a month from the HRD Ministry means I have an overflowing pending reading list. The Picador Book of Cricket, compiled by Ramachandra Guha (two more books of whose lie on the aforementioned list), is as romantic a book on cricket as it gets. I've barely reached the middle of the first volume in the book, which is all about the quarter of a century before and after Australia and England first locked horns in 1877. If I finish reading it soon enough, I guess I'll follow it up with The States of Indian Cricket by the same author. A shorter review for those who get it: these two look like perfect birthday gifts for dear Moh.

I'm yet to read two books I'd been gifted on my birthday this year – The Beatles: Stories Behind Their Songs from AP, and Gone With The Wind from the Angels. The former was a factual drag according to Ellen, but I guess I'll love the trivia. The latter should slightly lessen my regret of having not read too many classics, as much as I've consciously avoided them. It gives a warm fuzzy feeling, to see so many unread books in my room, although it's tough to keep them from catching dust. Not to mention, the prying eyes looking to borrow these (and never return until I harry them to death).

P.S.- Since I haven't told anyone, I'll have to tell you, at least: my love for the football field has increased manifold. And apart from that one goal I've scored there (which I keep telling myself to write about some time), that place will now be in my memory for a long, long time.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Veladrome


If I had any doubts that I'd still be sleepy after only a score of the proverbial forty winks, they were cleared emphatically in the first few seconds down the famous Amod Path slope. The morning, still in its winter slumber, seemed to throw a blast of icy wind across my unprotected face. Misty-eyed, I took it in my stride, puffing my cheeks in and out with warm air. A slight moment's hesitation forced me to check my right jacket-pocket: Haddu's Hershey's bar was safely locked in. Head down, hood up, I glided past the chirpy many as we reached the road by the canal...


It's the final semester, finally. The time I couldn't wait for ever since that first meal in the Rajendra Bhawan mess. But three years of watching one and many sing that cloying swansong has left me unsentimental. Five years is way too long anywhere, leave alone a hellhole like Roorkee. It'll be goodbye and good riddance, when the time comes. Until then, to paraphrase Lynyrd Skynyrd quite incorrectly, there's too many places I haven't been.


One of them's been that long misty stretch called the canal road at the stroke of dawn. Following the many faintly visible jerseys ahead of me, I forgo the familiar right turn across the bridge towards the railway station, and soldier on ahead in the now navy blue darkness. The road's full of speed breakers, and the many squirms of anguish and the hollow clanks of metal ahead forewarn me of their oncoming agony. A diversion's taken, and now on my left is a vast stretch of fields, only slowly growing back to life after the kharif harvest. On the right, an offshoot of the Solani aqueduct, a grey mist floating over its calm blue surface. And the two still dark sides, are seemingly seperated by an incredibly peeved wall of wind, that'd flipped my flimsy hood off long ago. The annual HEC Cycle Race could take a break- I stood up to soak it all in. It wasn't 5:15 a.m., like that Knopfler song I love, but in that cold pre-dawn haze of tranquility, I took those few breaths that I'll just hold in as long as I last.


Past the chaotic midway point, scything through the remaining heavy air from the night before, chest number 114 entered the portals of the campus at dawn. After an intriguing battle with number 126 ended in a comic defeat, I collapsed at the foot of a huge tamarind tree. 4Th placed Nivedan and 6th placed Ashwin were nice enough to keep me conscious enough to soak in the ecstasy of finishing the race, halved as the distance may have been from the original 36 kilometres. And after missing the year's annual b-plan contest, and the last DJ Springeezz, I finally had my first check off the bucket list.


P.S.- In the long hiatus between this post and the last, I missed out on a few things. In a short summary: there was one last sexual Nihilanth trip, a first New Year's Eve at home in five years and this little icky green blot on the face of the blogosphere turned four. Happy happy!