Saturday, 18 February 2012

Bombay- as I see it



A new city. New people, new places, new college, new home. A dazed, confused me.This sums up my initial response to the city of extremes that Bombay is.

In the beginning, I tried my level best to figure out the city and its people. The more I tried to understand it, the more complex it seemed. I missed home, I missed old friends, I missed graduation days. Basically, I missed everything Bombay was not. As the days passed by, I started to learn more about life in Bombay. After the initial confusion, I decided to stop trying to hard to figure out things. I decided to let myself be, to give in to the mystery Bombay was. That is when I fell in love with the city. And in that, I started loving Bombay for everything it was.

With my acceptance of the city, Bombay reciprocated my love with open arms. The lone, empty hours that used to haunt me became filled with love and excitement. I found my family in friends. Once I found 'my' people, I found a home away from home. Long hours in college, staying up the nights for assignments, heart-to-heart conversations with friends, travelling in local trains, finding 'our' spots, living an independent life- Bombay gave me all this and so much more. Cliched as it sounds, this truly was a dream come true.

However, with time, the fragility of my supposedly strong glass house gave away. Everything did not turn out to be as idyllic and hunky-dory as I had assumed, rather hoped, it would be. The first problem with the landlord, the first delayed assignment, the first friendship requestioned, the first expectation not met- when the problems started to crop up, they came aplenty. That is when I went back to what the city taught me- acceptance. I fought my own battles, I learnt to accept things for their worth. That's how you survive here. I do, my friends do, we all do. I am still learning new aspects about the city as well as myself with each passing day.

Bombay- the city of dreams, the city of extremes. Live the dream and see for yourself.

Friday, 17 February 2012

A Memory about Her. A Memory about Me.


Hands. Long fingers, odd nails displaying the initial attempts at putting nail polish.  My hands. Holding on to tiny, artistic hands. Her hands. Always up to something. Playing with toys, pulling cheeks, dressing up dolls, popping pills. Yes, this memory is about me. A part of me I lost. A part that will always remain with me.
                In this fast moving world that lives for itself, I live in a joint family. One of the few joint families in today’s ‘nuclear’ world that are; and I can say it is a privileged luxury I enjoy. In my family, we have more siblings and parents than what mere biological ties display. Ever since childhood, I have lived in an atmosphere where we share and care equally. In short- a big, happy family (yeah, they exist beyond movies too.) So, imagine my joy when the tiniest, sweetest bundle of joy joined the family. That day indeed was the happiest day of my life- the day my angel child, my sister was born.                
                Needless to say, she was the apple of our eyes. I went back to my childhood in taking care of my baby girl; reliving the gay abandon, the careless fun, the lovable mischiefs- all of which I had left behind. I was in mid school back then. They used to say I was a ‘serious child’. Shy, sitting in a corner, smiling selectively, sunk in novels I barely understood, unsure of my capabilities, dismissive of my personality—all this was me. Call it teenage uncertainties and doubts if you may; but in a perfect and happy world, I was quite an odd dissimilarity.
                But then, came along my angel. With her, I found the child in me. With her, I grew up all over again. Seeing her transformation from a bubbling toddler to one of the smartest kids I have ever seen further deepened my love for her. And in my love for her, my love for life returned. It might sound slightly odd to you that I was inspired by a mere child several years younger to me, but she was no ordinary kid. Full of life, she was the family’s stress-buster. Always inquisitive, her zest for life was infectious. Through her prism of innocence, the world started appearing a much better place. People started bothering much less. I myself started bothering me lesser. I became less cautious of my double-toothed smile. I started caring less about the fact that all my friends had a fair complexion and that relatives passed snide remarks about my ‘dark’ one. I learnt to laugh along jokes of my thin and skinny structure when classmates used to call me ‘hanger’ behind my back. Confidence came, happiness came, will came. I started loving my family more, I started loving myself more, I started loving life more.
                Idyllic much? Of course it had to get jinxed. Lightening struck the bliss, life took a shocking turn. Our elixir of life found her life in danger. Leukaemia- a form of blood cancer they called it. To me, it was just a plain black screen interspersed with the blues of numbness. A screen that suddenly parks itself in the middle of a straight road you’re walking on, blocking a further path, freezing your present one. She moved cities for treatment, I moved ages in terms of maturity. Bathroom became my secret refuge, where I used to cry my eyes red; but outside, I was this resilient, patient figure assuring everyone things would be fine. Of course they’d be fine, I’d say to myself. That was probably because I couldn’t even bring myself to the acceptance of the fact that they were ever not fine. ‘Strong’ me, sure.
                The entire family went down in crumbles. Silence became our mode of communication. Pretending normalcy- it was almost as if there was an in-house competition as to who can pretend to be more normal and mature than the other. And we all tried our best to come on tops. The part of family (including me) that was away from her in a home that did not feel like home anymore, tried its best to not let the situation fall low. But how could it not? How could we go back to a normal, regular life? How could I go back to loving the life she had taught me to love? All the same, try we did. Elders went to office, I went to school. We went about doing our chores. And I conveniently chose to ignore what I tried to pass off as normal. My grades fell, time seemed a bother, I felt alone. I used to get daily reports of what I ardently prayed was her progress. “Didi, I bought a new doll today! I will show it to you once you are here. Didi, I got five injections this week. Don’t worry, it does not pain. I am brave na! Didi, I am taking my medicines on time. Didi, I have made you a card, I have drawn a picture of your favourite chocolate and chips in it. Didi, I don’t want to wear this mask when I go out na, you keep it with you when we go out. Didi, I got a new dress, it’s very fashionable! You will love it. Didi, I miss you. Didi, I love you.”
I was dying slowly.
                But my bundle of joy knew how to live it up. Her zest for life, her infectious uninhibited laughter, her maturity, her conviction- she never stopped being herself. Her happiness was our hope, her genuineness was our treasure. I, personally, took a great deal of inspiration from her absolute love and enthusiasm for life. I felt silly about myself for thinking the worst and being stuck in my pessimism and dejection when she was all out there enjoying life inspite of suffering so much. Life gave gloom a nudge and shone again, when she came back home. What medical treatments took away from her outward appearance was only in technicality. To me, she was as beautiful as beauty can ever be. With her in front of my eyes once again, I turned back to a life I had turned my back on. Embracing her, I embraced life again. My eyes started meaning what they said, my smile actually became heartfelt. It was just this charming, contagious positivity she had about her that made me feel better about the world and in that, about myself. In the second chance I gave to life, I cherished her firsts. I remember clearly her first day of school- she was smartly dressed in her school uniform, her hair neatly combed and pinned, schoolbag and bottle in place, cute tiny socks and shoes adding more to her adorable persona. We all were nervous for her, while she herself was raring to go. My angel child- she made me proud, and taught me quite some lessons in confidence and self-belief. I found my peace by indulging her with my love, taking in her innocence, and often simply by looking at her.
Back to life.
                However; the universe finds out a way to be cruel, in the end. Suffering had apparently not had had enough of that poor, pure soul. It was not enough that the child was forced to turn mature at such a tender age. My happiness, my expectations from life was unfathomable to life itself. Relapse. It all came crashing, tumbling down. This time, she was not to come back. A numbing shock. A painful refusal. The lowest of lows. An inconsolable grief. A child of seven. A full of life, marvellous child of seven- she was. The ‘was’ is what hurt the most, the ‘was’ is what hurts the most. Gloom found company in my anguish. Once, to stretch my hand ONCE and bring her back to me- if only I could.
                Time does not stop, life does not stop. I did manage to move on with life. My angel child in my memories carved in me forever, I pulled myself together. For her sake, more than for mine. I accepted life in its ugliest and loveliest forms. But the questions never end. The image never fades away. That image of her hands. Those tiny, artistic hands. It killed to see them doing nothing. As I saw her for the last time on the hospital bed, my heart cried out- “Build another dollhouse, love. I am here, I will help you. We’ll hold hands and walk again. Just give me your hands.”
But they lay lifeless. 

Thursday, 16 February 2012

The Unmasked Passion


With the meditated precision of a hungry falcon,
I will hunt you down and tear you to shreds.
Of satisfaction that will transgress worldly pleasures,
I will sing songs that will be my armament.

That haunting memory I pretended not to know,
Lurking in the background- that voice, that body.
That voice, that body, the very presence-
I knew it was you; you know it was you.

I walked deliberately nonchalant,
I talked forcing an enviable calm.
Your happiness disgusted me,
It killed to laugh.

But you have been happy for too long.
I will shout, I will cry, I will laugh.
My felicity will be your destruction,
My felicity will be my revenge.

The sheer intensity of my abhorrence surprises me,
Yet I do not know of a more pleasing surprise.
You are blissfully unaware of my power,
I am blissfully aware of my threat.

The woods, they walk to me-
They have stories to tell.
Of calm waters forced to split open by forceful winds,
Of retaliating ice menacingly pushing back the winds.

-I will be that ice to your forceful wind.
My thin sheet will freeze your assumed masculinity.

My relentless obsession is my hope,
My devious feminity is my garb.
Your incoherent bewilderment is my amusement,
Your helpless desperation is my passion.

You will fall into my trap, I know-
That is the only advantage of knowing you.
No incantation, no chant, no spells-
My only trick will be looking at you.

Your confidence is the thorn that pricks,
My confidence is my only warning.
Your eyes are your bestial give-away,
My eyes are my untainted truth.

I will carve you with hot iron.
But, hollow you will be.
I will lure you like sweet poison.
But, poison it will be.


Wednesday, 15 February 2012

The 'Dark' Side

The linger of hope, the shadow of darkness

Embrace your darkness. Your fears, your apprehensions, your misgivings, your suspicions- face them. Had a public embarrassment? Laugh it off. Have a childhood fear? Challenge it. Dread a temptation? Give in to it, try it, and emerge from it. Have a secret? Share it with yourself first, and then share it with someone else.
I’ve always believed we all have a dark side. Why attach evil, negative traits to it? I meet people, I spend time with people. I value this time. But more than that, I value my time with myself. And in my solitude, I discover my dark side. They call me gentle, and they call me headstrong. They call me stubborn, and they call me sweet. They call me an introvert, and they call me genial. Who should I believe? More than that, why should I believe them? I respect them, but I’ve learnt that self-respect is more important in the end. People who have disgusted me in life have been the ones with hardly any self-respect. And this is why, I tread the lone path. In that, I love what I fear to see. It liberates, to not look for approval. I discover the path not taken, the ‘darkness’ in me; and slowly start unearthing it, loving it, and cherishing it.
Don’t fear the dark, it leads you to hope
Don’t leave the hope, it links you to sanity
Don’t just keep sanity, reach out to insanity
Take another step, and embrace the dark

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Words

To know I have you,
Is to live a blissful transcendence.
You are that one love,
And you are so much more.

You could be that purple tinge in the sky,
You could be that playfully serene wave slightly near the shore,
You could be that smile of spellbinding honesty,
You could be that beautifully stubborn strand of hair.

I see you every day,
I find you on special days.
I know you always,
I discover you in special ways.

You puzzle me,
You haunt me,
You leave me at peace,
You leave me in love.

They say I am incomplete,
Alone.
I wish they knew I have you,
My words- my loveliest company.


Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Cigarette


Touches your lips. Reach.
Hits your mind. Hold.
You hold it at a distance. Close.
It’s closer than the closest. Know.

You stare. You think. You know, you know.
Inhale. Breathe. Take a drag. Live.
Blow out the smoke, blow out the ache.
Reminisce, evoke, induce, reduce.

 The smoke comes back to you,
The haze moves away from you.
 Puff puff puff.
The fire burns out, the ash fades away.
Puff.

You brush aside the seemingly trivial.
You embrace the obviously dangerous.
It challenges your crowded solitude.
It calls out your closeted sensations.

Physical, mental, psychological, real-
Reflexes are there for you to choose.
It takes a little of your life away.
You live the rest of your life with it.

These burns don’t flake the skin,
They turn the frost.
These flames don’t light the fire,
They roast the smoke.

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

The Shining Star



The Shining Star. She always was.
The bright spot, bursting with energy.
That happy smile. Those speaking eyes.
No pretense, just the way she was.
Played her way around
Ran, turned, smiled.
What was it about her?
Enchanting, pure, devoid of malice.
That infectious laughter. That unaffected charm.
So perfect yet not too perfect.
When it seemed unreal, there came the blow.
Bit by a deadly bug, life betrayed her.
Time was less, but it was precious.
She knew it. Fought with an enviable calm.
Nonchalant. Undaunted. Resilient.
A kid she was, why forced to turn mature?
Incomplete childhood.Unfulfilled desires.
Restrained emotions. Unspoken words.
Unquestioning submission- this was not her.
She changed. Her spirit never did.
What was inevitable, ultimately found its way.
This was not merely another chapter ended.
Loss. Shock. Refusal. Grief.                  
Influx of memories. Gamut of emotions.
Time stopped. The clock ticked on.
Life moved. I had to move on.
She was the disbelief of a faded past.
Also the inspiration for a future hope.
Taught how to live, now soaring the zenith.
The shining star. She always was.
The shining star. She always will be.


Sunday, 5 February 2012

Because, a Single Act Can Change Your Life


A single moment, a single act can change your life. A hug, a kiss, a tear, a gift, a word, a fact. Or, maybe, a slap. Hers was exactly that- a slap.
                Seemingly brushing aside a plethora of emotions, she stepped into the capital city to live her dream. Delhi- the city of metro, DTC and autos. The city of the President, Prime Minister and the embassies. The city with the old-world charm of Paranthe-wali gali and the legendary snobbishness of high-society people. Of dauntingly fashionable women. Of infamously dubious men. And of course, the other ends of the spectrum too.
                Never too kicked about changes, her passion to pursue her dream was the only thing that drew her to the city. Her dream of studying in the university she had set her eyes on way before she passed her school. She was intimidated, she was nervous, she was dreamy, she was sure.
                She set out to get everything in place to get settled in the city that was near-perfect in her realm of imagination. A crazy day of running around later, she dragged her fatigued self to the Metro station to catch a train back. It was getting late and the train was about to arrive. Too exhausted to climb the stairs, she decided to use the lift instead. How overpopulated our country is- she realised after about fifteen people hopped in, challenging the lift capacity of seven. It was simple- the lift had to go from the ground floor to the first floor. A matter of few seconds. And it did take her a few seconds to realise about that hand groping her casually.
                *Gulp*                                                                                                                                     
~No, this can’t be happening for real! This is what one reads about, hears about. Why would SHE have to face it? What had she done?~
                The voices in her head firmly clashed with that hand moving furiously around her. In those few seconds that seemed like slow, agonising ages; her mind had stopped working. She tried to look behind, but there was no space to even tilt her head.
                The lift finally opened, and people rushed out faster than lightening. ~Didn’t anyone see what happened in there? Don’t they care?~
                She immediately turned back to look at that guy. She stared at him for a good 20 seconds at least, burning with rage. She expected him to melt then and there. But all she saw was a middle-aged balding man, smiling to his amusement. Smiling. ~Smiling!~  And then he went on his own way.
                “Run.”-a stray but resonating voice in her head said. And she ran. And she held him by the hand, and turned him to face her. And then, she slapped him right across the face. Slapped hard.
The world turned holier than thou as they all rushed to her help and trying to come on tops in beating the hell out of that man. Men shouting, women whispering, children gawking, police acting. A swarm of people- a swarm of people in the midst of whom she found herself. Found, loved, lived herself. Life-changing? You bet.

Friday, 3 February 2012

The Cloud and the Vision


Clouded visions- I don’t blame you for.
But you- you make your cloud your vision.
You say your power is all-encompassing;
Why, then, do you fear my silence?

Your mirror will crack,
Your bubble will burst.
The echoes will give away your truth.
Your truth will give away your vision-

The cloud that is your vision,
The rust that is your cloud-
The rust of your fallacy,
The fallacy that is your truth.

I will still be silent.
The silence that is my truth,
The truth that is my power.

Visions combine, visions collide.
That bleeding eye will have the last laugh.
Of your broken shield, songs will be sung.
Of your tainted dreams, graves will be dug.

The cry of pain will have the cry of victory.
The silence will be deafening. Resounding.

And I will watch,
Watch with my vision-
The vision that is not clouded.

The clear mirror.
The pure bubble.

I will watch.
We will watch.
We.
Not you.

Regret, loss, disillusionment- you.
Win, power, vision- us.
The cloud that is you.
The vision that is us. 

Thursday, 2 February 2012

'Booked' for a Movie


  What’s common between ‘The Namesake’; ‘A Mighty Heart’, and ‘Slumdog Millionaire’? Well, they are brilliant movies, they star the talented Irrfan Khan, and they are remarkable cinematic adaptations of different novels. What started as an experiment has gradually evolved into a trend over the years. Almost every other movie is an adaptation of a popular novel, especially in Hollywood. Bollywood is a bit different. Mostly, they copy straight away (sorry, ‘adapt’) from regional cinema!

      The joy of reading is something beyond comparison. You start living the characters, and relate to their circumstances. You read books at your own leisure. Movies, on the other hand, are grander and altogether more colourful. What you read over a few days, you can watch in 2-3 hours. The emotions get clearer, you connect strongly with the character (depends LARGELY on the acting). In a way, cinematic adaptations of books are a good way to popularize the novel. There have been many wonderful adaptations. ‘The Godfather’, ‘Gone With The Wind’, ‘Devdas’, ‘The Kite Runner’, ‘The Guide’, ‘Narnia’ series, ‘Lord Of The Ring’ series, ‘P.S. I Love You’, ‘The Devil Wears Prada’, and off course ‘The Harry Potter’ series…the list is endless but these are some successful examples. Who can forget the eight Oscar winning ‘Slumdog Millionaire’, an adaptation of Vikas Swarup’s ‘Q&A’ (why on earth did he rename his book ‘Slumdog Millonaire’ after the movie released? Individuality, originality are lesser known virtues, eh?) Another excellent movie, though less popular, is ‘Pinjar’, an on-screen adaptation of Amrita Pritam’s novel by the same name. Shakespeare is an all-time favourite; his plays have been adapted in different languages all over the world. Closer home, best-selling author Chetan Bhagat’s novels are perfect movie material, with  two movies already released based on his novels- ‘One Night At The Call Centre’(‘Hello’: bad, period); another based on his debut novel ‘Five Point Someone’ proving to be a blockbuster hit( '3 Idiots':infamous for the writer-director controversy, but entertaining all the same); with the other two books also in the making.

      We talk about books losing their charm, with nobody taking pains to take out time to read and preferring the shortcut by watching movies instead; but we forget where this shortcut takes base from. If you look at it that way, cinematic adaptations are actually a way of paying tribute to novels. Movies provide a larger platform to books. Once you watch a movie on the big screen, you will most definitely want to read it in print, though it is a silly idea to keep away a book and wait for the movie based on it. You get a different feeling when you watch a movie and when you read a book, and it’s best to savour both the feelings separately and not be judgemental.