Saturday, February 11, 2012

Perspective


 This test was the bane of my existence for those few weeks. Ah well! Who am I kidding? That’s probably saying too much, but I did spend an inappropriately arduous amount of time with the English vocabulary those days. This test was perhaps one of the only things I was really passionate about in a long while. My reasons for taking the test were ‘inchoate’ (See! How it makes you!) and fuzzy, even to me to an extent, but my resolve was strong. I was concentrating on beating the **** out of the test but did not really mull over what would be the aftermath of it.

Although it is just an English exam it usually mandates weeks and weeks of resolute preparations. From the moment I made up my mind, all my spare time, spared from ‘lazing around’ that is, was spent in studying ‘The Bible’ of the test. Though I am not the perfect example of the agony it elicits from most people, I still surpassed my own standards, which have slowly drooped over the past years. I even sacrificed an invaluable vacation on its account. And with all the other usual occupations of that stressful placement semester, it was an albatross around the neck.

In the preceding week, the red letter day was approaching fast, hence the study no longer avoidable on the account of a crappy logic of how I always do things on the 11th hour, 59th minute and they work out just fine. Not a particularly pleasantly week that was. On that momentous October morning, I woke up with an apprehensive tingle in my stomach. A couple of calls and texts wishing me good luck boosted my dwindling morale. I assured myself that I would sail through this ordeal with grace. I took a hot steaming shower to ease my nerves, picked up my papers and left for the exam. A friend was kind enough to drop me to the barely discernible recess in a shabby part of town they called the test center and load me with enough food supplies to last for an entire day. I slung my bag over my shoulder, double checked the admit card, called out a hasty goodbye and entered with a nervous smile, mixed with tiny scoops of anxiety and confidence. As I walked past the reception, I felt a sudden urge to call up my mother. Talking to her always calms me and if anytime, I needed it now. She told me to keep a cool head and concentrate and assured me that ‘I could do it’. Best advice ever. I snaked through the narrow corridors to the check in area and fidgeted around till they called out my name. The small talk with the instructor was mildly irritating, but I shut that out as I quickly signed the sheets before they escorted me to my terminal.

There I was, in the small room, facing the fateful screen surrounded by the heavy silence of the cheap pair of headphones, with just a pencil and an empty piece of paper to my aid. I needed to summon all my reserves of patience though just to sit through another exam after having suffered through a gazillion of those in IIT. Somewhere deep down I believed I was destined to do well out there despite my nervousness. I believed this was the key to my future and just a few hours of perseverance would set the path for what I had only dreamt was forthcoming. And besides, I had never failed at this before.

But destiny works in the strangest ways. I came out feeling like my whole world had turned upside down. My only facet I had confidence in anymore had failed me. I had looked at the screen for minutes, blinked my eyes till I could not deny that it was for real. The butterflies in my stomach had metamorphosed into little baby dinosaurs devouring my insides. There I was, in Gurgaon, alone, I could not bear to talk to anyone and thus I turned off my phone after leaving a message at my parents’ that I was fine and they need not worry. I ambled on the autumn sidewalk treading over scattered leaves wondering what went wrong. After a while, people (so to say the street vendors, the shop owners and such) began to notice my continual stray presence. Thus, to not seem a lunatic, I meandered through hordes of happy people in shopping stores and pretended to look around. I tried to cheer myself up by convincing my watchful self to loosen the purse strings for this one day. But the devils couldn’t be appeased by this tiny offering, they roared for a sacrifice.

Eventually, after having spent the afternoon in auto-critique, I was beginning to realize there was nothing I could do and the mental and physical exhaustion wore me down. Also, it wasn’t the safest place in the world and it had grown dark outside while I was enjoying the luxury of my parents’ hard earned electronic money to keep my mind off my incompetence, so I decided to head back home. I hurriedly got out of the Levis store I had been procrastinating in, found my way to the highway and looked around for an auto to take me to the metro station. I stood on the crumbling footpath at the edge of the road for about half an hour and all I could see were cars and the overstuffed tempo-vans with people jutting out of every opening, which by the way distinctly reminded me of the Fevicol advertisements I loved as a kid. I was wondering what was wrong, why were there no autos, or even buses. Was there a strike today? Or maybe some road construction thing where they just block the traffic off without any prior warnings or notices (Sometimes Delhi is a mess!), but no of course, the cars were all streaming through, so it had to be something else.

And after mulling over the possibilities in my head, I finally remembered one of the reasons why people hated living in Gurgaon. Because there was no decent public transport system in the every-where-you-look-you-can-see-a-fucking-skyscraper city! The metro saved the grace for commute to and fro Gurgaon, but the rest was gaga. The alternative was a taxi. Although I was not one of those ‘born with a silver spoon in their mouths’ kids, this qualified as an exceptional situation which warranted the use of a cab service. So I pulled out my phone with confidence to dial one of those numbers I always saw on the back of radio cabs but rarely dialed. I switched it on and quickly tapped in the number and as I was about to hit Call, guess what? My phone died! How cliche! So, I was on square one again with nowhere to go to and now with no way to contact anyone who could help me. All the terrible stories I had heard or read in the newspapers replayed in my head at the speed of light. Time was running out and I had to find my way to the station real soon however that might be.

Harrowed and tired, just as I was about to hit panic, I spotted a lone rickshaw in a dark alley just off the main road. I crossed the road at a cheetah’s pace and nudged the ‘rickshaw-wala’ who was napping on the backseat. He sprang down from the rickshaw and enquired politely, “Madam, kahan jaana hai aapko?” I needed to assess whether this man could turn out to be some crazy serial killer or a member of a kidnappers’ ring or, in short, off his rocker, if I wanted to take the ride at this hour. He was probably in his forties, though his hard sallow face added a decade and a half to his appearance. I flashed back on the Marasmus pictures we saw in biology textbooks on seeing his scrawny frame with his ribs jutting out where most people I knew sported a healthy belly. His brows were beaded with sweat in the pleasant, one could even call it a mildly cold evening; probably remnants of his last gig. The tobacco stained teeth visible inside his cracked lips did not help his case but his eyes gleamed with the content of a man about to go home after a day’s worth of hard work. He wore a ragged white short kurta, with a muddy almost yellow dhoti and Hawaii chappals; a farmer’s garb very common of rickshaw-walas. He did not reek of alcohol or cigarettes, he was polite and I could probably discount the tobacco bearing in mind that I was desperate; it was not like there were tens of rickshaws standing around.

So I answered, “Iffco Chowk, Metro station, chaloge?” He nodded imperceptibly and as per the norm, quoted the price. And the tutelage I had been privileged to, for all those years, like every other commuter, took over me. I had spent the last few hours taking an insanely expensive exam and shopping in over the top exorbitant stores, and yet I haggled with the man for a sum of money five times of which I could probably drop out of my pocket and never even notice. Welcome to the land of clear conscience!

When I had finally negotiated to my heart’s content, I climbed up and the rickshaw wala begun cycling it towards my destination. It was a long way. Although I was still brooding over my misfortune and silently contemplating my next step, I could not help noticing the route we took. We crossed traffic jammed highways and bustling malls shining with a thousand lights and deserted streets, and it all seemed unreal somehow. I just felt so small against the backdrop of the whole world. There I was, losing my head over not getting a perfect score when I could see people struggling to find the most comfortable place to sleep on on the footpaths from where they might not be kicked out in the middle of the night by policemen who were just doing their jobs. And I saw roadside vendors trying to make enough money to buy their families dinner for the night. And two young filthy boys happily playing with a makeshift cloth ball on the side of the road while my little brother cribbed for the newest Playstation. And a scantily covered malnourished old lady barely even capable of getting up from the sidewalk where she was seated, begging for alms. And rickshaw walas, quite like mine, who were pulling the burden of rich ungrateful kids like me across the streets just to make their daily wages. And for the first time in the day, I felt lucky. I felt like there was more to life than some stupid exam. I could just pick something and be worried or unhappy or more worried about it, but I would be losing that time of my life to things that don’t even matter in the bigger picture. I was lucky to be so privileged and for that few minutes I remembered that, something I should be doing more often.

Though don’t mistake me for a do-gooder saint, who had a moment of enlightenment and relinquished all her material comfort to serve the less-privileged and then left to reside in the Himalayas for the rest of life, or for that matter Somalia helping the poor kids. But I did have a moment of humanity, which each one of each probably has from time to time. But unlike most of those times, I intended to do something about it. Albeit something very very tiny in the face of the whole setting I just described, but well ‘Boond boond se sagar banta hai’ (I love Hindi idioms, they do express the feelings perfectly sometimes!). I had spent some ten minutes earlier bargaining with the poor fellow and I felt extremely guilty and heartless. I could probably just not have one dinner in the plush South Delhi restaurants and it would be enough to compensate for all the times I had been the “Bharat ki jagrut yuva”. So, on my way there I racked my brains over how I could get the cat back in the bag.

We had reached the metro station. I extracted a hundred rupee note from my pocket and handed it to the rickshaw wala. He held out his hand, but seeing the note he said, “Khulle de do Madam” and simultaneously searched through his pockets to see if he had enough change as it was more than double the agreed-upon fare. I chirped, “Rehne do bhaiya, khulle nahi chahiye”. It pleased me immensely just to say those words. I was jumping with joy inside and was hoping to see a smile on his face or some kind of positive acknowledgement, but to my disappointment he did not even raise his head. He was still busy with his tattered purse and pretended to take no notice. Slightly crestfallen, I turned around and walked towards the stairs to the metro. I knew I had done it for my own conscience, but it wouldn’t have hurt to see the man be a bit appreciative.

As I boarded the escalators, I stole a last glance towards the rickshaw wala. I expected him to have gone, or to be involved with another passenger like me, haggling over a couple of bucks. To my surprise, he was looking up towards me, and an incredulous smile adorned his tired face. I smiled back at him involuntarily, and he raised his hand to his head, in the manner of respect I remember doing while going home after school when army vehicles passed by our school bus (Boy! Do I have random baggage back from my school days!), as a gesture of grateful thankfulness. And that gesture which my trivial deed had invoked made me happier than I would have been had I smashed the test to smithereens. This realization dawned on me just when I lost sight of the road seconds later, though my upbeat mood stuck with me for the rest of the journey. So this is what it felt like when people donated huge amounts of money for good causes, maybe this multiplied by those ‘huge amounts’. Not that it was a big deal, but I felt good about myself, like I was a better person than what I thought I was a few minutes back. I managed to squeeze the exam tragedy to some obscure corner of my brain to be fretted about later. In fact I even decided to call up the people I had been avoiding all day. But oh! My phone was not off by choice now, so that had to wait till the next new morning.

Days later, I forgot about this little incident but my test score did not really fade out of my brain as I had incessantly hoped it would. I must say bad memories stick way longer in the head than good ones. But, whenever I think back to this incident, it reminds me of a scene in FRIENDS (my favorite TV show by far!). Its Joey and Ross and maybe once in their million years, Joey is the one showering the wisdom, lol. He says, ‘Who cares what the picture looks like! Maybe it’s not what you thought, but its a brand new baby and a brand new picture!’ Just reminds me that things may not fall into place as you want them, but being happy with what you do have is what matters.

This trivial incident, the faint shadow of congeniality, the warmth of someone’s happy smile, helps me bring things back into perspective.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

15/09/10

Some would say now is not the perfect season to divest time in writing a blog that has been dormant for quite a long time. But I felt the need to write, to vent out all the confusion and perplexity of the past few days. Undoubtedly, the coming fortnights will harbor a lot more of the anxiety, the stress and definitely the workload. Keeping up with that, I'm guessing, will not be child's play, at least not for me. Nevertheless, I shall devote this little space to a general pondering over the universe. 

I had been meaning to read 'The Fountainhead' for a long long time, and have been ruminating about it ever since I let the cover drop. Somewhere, sometime I was introduced to the doctrine that the framework of the characters depicted by Rand could incorporate every man with reasonable integrity preserved, both of the character and of the man. That it caught my interest has not been an occasional fleeting fancy, but a whirlwind of scrutiny of others and self. I browsed through limitless possibilities, but one of the more reasonable ones that seemed to fit in with the limited scope of observations I was permitted, was distressing. All of us when we passed out of high school, hopes high and enthusiasm unbounded, were potential Roarks, still to discover their unique realms perhaps, yet confident of inspired success. And as I turn back to look at that person who was my essence, I cannot find a single trace of it in me. When and how that element vanished can be a worthwhile topic of Ph.D research! (Cant keep the buzz away!) The people I see around me are all distorted reflections of what they started out to become. The journey has been from Roark to Keating, a foreboding of disaster.

For those who have not had the opportunity to read 'The Fountainhead', Roark is the real non conformist who abuses society conventions to carve a well-deserved niche for himself, striving incessantly for perfection. Keating is exactly the opposite, an absolute conformist, and aspires for approval and fame rather than innovation and gratification. There's the third kind, Ellsworth Toohey, who understands and exploits the weaknesses of human nature and edges towards being the totalitarian dictator. And the fourth, whose near-perfect description (on some web page) I take the liberty to quote here, "His youthful idealism has been crushed by the world’s cynicism", Gail Wynand. 

On second thought, I would conclude that the decadence has rather been towards Wynand. Many still have the minuscule grain of righteousness preserved deep inside, overshadowed by the rat race of the fast-paced world. I daresay there still are some, including me, who believe that at some point in the future when they have decimated enough to sustain themselves, they will delve headfirst into the dreams they had left stray for the so-called 'Careers' they sought to pursue then. Which makes me wonder, were we meant to be Roarks and we mutilated our own destinies or were we meant to be Keatings and Wynands all along? 

The question shall remain. Only our conscience shall seek the answer.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Crossroads: One Morning - Part 2











No one knows what awaits you round a bend on a lonely road .

She had been on this crossroad before and had suffered the worst. The characters changed, the time changed, the whole backdrop changed, yet the feelings were just the same, and so was the pain. And yet again she stood here and wondered whether the path she had embarked upon was indeed meant for. Whether the other would be for the better or for the worse. 'Cause from here, it had always looked greener. But fearing that the greener it is, the more barren it shall be further on, she had chosen to bear the hardship head-on, only to find that there was light and there was hope in her boulevard. Her spirits soared. Yet the suffering never ceased. It continued to haunt her. And now, when again wisdom eluded her, she stood frozen in time, looking back and looking forth, to make the make her way down the worthier path or the agonizing one again. She did not know. All she knew was that never again, shall she be here again. Not out of choice but out of compulsion. 'Cause the next time she would not survive this albatross round her neck.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Sketching enthusiasm rejuvenated

February 8, 2010
Rose Day















This is just before an exam.. a perfect example of how all the other things seem so much more appealing than mugging for exams
:)

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Little known amusing truths

  • American Airlines saved $40,000 in 1987 by eliminating one olive from each salad in first class.
  • The word "politics" describes the process so well: "Poli" in Latin meaning "many" and "tics" meaning "bloodsucking creatures."
  • People spend about two weeks of their lives at traffic lights!
  • Topless saleswomen are legal in Liverpool, England, but only in tropical fish stores.
  • In 10 minutes, a hurricane releases more energy than all of the world's nuclear weapons combined.
  • Turtles can breathe through their butts.
  • Peanuts are one of the ingredients of dynamite.
  • Rats multiply so quickly that in 18 months, two rats could have over a million descendants.
  • Most Zambians don't live to see their 40th birthday.
  • There are no clocks in Las Vegas casinos.
  • In Bahrain, a male gynecologist can only examine a woman's private parts through a mirror.
  • Leonardo Da Vinci invented the scissors.
  • Wearing headphones for just one hour will multiply the number of bacteria in your ear 700 times.
  • The screwdriver was invented before the screw.
  • Most lipstick contains fish scales.
  • Plants that are not cared for will cry for help, a thirsty plant will make a high-pitched sound that is too high for us to hear.
  • A 25 year old man from Maine is auctioning off the back of his neck as advertising space. The winner bidder can put a permanent tattoo ad on the back of Mark's neck.
  • It is impossible for a human to lick their elbow.
  • Like fingerprints, every one's tongue print is different.
  • Heroin used to be a cough medicine for children. A German company (Bayer) registered heroin as a trademark.
  • The first owner of the Marlboro Company died of lung cancer.
  • Some Eskimos have been known to use refrigerators to keep their food from freezing.
  • The 3 most valuable brand names on earth: Marlboro, Coca-Cola, and Budweiser, in that order.
  • Rather than bury or burn bodies after death, a Swedish company has come up with a chilling alternative; freezing them in liquid nitrogen, then using sound waves to smash the brittle remains into a powder.
More to come if this one turns out good... :)

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Random stuff


Well having nothing better to do, I decided to return to my old passion :) and truthfully, I don't have a clue as to what I shall be writing from here. I am just making things up as I go.


So whats going on around here. I just finished watching the India - SriLanka one-dayer with over 800 runs scored and India emerging triumphant at the end. It was a thriller of a match, though I missed a chunk of it owing to throbbing pain in my toe due to my surgery earlier in the morning. Dhoni might have been complacent in the beginning of Lanka's innings but by the end, sweat creased his brows and the brows of the million Indians biting their nails glued to their TV screens. I must admit it was a brilliant effort on the Lankan's part... 400+ in a chase is nothing short of amazing.

What else... For one, the next semester for all of us in my year will be a run in for the future, for anything that anyone might choose to do. And its going to be a tough and hectic one. This will also be the last semester to "regrace" the dwindling GPA's, which appears to be an impossible task in itself. It is such a hopelessly mundane prospect coz however hard you try, you end up where you started from. Leaving aside the academic pressures there will be coachings of different shapes and colours and sizes, the most common being for CAT where people decide whether they have to join TIME or CL. To me both seem equally pointless, but nonetheless you end up joining one of them. Then there's GRE and IAS and GMAT and what not. So basically I guess we're gonna spend the semester pitying ourselves for our sad English and the virtually non-existent atmosphere of education in "English". All this is apart from the usual struggle in a semester... and upholding all the other interests one might have. But for me, the struggle would not be the struggle of coping up with these pressures. In fact, I would rather invite them, having endured torturous moments when nothing occupies my mind. The challenge would be to decide what is it that I want to coach for, what is it that shall be my bull's eye for the next year, what shall make me happy when I step out of my convocation. Once I conquer this quest all shall fall into place. Atleast, my time and my thoughts shall fall into schedule. That would suffice for the moment.

Between, suddenly out of context I am reminded of a little chat I had in a family marriage sitting in the back during some ceremonies. I was pretty impatient and was spending my time chatting. It was then that one of my shweet uncles said that you know, all the traditions and ceremonies that we honour have some reasonable basis. For example, why is there an age gap between the girl and the boy in traditional arranged marriages. It is because girls are usually more mature than guys of their own age and guys take longer to mature. In essence, guys are inherently dumber than girls. :) 

I suppose I shall take leave now :).
And hope to get back soon

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Lose my way









In the whirlwind of blue devils
I struggle to not let go
Yet each moment scorches me
Entwined in austere woe

Deserted, I scream in silence
Is there someone to be
The envoy of ecstasy and love
The vicar of bliss, of life, of me..

Bereft of him I smile
To see the naked face thats mine
Gripped with fear at every move,
Yet says
Oh! Leave me alone, I'm fine!

Alas, there's no looking back
No U-turns on the road unknown
The universe conspires for what shall be
'Til then, I walk the monotone

I cry
I bleed
I lose myself

But now I pledge
It shall soon end
Few million seconds henceforth they say
I''l be myself again

I dare
I wish
I hope
I pray

I don't lose my way
I don't lose my way