Apr 26, 2007

Hmm............



Was listening to Santhosha Kaneere from Uyire ( 'Dil Se Re' from Dil Se)


Unnodu Naan Konda Bantham
Mannodu Mazhai Konda Sontham
Kaainthaalum Adi Eeram Enjum



Translated (to the best of my ability) this would mean:


The bond that we have, my dearest
Is that of the rain and the earth
Drops ensconced in parched land...


Is it possible to find such love?

Even in this age of pink valentines , inflation and gun culture?

Or is it an amaranthus that blooms only in the mind of the poet?

Are these merely words mouthed by tragic heroes of the days gone and days to come….untouched by time then, now and later?

Apr 20, 2007

Of Nose Studs and Tantrums

There is this lady who comes to my bus stop. Her husband drops her everyday on a two wheeler, with a little toddler perched up in front.

She comes to the bus stop in the nth moment just managing to catch the bus. Her son makes his dad go by the bus till it takes a turn, and mother and child keep waving at each other.

Sitting next to her, I enjoy this daily routine, as I see the mother’s face brighten despite the tell-tale signs of an extracting process of getting ready for work. She dressed well, a smart professional. But not as meticulously as a single woman. A tiny diamond stud sparkled on her nose, totally out of place with her attire. A mixture of tradition and modernity.

She reminded me of my own mother, in a remote way. My mother was a first generation graduate who proceeded with her masters as well. She chose to work only after I reached a stage where I didn’t need her attention much. Although I might appreciate her choices more now, there was a time when I was ashamed of and disappointed with her. She never dressed well. She wasn’t smart and trendy like the other mothers. She didn’t converse fluently in English. This was because English became her medium of education only in college. I did not see that she managed so well, inspite of only a few years aquaintance with the language. I was embarassed at her vernacular influenced diction. Inspite of the fact she was the person who introduced books to me, I was annoyed at her ignorance of Enid Blyton and Nancy Drew. Although, she read Tintin and Disney out to me, I grew up to despise her indulgence in Shivashankari and Mangaiyar malar.

There was this one incident that remains fresh in my memory. It was parent-teachers meeting in school. My father was glued to the TV. There was a cricket match on. My mother was getting ready to come to school with me. She wore a traditional cotton sari and jasmines in her hair. Many may not be able to relate to what followed, but just to give a background; I was studying in a school that had only the posh kids in town as students. My parents, prompted by the desire to give me the best, even if it was beyond their capacity had enrolled me there. I was watching my mom getting dressed in this fashion, with mounting apprehension. She then applied talcum powder that caked a little here and there. That was it. A bawling 5 year old shook the household. Even my cricket obsessed father was forced to look up. My demand – Amma should not come for parent teachers meeting. Let Appa come. Otherwise I will never go to school in my life again. My confused parents kept asking me what the reason behind this sudden strike was. In my own infantile set of morals, I did find the real reason cruel. But still, I did not relent. I kept on reiterating my demand, avoiding the why of it. My mother tried all options. She finally hit the bull’s eye. And I nodded teary eyed, half red in shame, half red in guilt. My dad was irritated. He started on a reprimand, when my mother started laughing, and went in to change back to her home clothes. My father was forced to give up his cricket match and come for the parent teachers meet.

Years later, when I was watching the re-run of Malgudi Days on TV, I was reminded of this incident where Swami goes through a similar predicament with his granny. I recounted this incident, asked my mother why she had given in to my tantrums. She smiled and said that my complaints were nothing. One of her sisters had introduced their own mother to her friends as the lady-help in the house, just because she wore her hair in a high bun which wasn’t in vogue then. It seems my aunt repents it till date, and all her siblings still taunt and tease her with this.

May be the reason why I see beauty in the odd diamond stud on the nose of the lady next to me , is because my mother simply smiled that day, two decades back. My mother had the choice to be modern and hip. And the means. But she chose not to. Those were her choices. She dared to be different. She was traditional. I would teach my children to appreciate their tradition. To be proud of it, and not embarassed by it, like the way I was. But then again, may be not. They could learn by themselves, just the way I did.

Apr 17, 2007

Can I ?



I can't expect everyone to behave the same way as I do. Can I ?

I can't expect everyone reciprocate my acts of friendship. Can I?

I can't expect to be accepted wholly for who I am. Can I ?

I can be lonely even when I am not alone. Can I ?

I can't stop feeling used and discarded. Can I ?

I can't always be the detached emotionless person, that I seem to be.Or Can I ?

I can't afford to see through people . Can I?

I can't give up fooling myself. Can I?

I can't expect the tears to dry up each time I cry.Can I ?

Apr 5, 2007

People 3: Small Wonders




It’s my life.

The lady of the house bathes under a half laid pipe. Clothes on. Her husband watches guard. The sky, their roof. The morning sun fingers the scaffolding. Rubble pierces their hardened soles/souls. ‘Hurry up’ yells the fore-man. The day’s work waits. Hunching herself into a human ‘U’ she rushes into the shack. Her youngest wails.
Others idle around, sunken eyes and sunken bellies.

The bus of the corporate they are building to grow, whizzes by. A shirtless little man jumps up. His eyes light up with excitement. Up and down, up and down. He does a little jig of joy. Milk white teeth flash. A new day has begun.


Motion.

A national highway. The lifeline of the soft city. Chocablock with vehicles. Thick grey smoke clouds the atmosphere. And the minds stuck (in the traffic). Some lose patience. Some lose interest. Some others lose lives. The national highway. A life-line of the soft city. Chocked.

A sub-urban school. All of two rooms. And a neem tree. Routine deaf to the road gasping outside its gates.

Bell rings. Freedom.

Four nimble feet. Pushing the wind on the divider. A tight chase. Movement in the middle of stagnation. Giggles. Pursuer and the pursued. Taste of free air.

The traffic stopped. So did everything else.

Note:

I was listening to Bon Jovi’s “It’s my life” when I saw the exhilarated little fella. I couldn’t think of anything more apt for a title.