25 Dec 2016

Understanding birthdays

First came the birthdays when I really did not understand what was happening around me. There would be new clothes and new toys. There would be balloons and glitter. There would be extra pinching-of-the-cheeks. There would be my recitation of the same nursery rhyme over and over and over. There would be that 10-years-elder-to-me girl angel from the neighboring flat. 

Then came the birthdays when I had to answer the very important question from my mom.
"What do you want - Coffee bite? Eclairs? Alpenliebe?"
The answer mattered a lot because the toffee had to be one that would be loved by my entire class - not to mention my favorite teacher angel, by my entire apartment, by all the neighboring kids joining me in the playground. 
During those birthdays, whenever I walked around my class to distribute chocolates during the lunch hour, I got more excited when I noticed that a classmate was not at his/her bench. It presented me an opportunity to place a couple of toffees inside the desk and offer the classmate a tiny surprise. 
Many a time, we make the mistake of assuming that only the person celebrating the birthday needs to be surprised.
Surprises never require occasions.

Then came the birthdays when the birthday dress attained gargantuan importance - Because it had to be worn to school, and more importantly, because it had to be worn before that angel seated in the corner desk of my class. 
There would be the realization that I looked awkwardly fat but there would also be the hope that my new birthday dress would make me appear as cool as Prince Adam in He-Man.
There would be a very calculated attempt to enter the classroom as late as possible. That walk, in the birthday dress, from the classroom doorway to my desk would make all the hero-introduction scenes of Tamil films shy away in shame. 

Then came the birthdays when the expectation of gifts arose, accompanied by the fear of treats
When a good friend forgot to wish on a birthday, the forgetfulness threw away a hint of a big surprise that lay ahead. When a good friend forgot to wish on a birthday and there turned out to be no big surprise, the ensuing fight ensured that the friendship grew stronger. 
As the friend circle grew, the number of wishes via text messages, Facebook messages and WhatsApp messages increased. But what always remained interesting was seeing how the really dear friends - the ones who had gotten so close that hearing them wish 'Happy birthday' seemed awkward - reacted to me turning a year older.
I will always cherish all their reactions.

Then came the birthday that was yesterday.
Thinking about it day before yesterday had given me a strange feeling. 
I was not going to be at school. I was not going to be at college. I was not going to be at office. I was not going to be with any group of friends. I was not going to be with my cousins. I was going to be at home with my mom and grandmother. 
I had not had the slightest of doubts regarding the affection that would be showered at home. But I had reserved doubts regarding the affection I might miss, not being in the vicinity of friends. 
And yesterday taught me a number of lessons.
Our aunts and uncles deserve to be loved more than they are - They love us more than we deserve to be.
A text message is no way lesser to a phone call. 
A friend who had called to wish and had fumbled a couple of minutes later, running out of topics, is no way lesser to a friend who, after a 30 minute call, had wanted to meet in person because there was so much left to talk. 
A friend who had called yesterday night, apologizing for the delay, holds the same amount of affection as the friend who had wished late night the day before yesterday, afraid that sleep might overcome the love. 
A friend who had forgotten to wish is still a friend one has to be grateful for - The absence of the wish only suggested that the person's love is stronger than his/her memory.
Prioritizing one's work over a loved one's birthday never meant disrespect to the latter - It just signaled survival. 
Most of us set out on a journey to find an angel, leaving behind the real angels at home.

P.S.: An extra-special lesson - Love never gives a damn about geographical distances - A friend from the United States, a friend from Tanjore and a friend from the neighboring street stood testimony to this.

21 Dec 2016

Notes & thoughts from a short trip - II


On the lookout for a miracle

Whenever I travel in a bus at nighttime, I keep staring outside the window, looking out for solitary lampposts and lonely huts. Such sights offer me a feeling I experience when I discover a child's drawing on a paper used to bundle up groceries.

But last weekend, as my bus spiraled on its way to Gokarna, I was on the lookout for ghosts.

I do not know how ghosts look but I continued looking for a flickering white light, for a body-less being, for a soft whisper with a mild fragrance.
It was not a want for a cheap scare. It was just a desperate need for some sort of a miracle.
If not for ghosts, I was ready to make do even with a God. But either refused to show up and all that lay ahead was just a beautiful trip.

****

Finding a place to stay

Restroom.
That seemed the priority. The living room could be compromised with. A night's sleep held lesser importance than a day's dump.
It made me wonder about the significance given to the living rooms and bedrooms in our houses. All the fancy furniture, the wall hangings, the show pieces - To a weary traveler, all these would seem as unimportant as the stairway in a 30 storied building. 
Aren't we all weary travelers, some literally and some metaphorically, in our daily lives?

****

Eating mindfully

Lemon-ginger-honey tea and mashed potato with butter. 
Possibly, the simplest of dishes one could order on a vacation. But sitting on an old plastic chair, behind an old plastic table, in an old and tiny cafe, with the Arabian sea before me, it was the best dish I had had in a long time.
There was no deliverable waiting. There was no meeting scheduled. There was no hint of sleep trying to overcome me. Every spoonful of the mashed potato and every sip of the lemon-ginger-honey tea lived its entire life in my mouth. Their travel down my throat was in rhythm with the receding waves. 
No gobbling up. No hurried swallowing. I managed to eat, after a long time.

****

The waves

Why do we like waves?
Is it because, unlike us, they cannot be controlled?
Is it because, like a pleasant dream, they come to us voluntarily yet do not let us lock them?

Is it because, like really good friends, they keep coming back to the shore though the shore does not make an effort to hold them?
Is it because they dance so well?
Is it because, deep down, we are still the underwater micro organism that started evolution?

Is it because, like many of us, they are the creators and destroyers of their own lives?
Why do we like waves?

****

Sunset/Sunrise

My brother and I were seated on a rock formation at the Om beach. We were waiting for the sunset. The two of us sat beside each other, sharing silence. The two writers that we are, that evening, we did not find the need for words. 
The sun slowly started sinking in to the sea. I hurriedly grabbed my mobile phone and played 'Oru deivam thantha poove'. Halfway through the song, the sun disappeared. But at the very moment the bright orange ball left my sight, I realized why I loved sunsets and sunrises.
No matter how bad things are, no matter how good things are, the sunsets and the sunrises would go on. A bad day always has to end and a good day always has to start.

The next day, before the break of the dawn, I rushed to the Kudle beach and into the waves. There was no one around. I stood knee-deep amidst the waves, not knowing if I preferred darkness or light. The sun started its majestic rise. I hurriedly grabbed my mobile phone and played 'Oru deivam thantha poove'. 
A feeling of warmth started seeping in.



Sharing secrets

As I stood at the Murdeshwar beach eating cotton candy, and on my way to the temple, my focus was only on the gigantic Shiva statue, seated in penance.  
Man had built a remarkable statue of God to serve as a constant reminder of man's greatness.
But after I entered the temple, the large Nandi statue grabbed my attention. I remembered what my mom had told me in my childhood. 
"If you desperately want something to happen, whisper it in Nandi's ears like a secret. Nandi has the power to make it happen".
As I walked closer to Nandi, I realized that I did not want to share my wants. Instead, I had a bag full of secrets. I unloaded the bag and handed over the secrets to Nandi. 
It felt really good catching up with an old friend.

12 Dec 2016

Can I be your O2?

I sharpened my pencil to write this poem
The lead broke and went rolling across the paper
That beautiful mole of yours - Can that go rolling too?
Your mole reminds me of the universe
Galaxies, stars and planets.. Rotations and revolutions..
Does the sun have to rise every morning?
I maintain peace with its routine for a simple reason
My favorite part of every day - Waking up before you, to see you try to wake up
Chuck your bindi. Chuck your mascara
That unruly hair, those un-opening eyes and that uncontrollable yawn
You are a princess all the way from the bed to the washroom.

Yesterday, during my walk, I came across a flock of birds
All pigeons but for a solitary dove
Like that single strand of grey hair on your head
Remember that day I discovered it and you broke down?
I try imagining you old and wrinkled
The affection does not diminish a bit
Reminds me of the stagnating water in our kitchen sink
To hell with all the utensils while you wash them
Why do you hold them so dearly?
To hell with the coffee mug - That beautiful ellipse is mine
Can I gift you a packet of straws instead? But wait!
To hell with the straws too. And also your toothbrush.

I have sharpened my pencil again
The pencil shavings show me an exciting version of your eyelids
Can I reroute the path to my office between your eyelashes and eyebrows? 
I have a confession - I threw away your previous pair of eyeglasses
You did not lose them at the restaurant
But the eyeglasses deserved it, spending more time with you than I do
Kindly hide away your new contact lenses
And your comb and your wristwatch and your slippers, especially your favorite pillow
I have already contacted a buyer to dispose all our furniture
I now need to worry about only one problem
How do I turn a part of myself into oxygen?

5 Dec 2016

From Ring-a-Ring-a roses to Rumi

When I was a kid, rain evoked only one emotion. 
Happiness.
A waterfall outside the window. A temporary lake around the house. The possibility of a new raincoat. The freedom of wearing slippers instead of shoes to school. The frequent power shortage and holidays. 

The weekend that passed also happened to be a rainy one. Today morning, I took stock of the emotions I had experienced.
Sadness. Love. Pain. Breakdown. Hope.
A lonely, wet road. A fallen tree entangled in the wires of a transformer. The dry clothes on a terrace getting beaten up by rain repeatedly. The continuous line of water drops illuminated by a flickering lamppost. A group of street dogs cuddled up close to one another.

The more agonizing realization was that the rain had not changed a bit. All the change had been internal.