Wednesday, February 23, 2011

If you're happy and you know it and you really want to show it, if you're happy and you know it... hit PUBLISH?

I'm so happy today, I could take Govinda out for coffee!

I don't know why my happiness analogies often have to do with taking some outrageous person on a date but it's possible I think outrageous = funny, funny = happy.

Or, forget coffee, I suppose I could go cycling with him. After all, health is wealth, never mind the stealth.


I'm also totally chuffed and looking forward to to wearing a sari tonight. It's been months! And if I wear a sari today I will be EVEN happier! Such is my conviction. I want to splash in a pool and fling frogs on the face of some nervous type who's just learned how to swim. Paddle paddle with a floating tube and paccchik! Croaker in your face! That's how happy I am - to be evoking Nanette the gorgeous leap frog in Gnomeo and Juliet. Evil happy. Lily pond happy. Photo caption to read amphibians and self circa 2011 happy. Then go to jail because PETA don't like me happy.


The sari doesn't really have anything to do with happy. But happy happy + sexy sari = unbeaten allure. And then they pay you compliments which is happier still. Compliments because there is this wedding thing I have to go for in the evening to which I'm wearing that lovely sleeveless green and gold brocade blouse. I think it's the Sangeet --- music, dancing, alcohol, people who've seen me as a baby -- what's not to look forward to?

Rajiv is getting married. You don't know Rajiv. But Rajiv always reminded me of Joylon Wagg in Tintin. Remember him -- the salesmen who comes to Marlinspike Hall in The Seven Crystal Balls and drives everyone mad?


Once upon a time, I was supposed to marry Rajiv. Our parents would have been happy. I can hear the voices in my head:

He's an investment banker in London, marry him!
No!

Why?
He's not my type!
Then how do you explain BEEP-BEEP?
That was an ABERRATION, not a mistake!

Yea well, you're going to die an old maid.

*Gobsmacked*

The end

So, anyway. I'm not marrying Rajiv, because, you know, it's too late now and even when it wasn't, our energy levels were mismatched. He's too... enthusiastic. His life is brimming with exclamations and he's great fun for five minutes and I HAVE always loved his name and if he were a different man, in the way if a washing machine were a toaster, or Jolyon Wagg was Captain Haddock, I'd marry the barnacle.

For now, I'm just happy to go to his wedding and be exhausted in the twelve seconds it'll take to say, Hiii!! Muah, muah! Congratulations! You look sooo good! Ha Ha, no, I don't want to dance, I'm going to the bar... no.. no..noo...Rajiv, stop, halp!

Ladies and gentleman, the magic of a sari.

Monday, February 21, 2011

A, u! Practice your vowels and I'm yours forever

When we started dating, Boy Wonder wanted me to fix two things about myself.
  1. Be less defensive
  2. Be less sarcastic
Being less of both is a work in progress and I hope I'm reasonably well-behaved and a more tolerable girlfriend than what comes naturally to me. In turn, all I asked from him was to fix his language. Not so much the horrendous Hindi swearing with a rustic tenor that totally blows the cover of his Joe Cool jazzy piano persona. That too but more... like you know, never use LOL, like ever, and talk less like this coz I'm not like the biggest fan on earth of breath-wastingly obvious superlatives or anything. And coz, jeez, how and like why is it so difficult, for like, you know, peeps to polish their klutzy bad ass phrases and drop this totally and completely unnecessary affliction to like employ truck loads of tautology and bullshit verbiage?

See what I mean?

I cried. I cringed. I longed for a companion who didn't have a flair for retarded syntax, for someone who would speak freely, with minimal self censoring, and say what he meant without resorting to excessive descriptors; like, you know, ugly and typical adjectives. Bad enough to keep it ugly or typical, but the redundant duality of both is poison. Learn that, already, I'd SOL - SCREAM out LOUD.

Embellishments of speech take away from sex appeal. This is common knowledge, right? RIGHT? Doesn't he know that by now, after being with me all this time? And then the light bulb shone. It dawned on me that he doesn't! That the reason why this bugger utters excessively long, redundant, multi-syllabic sentences, often of deliberately peculiar length is because of his voice! Which he thinks is sexy independent of the words it hosts! Of course!

Concession: He, boyfriend in question, does truly, have a sexy voice. It's deep and full and kind and warm. Nature has given him the gift of zero shrill but kept it balanced with zero wit. If I give you his number or you meet him somewhere and you're a hot, chirpy sounding chick, he will lower his jaw to sound like Amitabh Bachchan laying it on.

I'm tempted to, if he were game, embed an audio clip with him reading out some really nasty convoluted phrases in his baritone and you'll see why my brain goes into overdrive and my patience snaps like a beautician's thread, over and over again because how is it fair that someone can sound so good but chat such shit?

When people say to us things like, gosh you guys are so different, what do you see in him -- ok, no one says what do you see in him, but if someone were to -- I'd say he's taller than me and he has a deadly voice. Meet my boyfriend, my prop, my crutch, my spokesperson. (Just don't expect any fun or spontaneity from him, but other than that, nom nom, he's my everything.)

Sometimes at parties, when I hover near his elbow and he's dressed well and smelling good and talking, seriously, to a small audience about the virtues of aluminium or why circular polarisation in 3D glasses is bad, I moon out. I look, I glaze, I tee hee inwardly and let him talk. Because even though it - this talk, and often he - bores me to tears - circular polarisation?! FUCK! -- at least he knows his shit. In those moments, at such parties, I'm the prop, the crutch, the vapid butterfly, the arm candy, the rapidly chasing vodka smiler at the inane dumb fuck audience that cares about aluminum.

It's the curse of our relationship. He sounds good when I'm not interested. My ears perk when the matter gets personal and gripping. But by then he knows he's got my attention and -- here's the irony -- falls back on potty thoughts and cluttered speech.

Because he sounds good, he deludes well. It's like the time in school when I thought my running handwriting was round and curly and fabulous. To remind myself just HOW fabulous, I'd write on the last page of my notebooks, as one long word, over and over again: thequickbrownfoxjumpsoverthelazydog. JUST to admire the loops on my q, my j, my y and my g.

Useless analogy, but as far as narcissism went, I knew where he was coming from. And from knowledge strengthened my resolve: Arrogant bastard, I'll teach you.

And so, for the next two years, I proceeded to make the poor guy's life hell. I corrected his pronunciation. I mocked his sentence structure. I laughed at his lofty phrases. I made him squeal for Mummy!

All of this, I still do. But I like to believe that listening to him talk has become more tolerable. His words are clear and flowing. His stresses still need work -- there is a noun-verb difference, for chrissake, between when you say pro'jekt and proj'ekt! -- but overall, the beauty in the voice has been restored. There is appeal. Baritone is back. I can sit back and smacking my lips, revel in the sound of vindication -- or does contentment make me sound more humane? -- as the ice in my glass lands on my acid tongue.

This haphazard realisation came back to me yesterday. We were at a photo exhibition at IGNCA of Raja Deen Dayal.

There is no conclusive answer whether this photograph indeed shows a fakir who walked Deen Dayal's Studio to be photographed or if this was a 'commissioned' fakir whose photographs would later be sold by the Studio and advertised as 'native characters' in the Studio catalogue.

Sahibzadi Ahmad-un-Nisa Begum Sahiba (1910-1985) one of the several daughters of the VIIth Nizam (of Hyderabad) is seen wearing traditional pajamas under her western-style puff sleeved frock. By the early twentieth century most children in royal families were seen wearing western-style clothes combined with a few Indian elements for purposes of modesty.

We were a group of 20. The curator was showing us around. He said the tour would last an hour and a half. If there were questions about the photos, in the course of this sepia picnic, we were not to hesitate. Ask right then, he said, because at the end, and after having seen more than 200 prints, it "becomes a bit overwhelming".

This sent me back ten years to an old habit.

I don't usually ask questions, not in front of crowds, and not about topics I haven't been paying attention to and, consequently or not, know nothing about. It embarrasses me. I am shy to the point of being someone else. Right from the days of math class when the sum would be on the board and the teacher would towards the end of a lesson, put the chalk aside, dust her palms, and ask, any doubts?, I would always, always look thoughtful and slowly shake my head, because I needed the pretence of smartness. But more than that, oh god, please don't let her (i.e. the math teacher) see through my convincing nod!

Doubts were always for later, if at all, to be asked of a trusted source, a smarter friend, someone who understood the intricacies of simultaneous equations or the crappy calculus on the board. Putting my hand up in class, to a teacher, a voice of authority, in a glaringly public space, to ask a question? God, no.

This has stayed. Boy Wonder, on the other hand, is a lot more confident. He's a performer, really. All these years of being on stage paying tributes to his pals, Chopin and jing bang, have stripped off him the self consciousness that mortals such as I still very much reek of. He's a natural. When in top gear, there's no... um-er, you know, like feet-shuffling or stuttering or groping for words or anything as lame.

Yesterday, when I looked at him be the smart ass curious-minded enthu cutlet, much more than the 19 others in the group, asking all those clear, well-strung sentences lending voice to doubts about 'the scale of photographs in the 19th century', 'bromide ink', something about lighting and motion and 'glass print negatives' -- concepts, phrases, word combinations that never occur to me -- I felt very proud of him. This was new, this beading coherent necklaces of measured words and thoughtful content and coupling with a humble delivery.

The inward tee hee was, famous last words, for once, not mockery-based. Despite the bickering we've done this week and the damaging verbal crossfire notwithstanding, I felt comfort in the confidence of his fine grammatical constructs that don't make sense to me but only because as one of those couples with few overlapping interests, bromide ink doesn't push my buttons, and not because he lost me at word eighteen of sentence twelve of a line of thought that was headed off a cliff.

Married couples coming to photo studios for formal portraits were a rare occurrence in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. However the status of Raja Deen Dayal & Sons was already established by their royal clients and the local landed gentry were quick to follow with their own patronage.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Well Spivak-a-lula! She’s my ba-by!

Monday morning, 9 a.m

Says the grandfather to the granddaughter: Arre, you’re up early…

Replies the grand daughter to the grandfather: Yes, I’m going for a lecture.

A lecture?, like it were so unusual

Mmm hmm, I say, acting nonchalant, tying shoe laces.

Delivering or listening?

Stumped, amused, but truthfully and out of respect: Listening

Imagining the alternative though sends me out of the house a bit giggly.
~

Mayonnaise Toss rung yesterday to ask if I wanted to go for Spivak’s talk at the university. Mayonnaise toss = school friend, fellow blogger, chronic whiner – no wait: chronic whiner, school friend, current pursuer of a Masters in Lit and fellow blogger. I hadn't met her in a while. Spivak = Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, born on my father's birthday but five years earlier on Feb 24 , is a professor at Columbia University in New York, has very short grey hair -- kind of sexy, and is a voice of authority person when it comes to big deal things like post colonial theory and deconstruction. Never met.

No sequential logic, but of course I wanted to listen to Spivak talk. I even read her interview in The Hindu. The link was on a former colleague’s Facebook wall. I had to skim a lot because parts were boring and the other parts required a re-read to fully grasp, but surely clicking on the link qualifies me as as a curious kitty if not a literary heavy weight. Besides, I had nothing else to do and what a totally intellectual note to start the week on!

Plus, importantly, and to redeem my blonde-ness, I remember the name Spivak as a blast from my glorious academic past. She was someone we had to quote heavily in our under grad papers if all we girls -- and we were all girls -- were going to get anywhere. Ask anyone.
~

When friend and I walk into the Vice Regal lodge – the interiors of which, even in all my then seemingly-endless years at Delhi University I hadn't seen -- it's packed. Friend is not as jobless as I, but nonetheless, on leave on a Monday.

Vice regal interiors; same number of people behind me.
Trivia #1: Place is done up with Bose speakers
Trivia #2: Nehru delivered his Tryst With Destiny speech here.
(Remember, '
At the stroke of the midnight hour when the world sleeps,
India will awaken to life and freedom.
..')
Presumably though, the Bose speakers are less historic.


Unintrusive back-of-head shots of Spivak-attendees

Once we're in and leaning against pillars because we're late and there's no place to sit, I get a text from Mayo: I saw you come in. Who are you with?

I tell her the name of person I am with and add, ‘friend and fellow intellectual’ (plus the necessary smiley, because even though she knows me well enough, imagine that being taken seriously.)

Later, after the lecture, Fellow Intellectual and Mayo pull my leg about this idle daily blogging – I send them both email alerts and am always, always conscious about how indulgent that is, but then like today, despite making fun of me, they plead Tech Retarded-ness and say aww, blog, blog, and just as well the alerts comes in our inbox since (we’re so stupid) we don’t know what for is a feed reader, oh and ha ha, since we’re all friends here, I’m saved the ease with which I would otherwise get a tad defensive.

Spivak was spunky. Twice, at least, she called herself intellectually insecure. I liked her without understanding her. That’s allowed, isn’t it? She wouldn’t drone on like some of the newbie lecturers we suffered back in college, one or two of whom were in attendance.

With that powerful voice and changing pitch and cadence and things, it wasn’t easy to sleep when Spivak spoke. Just as well for when it comes to teachers, surely keeping the masses up and blinking is a massive prerequisite, more so if their sentences, like the Speaking Spivak’s, start with “If capital is the strongest agency of validation into modernity…

I took notes – Compulsively! Copiously! Continuously! Ever since I hung up my journo spurs, I’ve been itching to take short hand. So I took notes. (Like a fiend on a sugar high, if I were to go about this ‘analogically’) And when I didn’t take notes -- compulsively, copiously, and um, continuously -- I took photos. How long to keep up with this validation into modernity crap after all? But Fellow Intellectual, you know the guy with whom I came to listen to the lecture – not deliver it – would glare at me whenever I’d click. Later, he called me an intrusive photo taker: you can’t DO that!. But at least he called me an intrusive photo taker after the lecture and when I was done taking photos, so for a while, I put my camera away, and also my pen.

This was like college. Remember college? God, what was I thinking? Literature ruined me.

Left vocabulary, the abdication of an epistemological task…

Maybe I should have done Philo.

I cannot declare a rupture with femininity…

It’s amazing how many of those cows did better than me/ I did

The vanity in being feudal urban radicals needs to be undermined…If I am not interchangeable with a Hindi-speaking Delhiite, urban subalterns aren’t interchangeable with rural subalterns…

Heh. I think I’ll adopt that as an insult. Done. Subaltern is the new plebian.

I want to share this. I look at my friend, my Fellow Inn’uhlegjuual, rebuker of my reckless camera usage, slinger of jute bag, wearer of kurta pajama, carrier of DU look, mocker those all over, as the crow flies, in red, on Valentine’s, Day and, hello, he’s awake. He looks like he’s paying attention, even. He catches my eye; so much for attention. I silently enunciate: ‘Are you hungry’? He shakes his head. We go back to Spivak, her epistemological this and her teleological that and the rest of her impenetrable sentences that in spite of themselves don’t put us to sleep.

I dare not tell her that though, witness as I am to her firmly but not rudely slamming the question-asker who started with “Hullo ma’am, myself so and so, that was brilliant talk, ma’am, thank you, even if I am subaltern and I did not myself understand all…” – and she said, "I’ll take up your very good question, but I want to first say, if you didn’t understand me, you have no right to congratulate me.”

Ooh! Ni-ce! Touché! Now on, till the last question is answered, goose bumps for all!



P.S. I have a job interview tomorrow. (To clarify grandfather-like doubts: I’m the interviewee, not the interviewer). Must decide what to wear. Something that doesn’t say 'tried too hard', but nothing that shrieks… ‘subaltern’.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

If laboured comic timing be the fruit of love...

Hunky Ash-win, gay Ash-win, Ash-win wearing a leather jacket and talking to plants Ash-win.

Aren't you already sick of Ash-win?

Ashwin is the name of a character in A Perfect Relationship, a play that has five actors who won't say Ushwin like they're supposed to. I don't see why. They're all Indians with names like Sameer and Sukhesh. It can get on your nerves, this Ash-win situation, especially when the duration of the ordeal from an hour and a half could be brought down to 45 minutes. Either chop the crap or funny up the script. Right now it's an anecdote parading as an epic, a piddly ball of dough stretched into pizzas for the entire cast. The name sounded so inviting. What a waste.
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When out of 800 misspelt things on the menu, only the cold coffee doesn't make you gag

Dear Alliance Française, New Delhi,

I don't know if you've seen Greenberg. It's a movie in which Ben Stiller plays a carpenter cum recovering schizophrenic house sitting his brother's mansion in LA and looking after his brother's dog, a German Shepherd called Mahler, while his brother and family vacation in Vietnam.

To entertain/ distract/ keep from shooting himself, Greenberg writes letters of disgruntlement to Starbucks and, I googled this, to Hollywood Pet Taxi.

Nobody wants Greenberg's life.

Today, I was sitting in your cafe when I had a Greenberg moment. There I was pecking with my fork at your day's special, the penne pasta in red sauce, the noodles and chilli chicken and the honey chilli potatoes, and thinking, what parallels can I draw? What was your food tasting like? Why didn't I like it? What was so wrong? Why did I come here ? What is with your red sauce tasting like sambhar and detergent and vinegar?

I wanted you to know I'm never coming back, not with expectations. I'll give you the cold coffee, which the second time around, the guy made just as I told him I like it -- less sugar, crushed ice, more coffee. Other than which, your Max Caterers people need to up their ante, their socks, and maybe call in the proof readers, the spell checkers, the army, for at a language school especially, 'baby fitters' priced at anything is a bad joke.

Thanking you,
Just some visitor chick who can't speak french but has taste buds and wanted to get this out of her system.

P.S: Chilli chicken isn't tandoori chicken with ketchup on it.
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Friday, February 11, 2011

I don't want you to age gracefully anymore. I want you to not age.

My grandmother's making faces. She's wearing her favoured tattered shawl -- grey with that ancient red Himachal border, looking at the TV, shelling her peas and making faces.

Shelling her peas... sounds off. Surely, she's chheeloing matar. Yes, much better -- that's what she's doing. Every now and then, she'll give me the small, sweet ones to pop in my mouth. Besides the shelling/ cheeloing, she's also looking at some crap movie on TV -- Barsaat Ki Ek Raat -- featuring Amitabh Bachchan, Rakhi, Ajmal Khan and tackily picturised songs.

She's still making faces. She's still chheeloing matar.

Tacky

Chheelo

Tacky

Chheelo

Annoying before-dinner rhythm we've got going. I'm eating the matar, popping them in my face, also chheloing the matar, tossing the chhilka aside on a steel tray.

Again- faces! Now she's making faces at me. No -- TO me. I don't understand the look and it's pissing me off. And what's this wink thing happening? I say, irritably: kya-a-a-a? i.e Why are you winking at me, Nanu?!

Nanu starts nudging me to look in the direction of Bawa, my grandfather. He's sitting next to her. She doesn't want to say look! look! out aloud because hen he will hear her and be conscious. But really, WHAT am I supposed to be looking at?!

I break the whisper-wink one sided conspiracy, and say in a perfectly loud tone: WHAT is it, Nanu?

Bawa, dekho, tv dekh rahein hain, she says softly, i.e look, Bawa's watching telly.

Yea, SO?!

So he's usually not interested in anything.

Ohhh..



I look at my hunch-backed, wavy-haired, grey tracksuit- wearing grandfather sitting frozen and compact in a red plastic chair that's too small for him -- or is it that he's gotten too fat for it? Which is it? And is he watching or just looking? Looks like he's watching, alright. I excuse myself from the rhythmic peeling of peas and and go get my camera. It's a hobby, this constant chronicling of the long established body language of my favourite goldies. I need to remember their wrinkles. Photographs are the preservatives you can't dunk in jam.

This afternoon, he, my grandfather Bawa, couldn't remember who called five minutes ago. Nanu gave him hell for not trying hard enough. My mother, like all daughters in this family, took her father's side, saying, let him be etc. I was with my grandmother on this. Shout more, I wanted to tell her. Pressurise him into racking his brains. This not remembering nonsense is too easy. But he I'm not sure, gives a damn about the nagging of the domestic queen. And I'm sure he's not trying to depress anyone by being extra slow but it's no virtue and nothing he will get credit for, not from me.

Of late, at meal times, on the dining table, everyone else will be talking, and my grandfather, the old pilot, Bawa, in this classic way he has of resting his temples on the bent wrist of his not-eating-with hand, will just stay shut and chew and chew and chew. Which is fine, as far as digestion goes. But it worries me how much we're lowering the bar for him -- Barsaat Ki Ek Raat, really? My grandmother was watching it for him. He likes this shit, not her. She wants the 9 o clock news. Hence the faces. But she'll bear bad cinema if it means her husband and childhood sweetheart will look up and alert and interested and participatory. All the while, I'm imagining dramatic scenarios in my head, the inevitable ends, the future without them and and feeling angry that they're shamelessly deteriorating. Never mind the stupid fox and his unreachable grapes, it's the matar that's never sweet.
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Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Wriggle wriggle, my thumbs a twiddle

I should, I tell myself, get off my ass, and DO SOMETHING. Be a power puff girl. Take charge of life. Tweak my CV. BE the CHANGE. Get motivated! NETWORK! Meet people and not run out of steam before I put my shoes on because, well, I do that a lot and I don't, after all, have a job and I can't forever be selling cakes with Gupta ji -- what everyone in my family calls the boyfriend -- so, what's it gonna be?

I'll have a comic silence with no income on the side, please.

~

Like a best friend and I used to say in this one phase of ours:

Point to be Noted

And in not a bad way, is that I am amazed at my parents. They don't seem to care whether I'm working not, going to office or not, trying to get hired or not. Forget pressure, all I see on their faces is happiness presumably because I'm around more and sometimes, gasp, even smiling!

Maybe the smiling bit is from this humility thing that comes when you have scraps of rupees in the bank. I'm eating at home. I'm saying yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir. I'm picking up after myself. If I get out of the house, I'm back home for dinner. When I'm out, I sometimes check if anyone wants anything from the market. I'll turn to my mother and ask, soya milk? She'll say no, you don't know which is the good one. And the love will continue to flow.

My father? All he wants in this sabbatical of mine, as he calls it, is that I get more exercise and more sunlight. Really. It's his two-point agenda for me. This is the man who when I was finishing college, told me: Thank goodness you aren't like these focused 21 year olds. They scare me.

Sunlight and exercise, fine fine.

Back from my little blood donation outing today, I, boasted to daddy dearest about what I thought was a brilliant my hemoglobin level - Papa! Papa! 12.7'. He looked worried, almost admonishing that it wasn't good enough (!). What sort of man doesn't care about what I do 'in life' as long as it makes me happy, but I should always come first in haemoglobin?!

Curious man, my father. I'd like him even if I didn't know him.

On Saturday, I even went out to the Gymkhana with my soy milk drinker mommy and lover of sunlight daddy. The entire evening, I hung with them and our thoroughly entertaining house guest, a friend of my mum's, had three Bloody Marys, and after the third, reached the conclusion, that when she's in form, I don't know a more lively soul than my mother.

In hours more sober, I'm less generous about her virtues but nowadays the fad is for me to try and throw in a kind word or two. It won't last. But for now, as far as the 'rents are concerned, my unemployment rocks.

Filed under: Job, What Job?
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Anything to distract my she wimp self while the vamps suck out my blood with promises of parle-g biscuits and frooti afterwards

Drama queen? Present ma'am!
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