‘And talk of poems and prayers and promises,
And things that we believe in.
How sweet it is to love someone,
How right it is to care.
How long it's been since yesterday,
And what about tomorrow?
And what about our dreams?
And all the memories we share…’
‘Poems, Prayers and Promises’ was a compilation of my writing that I put together between classes 9 and 12. It was also the title of a collection of poems I wrote as a birthday present for that special someone in my life. And as 2007 passes gently into the good night of 31st December, Denver’s words keep running through my head as the signature song of a year that changed my life more completely than most have.
Five days before 2007 started, I ended a seven year long relationship. In a way it was a fitting farewell of sorts-to people, institutions, places, events and even memories that had defined and carried me through high school and college. I came back to a college which lacked many a familiar face that I had taken for granted earlier. And with some of those who remained, it was just not the same anymore.
As the year unfolded, a few old ties unravelled while others grew stronger and totally new ones formed and developed with stunning rapidity. And as the fates took their treacherous turns and I unwittingly played along, a faster swimmer free of the emotional baggage weighing me down in previous years, a series of realisations followed. That I did not like the girl I thought I did for the last two years, that maybe I liked someone else instead. Only to fall for someone completely different later. Well, at least I was spot on third time...
That I did not mean as much to certain people as I thought I did. And strangely enough, that I did not care so much about it because they no longer meant the same to me. That maybe, friends come and go and you can cling only to the precious few you must...
That the outside world was knocking and like it or not, I needed to leave the comforting confines of college life and look it in the face and spare a thought or two about what I would do out there...
That I knew nothing about love and how beautiful it felt...
‘I've seen a lot of sunshine,
Slept out in the rain.
Spent a night or two all on my own…
Had myself some friends,
And spent a night or two in my own home.’
The latter part of 2007 was one that I had always dreaded as an abyss of loneliness that I just wanted to get through as fast as possible. But once again, fate plays the strangest tricks. When the time actually came, it was the happiest time that I can remember as long back as my memories go. And I kept trying to hold on to it, to stretch it further and make it last forever, to fill those precious hours with everything I could find. Believing that by doing so, I could somehow prevent it from slipping through my fingers like the sand I gathered on the beach…
‘The days they pass so quickly now,
Nights are seldom long.
And time around me whispers when it's cold,
The changes somehow frighten me…’
Back home after a year and a half, lots of people tell me that I have changed. They are right, of course. I speak less, I am less interested in meeting new people, I hardly care about the ones I do meet unless there is something really special about them. In the past year, I have made just two friends. But they have been truly extraordinary ones.
To a friendship that sprang up in the course of an action-packed week that took us to four different places in seven days, thank you for all those late night phone calls on the back stairs of 9th block where I could pour out my most closely guarded secret to you. For those lonely days in the vacations when you were the one person in town I could share my fears and worries and loneliness with. For a thousand times when I have stood you up or kept you waiting and you have not uttered a word in protest. For all the jokes that I have made at your expense which you have taken with your sporting spirit and astonishing lack of ego…
To the other, what can I say? That has not been said already with every embellishment of language that I am capable of. Never has anyone taught me so much in so short a time. Never have I looked up to anyone as much as I look up to you each and every day. Never have I been so very sure that I need someone around for the rest of my life to make every day as complete as it should be. Never has anyone loved me so totally and believed in me in such trying circumstances. Never has anyone fought so much opposition from people close to them and given up so much to be with me. Suffice it to say that you are the major reason I will always look back upon 2007 as the most significant year in my life and look ahead to each day knowing that it will have your indelible imprint upon it…
To old friends who have borne with me in a year in which it has been increasingly difficult to do so, I pledge my gratefulness. This new streak of selfishness that has sprung up inside me has often made me insensitive to the fact that even you have lives and problems that you need to talk about. To the best of my little ability, I will try and make amends…
To my colleagues, I look forward to doing some great work together in the months to come. There is so much that you have to teach me and I can only hope that I will be fortunate enough to learn at least some of it. To my debating team, my quizzing team, my editorial board and others I will work with, I pledge the best efforts that my talent renders me capable of.
I realise now that some things never end, they never can. And clinging on to old times simply means that you miss the joy and the adventure and the challenges of the one which beckons so excitingly. 2008 marks yet another watershed in my life-the time when I will step out of college to put into action the plans that I have been formulating and re-formulating for most of the last year. I have certain hopes and expectations as to where I will find myself, but those may well turn out to be a mirage though I hope that at least one small detail falls into place. Be that as it may, it will be a year that satisfies to the full the old Chinese blessing-May you live in interesting times!
‘How long it’s been since yesterday?
What about tomorrow…’
What about tomorrow? Only tomorrow will tell…
Never have I looked forward to a year as much as I do to this one…
Happy New Year!
Monday, December 31, 2007
Friday, December 21, 2007
I Won't Cry for Yesterday...
Cigarette smoke has a weird way of drifting on the air even when the fan is off. It forms funny little patterns and if you stare too hard, you start seeing every imaginable shape in those wreaths as they rise slowly towards the ceiling and disperse into non-existence.
"...also broke up."
"Yeah, that happened quite a few months back, right?"
And in those twenty odd words, we sum up the ending of the love and the hopes and dreams that love invariably brings of yet two more people, at least one of whom we care about deeply. More often than not, we ache for both of them. The elation, the congratulations and the happiness that fly around when two of your friends start going out is in stark contrast to the prevailing mood when something of the sort comes to an end. Once you find out if they are sure that they have made the right decision, something inside you feels like it will never feel the same again.
My best friend says that guys never know how to comfort other guys (or even girls for that matter!). But, if truth be told, there is not much a guy needs from his friends at a time like this. A squeeze of the shoulder, a nod to acknowledge the reality and a comfortable shared silence in which you reach out without any words being necessary to do so. And we wait to let him tell the story in his own way, at his chosen time. If he wants to share it at all, that is. Our friendship will not come crashing down from the heavens if he does not.
There were just two of us at that table the other day and neither of us had just been through a breakup. Yet I somehow understood what solidarity and comradeship means among men. And just how much I miss people barging into my room at 3 a.m. to brutally shake me awake and settling down for completely useless conversations that ramble on long after the first streaks of dawn appear in the eastern sky...
On another level, it is at times like this that you realise that what you have is too precious to throw away with behaviour that suits a 3 year old more than a 23 year old. If you are reading this, thank you once again for keeping us going through my spoilt tantrums. I promise I will do my bit to chip in henceforth. Stay gold!
"...also broke up."
"Yeah, that happened quite a few months back, right?"
And in those twenty odd words, we sum up the ending of the love and the hopes and dreams that love invariably brings of yet two more people, at least one of whom we care about deeply. More often than not, we ache for both of them. The elation, the congratulations and the happiness that fly around when two of your friends start going out is in stark contrast to the prevailing mood when something of the sort comes to an end. Once you find out if they are sure that they have made the right decision, something inside you feels like it will never feel the same again.
My best friend says that guys never know how to comfort other guys (or even girls for that matter!). But, if truth be told, there is not much a guy needs from his friends at a time like this. A squeeze of the shoulder, a nod to acknowledge the reality and a comfortable shared silence in which you reach out without any words being necessary to do so. And we wait to let him tell the story in his own way, at his chosen time. If he wants to share it at all, that is. Our friendship will not come crashing down from the heavens if he does not.
There were just two of us at that table the other day and neither of us had just been through a breakup. Yet I somehow understood what solidarity and comradeship means among men. And just how much I miss people barging into my room at 3 a.m. to brutally shake me awake and settling down for completely useless conversations that ramble on long after the first streaks of dawn appear in the eastern sky...
On another level, it is at times like this that you realise that what you have is too precious to throw away with behaviour that suits a 3 year old more than a 23 year old. If you are reading this, thank you once again for keeping us going through my spoilt tantrums. I promise I will do my bit to chip in henceforth. Stay gold!
Thursday, September 27, 2007
The Mirror Has Two Faces
On repeat.Over and over and over again for the last two days.Two songs.A strange selection,yet all the more poignant for that strangeness.The soft strains of one blend in subtly with the insistent guitar lines of the other.To my mind rock is a powerful vehicle for every emotion.And the electric guitar and distortion have a way of expressing pain in a way nothing else can.Clapton and Allman's riffs and solos carry an unmistakable sense of confidence and power and competence that makes the futility and emptiness all the more compelling in its sadness.A paean that whisks you back to the time when it carried in it everything that you could not put in words.Or were afraid to,for the fear that doing so would tear you apart.And then months later,you come across the twin that apparently has nothing in common with it,yet carries the same soul,just expressing it differently.
Sometimes you come across a mirror where you least expect to.Where you expect a face,for example...
Eric Clapton and George Harrison were best friends.I have not come across anything that indicates that Clapton and Benson knew or worked with each other...
Sometimes you come across a mirror where you least expect to.Where you expect a face,for example...
Eric Clapton and George Harrison were best friends.I have not come across anything that indicates that Clapton and Benson knew or worked with each other...
Friday, September 14, 2007
Wednesday Morning 3 a.m…and before…
Manipal is empty…
In a small ghost town,the stupor of a slow evening settles languidly upon the landscape of a routine summer day.A blanket of darkness descends,further amplifying the silence that already echoes from everywhere.No beautiful sunset signals the slow entrance of night-the clouds see to that.A steady rain has been falling all day and despite the brief respite at the moment,angry rainbearers still patrol the heavens to warn of their omnipresence.The ground is wet,as are the fields,and the forest far way down in the valley…and the deserted streets along which my footsteps fall…
There is hardly anyone to talk to and not much to do either.Long endless walks with no destination in mind.A little more of the endless hours that hang heavy over me through fifty one days that seem to stretch into fifty one years fall away.It has not yet been long enough for me to get used to the ghosts that replace the life with which these very same streets usually bustle.So I walk in the middle of the road yet glance over my shoulder continually to look for a speeding bike.It is hard to reconcile myself to the blank television screens that stare back at me from the common rooms of the hostels I walk past.To see the shutters of the shops that dot the roadside downed during the very hours in which the crowds frequented them.To see no one sitting on the old basketball court or under the misspelt ‘No Squating’ sign or on the steps of the Innovation Centre.It is hard to reconcile myself to the loneliness that pervades every corner of the campus.
In the entire town,I can turn to just one person for company,and her presence is a godsend.The local pub is closing and rumours about it reopening are still unconfirmed.So we go to spend what might be our last moments in that cramped semi-darkness where so many emotions have been played out,where our hopes, fears, joys, disappointments and tears have mingled for years to create a plethora of unforgettable memories seen through a kaleidoscope of whirling colours.We sit there and laugh over anecdotes of times gone by while sipping,ironically,soft drinks.
It is late by the time we step out.I walk her back to her hostel and then start the long solitary walk back to my own room.The rain has started again by this time.A soft unobtrusive rain that falls slowly,almost apologetically through the night air.My road takes me past those fateful steps and I linger a long moment there before I can summon the will to move on.I deliberately choose the darkest and usually most deserted way back so that the emptiness does not weigh down on me quite so heavily.Yet it is also the road which awakens memory after memory of our shared moments…a road that I am not accustomed to walking alone…
‘When you walk through a storm,
Hold your head up high,
And don't be afraid of the dark.
At the end of a storm,
There's a golden sky,
And the sweet silver song of a lark…’
I look up at the neon lights that throw their wavering lights on the road ahead and the thin streaks of rain that are framed so clearly as they fall past the orange glow.There is a graceful music in the rain,a rhythm in its barely audible patter on the wet street that hazily reflects the streetlamps,a certain reassurance that life goes on,that what has been will be again,that these dead streets and buildings will awaken and take up the life that was theirs,that partings are temporary and the normal order of the universe will be restored in days to come,no matter how long and painful the wait for that restoration…
‘Walk on through the wind,
Walk on through the rain,
Though your dreams be tossed and blown…’
The rain has now ended.In its place,the valley and the hills that stand sentinel on its farthest edge send forth a fog that rolls in slowly,but surely and envelops the entire hostel complex.It grows chilly but the sight is wonderful to behold.The valley is totally covered in white wreaths of mist that break and reform in a million myriad woolly shapes,sending forth yet another legion of ghosts to haunt the already besieged town.With childlike naivete,I pretend that with everything else around me,I too am floating in mid-air because no land is discernible in the east.I cannot go back to my room just yet,I cannot walk past row after row of locked rooms that remind me with steadily increasing mockery that I am completely alone in that vast building.I sit on the edge of the new basketball court and breathe in the cold night air.Once again I look up at the one lamp that tries in vain to light the entire court and I see the mists swirling about and obscuring it till a orange-tinted white sea is all that is visible.
I miss you…
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Writing Love Letters in the Sand
'Love can't you see I'm alone,
Can't you give this fool a chance,
A little love is all I ask - a little kindness
In the night...'
A thousand million years ago,the first waves of the mighty ocean first ran upon the sand.A thousand million years later,when everything that is today has ceased to be,the waves will still continue to roll ashore-as if everything in between was just an illusion.Only time is eternal...and the waves.Those rushing roaring giants flecked with white who play their repetitive symphony round the clock.
'Every time I see you,
All the rays of the sun,
Are streaming through
The waves in your hair.
And every star in the sky,
Is taking aim at your eyes,
Like a spotlight.'
Letters.Five of them.A name.That is all I have at present.And what means a name without she who answers to it.But the Bard was wrong.With it is an image,no,images-hundreds of them.And with the images are the memories.A potent combination.One which haunts your waking thoughts.And your non-waking ones.With the same regularity that the messengers of the sea touch the shore.A name may not be much,but I have no choice.I make what I can of it and I can make a lot.For I must.Thus I scratch out those alphabets in the sand with my forefinger and begin a letter.
'Ocean deep -
I'm so afraid to show my feelings,
I have sailed a million ceilings -
in my -
Solitary room,
Ocean deep -
Will I ever find my lover?
Maybe she has found another,
And as I cry myself to sleep,
I know this love of mine Ill keep -
Ocean deep'
Poetry is not an easy vocation.Nor,for that matter is prose.Words-the very same words that seem to flow in torrents everyday are suddenly hard to come by.The best of authors have spent countless hours trying to put down their thoughts on paper,especially when it comes to professing the deepest and the most mysterious of human feelings.I have not a fraction of their skill.I wish I did.But I do have countless hours in which to undertake the task.For,what else is there for me to do?
The crying of the seagulls carries over the sound of wind and sea.It is not separated from the scene,it is a part of it and lends to its utter calmness and detachment.A perfect setting for my thoughts.Do the gulls cry of love?Of the madness of joy it can bring followed closely by the depths of despair?Of its inevitability?Do they try and persuade me of its futility?Do they relate stories in unknown tongue of lovers they have seen thus melancholy in a million such unknown settings?And a few hours hence,will they carry my tale and the few words I have inscribed on that golden slate to whichever such tranquil environ they fly to next...
'I was feeling insecure,
You might not love me any more,'
Fear is omnipresent.The fear of rejection.The fear of not knowing what to do with my life after that rejection.Of the utter bleakness and despondency beyond.Of those fatal words,"But I don't like you like that,you know!"So I hang back.As long as that doomed finality is not reached,hope still remains.Very faint perhaps,probably only a fantasy in my mind.But nevertheless,one that I draw comfort from,a reassurance that all is well and some distant day,the impossible will happen.And there is a touch of irony,a touch of disbelief that even Lennon was gripped by the same fear that besets me and moved to write these lines.A poignant understanding as the oncoming wave obliterates the name he scratched out in the sand.
The letter is finished.Very elementary,but the perfection of the muse is belied by the inability of the artist.This will just have to suffice.And now,another touch of Quixotism.In a world where communication can be instant,I trust the most ancient messengers of all.No cyber cafe or phone booth or even a post office awaits me.
'Just a castaway,
An island lost at sea,
Oh,Another lonely day,
With no one here but me,
Oh,More loneliness than any man could bear,
Rescue me before I fall into despair...
I hope that someone gets my
Message in a bottle,
Yeah,Message in a bottle,
Yeah...'
There is an old legend about the sea.The seventh wave is always the one that comes furthest up the beach.Watching the ocean for hours at a stretch,I fancy that the legend is true.But perhaps it is no more than a fancy.At any rate,I fancy that this same wave will wash upon another shore a thousand miles away where crowds throng the beach in hundreds.Yet the one person who comes upon my anonymous message will be the one it is meant for.And she will understand.Sometimes mere thoughts are so much more explanatory than words.
The gulls do not cry of the futility of love.They cry of its power to bring happiness,of the inevitability of its success and most importantly,of its timelessness.Only time is eternal...and the waves...and human emotion...
'A thousand goodbyes before the eternal hello...'
I read that line in an article somewhere.It gives me hope.I have said my goodbyes.Perhaps too many of them and some too permanent for my liking.But it is that one eternal hello that I look forward to,the one that serves to compensate for all of them.Maybe today,maybe tomorrow,maybe next week and maybe in thirty days time.And this time,once we say hello,we will never say a goodbye.The next time I have to write a love letter in the sand,there will be two of us writing it...to each other...
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Across the Universe
This is just a dream.Probably an impossible one,certainly an improbable one,but then again,all dreams are.If...if you just had that someone special who was the stuff that fairytale romances are made of by your side and you could choose to take off without a care in the world,where would you go?Across the universe?
'You're packing a suitcase for a place,
None of us has been.
A place that has to be believed,
To be seen.'
Across an entire continent to Europe and on a boat down the breathtaking Rhine valley past the towns and villages of Worms,Koblenz,Cologne and a thousand others where medieval castles perch high on every crag and silently overlook the mighty river's winding turns and keep the secrets they have collected from millions of men over hundreds of years.Into the land that fascinated and inspired the poems of Byron and Goethe and Heine and the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson that were your bedtime stories all those years ago.Into the homeland of Cinderella,Hansel and Gretel,Snow White with all their other magical characters to keep you company.
The air is cool, night is sinking,
And quietly is flowing the Rhine,
The tops of the mountains are blinking,
In purple-red sun-setting shine.
You do not have to look 'high up in the light for a maiden so beautiful with jewels glistening bright.' Your very own Lorelei is right there beside you in the boat that carries you through this Neverneverland.And as you take her hand,you realise that this is perhaps the most beautiful aspect of your trip...
To the city of lovers,where you sit at the cafes on the sidewalk and sip coffee and eat croissants in the sun and watch Parisian life flow by idly.Marvel at the innumerable masterpieces housed within the architectural wonder of the Louvre,walk hand in hand down the Champs Elysees to look out over the city from the top of the Arc de Triomphe.Climb the Eiffel Tower to its very top at night and survey the millions of lights that stretch away in every direction as far as the eye can see and you know that whatever ups and downs the future holds in store,'you'll always have Paris.'And maybe,when it is just the two of you on top of the most beautiful city in the world,you can turn to look into her eyes and sneak a special little kiss...
To a small area in northwest England dotted by fourteen sparkling lakes and dozens of fells and valleys.Feel the wind blow across the cold waters into your face and play with your hair as you gaze out from the shores of Lake Windermere.Or take a walk to the peak of Scafell Pike and 'wander lonely as a cloud' to gaze down upon 'a host of golden daffodils' upon the shores of Ullswater.And in the years to come 'when on your couch you lie,in vacant or in pensive mood',your 'inward eye' will return to the hauntingly beautiful scene and know that you were all the more lucky because you could share that moment with somebody...
Across an ocean and half a continent more to the the mountains of Colorado and Nebraska and Wyoming and Montana-names unlikely to be found on a typical US tour itinerary.Up the mountain trails past lakes that glimmer so blue that you feel you are looking at 'two skies,one on top of the other' and there is no possible line that can tell you 'where the heavens stop and the earth begins.'Climb the snowy slopes in the warm sun and the crisp cold air till the weather suddenly turns bad and you are forced to shelter in an empty hut built specifically for stranded climbers with tins of cocoa,a stove and candles.And as you sip your hot cocoa and eat your sandwiches with your shadows assuming strange contours on the walls and the snowstorm howling outside,you realise the true meaning and worth of a candlelight dinner...
Down south to another continent.On the waters of Lake Titicaca to the majestic peaks beyond.And so on to the Inca Trail that leads you through Amazonian rainforest to Andean mountain paths more than twelve thousand feet above sea level to finally end at the Sun Gate of Machu Pichu-the Lost City of the Incas.A city completely made up of huge blocks of granite fit together perfectly without using any mortar.Yet there are no granite quaries till all the way down to sea-level.How did the Incas move those heavy blocks of stone thousands of feet up the mountainside without the benefit of modern technology?Nobody knows the answer.It is one of civilisation's enduring enigmas,a mystery lent even more glamour by its setting.A fitting place to give voice to man's most enigmatic and least understood emotion.And so you turn hesitantly to ask those golden words laden with hope,yet tinged with apprehension in no slight degree,"Will you marry me?"
'And love,
It's not the easy thing,
The only baggage
That you can bring,
Not the easy thing,
The only baggage you can bring
Is all that you can't leave behind.'
Foolish?Yes.Romantic?Infinitely.But as you ask the question,you perhaps know that the cosmos which conspired to bring you together and kept you together as you travelled across so much of it will not let you down now.Thus there can only be one answer to the question you have just asked...
U2 was right.It is difficult,if not impossible to let go of certain things.So most people choose never to leave.But the luckiest are those who can take along 'all that you can't leave behind.'And with you,I know that I am one of those so blessed thus.Blessed to 'walk on,walk on...'
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot...
A door opens and closes on the fifth floor of a flat in South Bombay. A simple two-word SMS saying-‘See ya.’ A handshake at Hazrat Nizamuddin station on a hot summer morning. Sometimes you can tell. That exact moment when you lose a friend. It might have begun earlier. But there is always a point at which you know that however bad matters might have been before, now there is no going back.
It hurts. Whatever the reason may be, even if it is not your fault, even if the person in question is clearly responsible and you have reached the limit of how much you can take, you always remember better times. The laughter, the banter, the memories you shared and how they made up such an essential part of you. And when they go, that part goes with them and makes you suddenly feel incomplete. ‘Then why do things go so wrong?’-you ask, ‘How can people so special and so integral to your existence manage to drift so far apart from you?’ Those are difficult questions to answer…and painful ones. But, as with everything else in life, people change. Perceptions change…and so do realities. The sad part is that you never notice these changes initially. You cling on to an image that has ceased to be true. And then that image grows until it overshadows the reality or replaces it completely. Both of you wonder how the other is so different now and why they act in a manner that you would never expect of them. When problems arise, there is a chance for redemption. Yet too often you never take this chance-simply because it is too frightening to acknowledge that those problems actually exist. Yet again, sometimes you just do not want to go back. So when somebody asks you what is wrong, you reply that nothing is. And turn around and walk away. Into the sunset…
I have had awesome friends. All my life. And I do not deserve them. In fact, my friends (and family) have been the reason why I have been able to manage my life till date. Every time something has gone wrong, I have run to them for help and they have been magnificient. Whether it is getting hold of a textbook they have never heard of just because I needed it for a competitive examination or running about with me to every college in town the week before university examinations or just listening to my drivel on the phone for hours at a time even with an important exam looming the next day, they have gone through all this and more without a word of complaint. And with absolutely no resentment either at being taken so blatantly for granted by me.
This one is to all the friends I have lost. Thank you. I was fortunate to have had each and every one of you as a friend. And if I lost you, it was not your fault in any way whatsoever, but entirely due to my own shortcomings. The same ones with which you put up time after time. To someone who grew up with me through my seven happiest years in school. I still cannot believe that we have drifted apart…and I could never fathom why. To an old friend who I lost once…and regained-because our magic was such that after months of not talking to each other, a message was all it took to bring us together over coffee and then to promptly agree to leave the past behind. Hanging out so much with you over the last seven months was one of the best things that ever happened to me. And now that it has come to an end, I miss those months terribly. To someone whose imminent departure moved me to tears for the first time in twelve years. I am sorry that I have failed you thus. To others too numerous to name, but who ‘I have loved long since and lost awhile.’
Thankfully there are still people who patiently put up with my many failings. And I am still fortunate enough to meet wonderful people who become great friends. This is to all the friends I have. I am an ungrateful wretch, but for once, I do realise how lucky I am to have all of you in my life. Thank you. To someone who forsook all traces of ego to reach out to save a friend she had known barely a week. Who continues to go far beyond what anyone else would to affirm our friendship every time any hint of trouble appears or we seem to be drifting apart. You are my one island of sanity in a crazy world-a place where I can always get my bearings right. To quote you-‘because you care, because you worry, because you love, because you keep in touch, because you are you…and you help me be me.’ To someone who was friendly enough to scrap a person she had spoken to only on the phone once…and now keeps becoming more and more special everyday. To someone who has calmly ignored multitudes of jokes and aspersions which become less funny and more tasteless with each passing day to become my very own ‘bridge over troubled water’. To my roommate who has quietly been there throughout these four years of college, never refusing anything that I asked of him and never hesitating to voice opinions and truths that were unpalatable if he thought that I needed to hear them. To all my other friends and colleagues without whom my life would have been much less special and enjoyable.
‘Heart-smitten with emotion I sink down,
My heart recovering with covered eyes;
Wherever I had looked I had looked upon
My permanent or impermanent images…
And I am in despair that time may bring,
Approved patterns of women or of men
But not that selfsame excellence again…
You that would judge me, do not judge alone
This book or that, come to this hallowed place
Where my friends' portraits hang and look thereon;
My history in their lineaments trace;
Think where man's glory most begins and ends,
And say my glory was I had such friends.’
(W.B. Yeats-The Municipal Gallery Revisited)
Eloquent lines…and never did they hold as much meaning as they do when used to describe the remarkable men and women I have been fortunate enough to have had as friends.
It hurts. Whatever the reason may be, even if it is not your fault, even if the person in question is clearly responsible and you have reached the limit of how much you can take, you always remember better times. The laughter, the banter, the memories you shared and how they made up such an essential part of you. And when they go, that part goes with them and makes you suddenly feel incomplete. ‘Then why do things go so wrong?’-you ask, ‘How can people so special and so integral to your existence manage to drift so far apart from you?’ Those are difficult questions to answer…and painful ones. But, as with everything else in life, people change. Perceptions change…and so do realities. The sad part is that you never notice these changes initially. You cling on to an image that has ceased to be true. And then that image grows until it overshadows the reality or replaces it completely. Both of you wonder how the other is so different now and why they act in a manner that you would never expect of them. When problems arise, there is a chance for redemption. Yet too often you never take this chance-simply because it is too frightening to acknowledge that those problems actually exist. Yet again, sometimes you just do not want to go back. So when somebody asks you what is wrong, you reply that nothing is. And turn around and walk away. Into the sunset…
I have had awesome friends. All my life. And I do not deserve them. In fact, my friends (and family) have been the reason why I have been able to manage my life till date. Every time something has gone wrong, I have run to them for help and they have been magnificient. Whether it is getting hold of a textbook they have never heard of just because I needed it for a competitive examination or running about with me to every college in town the week before university examinations or just listening to my drivel on the phone for hours at a time even with an important exam looming the next day, they have gone through all this and more without a word of complaint. And with absolutely no resentment either at being taken so blatantly for granted by me.
This one is to all the friends I have lost. Thank you. I was fortunate to have had each and every one of you as a friend. And if I lost you, it was not your fault in any way whatsoever, but entirely due to my own shortcomings. The same ones with which you put up time after time. To someone who grew up with me through my seven happiest years in school. I still cannot believe that we have drifted apart…and I could never fathom why. To an old friend who I lost once…and regained-because our magic was such that after months of not talking to each other, a message was all it took to bring us together over coffee and then to promptly agree to leave the past behind. Hanging out so much with you over the last seven months was one of the best things that ever happened to me. And now that it has come to an end, I miss those months terribly. To someone whose imminent departure moved me to tears for the first time in twelve years. I am sorry that I have failed you thus. To others too numerous to name, but who ‘I have loved long since and lost awhile.’
Thankfully there are still people who patiently put up with my many failings. And I am still fortunate enough to meet wonderful people who become great friends. This is to all the friends I have. I am an ungrateful wretch, but for once, I do realise how lucky I am to have all of you in my life. Thank you. To someone who forsook all traces of ego to reach out to save a friend she had known barely a week. Who continues to go far beyond what anyone else would to affirm our friendship every time any hint of trouble appears or we seem to be drifting apart. You are my one island of sanity in a crazy world-a place where I can always get my bearings right. To quote you-‘because you care, because you worry, because you love, because you keep in touch, because you are you…and you help me be me.’ To someone who was friendly enough to scrap a person she had spoken to only on the phone once…and now keeps becoming more and more special everyday. To someone who has calmly ignored multitudes of jokes and aspersions which become less funny and more tasteless with each passing day to become my very own ‘bridge over troubled water’. To my roommate who has quietly been there throughout these four years of college, never refusing anything that I asked of him and never hesitating to voice opinions and truths that were unpalatable if he thought that I needed to hear them. To all my other friends and colleagues without whom my life would have been much less special and enjoyable.
‘Heart-smitten with emotion I sink down,
My heart recovering with covered eyes;
Wherever I had looked I had looked upon
My permanent or impermanent images…
And I am in despair that time may bring,
Approved patterns of women or of men
But not that selfsame excellence again…
You that would judge me, do not judge alone
This book or that, come to this hallowed place
Where my friends' portraits hang and look thereon;
My history in their lineaments trace;
Think where man's glory most begins and ends,
And say my glory was I had such friends.’
(W.B. Yeats-The Municipal Gallery Revisited)
Eloquent lines…and never did they hold as much meaning as they do when used to describe the remarkable men and women I have been fortunate enough to have had as friends.
Welcome to Wherever You Are (Chapter 1 of my first year journal-Exile on Manipal's Streets)
The rain-blinding, furious, unrelenting-driving against the window-panes of the bus, seeping inside between the closed frames, pattering like the feet of so many little elves on the roof. I cannot see beyond a few feet and have no idea how far we are. I have told the conductor to let me know once we arrive and received an ambiguous nod of the head in return. The conductor calls out-‘Udupi’ and most of the other passengers leave their seats and move towards the exit. I know that it will not be long now. The brochure said five kilometres.
The now nearly-empty bus lurches to a start once again and I can make out that we are travelling through a series of narrow winding roads. There is no letup in the rain that is about to welcome me to my home for most of the next four years. But even that cannot prevent me from sighting the huge hoarding that welcomes you to Manipal with another one advertising the completion of the fiftieth year of Manipal in education and healthcare. The conductor bellows that we are at Manipal and this is the last stop. I pull my bag out from the overhead rack and exit into the rain. Collecting the rest of my luggage from the helper takes a little more time while that worthy searches for the key to the storage space. Then the bus pulls away leaving behind a trail of fumes that are fast dispelled in the downpour…and me…
I am already drenched to the skin and am thus in no hurry to seek the shelter of an auto. So I make a leisurely inspection of my surroundings. I am at Tiger Circle and I know from my mother’s description that it is the town centre. The buildings to my left-which a sign tells me are the KMC buildings-have recently received a fresh coat of paint. The others around the square look as if they could do with the same. But on the whole, the place is much less derelict than I expected.
It is six thirty on a morning in early September and the grey overcast skies look down on a nineteen-year old who has just joined the thousands of others who pursue the Great Indian Dream of a degree in the twin El Dorados of engineering and medicine. In my case, that pursuit, though by no means whole-hearted, has led me to this small mini-town after a fifty hour journey. Cast into a totally different milieu from the one that has formed the backdrop for my entire life, the weeks and the months to come shall bring me face to face with people and experiences hitherto totally unknown to me. That the people I come across shall be those with whom I have at least some aspects in common, I have not the least doubt. Youth everywhere are essentially the same-in their hopes, dreams and aspirations, in spite of the cosmetic differences that may seem overwhelming at first. But there shall be trying times ahead as I adjust to the world of Manipal and I can only hope that the excitement of discovery shall be greater than the loneliness of unfamiliarity.
It is time to move on and I hail one of the many autos that wait patiently nearby despite the weather and the earliness of the hour. Another ride-a brief one-through drenched streets, a glimpse of the buildings that dot the roadsides-most of them shops or eateries, the others college buildings or hostels and I am finally at Block 7, MIT Hostels. Soon I am once again standing alone again as I begin hauling my three considerably heavy bags up the front steps. Another auto pulls up in front of the neighbouring block and I wave a hand to the solitary figure emerging from it. We leave a formal introduction for later though, our minds are on other matters at the moment.
I finally manage to wake the caretaker after knocking incessantly on the door the sleepy guard pointed out to me for close to five minutes. The keys to my room are found and we climb six flights of stairs to my room on the third floor. It is at the very end of the corridor-a further distance to drag my bags. But I am finally inside Room No. 409-my abode for the next one year. It is not quite the ultimate luxury as far as accommodation goes, but the room is clean, well-furnished and a far cry from the horror stories of hostels that I have heard. The caretaker departs and I put off unpacking till later. A refreshing shower and a change of clothes later, I step on to the balcony next to my room. The rain has lessened by this time and the sun is struggling to break through the clouds that cover the distant hills that I can see from the balcony. Someone else arrives on the floor with a pair of suitcases. It is the occupant of the room next to me. He puts his suitcases inside the room and then joins me on the balcony. I stretch out my hand to make my first friend in college…
Here in these pages, I pen down the starting moments of my new existence. Many chronicles of this town and the life that I shall lead here will no doubt follow-some pleasant, some not-so, and most downright mundane. No matter that they are of no interest to anyone save me. Perhaps they shall afford a passing diversion years hence when I look back upon these fleeting moments of yesteryear.
School is over. Life, on the other hand, is about to begin…
The now nearly-empty bus lurches to a start once again and I can make out that we are travelling through a series of narrow winding roads. There is no letup in the rain that is about to welcome me to my home for most of the next four years. But even that cannot prevent me from sighting the huge hoarding that welcomes you to Manipal with another one advertising the completion of the fiftieth year of Manipal in education and healthcare. The conductor bellows that we are at Manipal and this is the last stop. I pull my bag out from the overhead rack and exit into the rain. Collecting the rest of my luggage from the helper takes a little more time while that worthy searches for the key to the storage space. Then the bus pulls away leaving behind a trail of fumes that are fast dispelled in the downpour…and me…
I am already drenched to the skin and am thus in no hurry to seek the shelter of an auto. So I make a leisurely inspection of my surroundings. I am at Tiger Circle and I know from my mother’s description that it is the town centre. The buildings to my left-which a sign tells me are the KMC buildings-have recently received a fresh coat of paint. The others around the square look as if they could do with the same. But on the whole, the place is much less derelict than I expected.
It is six thirty on a morning in early September and the grey overcast skies look down on a nineteen-year old who has just joined the thousands of others who pursue the Great Indian Dream of a degree in the twin El Dorados of engineering and medicine. In my case, that pursuit, though by no means whole-hearted, has led me to this small mini-town after a fifty hour journey. Cast into a totally different milieu from the one that has formed the backdrop for my entire life, the weeks and the months to come shall bring me face to face with people and experiences hitherto totally unknown to me. That the people I come across shall be those with whom I have at least some aspects in common, I have not the least doubt. Youth everywhere are essentially the same-in their hopes, dreams and aspirations, in spite of the cosmetic differences that may seem overwhelming at first. But there shall be trying times ahead as I adjust to the world of Manipal and I can only hope that the excitement of discovery shall be greater than the loneliness of unfamiliarity.
It is time to move on and I hail one of the many autos that wait patiently nearby despite the weather and the earliness of the hour. Another ride-a brief one-through drenched streets, a glimpse of the buildings that dot the roadsides-most of them shops or eateries, the others college buildings or hostels and I am finally at Block 7, MIT Hostels. Soon I am once again standing alone again as I begin hauling my three considerably heavy bags up the front steps. Another auto pulls up in front of the neighbouring block and I wave a hand to the solitary figure emerging from it. We leave a formal introduction for later though, our minds are on other matters at the moment.
I finally manage to wake the caretaker after knocking incessantly on the door the sleepy guard pointed out to me for close to five minutes. The keys to my room are found and we climb six flights of stairs to my room on the third floor. It is at the very end of the corridor-a further distance to drag my bags. But I am finally inside Room No. 409-my abode for the next one year. It is not quite the ultimate luxury as far as accommodation goes, but the room is clean, well-furnished and a far cry from the horror stories of hostels that I have heard. The caretaker departs and I put off unpacking till later. A refreshing shower and a change of clothes later, I step on to the balcony next to my room. The rain has lessened by this time and the sun is struggling to break through the clouds that cover the distant hills that I can see from the balcony. Someone else arrives on the floor with a pair of suitcases. It is the occupant of the room next to me. He puts his suitcases inside the room and then joins me on the balcony. I stretch out my hand to make my first friend in college…
Here in these pages, I pen down the starting moments of my new existence. Many chronicles of this town and the life that I shall lead here will no doubt follow-some pleasant, some not-so, and most downright mundane. No matter that they are of no interest to anyone save me. Perhaps they shall afford a passing diversion years hence when I look back upon these fleeting moments of yesteryear.
School is over. Life, on the other hand, is about to begin…
Tuesday, January 23, 2007
And when all the wars are done,a butterfly will still be beautiful…
Baghdad,Iraq-A bomb struck a small bus in Baghdad as it headed to a predominantly Shiite area on Sunday, killing six passengers and wounding 10, police said. The bomb was left in a bag by somebody who got off the bus, police said. Sirens wailed as police and ambulances rushed to the area, and rescue workers pulled the badly burned bodies from the charred bus.About 45 minutes later, a parked car bomb exploded outside a restaurant in eastern Baghdad,wounding six people,according to police…
There is a freshness in the predawn air that always heralds sunrise and the promise of a new day.After all these years,I can tell exactly when that time arrives.I linger on the edge of the valley.It is a clear day and I can see far into the horizon as the sky slowly brightens and the first light touches the distant mountain tops.Gradually,ever-so reluctantly a red orb makes its way into my line of vision.It does not have much strength yet and the early morning mists continue to swirl in the valley,obscuring the hills just enough to add to their mystique.Not for long,though!In minutes,seconds maybe,the sunrays shine forth and the hitherto all-encompassing mists fade into dreamlike oblivion.The sun is now well above the horizon and the red has now yielded to gold. A new day has come and the promise is fulfilled…
Mogadishu,Somalia-Two days after the United States launched an airstrike against alleged al-Qaeda terrorists in southern Somalia, U.S. officials declined yesterday to provide details of who, or what, was hit.In Mogadishu, the Somali capital, reports circulated that as many as 50 people, many of them civilians, were killed in the attack by a U.S. Air Force AC-130 gunship.Somalis have already begun to express anger toward Ethiopian troops. Last night, a former police building in the capital, now occupied by the Ethiopians, was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired from a speeding car. One Ethiopian and one Somali soldier were killed, and three civilians were injured…
Late afternoon.The sun is dipping slightly in the west and the sunshine is just the right temperature to bask in.A steady breeze is blowing across the cricket ground kicking up an occasional light puff of dust.Once again I am alone…sitting on the edge of the wall that lines the ground.Or maybe,I am not all that alone.A little puppy joins me-running into the field.Shortly followed by another of nearly the same age.The two are a sight to watch-running,rolling over,gamboling,mock-fighting.Unconscious of their surroundings,unloaded by multiple worries,carefree!The dust makes one of them sneeze and I cannot help but wish that I had a camera to capture the exact expression on its tiny face before and after it sneezed.Before for the puckered nose,after for the bewildered expression it sported! And as they go off again-one chases the other clear across the field-I cannot help but smile…
Bangalore,India- In a bitter sequel to the riots on Friday, localities in Bangalore East witnessed another round of mob fury on Sunday as miscreants attacked shops and torched vehicles, while a 11-year-old boy died and five sustained bullet injuries in police firing. Over 10 policemen have sustained injuries.Overall, more than 60 people sustained injuries, over a dozen vehicles including three BMTC buses were torched, several two-wheelers, and hundreds of shops damaged, nearly 30 houses looted, five chicken shops and 15 houses burnt, and places of worship stoned…
The evening is nearly gone.Only a last faint shade of mauve remains against the canvas of the nighttime sky.The trees are black looming hulks enveloped by the shadows of the night.The air is filled with the chirping of birds returning to their nests for the day.There is something about the flight of thousands of birds-grace,movement,exhilaration,an exquisite randomness all the more beautiful for its disorder. For a minute I too am part of the cacophonic panorama unfolding in the heavens above-a modern Icarus with wings of imagination instead of wax.The sounds gradually die down as the birds settle.A magical silence takes over.I return to earth.Another day in time passes…
In a small garden somewhere is a tall creeper winding its way up a wall of ivy.A butterfly has been flitting back and forth to that creeper.Elsewhere there is war, death, hunger, suffering and cruelty.But none of that pervades this solitary garden.Here there is peace and life and beauty!So it shall be long after the depressing headlines of the day’s newspaper have faded from a fickle memory.And when all the wars are done,a butterfly will still be beautiful…
Baghdad,Iraq-A bomb struck a small bus in Baghdad as it headed to a predominantly Shiite area on Sunday, killing six passengers and wounding 10, police said. The bomb was left in a bag by somebody who got off the bus, police said. Sirens wailed as police and ambulances rushed to the area, and rescue workers pulled the badly burned bodies from the charred bus.About 45 minutes later, a parked car bomb exploded outside a restaurant in eastern Baghdad,wounding six people,according to police…
There is a freshness in the predawn air that always heralds sunrise and the promise of a new day.After all these years,I can tell exactly when that time arrives.I linger on the edge of the valley.It is a clear day and I can see far into the horizon as the sky slowly brightens and the first light touches the distant mountain tops.Gradually,ever-so reluctantly a red orb makes its way into my line of vision.It does not have much strength yet and the early morning mists continue to swirl in the valley,obscuring the hills just enough to add to their mystique.Not for long,though!In minutes,seconds maybe,the sunrays shine forth and the hitherto all-encompassing mists fade into dreamlike oblivion.The sun is now well above the horizon and the red has now yielded to gold. A new day has come and the promise is fulfilled…
Mogadishu,Somalia-Two days after the United States launched an airstrike against alleged al-Qaeda terrorists in southern Somalia, U.S. officials declined yesterday to provide details of who, or what, was hit.In Mogadishu, the Somali capital, reports circulated that as many as 50 people, many of them civilians, were killed in the attack by a U.S. Air Force AC-130 gunship.Somalis have already begun to express anger toward Ethiopian troops. Last night, a former police building in the capital, now occupied by the Ethiopians, was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired from a speeding car. One Ethiopian and one Somali soldier were killed, and three civilians were injured…
Late afternoon.The sun is dipping slightly in the west and the sunshine is just the right temperature to bask in.A steady breeze is blowing across the cricket ground kicking up an occasional light puff of dust.Once again I am alone…sitting on the edge of the wall that lines the ground.Or maybe,I am not all that alone.A little puppy joins me-running into the field.Shortly followed by another of nearly the same age.The two are a sight to watch-running,rolling over,gamboling,mock-fighting.Unconscious of their surroundings,unloaded by multiple worries,carefree!The dust makes one of them sneeze and I cannot help but wish that I had a camera to capture the exact expression on its tiny face before and after it sneezed.Before for the puckered nose,after for the bewildered expression it sported! And as they go off again-one chases the other clear across the field-I cannot help but smile…
Bangalore,India- In a bitter sequel to the riots on Friday, localities in Bangalore East witnessed another round of mob fury on Sunday as miscreants attacked shops and torched vehicles, while a 11-year-old boy died and five sustained bullet injuries in police firing. Over 10 policemen have sustained injuries.Overall, more than 60 people sustained injuries, over a dozen vehicles including three BMTC buses were torched, several two-wheelers, and hundreds of shops damaged, nearly 30 houses looted, five chicken shops and 15 houses burnt, and places of worship stoned…
The evening is nearly gone.Only a last faint shade of mauve remains against the canvas of the nighttime sky.The trees are black looming hulks enveloped by the shadows of the night.The air is filled with the chirping of birds returning to their nests for the day.There is something about the flight of thousands of birds-grace,movement,exhilaration,an exquisite randomness all the more beautiful for its disorder. For a minute I too am part of the cacophonic panorama unfolding in the heavens above-a modern Icarus with wings of imagination instead of wax.The sounds gradually die down as the birds settle.A magical silence takes over.I return to earth.Another day in time passes…
Papers in the roadside,
Tell of suffering and greed.
Here today, forgot tomorrow,
Ooh, here besides the news,
Of holy war and holy need,
Ours is just a little sorrowed talk.
In a small garden somewhere is a tall creeper winding its way up a wall of ivy.A butterfly has been flitting back and forth to that creeper.Elsewhere there is war, death, hunger, suffering and cruelty.But none of that pervades this solitary garden.Here there is peace and life and beauty!So it shall be long after the depressing headlines of the day’s newspaper have faded from a fickle memory.And when all the wars are done,a butterfly will still be beautiful…
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