Friday, December 30, 2011

2011

Many years from now when I will hopefully have the wisdom to give myself the time to introspect, I will look back at 2011 and have only one thing to say: ‘what a year’.

During the New Year’s Eve party last year we played a game. All of us had to write on a chit what we wanted to do in 2011 and the others had to guess who wrote what. I don’t remember what I wrote, but I will never be able to forget what my father wrote. ‘All good men go to heaven’. Five days later, we came perilously close to seeing his wish almost being fulfilled.

My father has the uncanny knack of waking me up early from sleep and when his third heart-attack struck we were still an hour from first light. Medhavi and I were just over a month away from the arrival of our first child. And there was a realistic chance that the grandfather may miss seeing the grandchild. Over the next two weeks, we waited and my dad fought. He was okay to go, but he was not okay to go without putting up a fight. And for the nth time, his will triumphed.

Friends, family, colleagues and well-wishers - there was no dearth of support or prayers. One must be more than lucky to be surrounded by people who give without expecting anything in return. I was overwhelmed.

A month later, dad was with us at the hospital lobby waiting for his grandchild. Ruhaan arrived in the middle of the Cricket World Cup. I was editor of a cricket website at that time. But again, I was surrounded by a special circle – I managed to take seven days off. No calls, no mails, no cricket reports. It was the first step towards work-life balance.

I went back to work. India won the World Cup.

Ruhaan was already a month old by then. A month later, we started him on a diet of road trips. In eight months, he travelled thrice to Ranikhet and once to Barog. The third trip to Ranikhet was a toughie. Stuck on the highway due to a religious festival and forced to take detours through village roads and paths that did not exist on the map, we were pushed to our limits. Tired, hungry, sleep-deprived, Ruhaan was the only reason we kept pushing ourselves. I had driven us all into a hole, and I had to dig us out of it. Through it all, he cried just once. It was as if he was asking me ‘Just what do you think you are doing’. I had learnt my lesson: You can be adventurous, but you can’t be stupid.

Now ten months old, Ruhaan continues to push us. He teaches us new things everyday; he brings out the ability to do what we had always thought to be impossible. He makes us think.

One of those thinking decisions this year was a change in profession. It was a tough call to make. After spending a decade in journalism, I moved over to the corporate sector. I don’t know if I like it. Two months is too short a time to come to a conclusion, but I do like the feeling that I have more time at home. Ruhaan has ensured his dad has a better work-life balance.

Another thinking decision of the year was to sell off our house that had been our home for the last 14 years. It was my parents’ labour of love. It was the home where I spent my young adult life, it was the home where Medhavi and I were married and Ruhaan had his annaprashan. Every nook and corner of that home had a story. But it was time to move on. The memories will stay. The challenge of building another home welcomes us in 2012.

2011 was also the year of loss; family, friends – some to death and some who just drifted away.

2011 was also the year of welcoming the next generation. The baton will take some time to pass, but the hands that will take the baton have arrived.

So long 2011.

May the peace prevail and may the love last.

Monday, June 13, 2011

She and He: movie talk

She: Badmaash company

He: Shaitan now :-)

She: Am scared

He: Bheja fry mat ho. Ab bas Ready ho jaa

She: Kyon? Zindagi na milegi dobara

He: Nahin yaar bas yunhi...Life mein kabhi kabhi

She: Bhag :-) dk bose

He: You developing Delhi Belly?

She: Ya. Too much shor in the city

He: I thought it was Fast and Furious

She: Ra One is stuck in stanley ka dabba

He: Guess it's Haunted

She: Ya the Heroine's the Ghost

He: Soon enough it will be Rana to the recue

She: By god that's Murder 2!

He: At least it's not Mission Impossible

She: No it' the talented mr ripley meeting the Bounty Hunter

He: should be all fine if Mr Benjamin can keep the Buttons in place

She: Could go on, But sleepy.

He: Ya soon enuf it'll be Dial M for Murder

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Praan chahe - two renditions

The first one by Punkaj Mullick sung about 50 years ago - what orchestration!



The second - a recent remix!

Saturday, August 28, 2010

She's sensual, not passionate

No she doesn't close her eyes
or moan and shout
the passionate woman is a blind woman

A passionate woman grabs you
kisses you and bites you
hurries you and tries you

And then done with the deed
will fall asleep.

But the sensual one
she'll be unaroused and yet arouse you

She's a woman of substance
feminine and abundant

And for her the journey
far more intense than the destination

Ask her for a kiss and she'll tell you take a walk
clearly she prefers the chase.

I wish, I wish, I wish in vain

He said for all this talk about equality,
the only thing people really have in common
is that they are all going to die.

You can see it in the eye how each one
is curious about what the weather looks like
But they'll never look out of the windows
or even take a walk outside.

It's in the eyes
and it says 'I know something that you don't know'.

Everybody's wearing a disguise
to hide what they've got left behind their eyes
But me, I can't cover what I am.

I wish, I wish, I wish in vain
if it was easy to tell black from white
and our choices were few.

The thought never hit,
this road we travel together would never shatter and split.

I wish, I wish, I wish in vain
but the only thing people really have in common
is that they are all going to die.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

She and He: Line maroing

She: I see cricket has really got your attention today.

He: Why do you say that?

She: You've had no time to moon

He: Missing the honey. What's my poison?

She: Hunny

He: Am winnie the pooh alright.

She: :-) better look out for that middle

He: But you still haven't completed the 'she says' bit of the may i kiss u 'he says' line.

She: Line maroing is your job

He: So will you play along? I promise to keep it simple and straight. No going around in circles.

She: Play?

He: We are but players and all we do is play our parts.

She: Circles?

He: Won't go round and round, keep it short and simple.

She: It?

He: It is written

She: Much has been written and yet nothing... :-)

He: There is a slip between the cup and the lip