Thursday, September 16, 2010

Wanderings of a Nomadic Mind

There is too much going on in my mind. Sometimes there is so much to think about, I start thinking about the fact that I am thinking. It’s happening right now. I don’t know if this qualifies me as a weirdo, but my mind can wander from the cow sitting on the road to naked children playing with broken tires. As I pen these thoughts down, my mind races to the Landmark bookstore where I see books by young Indian writers, hoping to make it big like Chetan Bhagat. The other time I went to Landmark, I wished that it was a giant library instead where I could read old books and be surrounded by a frothy silence that tastes of learning and solitude. Oh wait, I have to think about the housing situation back in school. Really, I almost missed that deadline. My mind needs some loose shackles; something to keep it from wandering too far away. I wonder what heavy chains smell like. Too many thoughts make my head dizzy sometimes. That means a lot of dizziness. Sometimes I wonder if thinking about dizziness can make you feel dizzy. I guess it would be the same logic as saying thinking about headaches gives you one. Maybe a hypochondriac could explain better. Or maybe he’d think talking would make a malaria mosquito jump into his mouth and spell his doom. Today’s Hindi newspaper informed that the situation in Kashmir would cause India to meet her doom very soon. The next page was about the ‘party circuit hitting it up in town’. Is it ethically correct to ‘party it up’ when our nation faces imminent doom? I wonder if the ‘fashionistas’ ever give it a thought. If you give it serious thought, the money spent on one Christian Dior bag could probably feed at least fifteen families for three months. If only every Indian fashionista thought about this before splurging. Its easy to think that those tucked deep within plush velvet and mahogany chambers are duty bound to feed those lesser than themselves. I think if the middle class as well as the rich did their bit, we could stop all the angry growlings of India’s hungry stomachs. Rummaging in last year’s section of my memory, I dig up the image I saw in my dermatologist’s clinic. It was advising a tummy tuck. Patting my stomach, recently stuffed with noodles and AppyFizz, I don’t think I need it. Tummy tucks are probably expensive. Being completely unaware of the way the whole cutting and pasting job is done, I would like to think that they sedate the patient, or ‘tummy conscious’, before poking a knife through their digestive organs. I saw a movie that was based on the illegal organ trade that was ravaging Indian hospitals some time back. Maybe it still is. The newspapers are too busy with Kashmir and the Fashionistas. Salman Khan recently said it wasn’t cool if people only stood up for the Taj hotel bombing and didn’t bother enough about the other blasts. I think he’s right in some way. Unfortunately, his shirt tearing and pelvic thrusting have earned him little credibility with the general population. Only young Indian men want to be like him. It’s cool to ride mean bikes, wear body hugging shirts and jeans, rip shirts off in public and be like him. I don’t think I dislike him. No, not all. It’s the men who want to emulate him that annoy me. Thinking about Indian men, those adorning our already dirty streets, makes me pretty furious. For one they desire to humiliate girls by singing songs, then they want to follow girls again to trouble them, then they want to whistle at them to achieve the same purpose. So, I guess, the desire is one. However the methods of achieving that are varied and cheap in different levels. I wonder if wearing inexpensive clothes, qualifies as cheap. The meaning of the word varies. The tone with which it is used can tell what is being indicated.  Maybe.  We are an equivocal people. Politicians freely abuse the use of ambguity in the parliament or show their expertise in using it in front of cameras when asked trivial questions about education and hunger. I am getting back to problems of the Indian society. Are my thoughts coming full circle? A circle has no beginning or end so maybe my thoughts fall in the same category. the only problem with this prolific thinking is the distraction. Sitting here in the hot and dirty third world, I think about the cool limes of New England. While in New England, ambivalent thoughts about my duty to India occupy my mental recesses. The food is especially tempting when I’m 12 hours behind. The chicken biryani and kebabs make my mouth water. Just like my dog here, who’s sitting and staring at the cupboard that houses his favorite chewy bone. I wonder what the bone tastes like. He chews on it so voraciously, you would think his life depended on it. I can hear the sound of plates clattering on the dinning table.

Ahh, good old Indian food. I guess its the one thing that can stop my mind from running wild. I think I should go down before all the kebabs disappear.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Kaleidoscope of Holy Freedom

The 63rd Independence Day dawns,
Amidst the cacophony of car horns,
The screech of a multitude of newborns,
The whiff champa in luscious government lawns.
India is awake.
*
The angry afternoon sun scorches down on emaciated workers,
A mangy dog rummages for some left over,
The neighbor counts the blasts – keeping score,
The young ‘un propagates – his throat sore,
The sky overcast with no drop to quench the earth’s many a pore.
India plods on.
*
The podium talks of military power,
Indifferent, the peasant prays for a torrential shower,
The clan hordes more – filling up its private coffer,
The Sensex plunges a little lower,
The red flag unfurls in the east the stench of danger,
India defines ambiguity.
*
Cynics launch a tirade against inefficiency,
Students rally for immediate change with an urgency,
The old remember the ‘good ol’ days’ with frequency,
The commission steals funds as if in an emergency,
The battle of languages rages on with fluency.
India disappoints.
*
Muddy children play games with sticks and stones,
Under the moonlight the aghori baba counts out skulls and bones,
The cities are abuzz with more than a million phones,
Growing with only three more to beat in international zones,
New age philosophies perforate the societal fabric in drones,
Jeans in the streets and purdah within homes,
A token woman president – fit to embarrass the young and the grown.
India tries.
*
A hot tea during a cloud burst,
The smell of the earth first,
Then the drops quench the thirst,
Pigtails with red ribbons, a kaleidoscope of Technicolor, brightly clad young girls,
Drenched bodies atop bikes whizz and whirl,
Imposing moustaches with an imperial upward twirl.
India smiles.
*
The blessed land.
Three million gods and reincarnation for support.
Blue turban minority rule.
The swish of a whip behind the scenes.
Happily ignorant common men.
The land of holy confusion.
The two thousand year old civilization follows the same narrow path.
*
Shiva, Jesus, Muhammad, Zarathustra and Buddha are busy laughing.



Saturday, May 29, 2010

Stilettos and Ties

Tripping on broken glass
Stilettos dangling by the hand
Plunging necklines and low on class
Cheap yellow dress red waist band
Smokey eyes attempt mystery
Smudged lipstick
Eyeing one with shared history
Passion sealed behind a lock’s click
The night is young.
*
Buttons open
Tie over shoulder
Subconscious erotica unspoken
One hand on scotch another on her
A caress on the neck
A gaze into the eye
Another on the list – a check
On the dance floor make the time fly
The night is young.
*
New morn
Yellow dress and stilettos by the bed
Shirt ripped tie torn
Throbbing head
Coffee mug tipped over
Puddle on the rug
Struggling  for a sheet to cover
Shoes off with a tug
The night was long.
*
Stories abound
Tacit understanding
Stale bagels dead love
One was on business
Another an assignment
Too much to drink
No time
Running to office
*
Dishes left dirty
*
Waning interest
Fake smiles
Crusty curtsies
The night was usual.
*