Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Why cant people accept that others can be happy outside their brand of happiness?

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Akhana ashobhyotar, akaran obhimaan er purno odhikaar ashampurno
I'd write a story about him and his lover he took as his freedom.
His lover who then took away that freedom.

But I can't.
I am her

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Turn-Table

Disclaimer:  Resemblance to any character living, dead or half-dead is purely coincidental: Or the fruit of my phenomenal powers of clairevoyance.



"Please don't tell May I asked about her"...he said somewhat hesitantly - almost as an afterthought - as the three of us sat finishing our coffee, waiting for the bill.
"No, of course not", I reassured, my voice sounding forced to my own ears. Ranja and I exchanged quick glances in understanding of the secret pact just made. This was the first time that Ranja and Bobo were meeting, both having fair ideas about each other from how much I'd told them!
We got out and took a cab. The three of us were headed in the same direction. But Ranja had to be dropped off first. She got in first and I squeezed in beside her, gesturing Bobo to hop in next.
"I'll sit in front", he quipped and settled beside the cabbie, lighting his cigarette. It felt strange. The seat next to the cabbie's had always been MY place for all of the past twelve years.
We dropped Ranja off. Bobo said he really liked her: Which was saying a lot, considering he had always - without fail -written off all the ladies I had even remotely been interested in, citing reasons of disapproval that were frankly beyond my comprehension. Always. Bobo got dropped off a little ahead of his home; he had to buy cigarettes, he said. He forced a hundred rupee note in my hand, and gave it a tight squeeze, before turning to walk away down the narrow dimlit alley, where we once played cricket. About eighteen years ago.
Yes, eighteen long ears had passed since Bobo and I first met. I used to be this geeky gawky kid with thick-framed glasses, that made it uncomfortable for me to play for as long as I would have liked to. Needless to say, I wasn't a favourite in the group. But Bobo and I - as different as chalk and cheese - bonded nevertheless. Over books - Phantom comics, Tintin, Asterix, Saradindu, Satyajit Ray, Tenida; music - Suman, Anjan Dutta, Michael Jackson, AIR Radio, Phil Collins, Pink Floyd, Genesis, Coldplay; over the same tuition classes, over porn, over years of Durga Puja, piles of photocopied notes, boxes of borrowed cassettes, and of course, girls.
Girls became an integral part of our growing up, and we spent increasingly longer hours sharing stories of heartbreak on the terrace, even as we puffed away on the surreptitiously stolen cigarette or two, followed, as de rigeur, by chicklets. On one of these summer evenings, Bobo told me about May.
May? You like May? Truth be told, I found it hard to imagine May as a love-interest for anybody, LEAST of all for Bobo. She'd grown up with us, playing, fighting, cheering, and even smoking with us. So MUCH around us, in fact, that to actually visualise Bobo and her as a mushy couple-in-love wreaked havoc with my senses. May? I asked again! Yes, he laughed indulgently, wiping his glasses with the hem of his kurta. I had no inkling of this affair that had apparently been brewing behind my back for the past three months. May's father did not obviously approve of this romance; after all these were school kids! May had not been allowed to go out alone since the last week, and my poor friend Bobo had been reduced to the very picture of Romeo. What could be done? We plotted and schemed and racked our brains till I suggested they elope. An entire diagram for the elope route was chalked out on the last pages of Bobo's mathematics copy. All that remained to be done was to work on a few minor details. Minor details like how to convey the very idea to May (no cell phones, remember), where to go after eloping, what to do after that, and oh, most importantly, what to do on the 2nd of the next month - the date the Board Exams were slated to begin. Minor details. They would work themselves out, we convinced ourselves. Thoroughly pleased at the ingenuity and brilliance of our efficient and resourceful selves, we went home: Bobo, with the sweet pain that only the uncertainty of first-love can cause; me with a puffed chest and a rock solid resolution to get and keep these two together at all costs. May and Bobo.
Much to our disappointment, however, the episode of the brutal father fizzled out rather undrammatically, giving us no scope to prove our first stints at gallant machismo. May was allowed to go out again, on condition of a very strict curfew time, as her father realised it was pointless using archaic (or any other) methods of blackmail on her. From that point on, the three of us went everywhere. There was, however, a slight difference in our outings henceforth. The two of them would deliberately lag behind as I walked ahead awkwardly alone. They would look at each other and smile silly smiles, as I sat plucking blade after blade of grass, not having the barest inkling of how and why a blaring midday Sun could induce such mush. After two or three embarrassing lessons, I learnt not to turn back to talk to them as they cosied up in the backseat of the taxi. I learnt to join in much much later for our evening addas at the terrace. I learnt to keep secrets - his, hers and theirs. I learnt to invent newer methods of reconciliation, when they fought. I learnt to function as a go-between. I learnt to act as postman. I learnt to lie to the parents - his, hers, mine. I learnt to never take their ritualistic 'break-ups' seriosuly. Gradually, slowly, I learnt to find new friends. Finally, I learnt to leave nest. My room, my home, my parents, my friends, my city, my May-and-Bobo. Funnily enough, however, I never learnt to really 'get' a girl. So even while a whole range of emotions rushed through my mind as I tagged along with these two - anger, betrayal, hurt, envy - I never once had anyone that could be the equal of May for Bobo. Twelve long years - this is how it went, even as we kept in touch across different cities.
When I returned home this time, however, I learnt of a wedding-to-be. May's. Not Bobo's. It had been a while, he said over coffee. It had been two years since May-and-Bobo had become May and Bobo. Two separate people with separate lives and phone numbers, to which I had to call separately to fix up separate appointments. And yes, I had to introduce Ranja to them - separately.
It felt uncomfortably strange, I realised, to be sitting alone in the taxi, as it sped along the now-empty streets of my city. It felt strange not to be sitting in the front.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Ten

On a particularly sweltering evening in May, when not a single leaf on the trees stirred – the standard method of gauging the degree of humidity in Bengali homes – off went the electricity supply. As it went to shed its load, we too were left haplessly sweating it out, drowning in pools of sticky salty perspiration.

To calm my frayed crankiness that rose in direct proportion with the mercury, my father, the victim-by-default of the tantrums of this four year old daughter of his, devised a plan. Count up to ten, he said. But not in any harmonic order, he specified; spacing each number randomly, instead. See what happens when you reach ten, he assured with a mischievous grin. Impatient, I began ranting one, two, three in quick succession, when he stopped me to show how to really go about it.

One, he said and went back to humming the Manna Dey song he was singing, staring out of the grilled window, billowing grey smokes from his cigarette.
Two was followed by ‘Did I know what instrument Ali Akbar Khan played’: Sitar, I said in half-confidence. Sarod, he corrected me – the same instrument that Amjad Ali Khan played. He knew I’d know Amjad from the video I had watched last week on Doordarshan. Sarod is the instrument that looks much like the one the Goddess Saraswati plays, he went on; only that hers is called a Veena.
Three, he reminded me and I realised I had to go to the loo. Even though the bathroom, with its broken planks for doors, its moist walls the haven for tiny ugly insects, the latch to which I couldn’t reach, was in the next room – I had to be taken there by Baba, especially when it was dark, either in the middle of the night or in situations of loadshedding like it was that day. As he stood waiting outside in the dingy red-floored veranda, still smoking away, I heard him go four, then slowly, five, in a bid, I realised to hurry me up!
I joined him and in spite of the unbearable heat, snuggled up to his six-feet lanky frame, waiting for number six, waiting for the fan to whiz back with a lazy clunky thud. Seeing he was lost somewhat, semi-hunched on the railing dotted with bird-droppings, “six”, I enterprised, tugging on his khadi panjabi, egging him on to take the game forward. He looked down at his two-and-a-half footer, gave a half-smile and said, almost to himself, “That’s how long ago I’d met Anasuya. Six years ago. You know Anasuya, don’t you?”
-“Hmm, Ma”, I replied in a staid sombre grown-up tone.
-“We met at college, you know right?”
-“Yes, Presidency College”
-“Which was originally called…?”
-“Hindustan College.”
-“Hindu College.”

Seven, he stood back ramrod straight – back in form, back in the game. “Do you want to go out for a walk and call your mother?” he asked casually. I went over the whole process in my mind. Changing into my frock from the soft white cotton penny I was wearing with red and yellow ducks run-stitched on them; walking up to the end of our alley, turning left from Mahakali Sweetshop to finally reach Arun Dada’s phone booth; dialling Ma’s number (which I knew by heart), have Aneesh pick it up, chat me up with saccharine inanities, before finally declaring that Ma was in the bathroom. The only good thing about the whole stroll could be a bottle of Coca-cola that I might coax Baba into buying me on our way back. But no, I decided, it wasn’t worth it. The heat, the changing, the walk, Aneesh, and the dicey bait of Coca-cola. Plus I didn’t want to miss this game. I was eager to see what happened at ten.
“No. Eight” I flashed a grin!
-“That’s the double of your age right now!” quipped Baba.
- “Double…?”
-“Yes, four plus four”
Realising we were getting into the dangerous terrain of arithmetic, even if playfully, I pleaded, nine! “Clementine’s shoes were number nine, remember?” Of course I did! We’d been taught ‘My Darling Clementine’ at school last week, and I’d been singing it ‘in the cavern, in the canyon’, and in every other conceivable place, NON-STOP!

My father laughed his throaty laughter at how readily I had launched into an instant rendition, forgetting to whine about the heat and the dust. “Ten”, he announced with confident finality, as he took his last long puff before flicking away the butt on to the terrace of the next house: And ‘clunk’ I heard, almost immediately in the next room, as the fan groaned back into action.

This was unbelievable! Stupefied, I had even forgotten to rejoice and dance like I did usually once the power was back. What I had just experienced was beyond reason, beyond rationale, beyond gimmick, beyond magic – the closest it came to, was divine miracle! And my father had performed it with the surety of God himself! How was I to convince my friends at school tomorrow, that this man – my father – was God himself? That when he pronounced, “Let there be fan”, there indeed it was! That too at the exact moment he wanted it! Oh what would I have not done to have Aneesh right then to show him what my father was capable of, and to see his white face, with green veins popping out visibly like onions in an omelette, go ashen!

Hero – God, actually – in the eyes of his daughter, Baba gave a smug smile and ordered, “Go finish your homework now!” Homework? I could have jumped from the veranda if he’d asked me to that day, knowing my ‘Godfather’ would have me safe! What’s more, I could have touched the dreaded lizard behind the mirror, in the assured knowledge that Baba would turn it into Puff-the-magic-dragon - all pink, furry and playful!

Every time there was a loadshedding after that day, there was an unsaid code between us to go back to this game. Not that he agreed to indulge always, saying miracles are to be used sparingly and in extreme cases only, every time Baba did actually concede, the power would be back at the stroke of ten. Sometimes, when I tried to imitate Baba’s method on my own – perhaps to enthral friends - spacing the numbers out as randomly as I could, reaching ten at a long sweet pace, the power didn’t come back. My belief in my father’s sole powers to make it work therefore, deepened further and further. Gradually, my faith and reverence for what he said, what he believed, what he thought, what he did, began to percolate to other – almost all – spheres of life. My father could do no wrong; there could be no plan B for Baba’s plan A, I was convinced.

This is how it went for several years. Each number would bring with it, its share of trivia; its own peculiar memories – dates, addresses, numbers of letters, years piled on, years to come, years to wait for; and with each day of growing up, I would deliberately prolong the time-space between the numbers, so that newer stories could be sewn in between them, stories that would fill in sultry evenings of loadshedding. But for all these interruptions, these fillers, my fascination with the magical game –whenever Baba obliged, that is - never ebbed.


********



It was the final set: the score read thirty-forty. As Steffi bounced the ball up and down, looking up to fix her stare on Monica Seles in between, her lips pursing in visible anxiety, beads of sweat making a transparent moustache over her upper lip, off went the television tube. Roars of disappointment rang out in unison throughout the locality. Loadshedding.
And I was ten.

In a fit of urgency, I implored Baba to start the game; I was in no mood, moreover for uneven arbitrary languorous intervals, peppered with stories, reminiscences or lessons. It had to be fast, and it had to yield results. If this wasn’t a state of emergency, nothing would ever be!!!

Baba, however, such an ardent tennis enthusiast, had been a little aloof the whole day; and beyond an occasional “Advantage Seles”, or “Tch! clumsy shot, Steffi”, he had been more or less quiet throughout the game; not even commenting on the pretty ball-fetcher girls or Peter Graf’s stylish shades through which he kept a hawk eye on his daughter’s every move.

I can’t place a finger at which point exactly I’d stopped praying to the elusive, illusive, invisible God to rescue me in times of utter despondence that fluctuated in degrees of intensity; and prayed instead – pleaded, rather, with all my heart – to the unerring, unfailing miracle-man closer home; at home in fact, to rescue me and salvage the situation, no matter how impossible. In a way, I’d learnt to scoff in the face of difficulties – and when they remained unmitigated, I learnt to come to terms with the fact that there must have been some loophole in the earnestness of my praying. My godfather or his powers were not to blame; could not be blamed.

And though I understood that miracle-workers had moods that might not necessarily be in sync with my demands or tantrums, on that particular day, I wasn’t ready for reason. Much against his wishes therefore Baba started his counting: absent-mindedly and looking downwards at his own shadow on the red stone wall, made by the moonlight that trickled in through the grills of the green windows.
…Seven, eight, nine tumbled out quicker than they ever had, as did “ten” in a similarly careless, disinterested and perfunctory tone.
And there we sat, in the same darkness, in the same humidity. Nothing changed.
Elevens and Twelves made their silent, unuttered entrances and exits while the darkness and the humidity clung on just as obstinately.
The debut of this ineffectiveness numbed me. The match, Steffi Graf, the heat, the promised coca-cola…nothing seemed to matter anymore.
Something snapped inside and I can’t recall today if I’d imagined it, aurally hallucinated or had actually heard the sound of that snap. But I’ve never gone back to counting till ten for light to come back. I like loadsheddings now.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Criminal Fiona Apple

I've been a bad bad girl
I've been careless with a delicate man
And it's a sad sad world
When a girl will break a boy
Just because she can
Don't you tell me to deny it
I've done wrong and I want to
Suffer for my sins
I've come to you 'cause I need
Guidance to be true
And I just don't know where I can begin

What I need is a good defense
'Cause I'm feelin' like a criminal
And I need to redeemed
To the one I've sinned against
Because he's all I ever knew of love

Heaven help me for the way I am
Save me from these evil deeds
Before I get them done
I know tomorrow brings the consequence
At hand
But I keep livin' this day like
The next will never come

Oh help me but don't tell me
To deny it
I've got to cleanse myself
Of all these lies till I'm good
Enough for him
I've got a lot to lose and I'm
Bettin' high
So I'm beggin' you before it ends
Just tell me where to begin

What I need is a good defense
'Cause I'm feelin' like a criminal
And I need to redeemed
To the one I've sinned against
Because he's all I ever knew of love

Let me know the way
Before there's hell to pay
Give me room to lay the law and let me go
I've got to make a play
To make my lover stay
So what would an angel say
The devil wants to know

What I need is a good defense
'Cause I'm feelin' like a criminal
And I need to redeemed
To the one I've sinned against
Because he's all I ever knew of love

What I need is a good defense
'Cause I'm feelin' like a criminal
And I need to redeemed
To the one I've sinned against

Because he's all I ever knew of love

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Sparkling you

I lie awake in my little dark corner and watch the silhouette of your body sparkle with every glow of my drag...till you vanish again