Cathay Pacific gave me a gift over the Christmas holidays - a 17-hour stopover in Hong Kong. That's right, 17 long hours!! I landed in Hong Kong at 5:40 in the morning and my flight home to Bangalore was scheduled at 10:40 in the night. God forbid that it be late!! I had researched Hong Kong prior to the flight, and this being my first visit to Hong Kong, I determined that it was best to stick to the tourist spots. I usually prefer to travel alone to new places, but I made two friends(Priya and Deepu) on the LAX-HKG leg who wanted to tour around Hong Kong too. Deepu was ready to depend on my internet-fueled-knowledge of Hong Kong, but Priya wouldn't hear of it, so off we went to book a transit tour. We signed up for a three hour tour with Vigor tours - they pick you up from the arrival area of the airport and return you to departures. The tour costs about 200 Hong Kong dollars(a very affordable 28 USD). I was initially a little apprehensive about the language barrier, but I needn't have worried – Hong Kong citizens speak passable English, albeit spiced liberally with Cantonese. The key to understanding Hong Kong English is recognizing the fact that they leave out the last sounds of each word when they speak. For example, the tongue twister “Betty bought some butter, but the butter was bitter butter, so she bought some better butter to make the bitter butter into better butter” will be “Bett bo sa butt, ba the butt wa bitt butt, so sh bo sa bett butt to may the bitt butt int bett butt”. Feel free to sneeze liberally through the sentence. Speaking of free – you also have to replace the “th” sound with the “f“ sound. When I asked the receptionist at the counter how long the tour was, and when I should report to the pick-up point, she said “You go be hee-ya a nigh-fert. The tri ee free howa lon”; read: “You gotta be here at nine thirty. The trip is three hours long”. Simple, you say? Well, these tips sure make it easy to understand Hong Kong English, but I still haven't figured out the keys to speaking Hong Kong English. For example, when I went into Starbucks and said “Wah trip sho espress anh free froo bah plee, tay aw”(for “One triple shot espresso and three fruit bars please, take away”), the girl behing the counter gave me a strange look. I quickly saved the situation by shifting into survival aka hand-actions-assisted-lip-sync mode.


I had some more hours to kill before the trip was due to start, so I just roamed about the vast expanse of the arrivals lounge. The airport is very clean and mess-free. Full points there. There are very few power outlets(for laptops) and internet connectivity is slower than the dial-up connection I used years back. This was true even sitting right under a hotspot. That was very disappointing. Precisely at 9:30, the tour guide appeared and took charge of the 25-or-so of us going on the trip that day. Deepu was troubled by some problems of the ahem, digestive kind, so the task of chaperoning Priya fell to me. Now I was real happy that we had booked the tour – I do not want a hysterical girl to pacify in case we got lost, ran out of cash, hungry, thirsty and beyond flight time. The guide, Willie, was a very old guy who used a baggage trolley as a walker to get around. He was very affable though, and very knowledgeble about hong Kong. The tour company had arranged a large air-conditioned bus to take us around Hong Kong. What struck me immediately was how clean the roads looked and the totally clean air. We were first taken over the Tsing Ma bridge. The bridge is a marvel of modern engineering. There are two tiers to the bridge – the upper tier has two trafficways, one to carry traffic in each direction. The lower tier has trafficways under the ones on the upper tier – these lower tiers are covered. The lower tier trafficways are used by maintenance and emergency vehicles normally, and by general traffic in case of adverse weather conditions. The lower deck also has tracks in the middle, allowing the metro rail traffic to use the bridge. A true marvel, indeed. We were then taken to a viewing platform, from where we were able to view the entire bridge from end-to-end. I obliged many tourists who wanted to have their photos clicked against the backdrop of the Hong Kong skyline.


Next, we were taken to the offensive-smelling Tshim Sha Tsui promenade, which houses the Avenue of Stars(the Chinese equivalent of the Hollywood Walk of Fame). Hand prints of countless unknown (to me!!) Chinese actors and actresses paved the walkway. The only ones I recognized were those of Bruce Lee, Jet Li and Jackie Chan. Again, I obliged tourists who had their hands stuck into the hand prints of stars, looking up at the camera and squinting against the afternoon sun, all the while trying to smile. Priya bought a momento for Hong Kong $10, choosing to pay the same amount in USD. By the time she realized her mistake, I was shaking with laughter and the momento seller was on his way to the nearest money exchanger.


Next trip was on the (very) famous Star ferry. We took a short five-minute ride across to the Central island of Hong Kong. This place is much like Bangalore, with expensive cars jostling for space with public transport vehicles on narrow, congested and noisy roads. We took the bus to a famous temple in Hong Kong, the Man-Mo temple. The temple is nestled amongst high-rise residential complexes. There is a drum inside the temple which you sound on entry, to alert the Gods that you have arrived. There are two figurines inside – the figurine of Man Tai, if touched, bestows blessings of learning and knowledge upon you, while the figurine of Mo Tai bestows success in profession. I touched both, for good measure(now blessings too – Made in China? He he). Large spiral incence sticks burn slowly inside the temple giving it a vibrant look and asthma-inducing air. I saw many tourists(children, mostly) running out, sputtering and coughing. I too lit some incence sticks and came out. On exiting the temple too, you sound the drum, to thank the Gods for their patient listening, and to tell them that you are now leaving.


Next we went to a street where antiques were on display. Except for Chinese boards, this road looked like a local Bangalore street. I looked at everything, but bought nothing. Priya, being suddenly interested in some emerald chains, tried haggling with some hawkers. When I realized she was getting nowhere, I told her to use the calculator technique(you type the amount on the calculator. Vendor diagrees – presses AC and enters new amount. You disagree – press AC and enter new amount, and so on until the haggling stops.). The only problem was, we did not have a calculator, so out came Priya's international-roaming-enabled cell phone. After fifteen minutes(during which she tried to teach the hawker to use the calculator on her cell phone(in pantomines, no less!!) and he in turn, calling up her relatives in Madras on international roaming rates – imagine vendor pressing the call button three times and Priya jumping up and down screaming “No, No!!”. I had long given up and was laughing like a maniac.), we gave up. After half an hour of aimless wandering, we returned to the bus, which took us to the central metro station for the ride back to the airport. The station is located in the basement area of a large mall. Here, Willie handed us tickets for the metro ride to the airport, and we tipped him generously. I was firm that I wanted to sample local Chinese food and not just imported fast food, so off we went to find places that sold authentic Chinese dumplings. Here we learnt the harsh truth that it is almost impossible for tourists to find a decent place to have lunch between 12 and 2 in the afternoon. After a quick tour of the restaurants, we finally decided to eat at McDonalds. A greasy burger, fries and large coke later, we waddled to the basement, where we swiped cards and waited for the train to arrive. As the large counter counted down to zero, the train doors opened and a soothing Chinese voice informed us that we were 23 minuted away from the airport. In exactly 23 minutes, we had arrived back at the airport.


It was just 2 in the afternoon. Almost 9 hours to go. I very briefly considered going on the tour again, but Priya's glare nipped that dream in the bud. That's when I remembered with a shock – I had planned to shop for a camera in Hong Kong for a friend, and I had forgotten it completely. In panic, we looked around and fortunately found a shop selling cams. I did manage to buy one with a higher resolution and lower cost than was available in the US, and it came with the standard international Sony warranties too!! We then submitted to the hassle of immigration and security check. Though the queues were long and winded, the cheery staff more than made up for it. Once inside, we went searching for Deepu, but he was nowhere to be found. Finally, we spotted a free couch and decided to camp out there. I was carrying a book and decided to read it, and guard the baggages while Priya slept. I woke her up when I was through with the book. I went to sleep while she went around looking for a free internet terminal(Good luck finding one!!) and hot coffee. I woke up two hours later with another two hours to go for the flight. Decided to take care of business, converting all our Hong Kong dollars to USD. Then it was freshen-up and tea time, when we heard the announcement for the Bangalore flight.


Yay!! Thank fo yaw hospitali Ho Kon, anh ho too bee bah soo!!

A post on new year's day was planned much in advance, positioned as an excellent occassion to rejuvenate sagging blogging spirits. What was not planned was the sombre note on which that post was to be penned. What sombre note, you ask? Read on to know.

The new decade started as expected, at 00:00 hours. Was inundated with phone calls from friends and family and chat messages from acquaintances long forgotten(By the way, what better occassion than the new year, to reconnect!!). Fifteen minutes passed by in a flash, before the chats slowed down to a trickle and my poor phone was able to catch it's breath before ringing once again. I ended up making my customary calls and wishes long after people had gone to sleep in exhaustion. The highlight new year's wish was from a dear friend who was watching the Sydney fireworks show(on TV, nonetheless!) and that too, with a married man(:P).

I wanted to go to sleep but was unable to, pain from a tooth extraction(more on that soon) ravaging exactly one half of my head. Two painkillers later, I managed to drift off to an uneasy sleep, only to wake up two hours later at the unearthly hour of 4:00 AM. While the whole city lay in an exhausted stupor, I drove alone to the airport for an early morning flight to Mumbai. Long queues, harried gate agents, tired flight attendants and countless delays later, I landed in Mumbai at 7:00 AM. I was in Mumbai to meet a dear friend(A) and ex-colleague back from my Infosys days.

Another friend(B) rushed me through hurried Hi's and bye's of my numerous friends in Mumbai. We then settled down at B's apartment with a large salmon pizza and bottomless container of Pepsi, awaiting A's arrival to Mumbai. Seconds morphed into minutes, and minutes into hours.

You're right.

A didn't turn up.

Few things have hurt me more.

New year's day passed by in a blur.

Hope your new year's day was so totally unlike mine.

Happy new year!!

Well, depends on how you look at it, right? I am the eternal optimist(even in my moments of pessimism), but I'm unable to think of myself as 25 years young. I'm feeling ancient. It's been a quarter of a century since I landed on earth. For the first time in my life, I tried to postpone away my birthday. I felt no mirth and joy of being another year older. What a contrast to the time I was counting down hours and minutes to my 18th birthday.

Feeling ancient is not surprising, considering my situation. For starters, I am 2 years older than all my classmates. I feel like a wizened old cow in a stable full of young stallions. If you're going to tell me it's all in my mind, spare me the words. I've seen it in the attitude of people around me. People are just waiting for a reason to refer to my age again and again. To put it in perspective - My poor phone back in India used to splinter into a hundred pieces each time it fell down from it's perch between my ear and helmet, or from my pocket onto the road beneath a kerosene-fume-spewing autorickshaw or accidentally dropped into the lift shaft in office; each time it used to switch back on faithfully once I'd put it back on and I used to seize the opportunity to say "Nokia, man. Very sturdy". Likewise, each time I blurt out a wrong answer in class or a stupid idea, I can hear rude whispers behind me to the effect of "Oldie ya.. 1984 model" or "Old syllabus dude.. What did you expect the oldie to say??" :( I mean, :(. And I was just 24 when all this happened. And now I'm a year older.

Try as I did to postpone the inevitable, but finally did arrive my 25th birthday. Not once, but twice(one was my date of birth, and the other was according to my Hindu star). Disembodied voices on the phone boomed out congratulations and wishes on my silver-jubilee birthday. Friends on orkut and FaceBook pounded me with wishes on my birthday. Birthday emails from friends, ex-friends and ex-best-friends, ex-colleagues, etc. sure made my email inbox a cheery place. Ganeshaspeaks.com, tarotastrology.com and cyberastro.com were not to be left too far behind in wishing me and offering me their products and services for a hefty discount(only because it was my birthday, mind you!!). One of the sites gave me two gifts(We're sorry, but you have Mangal Dosha in your horoscope and Congratulations, you do not have Shani Dosha in your horoscope!! Bah. What is there to be sorry about telling me I have Mangal Dosha? I am told that Aishwarya Rai and Abhishek Bachchan too have Mangal Dosha. Don't you see, morons, that Mangal Dosha afflicts only the rich and the famous?)

Thankfully, folks at home did not rub it in too deep. My star-birthday(yeah, I'm a star!!) was celebrated with a sumptuous feast prepared by mom, delicious and creamy pink payasam by sis and crunchy bajjis by dad. A yummy choca-mocha-crunch cake kicked off my birth anniversary, followed by a sumptous feast, topped off with delicious dabeli paav from sis. Wow. In between, however, my birthday was celebrated in spectacular fashion over the interceding weekend(with rich Italian food on the first day, a boat cruise and cycle-tour the next day, punctuated with a grand pizza and topped off by stir-fresh Mongolian spead. Ooooh. Awesome. The only negative aspect was senior family members pronouncing me of marriageable age(What a load of you know what!!). That raises the next sore point.

I used to think that only girls endured impetuses towards marriage(forgive the gender profiling, but this is what I had heard and seen happening). Oh how sorely mistaken I was. A couple of weeks back, there was suddenly a spate of people asking me when I was planning to get married, when I was planning to settle down, etc. Well all those questions, encouragements and motivations just gained momentum in the light of my 25th birthday. Many people who had studied with me(sat on the same bench, read from the same book, ate from the same tiffin carrier, got runny noses from each other, got belted by the same teachers, that sort of thing) suddenly had a feeling that they were young and barely 18 while I had somehow, mysteriously overtaken them and gotten to be an old and senile 25. Just because their 25th birthday happens next month. Well, bad luck folks, I have absolutely no intention of succumbing to any such settling down in my foreseeable future(never, if I have my way). I'm too fond of a life where I get to be myself, where I'm responsible for no other, where I'm responsible to no other.

I had seriously considered giving myself a special gift for my birthday(being the gadget freak that I am), but somehow I lost the drive to actually go and indulge myself. I have sunken into this feeling where I am content at just looking at the devices online. Hope I will get over this abnormality pretty soon. Well, on that note, I have stepped into the 26th year of my illustrious existence on this planet. May I have many more birthdays, complete with cakes and feasts and bajjis and dabeli pavs, may I have all of these and much more friends to remind me of my birthday every year and may this blog last to see more of my birthdays. Amen.

There were a couple of posts brewing about my new shiny black iPod touch, violin, etc. but they will have to remain in the pipeline just yet. For, friendship day is here. Friendship day was never in the grand scheme of things. By never, I mean never. Therefore, justified that I did not even keep track of the comings and goings of Friendship day. But the triennial inundation of my gmail inbox has just taken place via orkut and facebook(not that I'm complaining. Far from it!!), and this time around, I'm compelled to write a post on it. In spite of my favourite hobby(procrastination), this post has to be started, completed and posted today itself, or else it has to wait for another year, I guess. So iPod and violin, we'll get to you e-v-e-n-t-u-a-l-l-y. Fret not.

Friendship day was a rage during school days. We planned for it weeks ahead. Filched money for cards and friendship bands(Kids nowadays are so lucky. Electronic cards and electronic friendship bands). I don't know about you, but I managed to make more enemies than friends each year on friendship day. Most of the reasons for this phenomenon were beyond my control. Once it was because I had totally forgotten the day(I'm very very bad with remembering occasions) and sauntered into school the day after, oblivious to the long glares flashing at me from all sides. Yes, I had forgotten to make the customary midnight calls(I hate the guy(or gal) who made up this stupid tradition of wishing people at midnight. When you could be snug and sleeping.). God knows how many friends-lists and best-friends-lists my name got struck of that time. I had to identify all offended parties(You know. Whoever scowled when they saw me) and pacify them. The effort took me most of the year until the next friendship day was here to catch me unawares.

The other reason was totally beyond my control. I did remember friendship day in advance and even got some friendship bands with money filched from Mom's secret stash. The nut who ran the fancy store was unable to give me friendship bands all in the same color, so I got bands in two different colors. Yeah you guessed it. People thought they were color-coded and I earned myself some fresh enemies. Phew. So much for all my efforts. Thankfully, soon after, all the guys grew up out of that phase(of celebrating Friendship Day, Left-handers' Day, Right-handers' day, etc). Of course, not many of the girls grew out of that phase. Tempers still fray over missed friendship day greetings, missed womens' day greetings, etc. Some smart guy came up with an idea to circumvent the irritated-female problem. Every "day" celebration was converted into a week-long celebration. You know, friendship week, womens' week, fools' week. Phew. Gave us some breathing time.

Personally, this concept of having a separate day to celebrate every single concept of life has never appealed to me. I find the whole idea so frivolous. The way I see it, I don't need a whole day to come by, just to appreciate the people in my life. I don't need a day to remind me of how drab the world would have been without left handers. I don't need a day to remind me of teachers who treated me as their favourite punching bag and smashed my knuckles to pulp. I don't need a day to remind me how valuable a role my cell-phone or laptop plays in my life. I think of, appreciate and thank God for all that every single day of my life.

But still, I know you're all yearning to hear it, so here goes !! (drums rolling)HAPPY FRIENDSHIP DAY!!

PS: Commenters earn an extra friendship band. Offer valid for a week only!!(Last-ditch attempt to get more silent readers to comment, tee hee :D)

It was late at night on a sultry Friday. Monsoon clouds hung low in the sky. The sky was a menacing hue of red. Lightning flashed off to the east, answered by low rumbles of thunder. The storm was still some distance away, but would be here soon. The air was still, but deliciously cool. Silence hung like a blanket, broken only by the crunch of the gravel under their shoes. Wait a minute. Did I say 'their'? I did. They are a group of young software trainees, currently undergoing training at one of the country's most-admired software firms. They were a motley group of Indians, Chinese, Americans, social drinkers, antisocial drinkers and teetotallers. The Indians were playing the perfect host to their Chinese and American friends. On weekdays, the preferential treatment meted out to the 'foreigners' (not required to adhere to dress code, swipe-in timings not enforced) repulsed the Indians, but on weekends, international-Visa-credit-card-filled wallets spoke and made amends for the foreigners. Of course, the Indians were only too happy to show the foreigners around town.


So on this sinister Friday night, what were they doing in the open air? Returning to the campus, their jobs and their beds after a night on the town, that's what. Stomachs were full of parathas and chicken and assorted vegetables swimming in a rich buttery gravy. Some of the stomachs were swollen silly with beverages of the alcoholic variety. Some pairs of lips clenched glowing cancer sticks. One thing, however, commonly denominated the group. Everybody clenched one or two bottles of the afore-mentioned beverages, to stock the dwindling reserve in Nitin's room. The housecleaning-boy had begun to demand his share of the beverages to keep his mouth shut. Complex calculations by Vinodh had revealed that 12 teetotallers were to be 'shown around town' every weekend if the reserve had to be maintained at respectable levels.


So that was how Dave, Chris, Zhang and Mahesh had found themselves returning to campus from town, aka, 'Akal-bhai's Paratha joint'. As if he doesn't sell anything other than parathas. These four had sat around, alternatively terrified, petrified and wonder-struck at the sight of theregulars guzzling a gazzillion litres of 'lassi'. And wondering what was so tipsy about a few litres of buttermilk. And absolutely missing the point in storing up lassi for the weekdays. The group trudged along in silence – not that most of them were in no shape to open their mouths. They all sighed a deep sigh of relief as they shinned up the last hill and the night-time lights of the campus swam into view. The sigh quickly turned into an impromptu shout as a sudden squall poured down. They all ran as quickly as they could, hoping to hoodwink the guard on duty under the cover of rain, but it was not to be. The rain-gods or whoever sat up there suddenly decided to display the sky in all it's celestial splendor. Dry celestial splendor.


So plan B it had to be.


Let's clamber up the wall”, whispered Suharto, opening his mouth for the first time since leaving the 'paratha joint'.

This is on the east side of the campus and our rooms are atleast a mile's trek away. Have you lost your freaking mind??!”, whispered back Santhu, fiercely.

Have you forgotten the electrified fence on the other side of the campus”, countered Suharto.

Headlights approaching in the distance prompted no further discussion and immediate implementation of Suharto's plan.

The boys landed safely on the manicured lawns on the other side and commenced walking to their rooms, 'lassi' bottles clanking and jackets dripping.


They had almost made it back to their lairs, when they were surprised by a voice behind them.

Hold it right there, boys”.

Hurried sounds were heard, and then an intense spotlight switched on, bathing the group in light and blinding them to whoever they were facing.

Don't you think it is a tad too late to be wandering about campus on a Friday evening?”

Sir, we were preparing for our comprehensive exams, Sir, and that's why we are walking back late, Sir”. Three 'Sir's”. Overabundance of respect. This had to be Braj. So he'd found his tongue ultimately.

Is that so. Most commendable. By the way, what are all of you carrying?”

This is lassi, Sir. We had got them bottled when we went out earlier this evening”, spoke up Mahesh, disastrously.

All along until now, it was just the Indians trying to save the show. The international trainees(don't get me wrong. Some of them were very drunk indeed.) stood around like deer trapped in the headlights of an approaching train. The last vestiges of manouverability were now lost for ever.

May I have a taste of your lassi?” asked the interlocutor.

Sir.. but Sir.. we are hungry..”.


Monday morning finds the boys sitting in the interlocutor's ante-office, waiting to know their fate. Though resigned to it, they were still eager to know what it was. The foreigners were let off with a warning on the spot. Only the Indians were directed to appear for the hearing on Monday. There was no doubt about their fate. The company rules clearly warned against posessing or consuming liquor on campus. There were equally strict guidelines on why staying out of campus beyond 9 pm, without permission, was not acceptable. The consequences too, were spelt out lucidly. Their intelocutor, who later turned out to be the HR head of the training center, was an ex-armyman, known well for his draconian enforcement of rules. Yes, there was no doubt on what their fates would be.


The administrative assistant appeared to usher them into the presence of the man himself. With pounding hearts, flushing ears and butterflies in their stomachs, they shuffled into the room. On the table sat the bottles of 'lassi', seeking to remind whoever had forgotten minor details. A stern face peered out from in between the bottles. The stare remined fixed on the boys for a few minutes. Confusion turned to embarrassment to guilt to shame to fear. One by one, the boys began to sob. The stare remained steadfast. Finally, he got up from his seat and came around to the shivering boys. Mahesh raised his tear-stained face as he felt a hand on his shoulder. The man appeared even more dragon-like, up close. Then, surprisingly, the features softened.


It is extremely bad manners to partake liquor without offering it to a guest.”


But Sir... bu... but... liquor???????????????????????????”

We had been meaning to go out somewhere for quite some time now, what with the weekdays being all drab and monotonous. Sis suggested that we go visit the San Diego county fair by the ocean. Now, I have visited my share of fairs in India. We were regular visitors to "Great India Annual Consumer Fair", "Megha India Consumer Exhibition" and "Punjab-Haryana Handloom Fair" in our childhood. Most of these visits were forced upon sis and me due to our lack of assertiveness and we sort of had to go along with whatever Mom and Dad decided(works the other way round nowadays). In those days, Mom used to gleefully make the choices, and we three used to go along as unsuspecting gudgeons.

The "Great India Annual Consumer Fair" would usually arrive every six months in the exhibition grounds near the railway station in Bangalore. Whole Rajasthani families would stand around trying to woo customers to buy things like scented safety pins, two-foot-long pencils and the like. We had no intention of buying anything, but nevertheless went into every stall for Mom to check out every item. Dinner used to be papads the size of a small helipad and "Mewad strawberry icecreams". Oh no, disasters by any yardstick.

Megha India Consumer Exhibitions notched all-time highs on my favourites chart. Since it was an exhibition, they used to display many household 'innovations'. Inventions like automatic-rangoli-makers, talking water bottles etcetra etcetra filled the stalls. Sis and me stood around giggling, watching Mom listening with rapt concentration to a guy trying to sell her some 'headache relieving chappals', 'better memory bracelets for your children', so on and so forth. The high point was the rides - they had rides featuring rusty and sandblasted helicopters and trains. Today, merely looking at them would give me a septic and gangrenous wound - I wonder how Dad even let me get on to them.

The Punjab-Haryana Handloom fairs used to be Mom's favorites until she purchased some decorative cotton bedspreads with 'one-year guarantee, Madam!!'. One spin through the dryer and the bedspreads went back to being just bales of cotton. We haven't visited that particular fair since then. Sis and me, we hardly missed that fair since all we kids used to purchase from there were handkerchiefs. But believe me, the boards of that exhibition make me grin even to this day.

I am, by birth, averse to looking at stalls filled with bedspreads and animal-oils-with-therapeutic-values, hence I was not too keen to visit the San Diego fair, but what a loss it would have been, had I stuck on to pre-conceived notions about fairs! Stalls selling exotic food dotted the landscape. There were foods like deep-fried bread pudding, deep-fried ice cream, deep-fried cakes and Australian battered potatoes that I was seeing(and tasting) for the first time. The high-point of the show was the hypnosis show by Mark Yuzuik. Laughed and laughed for one full hour. Wonderful show that was. I had forgotten to take my jacket from home(after all, who wears a jacket in summer, right!!), but, in a bursts of bravado, boasted that I was used to much colder weather routinely. I spent half the evening shivering silently in my flimsy t-shirt. I thoroughly enjoyed the fair, except for that I could not go bungee jumping, tattoo my arm or get my ear pierced(all thwarted by familial pressures). Sigh. Next time, I should go alone.

That was a perfect beginning to the weekend, and I hope to do more 'posty' stuff the rest of the weekend. Stay tuned.

The unspeakable has happened. This has happened never before, atleast to me. Since it was totally unexpected, I had no idea how to react. I was in the throes of this serious medical condition, when this happened. Fortunately, it seems to be a respite from the anathema.

Yes, gentle readers, I have been tagged, by none other than Sleeping Devil.

I have read some blogs where the authors decline to tag up a tag. I know very well the futility of such an exercise when confronted by such a formidable adversary as the Sleeping Devil herself, therefore I will not act like a cow being led to slaughter, rather responding to the tag in a dignified manner.

For those of you who did not visit the tag link above(I know you didn't), this is what the tag is all about:

  1. Link to your original tagger(s) and list these rules in your post.

  2. Share seven facts (or more) about yourself in the post.

  3. Tag seven people at the end of your post by leaving their names and the links to their blogs.

  4. Let them know they've been tagged.

Given that I talk talk and talk only about myself in my posts, such a tag seems rather meaningless, but I will try to let you on some hitherto unknown facts about me. Here goes:

  1. I am an engineer by education, but a journalist/novelist/columnist by ambition. Someday this ambition too shall come true.

  2. I harbor severe atheistic leanings. However, lacking the courage to reject God outright, I cannot proclaim myself an atheist without fear of risking God's wrath.

  3. I am extremely straightforward and am a stickler for rules and procedures. Very often, this attitude backfires on me, yet I act again, refusing to give up. In most situations, I try to tell the truth, only resorting to lies under duress.

  4. I love to drive. Friends have found my passion for driving undiminished even after 8 continuous hours at the wheel of a non-cooperative vehicle, in unforgiving conditions.

  5. I cook very well, being trained from a very young age by mom and sis. I know enough to cook atleast three four-course meals without repeating a dish.

  6. I am a voracious reader. I read any author, any genre. At those rare times in my life when I am far away from a library, I even read user manuals of household appliances. No kidding, this one.

  7. I love rain more than anything else. Nothing like a deluge to get my spirits high. Thunder and lightning mark most of my creative outbursts.

There. I have successfully responded to the tag. I am required to tag seven others, but I know nobody else who reads this blog AND has a blog of their own. If, however, you fall into this category, please consider yourself tagged, and do the needful.

P.S: Nowadays, I have been working on something quite outside my path-familiare, therefore please forgive the slow pace on the blog. I promise you I will have something to show for at the end of it.

I've been looking for newer and more intense yoga sessions to try out. Sis has been telling me about the Bikram Yoga sessions that she goes to, and as with everything else that she tries, I wanted to try this one too. Bikram Yoga is a specific sequence of 26 postures and 2 breathing exercises. Each posture is held for a long time, typically half a minute or a full minute. The entire sequence takes about 90 minutes, and is practiced in a studio heated to about 40 degree Celsius and 95% humidity.

This was the first time I tried Bikram Yoga, and though I was very enthusiastic about it last night, I began to have slight misgivings in the car. After all, 7am is core sleep time for me, and here I was, dressed up and speeding towards a superheated(feels like!) studio to pull and stretch. Phew.

It was really amazing to see how many people were willing to torture their bodies for fitness. Most were dressed in just speedos or shorts. In comparison, I was dressed like a bridegroom. Track pants and t-shirt and all. Well, they knew what to expect and I didn't. We proceeded to sign up for the session. I got a wholesome student discount for 10 sessions(after the lady at the reception had incorrectly identified me as Sis's husband. As is my wont everywhere). The receptionist/instructor seemed a tad too enthusiastic for someone who woke up at 6 am on a Sunday. You know the type:

Situation: Dust-filled room with all possible allergens in the air.
You: Ahhhhhchooo!!
She: OMG!! you have a fantastic sense of humor!! ROTFL!! The perfect person to have around on a weekend morning!!
You: What the heck!!(to yourself).

Entered the heated yoga studio. All eyes were focused on the overdressed newbie. I could see them all in the mirror, grinning at me. I just pretended to ignore them all(what more could I do!!). A few minutes later, the instructor entered the room. All her sense of humor was gone, I noticed. She started us out on the pranayams. Told us to do it with a smile on the face. Instantly, there was a wide smile on my face(Cakewalk, I was thinking). The regulars were smirking(Newbie, they were all thinking).

Then the instructor started us on the stretches.The stretches were nothing new - I had done them all before. But at a rate of a few thousand per second. I really started feeling the stretches and bends when they were held for a long time. Muscles that were dormant for the past decade or so started waking up, screaming in agony. I broke out into a flushing sweat. I broke each posture atleast a couple of times, wiping the sweat off my face(useless, for it came right back). By the first interval, I was already in curse mode, cursing Sis for telling me about this routine, cursing the sadistic instructor, cursing the Adonises who were grinning at me in the mirror. And of course, me, for waking up so early on Sunday to sweat and torture my poor body.

Yoga is supposed to increase energy levels and stamina. Soon into the second set, there was a soft thud. My hands had slipped and I had fallen face-first onto the mat. And I had no energy left in me to even sit up. My heart was threatening to stop if I did so much as inhale another breath. While I was contemplating this terrible deadlock, I heard the faraway voice of the instructor asking Sis whether her bro was alright. Sis nodded through giggles and her own gasps for breath while I stared morosely at the instructor. She told me to keep my head above the heart, but I was too muddled up to think. Ultimately I settled for a "heart inside ribcage" position. I am, nevertheless, proud to report that I missed only about 2 minutes of the 90-minute session.

The floor postures were relatively easier, but still taxed the elasticity limits of tendons and other things that made their presence known only recently. I suspected that the clock in the studio moved slowly, but my watch concurred with the wall clock. Sigh. I was one happy soul when the instructor finally left us in shavasana(an apt name for the posture. I was already a corpse. A sweating corpse). A few minutes later, I picked myself up to follow Sis out of the door. Every single joint was quivering.

Back home, Sis advised me to "listen" to my body. I am - my body is wailing. But one thing is for sure - I'm going back for more. I just love challenges, and I'm sure my body will rise up to the challenge in no time. If you're enthusiastic about Yoga, do try this out. Meanwhile, I'll go and lick my Yoga injuries.

Replies to comments may be a little delayed. Even my fingertips are sore.

The last three posts didn't sound like me, right? Right. I wasn't all that idle this past week.

Divya asked me to write an entry for the Express Yourself Contest on Sulekha. Honestly, I didn't want to, but decided to write anyway, just to humor Divya ;). But things just got so interesting and addictive, that I wrote not just one, but three entries. I have cross-posted those entries below(There. Now you can't accuse me of self-plagiarism!!).

Caveat: The threads of these entries are true, but the narrative is highly "masala-cized". Couldn't help it.

There are so many talented writers out there, and honestly, I felt that some of the entries surpassed mine in quality in content. Nevertheless, I am humbled by the judge's decision to award a runners-up trophy to Dangerous Embarrassment. Heart-felt congratulations to all the winners and participants. The winners and trophies can be found here. Divya, not at all surprisingly, won in the poetry category with this superb entry.

So much so for blowing my own trumpet :D. As Divya said, many more people who write here at blogger should write at sulekha and take EYCs by storm. Yes, Sleeping Devil, you. Please? :)

Did you notice the abnormally huge number of links in this post? I just did!!

I was very shy and quiet as a child. Like any other child, I too used to get into violent fights and brawls, but only with those kids who were very close to me. The outside world would see me as a docile young kitten with a mild temperament and impeccable manners. So much so that when Mom told others of the thrashings sis was subjected to at my hands, they thought Mom was a habitual liar(Mom dropped the complaining habit soon after). No, I wasn't doing it unconsciously. I quite often went out of the way to be polite and nice to people. This habit of mine put me into a discomfiting situation one fine day. I should have seen it coming.

Every summer, we used to make a trip to our native place in Kerala. It used to be a whirlwind tour, visiting our aunts, uncles and cousins, as well as those of our parents. Since we were the only members of the family outside Kerala at that time, at each home, we were given receptions befitting royal visits. Mango and jackfruit delicacies at every home(Mom used to carry a strip of Digene in her purse permanently. We used to pop one into our mouths each time we came out of one house, before going into the next one).

This happened when I was ten or eleven years old. We had gone to visit my grand-aunt(Mother's aunt). She was known throughout the extended family to be an excellent cook(Relatives visiting her home used to time their visits to coincide with lunch or dinner. She was that famous). So off we went to visit her, empty stomachs and all. As expected, there was a delicious spicy fragrance greeting us at the gate. We eagerly went in and greeted grand-aunt, and after the customary greeting, she invited us to sample a seasonal delicacy that she had made for us. This was where it all started.

Mom and sis accepted immediately, whereas, for some strange reason, I decided to play the decent guy. In a very formal and polite vein, I declined(the plan being that she would insist, and then I would accept. And then polish off whatever was placed in front of me). I had not accounted for the informal and unrefined(albeit loving) attitude of these people who lived in the beautiful countryside, far away from the polished etiquette of city life.


She said, “Looks like our little boy is not hungry. It's ok, you both eat. Come on”.


And I sat there watching my mom and sis gorge on the delicacies, while I had to be content with the smells and sights of the delicacy being devoured. Aunt couldn't get why sis was laughing her head off. Years later, to this day, the story is recounted at every family function, embarrassing me to no end. But one thing is for sure – I have learnt my lesson!!

Me..

Aspiring computer scientist. Aspiring writer. Aspiring Nat Geo traveler. Aspiring musician. Aspiring pilot. Aspiring chef. Yes, I'm constantly growing up.

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