Sunday, November 24, 2013

Dusk



It is dusk and it was dusk when I fell in love with you.

It is dusk and many have gone by but there don’t seem to be many left.

Maybe in another lifetime, I shall lie down at dusk next to you, kiss you beneath the pale sky and make love to you when the moon is high.

But that would be another lifetime.

But it is dusk and I remember falling in love with you at dusk. 












Thursday, June 13, 2013

Your Name


It was just another day at work, mundane, bland and as usual I was multitasking – switching my view from the software that I work on to the many pages on chrome ranging from Gmail to Facebook – whilst keeping my mind off a chatathon which had commenced in the neighbouring cubicle.

That’s when I saw your name on the Gmail chat list in green – available – and that’s how my very perfectly mundane day ceased to end.

For one whole minute I couldn’t take my eyes off your name. You were online and your chat status signalled that you were available. How I wish you WERE available.
Suddenly the world around me seemed to dissolve into a deep abyss. I was oblivious to the passersby or the chatter. I could neither shift to the software I was working on nor to another tab on the browser. I fell into a pensieve, revisiting memories that I had kept hidden for some time now. 

I remember getting excited whenever your name appeared on the chat list ensuring endless conversations ending with a smile on my face. In that little box on the corner of the screen, I shared my secrets, my joy, my pain and my world with you. That little box was where we met, day after day, strengthening our bond, closing in the distance that lay between the two of us. It was in that little box that I fell in love with you.

One day, you turned from green to grey. Perhaps you need some time away from being green was what I thought. Little did I know that you would choose to remain that way forever. The little box – my escapade, my Pandora – only popped up when I had a lament against you or when I lashed at you out of feminine frustration but it never turned green.

I came out of the pensieve and found myself still staring at your name. The chatter around me hadn’t ceased and I have no clue if some passerby had caught me staring at the screen. I couldn’t care less.

I stretched my hand longingly towards your name to feel it half hoping that I could feel your finger touching mine. Hopeless me but I waited. Thought you would open the box for old time’s sake. I waited, but it only took a few seconds to uncross my fingers.


You were gone. Your name went from green to grey. 

Sunday, May 19, 2013

SHE


I saw her looking at me.

She was standing right in front of me, about a foot away or two, looking at me despite the numerous objects that could distract her attention I secretly wished that she looked away. I loath being scrutinized by her looks.

Her looks. Piercing through my body deep into my soul. Scrutinizing every bit of my existence.

She tried well to hide but my growing familiarity with her looks gave away the questions that she intended to ask me. She was waiting for my nod.

I nodded.

“Who are you?”
A wanderer – not lost yet not found either

“What do you want?”
Space – Physical, virtual, ethical, spiritual but spotless

“Are you screaming?”
If you could only hear me from within

“Your path of reclamation?”
The one which I alone can find and I alone must tread on

“Sooner or later?”
Sooner it must be for I have wandered a lot

“I hope you do”

Her looks softened. I knew she had no more questions. Yet I knew she would come back with more if I took to wandering again. She looked away. I wish she had looked at me for some more time but I knew and she knew that a reflection on the mirror lasts only till the individual looks at the mirror.





Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Wedding


So what are you wearing for the wedding?" - Clothes of course auntie (with a smile to camouflage my irritation)

Take all your sarees and go to 'Mata Bangles'. He knows better to accessorize women for weddings." - Thanks a lot auntie, will do (can I now have my lunch in peace)

So have you packed all your clothes and other stuff you need for the wedding?" - Errr....ummm... No we still have a week 

You have lost weight" - yes, I gym everyday

You have put on weight" - no, actually I have lost some

So it's you next" - Well hehehehe (I've heard that one before)

Why aren't you wearing a saree" - Wanted to freed myself of a catch 22 situation 

You see there is a guy in america who wants a girl" - (I thought there were many guys in america) No auntie not interested in guys who live in america

You see this guy in america does not want a girl who wants to live in america after the wedding" - (who's this Jack Sparrow I say?) Well let him come down to India and settle here auntie. I shall think about him after he gets his first pay cheque here.

Ninna line clear" (your line is clear now) - Well hehhehehe (when wasn't it clear by the way)

Give or take a question and two that came my way, I can finally declare my brother married. Please note
that I shall not play host to any other wedding in the near future. It really is tasking to get back to the normal sphere of life after one, and that too in the family.

So don't bug me with 'When's yours?'

Saturday, January 12, 2013

My Room


I had managed to pack my few precious and fragile artifacts and cadeaux amidst the barbaric acts of violence manifested upon my books and clothes by a team of movers and packers when I realised that my room was almost empty. The last of the carton boxes left the room along with the barbarian handling it, leaving me with an empty room. My empty room.  A room that I had occupied for six years. 

A room where I grew.
 
My parents relocated to Malleswaram from Rajajinagar, in Bangalore - just a month before my naissance - with my brother who was seven. The house that the four of us moved into (technically 3 and a half as I was yet to make my grand appearance) was big enough for four people but had only one of each facility like any other old houses built to house a grand family of five perhaps. A veranda, a living room, a bedroom, a bathroom and 'comme les francais', les toilettes (one). 
Brought into that house in full flesh five days after being born, I grew up in a locality that housed a temple at one end of the road and a bar – yes a bar – on the other end. And let me make it clear, I had never felt safer before. The inmates of the bar took to liking my family, called my mother ‘amma’, dad ‘sir’ and the two of us i.e. brother and me, putta and putti (little ones).  Whenever I pass by, I look fondly at that house. I lived there for 22 years in all innocence and happiness and then dad and  mom realised that the once upon a time large house started squeezing around us as the ‘putta’ and ‘putti’ were all grown and required their own turf.

That is how I came to occupy ‘A Room’.

My Room.

The very thought of moving into a new home excited me.  We were taken to a newly vacated home in Malleswaram (don’t become a sinner by asking why didn’t we consider any other area in the city) for a ‘decco’. The house was on the first floor and opened to a huge living room flanked by two rooms onto the left and right respectively. Trust me having lived in a single bedroom and a single bathroom house; I was elated beyond imagination when the room with the attached bath was awarded to me.  We moved in within a week. And thus began my journey in a room that was mine.

And for six whole years, it was mine.

A room where I grew.

A room to which I carried everything that I had ever possessed  and tried squeezing in the innocence that was mine. But again, you can only fit a few things in a room. You have to let go when you have to let go. And in that room, I let go a few things which had clung to me, some on my own and some taken away.

The room was a witness to my first love and first break up. Right from the frenzy of the romantic ardour taking over my senses to the tears that flooded my eyes and rolled down my cheeks whilst the floor supported my body which couldn’t heave itself on its foot thanks to the pain in its heart, the room saw it all.

The room witnessed a bonding between my best friend and me like never before. It is between these four walls that secrets, wishes and desires flew from the lip to the ear. We spoke without having to bother about walls and their ears. This is where I learnt that everybody grows up and that your best friend is bound to make decisions that might not comfort the bond that you share with her but life in its fullest form is different from one to another. We all have to go our own way. Don’t we?

It was my refuge from a world that never came to accept my school of thought. I would lock myself up and stay in till I felt at peace. The room was a perfect hideout in the middle of the night to run back to ‘Harry Potter’ thanks to the gnawing curiosity in my mind the story created. The reason was always’ Mom I need to visit the loo.’ And she knew I wouldn’t use the other one. I never slept in my room though. I can’t sleep alone.
A million other memories are attached to my room.

This is the place that comforted me when I faced bitter truths about life. And this is exactly where I learnt that every relationship goes through a test of time and just a few of them are rebels. The rest wither and die. I learnt that words sometimes lack density and not everything said is true. I learnt here that people who come into your life have no need to stay and some just wander to plunder and leave when confronted. Not everybody is your best friend. And throughout all this the floor of ‘My Room’ always supported me whenever I needed someone to sob to.

I changed jobs, I met new people, I befriended some and abandoned a few (I had to). And in the meanwhile from 23 I had come to call myself a 29 year old, someone to whom peace mattered more than any other possession and space mattered much more than the world itself. I lost myself, gave up looking and then discovered where I was. And when I was on the verge of that great discovery, time had come to pack my bags again.  This time neither had I outgrown the room nor had it shrunk in size overnight but I guess, my chapter in that room was over. I had to move on.

I know not what the other room has in store for me, I may change more rooms after this one but what ‘My Room’ holds, taught me and made into is closer to my heart than perhaps any other that I would live in.

I sat on the cold floor looking at my empty room. It looked exactly the same like the day it did when I first stepped in, when all of a sudden my brother walked in to shake me out of my reverie to ask if nothing was left behind.

I told him that nothing was left. He walked away. But I didn't tell him that something was still left.

Me.