Saturday, December 22, 2012

An open letter to Sonia Gandhi

Dear Ms Gandhi,
I have a very basic question. Why am I so afraid for my safety in a country where the Head of State (in every practical way) is a woman?

Today the Government hid, you hid, while the people who voted for you, people who came with their children, teenagers, people who came to ask you to return the favour, to validate their vote, waited in vain. Bewildered youth were not only turned away, they were treated as terrorists.
I know you’re busy, very busy, also trying to make excuses for the nationwide rage you’re currently on the receiving end of. Let me make this easy.

Let me tell you exactly what happened today in Delhi.
When you look away from wrong-doing for too long, when you refuse to support the helpless, the underdogs, the down-trodden, victims, whatever you want to call it. When you ignore them for too long, you’re giving rise to a rebellion. When you shirk away from enforcing law, you’re giving way to lawlessness of a different sort.

What do you think gave rise to the Gulabi Gang in UP? Did this whole group of strong women, who take their rights by force spring to life overnight? No. Hundreds of women died, pleaded, begged for your attention while you looked away, and went on to make other “important policies”, before this group said, FUCK the law, we will take the law into our own hands.

Today, 5 boys died in Jharkhand because they molested a woman. They were brutally stoned to death. It is happening, you see? They’ve been calling for you, but you’ve neglected them. Now they’ll do you one better. They will do your job, but in the most violent way possible. Instead of one, you now have two problems on your hands.

Do you now understand what happened today? You looked away for years, while women suffered EVERY SINGLE DAY in this country. And today, when they came to you to make sense of what happened, you ordered an attack on them. They have now turned sullen, violent and completely intolerant of your disregard for them. They turned lawless. Because you refused to enforce law in the first place.

Don’t keep making this mistake, Ms Gandhi. Because women are losing patience. You already saw something today of their anger, their angst. But you have seen nothing yet. Make us safe, or God help us all if you leave us all to protect ourselves. We will shame you, and we will shame ourselves but we will get things done and not in the most ideal way.

I have a niece, Ms Gandhi. She is 5. I am deeply suspicious of ANY male attention that comes her way. I watch carefully while she plays, I watch the men around her, drivers, watchmen, relatives, passers-by, even people who know us well. I do not approve of men pulling her cheeks even. I want to protect her from everything. God forbid, if something happens to anyone I love this much, I am telling you now, I will create a wave of rage and fury that will take over everything.
I know I speak for every single woman reading this. They will show no mercy. And you will have to fight several fires at once.

Learn from today. Enforce the law. Make us safe. Or be prepared for lawlessness that will burn this country. And you. I voted for you, Ms Gandhi. I counted on you. You failed. It won't happen again.

Strike not three, but in thousands… You’re out.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Today

"Monsters are real. And ghosts are real too.
They live inside us, and sometimes, they win"
Stephen King.

I hope God will forgive my weakness today.
I hope God will respect how brave I was today.

I'd like to think this morning, when I woke up, He must have cringed a little at what was to come,
I'd like to think there's an extra star in the sky tonight, one He lit just for me.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

I wonder if you question what you did,
I wonder if you even know,
I wonder if it pinches you ever, the destruction you caused.

At some point, I will forgive you. It's the natural order of time.
But here's the thing, sonny boy.
The joke's on you.
Because one day I will be free.
But how will you ever wash the blood off your hands?

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Aboard the Dhauladhar Express

Night time.
No confirmed tickets.
Waiting at Pathankot Station in a swarm of mosquitoes for the Dhauladhar Express.
Things are not looking good.

I wait with the bags, pursing my lips so none of the 1,000 bugs circling my head get to be my dinner, while P goes to check if our tickets have a hope in hell of getting confirmed. Now this is the beauty of travelling with P. She's a star. She works part-time as my rock, my problem-fixer, giver of laughs, source of my powers, all of that. She and SS both. But here's the truly wonderful thing. She can talk her way into almost anything. And you'll believe everything she says.

For one, she talked me into this trip, convinced me that it was a perfectly good idea to take the bus to Mcleod Ganj at night (it turned out to be a death bus driven by a maniac; I'd willed my bookshelf to Aarya) and to travel without confirmed return tickets (she'd told me they were confirmed. They weren't). To be fair, in her head, they were confirmed, she was that confident (it was WL 1 and 2, come on, of course, they'll get confirmed. They didn't). All this, despite knowing her extremely well. But here's the good part. I'm glad she did. I haven't laughed that hard in a while.

I shift into the waiting room, a tiny, bare room with chairs backed up against the walls and one round table, and pretty abysmal unisex bathrooms. But this is better than the bug fest outside. Also, we were two girls at a station where most people are assuming we're foreigners. I think it is my haircut (I have bangs now). So we're getting loads of eyeballs.




When P comes back, I know from her sheepish grin that we're travelling ticketless. "No no, it's confirmed, but..." I wait, grinning. "But only one ticket is confirmed." When I start laughing, she protests, "But Seju, that never happens! They don't confirm just one ticket!" True. We later find out it's a system error.

Anyway, I am not worried. I know P can talk herself through anything. The TC was just going to have his pants charmed off him. We eat dinner at a tiny dhaba, just outside Pathankot Station, waiting for the Dhauladhar Express back to Delhi. It's a weird night. We're wearing travel rags and we're still extremely overdressed for this place. But the food is brilliant. And the service, even more so. Our foreigner tag is sealed by the slight hesitation on my part to fully dive into the food and look around the place in apprehension. It's a proper Punjabi place, complete with that singer Gurdass Mann's photo up on the yellow-painted wall. It's delicious. Not just the food. And yes, this is P's favourite food in the world, dhaba food, not poncy hotel stuff, and she's blissful. Look.



We finally board the train. A couple of seats in this compartment, and the rest are small rooms, those coupes, closed ones, with doors and everything. We sit in our seat, the one on the left of the compartment, two seaters. P goes off in search of the TC after making sure I am seated in our seat. Now there're a couple of goofs in the system and various people are wondering which seats are theirs. This group of men, huddled in the compartment, loudly and firmly attempting to take ownership of SOME seat. We exchange our seat with a gentleman, who sweetly agrees and promptly finds out it's not his seat to give away. There's a fair bit of confusion. P dives right into the animated conversation.

In the middle of this madness, a scrawny boy, around 14, comes running into the compartment. "You're baithe here for 15 mins?" He asks breathlessly.
What? I blink stupidly at him.
"Charge phone, na, pliss?" He thrusts his phone at me.
I continue to look at him not understanding a word.
P comes over when she sees him.
"Kya hua? Kya problem hain?"
"Phone charge karna tha." He gestures to the socket behind me. "Bas 15 minutes".
Ah.
P has no patience for this guy. She herds him off to the centre of the compartment.
"Yaar, tu waha kar le," she says. "Hamare seats ka kuch pata nahi, tera phone kya charge karenge."
He shuffles off.

We're laughing about him when P spies the TC a few seats away.
"So, I am going to tell him you HAVE to reach Mumbai day after and you need to get to the Delhi airport tomorrow. So he won't offload us."
"Does that happen?" I am slightly freaked.
"No no, never," she says confidently, "but you know, just in case. So look tense."
Erm. 

As the train starts to move, we sit in the one seat we have, thinking worst case scenario, we'll go to sleep sitting up. We laugh as we hear the men arguing and looking at our cramped seat. We laugh about the hapless boy who valiantly gave up his seat and the found it's not his at all. And the memory of the manic bus driver to Mcleod Ganj, and we're soon in hysterics, the kind that come with every remembered joke after a really fun trip.

The TC is now walking towards us.
P turns to me urgently and hisses, "He's here. Look EMOTIONALLY DISTRAUGHT!"
Emotionally distraught? I start to giggle.
He's at our seat now, and at P's meaningful glance, I attempt to visibly deflate and stare listlessly at the floor.

I need not have bothered. Then something happens that completely distracts the TC. The boy who'd left his phone to charge comes careening into the compartment, almost ramming into the TC.
"Mera phone!!" He cries into the man's face. "Mera phone kaha hain?"
The bewildered TC just stares at him. I suspect this is the effect this boy has on most people. 
P points it out at the socket next to the window.
He heaves a massive sigh of relief, staggers to his phone, unplugs it and sits down on the seat, breathing heavily. 
The TC, now galvanised into action, asks him where he's travelling to.
"Mein toh mata ke darshan ke liye jaa raha tha, Vaishnav Devi ko."
We take a minute for this to sink in. That is in the exact opposite direction to where we're headed.
"Toh tu yahaan kya kar raha hain?"
"Mein toh sirf apna phone charge karne train mein aaya tha. Mein station pe friends ke saath khana kha raha tha, socha charge kar du!"
Oh dear lord. He'd got on just to charge his phone. He didn't want to take this train. He jumped in when he discovered the train was pulling out of the station. With his phone.
We're all staring at him when his phone rings. It's his buddy from the station.
"Haan, mein train mein chad gaya hoon," he says nonchalantly into the phone, "Agle station pe utar ke wapas aa jaoonga. Bas 2 minute mein pahucha."
He was telling his friends he'll be back in two minutes? This boy has no idea what he's got himself into.
The rest of us are now starting to laugh. The TC too.
"Beta, tu phone charge karne chada, aur ab tujhe lagta hain tu do minute mein wapas jaayega?"
He looks very embarrassed but he's still not really got it.
"Mujhe laga yeh train subah niklegi," he says. We're all incredulous. P laughs, "Toh tumhe laga hum sab yaha subah ki train ke liye abhi se chade?" We're laughing now.
He's really flustered now and blurts out, "Arre mein toh Punjabi hoon, mujhe yeh sab kya pata?"
This is almost too much for all of us. We're all doubled over by now.
"Agle station pe utar jaaonga," he says weakly over the din.
The TC looks at him in between guffaws. The thing is, you couldn't get angry with this guy, it wasn't that he was trying to pull a fast one on anyone, or being cocky. He is just really really dumb. And that's hardly his fault.
"Tu ab Mata se prarthana kar ki train Delhi se pehle kahin ruk jaaye, varna tu chal raha hain Delhi tak." He shook his head at the restless boy. "Jaa, general mein jaa ke baith jaa."
The boy gets up and grinning, trots off towards the general compartment. We're all still reeling from this when the TC starts checking tickets again.
Except that now he's in such a good mood from all the laughing, P didn't have to try too hard. He immediately allots us another seat, clears the confusion of the remaining tickets, and leaves.

I drift off, grateful for this journey. Regular air travel had taken me away from this, the adventure of the absolute unknown, the possibilities of lunacy while travelling. This is the most fun I've had in commute for a while.


After that, we sleep like babies. After all, we both get one whole berth each to sleep in.
Ah, luxury.


Friday, June 8, 2012

Happy Birthday, Dad.

You would have been 67 today.

What would we have done, I wonder?
We'd have said, let's go out and eat!
Or  let's go out of town.
Let's do something, I'd have begged.

But I know how we'd have celebrated your birthday.

It would have happened in the way you loved most. With your family. Your brothers. And a visit to the temple. That is, if we weren't travelling to where Bapa was.

We'd have started the day by going to Dadar, early morning temple visit. And you'd have gone to work after that. No celebrations. The brothers might drop by. No biggie, you'd have said. We'd have protested the boring 60s and gone on to work.

You'd have returned at 6pm, rung the bell, one hand on the grill, with fingers wrapped around the metal bars as I'd open the door. As always.

I'd have helped carry your bag inside, wishing you again, grinning from ear to ear and wait patiently outside as you'd wash up, change immediately into "home clothes" a habit you've passed on to me, and then we'd sit for the one thing we both cannot do without. Evening chai.

We'd sit at the dining table, look down our noses, our similar, straight noses at mum's coffee, smile the same smile as we tease her about it. You'd ask about our day, and raise your eyebrows at my stories, wrinkling that lovely regal forehead. I love mine, because it's like yours. Your hair, a lovely mop that never did properly get to go a complete grey, would be neat, not out of place, like mine. No, I dodged your neatness and attention-to-detail gene. You should have tried harder. :)

We'd talk, as I loved to with you, I wouldn't probably be in the mess I am in now, because you wouldn't have let all those things that happened ever happen to me had you lived. So, we'd be discussing all sorts of wonderful things. We'd talk about my writing. You went before my first byline appeared in the paper. The Free Press Journal. I remember looking at my name in black and white and feeling that ache, and knowing that day, that nothing would make me whole again. I shouldn't have waited for a byline. I should have tried to make you proud of me every day. 

I'd have wished you probably a 100 times by now. And you'd have laughed, gosh that delightful laugh. And graced me with that smile, that smile that lit up the room. At least for me. No matter how dark that room was. Any room. Anywhere. Do you know that that's the first thing people remember about you now when they talk to me about you? How your smile made them feel that everything would be okay. No matter what they were facing. That when you sat and talked to them, they believed. In everything that you stood for. And why wouldn't they? You stood for God so much. And He lived in you, towards the end. I felt it. So everyone else must have.

By dinner time, the brothers and your sister would have started arriving. The "No biggie" would have turned into a massive gathering of 7 families, children included, and then some. There would have been around 40 people cramped into our house, and the cacophony that would usually annoy neighbours would have been met with indulgent knowing grins instead. The Mehtas have assembled they'd have said.

I'd have gone to mum in the kitchen, what about food, what will we do? But Mum would have known better. Of course, she would have. Make enough for 50 people, my mum would have had said to the cook that morning. She knew.

The house would have been full of laughter, and crying (some kid's going to fall on his head, of course) and so much food (it IS a Gujarati household). By 11pm, the stories would have begun, the legends of the brothers, the house they grew up in, the stories of Ganpati Visarjan when 5 engineers sat and designed Ganpati sets to rival professional art directors, complete with pulley systems for tiny toy wells. The stories of their legendary absent-mindedness, my father would win centre-stage here. Stories of him leaving without his shoes, of promising to pick people up, forgetting all about it the next minute and actually driving PAST them and WAVING at the hapless victim, of him forgetting to put the role in the camera on an epic family holiday. Stories of the deepest bond that they shared, never needing friends because they had each other.

I'd look over at you. Your face would have been alive with joy, with happiness, with the comfort of family. The sort of celebration you'd have loved the most.

Instead, today we go about our day. No special food in the kitchen. Maan wished me in the morning :) and I ache that Maan and Aarya never met you. You would have loved Maan. Did you know Vaibhav brought her to meet you the day before you left for Lonavala? And you weren't home. They thought of waiting. But then, as we all think, so so stupidly, there's always tomorrow. Little did they know.
You'd have been so proud of Aarya. She asks about you many times, about Dada. She cried once too, and said she's missing you. I suspect she saw her father missing you. He doesn't talk about you to me. Ever. I suspect he cannot. I miss you with everything I have, and yet, I suspect sometimes, that he misses you even more than that.

I dream about you often. But you are still as vivid in my dreams as you were when you left. I am not sure if I am happy or alarmed by that.

Dates are cruel things. They fuel memories and make them stronger. You can combat a memory on a normal day. But attach it to an important date, and there's no stopping it.

I concede. :) I miss you. Every day.

So yes. It would have been a lovely day. Because of nothing else but that you'd have still been here. With me.

Happy birthday, Dad.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Time Travel

If you could go back in time, would you change things? You would, of course you would. If you look at your life and think, wow, I wouldn't change a thing, not even the one teeny tiny bit of rearranging, I'd like to come shake your hand. And then slap you a little bit, just you know, so you'd have something different to say the next time.

What do you reckon you'd change, really? To find that one moment that set the ball rolling for the way a life shapes up. Kind of a challenge. I think I'd go through several attempts, seeing the sometimes misplaced sense of priorities I seem to persistently exhibit. Like in some movies, where the protagonist goes through a day again and again to get it exactly right, and in the end, someone dies anyway, because the moron was fixing the wrong moment.

Or maybe it's destiny and no matter how many times you adjust things, you're going to land up exactly where you were supposed to.

There's a film that sort of is about this and then some. Have you watched Sliding Doors? The movie starts with Gwyneth Paltrow having lost her job at a PR firm. She has a few drinks with her friends, goes home to a boyfriend who you realise is a bit of an ass right away. The next morning, she's running to make it in time for the train, and this is the moment the film splits into two. Two parallel tracks: one in which she makes it in time, chats with this lovely man, comes back home in time to find her boyfriend cheating on her, moves out, etc. And the other track, where she misses the train, the doors slide shut, and on her way back home, she gets mugged, goes to the hospital, remains oblivious to her cheating boyfriend for a large chunk of the movie, etc etc.



Now here's the thing. In both sequences, she ends up meeting the same people in different ways. And in one scenario, she dies in the end. And in the other one, she ends up talking to lovely man from the train much later, in the end. In an elevator.

It all depended on whether on not she caught the train in time. Scary stuff.

I watched three things about this in quick consequence, hence all this thought.

A rerun of an episode in F.R.I.E.N.D.S. where they all asked what if? What if Phoebe were a corporate lawyer, what if Monica was still fat, what if Chandler quit and became a cartoonist, etc.
The thing is, at the end of the show, they all were exactly where they would have otherwise been.

Last night, I watched an episode of Supernatural (who else wants to have Dean's babies? :)) which finally showed a scenario that the boys continue to ask in each episode. What if we'd never been ghost hunters, demon killers, vampire stakes, etc etc. They show Dean in a cool corporate job, madly rich and successful and Sam, tech support in the same company. And of course, they end up seeing a ghost and fight it, and maybe 5 years later than otherwise, they joined hands and became... well hunters. Hot hunters. Fully awesome, demon-killing, good looking, funny... okay. Back to the point.



I am a deeply impulsive being, which means I go through most things in life with the attitude of an elephant crashing through a jungle, not really thinking about how what I do or don't is shaping tomorrow. It's much later, when I reflect, I can see what I probably should have done differently. But then, what I didn't do differently also made me what I am today, yes? And if I do like that bit, then the rest becomes pointless.We're possibly meant to be just this. What we are today. Maybe when my father died, a part of me became so strong that it can take on the world. Maybe, the graveyard of my dead relationships made me so focused towards work that I soared professionally. Maybe, the hurt and the pain that every disappointment brought gave me newer stories to write. Without those, who would I have been today? Someone better? Happier? Maybe. With better stories? Unlikely, but who's to say?

What then, do I go back to change?

So, maybe some battle scars are there for a reason. Even if the reason is just to make you feel like a giant dufus.

Monday, May 21, 2012

I am like this, but then, I am also like that

(I'd written a slightly different version of this on FB. The last one, though, is from Grey's Anatomy).


I am highly prone to brief and intense addictions. It could be a TV show, a person, a song...

I love football. I used to play with the boys till I developed body parts that were no longer conducive.

For all my cautious talk, my life shows a persistent recklessness. I am alarmingly contradictory. I want, at all times, completely incompatible things.

I love sinking my teeth into a story. To turn it around, to tinker with the start, to pull things out and fit them somewhere else, and make it as beautiful as it was meant to be. I am a print editor, through and through.

I love video games, especially ones like Doom, where you’re handed a gun and an arsenal, and gross demons and soldiers ambush you from everywhere and you shoot everything in sight and all the blood splatters the walls and… what? Why’re you looking at me like that?

I am a sucker for happy endings. I get massively upset when fiction ends badly. Hello, if I want reality I have my life, no?

I don’t like all babies. Only cute ones. I live in fear that my own baby won’t be and then I won’t like my own child.

I am madly passionate about wildlife, the outdoors, and everything nature-related. I live in the (slightly deluded) belief that it feels the same way about me.

I cannot fathom how in the blistering barnacles have we reached a point where cockroaches (*shudder) are featuring in entertainment films. I could not enjoy Wal E as much as I could have (*gags). And Monster vs Aliens. The doctor's a roach?? What in the whole wide world is that about? Since when are these cute? This has to stop. Now. Yes, I am phobic. And if you're at all sympathetic to their cause, go read the Roach post in this blog. Bullies.

I think travel is the closest I've come to feeling at peace. And I think I am really good at it.

I have the gift of impossible relationships. Love is my Waterloo. 

I cannot hold my drink. And I do not sip. I gulp. One drink: (Loudly) talking about how the waaallsh are moovinng, how much I love my frandsh and my mommy, and how the tiger is going f***ing extinct. Second drink, I am horizontal on the floor… thank you ladies and gentlemen, end of day’s play. I quit when people started party conversations with a slightly nervous, ‘So what is Sej drinking?’ or ‘Who is mixing Sej’s drink?’

Dirty bathrooms depress me.

I've discovered that God takes sides. If you've hurt me, if I were you, I'd watch my back. No, no, really. It's scary.

My father’s death has left me a shadow of the person I used to be.

My mum is not as timid as she looks. If there ever was an example of looks being deceptive, my mum could run the campaign. This is me and mum in a fight when I want to do something she doesn't want me to:
Me: *LOUD YELLING
Mum: Silent and appearing docile.
Me: *MORE LOUD YELLING FOR AN HOUR
Mum: "No."
Me: "Okay." 

I get high on live performances… theatre, street plays, stand-up, concerts, anything that exudes live energy.

I think my niece is special. As babies go, she has spoilt me for life.

Contrary to popular belief, I love driving. I used to take long drives, before this city and its roads became what they are today.

Once you’re in my (very short) special people list, you can do no wrong. I mean, you will need to stab me in the back with a pretty sharp knife for me to see you’re a so-and-so. I have a few battle scars to show for this idiocy.

I adore desserts. If they put me in one of those ads where one is supposed to make those orgasmic sounds and ecstatic faces after a bite, I wouldn’t have to act at all.

I laugh at almost everything. I believe what Cyrus Sahukar once said in a Femina interview: Dude, funny is all around you, you just have to see it.

I can be painfully vicious in a fight. But I should care enough to be.

Finally, against all odds, against all logic, I believe…

Friday, May 18, 2012

The Loss of Innocence

I saw my first and only strip show in Bangkok. 
On an office conference. From Femina. All those years ago.

Loss of innocence happened. 

The lanes of Patpong were everything I'd heard they would be. There were endless rows of clubs, with men and women standing outside and enticing passers-by. Shocking passers-by in my case.
Men came up and asked, "Want boy? Very nice," with accompanying hand gestures. As I gawked at them, trying to form a sentence that would appropriately explain that while I was at the most popular sex street in the world, I was not looking for anything, my friend pulled me away with a 'no no, not interested'.

"Why are you having a conversation with them?" G was laughing.

"I was not! I was attempting to decline." I said, completely distracted by everything. There were peddlers selling sex toys and I could hardly believe some of the shapes and sizes of the various things on display. There was music blaring out of every other club and --

"Okay, can everybody else see a naked woman in a glass cage?" I stared as she shimmied up and down the sides and smiled seductively at us. I couldn't help it. I laughed. And it wasn't a flustered 'Oh my, there's a naked woman in a glass cage' laugh. It was a 'Um, lady, knock, knock, you know that we can see you, right?' laugh. It was a 'Sweetie, don't look now, but you're in a glass cage' laugh. She wasn't amused.

We were finally there. The club was named after a woman's body part that had nothing to do with a cute feline animal also of the same name. There were 15 of us, including U, who was heavily pregnant. With twins. The guys haggled with the staff for seating, rates, etc, and we took our seats in front of a poorly-lit square stage. I looked around our little group. Apart from U, who was already looking doubtful about her parenting skills given that her kids could technically say that their mum had taken them to their first strip show, we were a mixed group. There were two three girls who blushed at the mere mention of sex... and all that surrounds it, and in the media, these conversations came up often, so I knew that they indeed blushed often. And then there were others, me included, who had come out of pure curiosity. To see what the fuss was about. I was even interested in a story. Maybe I could talk to a few of these girls... get their story. I said so to P. She rolled her eyes.

"Sej, will you stop thinking about work?! We're on holiday!" she exclaimed.

"Er, P, we're here on an office conference." I grinned. 

"Oh, yeah," she laughed sheepishly. "Forgot."

So okay, drinks served, seats adjusted, breathing exercises done (by U), and they were ready for us. I didn't know if we were ready for them, though.

Ten minutes later, I was shell shocked. It was the worst thing I had ever seen. Now, don't misunderstand me. I am not a prude, though I do think women having to take off their clothes and get jeered at for a living is appalling, but that is just one of the reasons I hated it. This was a horrible, horrible show. It was not erotic, it was not tasteful. If anything at all, it was downright sad.

A couple of women shuffled on to the stage, wearing a bit of this and a bit of that. They moved listlessly to the music. They looked bored out their brains. A couple of women at the back of the stage were actually talking. they were in the middle of a conversation. 'Hey what's up, nothing much, I saw a movie, went shopping... hey can you get my bra strap open... Ya, so shopped and then... wait let me just wave this in the air... ya so then we just hung out.' Like that. Most of them were old, and, forgive me for saying this, but it was a strip show... fat. Really. 

But the worst was yet to come.

One of the women finally broke the hideous vacant moving-on-the-spot routine and came up to the front of the stage. She was wearing nothing at all. She sat down on her knees and proceeded to remove colourful strings of paper. From inside her. I recoiled in my seat. That was the mildest scene that night. The women proceeded to do acts (with the body part that the club was named after) that until now, I had thought physically and humanly impossible. Acts that involved pens, paper, writing, and (shudder) cola bottles. Our numbers dropped rapidly. P was the first casualty. I don't think she had ever seen a porn film in her life and here... She left almost immediately. U braved it for some time, her face alternating between disbelief and disgust. My threshold came after the cola bottle. When she brought the bottle close to herself for the first time, I shrank back in my seat with a 'Oh god, oh god, what is she going to do now?' Unfortunately, I found out immediately. That did it. Want to go," I whispered to V. "Want to go now."

A loud, opinionated discussion followed that night.

"Men like this?" I asked. I was over the shock of it now, and the dynamics were interesting. 
P, next to me, shuddered. "Men are sick!" She looked accusingly at G and D and said again, "SICK!"
"Men don't like that!' said D, slightly frightened. "That was a really bad show! There are better ones. More sensual than sick." He looked around the group of disgusted women. "Really! I promise!"

That must be true. This show was more of a circus act than fodder for erotica. It was a freak show. But there were men in that audience who were enjoying it. I saw them. They were there. Perverts for whom even this portrayal of bored, disinterested, freak act was pleasurable. They look pretty normal... business suits, well-bred. They didn't look twisted in the least. 

And that scared the hell out of me.

(First posted in itsastartwhat.blogspot.com in 2007 :))

Thursday, May 17, 2012

My ear vs the Roach

A travel plan is an oxymoron.
No travel, no matter how well you plan it, is going to go completely according to plan.
Flights will be cancelled, trains will be delayed, restaurants will close by the time you reach, car tires will go bust, a stomach flu may find you, or a cockroach could climb into your ear.

Yes, true story. It happens. It did happen. To me. Very far away from home. Or a hospital. Or my mummy.

I was in the middle of a travel assignment in Meghalaya. We'd reached Cherrapunjee late evening, and the hotel was on a beautiful hill, in the middle of... nowhere. Ironic how that particular bit had appealed to me immensely before a cockroach mistook my ear for its home.

We were visiting in the middle of summer but Cherra (as it is fondly called), was showing off. No longer the wettest place on Earth? I'll show them. That sort of thing. It had been an exhausting day, with a full trek in the rain and some hail thrown in for good measure. I couldn't wait to sleep, so I asked for dinner to be sent to the room. After a few bites, I left the rest on the table. A BIG mistake. I was after all, in the wilderness, and should have been slightly more mindful of bugs, but I went off to sleep under a bundle of mattresses almost immediately after.

See how pretty. Not that I got to enjoy any of it
It happened at around 5:30 in the morning. In hindsight, I can see it as a scene in a movie. The small roach making its way over the mattress. Approaching the ear. Audiences gasping, covering their eyes, cringing, hopelessly telling the sleeping form on the screen to wake up, as it pauses over the opening of the ear...

I felt this horrible muffled scratching, scraping in my left ear, and I jerked up in bed, bewildered, still not fully awake, with an extremely strange sensation in the left side of my face. The room seemed to sway for a second as I shook my head. And then a feeling of horror as I instinctively knew what had happened. Oh god, oh god, there's a bug in my ear, I thought, as the scuffling continued. I was hoping, so so so hoping it was just the altitude and wax, but when I moved to get up, the scuffling increased, and I let out a whimper. Jeez, what was it? I tried tapping on the right ear, so if it was on the brink, it could fall out, but that sort of frightened it, and it started to flap around. I yelped in pain and fright. The pain, combined with the flapping sound in my ear! YUCKS!

I sat, slowly, with as little movement as possible and called L, the photographer in the next room. I took deep breaths, and said, feigning calm, "L, can you come out, please? I think there's a bug in my ear." Slight pause. Understandable. "Inside your ear???" Another pause. I waited, shockingly patient. "Coming," he said. I got up, again, very slowly, and as if in slow motion, switched on the torch, and swept the light across the room. I knew, I don't know how, exactly what it was, but I wanted to be sure. And there, sure enough, in the corner of the room, near the food, was a tiny group of small roaches. Not the massive ones, the small, long, gross ones. It was a horrible moment, for anyone, but let me take a second to tell you why it was more so for me.

I hate roaches. No no, it's not the girlie I-am-so-afraid-of-roaches fear. It's a deep phobic fear. I am mortally frightened of them. It is a paralysing fear. One that I am battling with continually. I have abandoned trains, buses, cars (one I was driving, yes) because of these darned creatures. They seem to smell my fear and single me out to torment. Always. So. Back to the story. 

I met L at the door, who was still groggy with sleep, "What happened?" "There's a bug in my ear," I said. I think he expected hysterics, so did I, so this matter-of-factness gave him hope. "Let me see," he said. Gratefully, I let him peer into my ear, turning my head this way and that. "I can't see anything. Maybe it's gone?" he asked. "No, unfortunately, I can feel it," I said. We stood there, in our nightclothes, in the cold and I could tell he didn't think it was a bug. Suddenly, a gust of wind blew in our direction and the insect flapped helplessly, making me double over in pain, with a "Oh God, what the EFF!" This alarmed L considerably, bug or no bug, and he ushered me hastily back into the room and closed the door.

I slow-motioned to the bed, the wretched creature calmed down and the pain paused. God, this was the grossest thing ever to have happened, I thought. "I'll call AL," L said. "He'll know what to do." AL was our guide for the trip. Yes, I thought. AL would come through. An extremely jolly sort of fellow with a great love for drink, a good time and all things Khasi, AL was madly well-connected. Too much so... by evening all of Shillong knew my encounter with the roach (no exaggeration). While he dialled, I called Mansi, my brother's wife. "Maan, there's a cockroach in my ear, Maan," I said pitifully, relieved that I was finally telling someone who would understand the enormity of a roach bullying me. Mansi is a fire-fighter. A cool head, but for a few minutes, there was full blown panic. How did it happen? A ROACH??? REALLY? AAAAHHHH! That sort of thing. "I am calling the doctor, you hang in there, I am on it," she hung up. She called back with notes immediately: find a hospital. In the absence of that, pour hot mustard oil in your ear. It will die and float out." Hmm, I thought, hospital. Definitely hospital. She hung up with a pep talk, and told me to continue to be calm. I doubt I was calm. I think I was in denial. Jeez, YUCKS!

L handed the phone to me. "AL," he said. I took the phone, cringing at the slight movement in my ear, and talked to an extremely sleepy and hungover AL. "AL, I have a bug in my ear. Where can we find a doctor?" AL waited for this information to seep through the layers of alcohol-induced sleep. I think the only word he actually grasped was doctor. "We can go to the market at 9 and check with the local guy if he can help us. Would you like some tea?" he asked cheerfully. Tea? IF he can help? I think in my bid to appear calm, I was ending up doing too good a job. I took a deep breath. "AL, I have an insect, probably a roach, lodged inside my ear. I cannot wait for three hours to visit a local quack and for him to pour oil in my ear. I need a clinic, or a hospital. Now." This seemed to rouse everyone into motion. AL said, "I'll check and call you."

AL came to the door. I got up in anticipation and regretted in instantly. AL and L looked on in dismay while I bent over with "OW!" as the poor insect fought valiantly to escape. AL, now all business, said, "We can either go to the doctor's house in Cherra or drive to Shillong, 2 hours away." L, a local Shillong boy, spoke Khasi fluently. "Shillong," we both said. No contest. AL called the driver and declining his suggestion of a merry breakfast with an incredulous look, L and I left for Shillong.

In the car, L and I looked at each other. I could tell he wanted to laugh. "Does it still hurt?" he asked instead. I gingerly shook my head. Nothing. I did it again, slightly firmly. Nothing. It had died. Inside my ear. I could feel it still, a weight, now dead, in my ear. I was wrong. This was the grossest thing to have ever happened, I thought gloomily. L kept me distracted all the way to Shillong with stories about Meghalaya, friends I didn't know, cats he'd seen, anything at all. Now that the thing had died, my ear wasn't hurting, I just had to deal with how disgusting this situation was. YUCKS!

We reached Shillong in record time and pulled into Bethany Hosiptal. L spoke to the doctor in Khasi as I stood quietly by. Till now, I had not concentrated on this part at all. In the car, I had gratefully listened to L but now, I would have to face this. Would they pull it out? What if it was too deep? Oh god. And YUCKS! I did not miss the amused look the doctor shot in my direction during the conversation. He took me to the OPD immediately, sat me down and flashed a torch in my ear. Yes, he confirmed. It is a bug. A roach. I didn't realise until then that though I knew it was a roach, a part of me was hoping he'd say, what? NO, it's just wax! Tut tut, silly child. Go home, now.

Damn. This thing had now been inside my ear for 5 hours.

"Please just get it out of me," I said resolutely. "Even if I scream, or cry or hit you, please just ignore me and just get it out." The doctor brought a set of clinical tweezers. Feeling supremely sorry for myself, I closed my eyes and clasped my hands together. I felt the cold metal in my ear and tensed as the doctor reached in and pulled. There were a few seconds of pain after which he pulled away and said, "I can't take this out. It is too deep inside." And then promptly turned away and started to speak to the nurse in Khasi.

"Wait!" I squeaked. "You can't take it out?? So then what??" The doctor held his arms up in a whoa, chill lady manner and said, "I mean, I can't remove it with this. I need larger tweezers." Oh, well, he should finish his sentences, no? How was I supposed to know? I settled back into my seat with as much dignity as I could muster. L was by now quite tickled by this adventure. The tweezers arrived and then the doctor wasted no time. "Brace yourself," he said. Like I had to be told. I don't think I'd relaxed my shoulders or exhaled since 5:30am. He plunged the metal in, I felt a tug, some pain that lasted for a few seconds and with a whoosh, it was out!

I didn't look at it, I didn't want to, but I knew it was big, because when the doctor pulled it out, both L and the nurse collectively said, "Oh, JEE-SUSS!" L said I should keep it as a reminder. I looked at him as if he'd sprouted two heads. Was he mad? I was in no danger of forgetting this. No matter how much I tried. The doctor gave me antibiotics so I would be infection-free and as soon I returned to Mumbai a few days later, I went to an ENT and got everything checked and cleaned.

See the second line. It says, "Insect gone inside ear". Haha.
L and I went to his house from the hospital, where we were both hysterical with laughter about what had happened. Once my friends heard, they were all sorry for me for around two seconds before the roach jokes started. "What if it's laid eggs and you have loads of baby roaches in your ear in a few weeks?" EW. Or "What if its friends come get you?" Or "Arre wah, inke liye toh ab tumhara kaan hi kaafi hain!"

Oh, ha ha, very funny. I hung up on them.

My ear had been through enough for one day.


Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Exposed

If you want to know someone, ask them to write something for you.

Over the last few years, I've discovered that writing exposes you in a way very few things can.

By that logic, yes, of course, all art does. Like painting. What you draw, how you draw, the colours you use, they're all give-aways. Movies, dance, even how you cook, all of that.

Yes, but I still feel writing (and this may be because I am a writer) can strip you naked in front of people. In front of people who don't know you at all.

I've been accused of judging people based on how they write. Guilty. But it's so much more than playing Grammar Police. Of course, if you send me a text message saying "Hi, I dont think that will happen," and then follow it immediately with one that says, "*don't", you've won my heart forever. And just so you know, I've registered the comma after the 'Hi' and the capital use of H too.

Of course, all these are turn-ons, but that's just one level. I am looking for who you are. 

You write to me in a message:
I went to a family function this evening. Everyone was there, it was so much fun. We laughed and ate so much food! (I can tell you've had a great time at your family function)

Or you write this:
My cousin got married today. The Guzzus were out in strength today, and we sat around and did what my family does best: laugh and eat. It was more fun than I've had in a while.
(I can tell you have a married cousin you like, I can tell you're aware of what your community is like and is ribbed for, you love it and that you're capable of making jokes about it. I can also tell you love spending time with this particular part of your family)

See what I mean? This is not about how you SHOULD write. No, I am merely saying these are two very different people.

The way you write tells me not just what you're thinking, or your opinion on something, but it tells me, in black and white, what you feel.

Let me explain.

In the last two years, people who've read me forever started to notice something different about the way I wrote. There was a piece that was well-written, it was perfectly adequate for the purpose it was supposed to serve. You couldn't fault it. But it wasn't always me. They said, at some point, there's a sense of a wall we can't cross.

Some said they felt cheated. They sensed a wonderful madness in the writer, a free spirit, and a potential of it coming through in the writing, but I refused it. The tip of an iceberg. Apparently, I no longer allowed them in. That I remained, in the story, tantalisingly, just out of reach.

It was not conscious. I did not know when it happened. But here's the incredible thing: I was going through a terribly painful time in my life. And I did not allow myself to show it. Betrayal, hurt, all of it. I hid it from everyone, what had happened to me, the injustice of what had happened, I hid it all. Even from the people I saw everyday. It became a way of life. To lie about it. To hide. To constantly worry about 'appearing' okay. To laugh when I wanted to cry. To smile when I wanted to yell. To purse my lips when I wanted to slap. Everyday. For more than a year. I withdrew inward. I took shelter inside, deep inside, where no one could see me.

Costly decision. Because my writing followed me. It became everything I was feeling. Withdrawn, walled in, sometimes full of fake abandon, and the most important thing: it was without me. I was lost.

Sometimes, a stray sentence, a stray story even, would suddenly bring me forth. So all was not lost. She was in there somewhere. Just too embarrassed to write what she felt. I tried to put it down, but couldn't. It wouldn't come. I told close friends that it refuses to come and they said, have the courage to write badly. Be brave and let all the rubbish out. You've stashed everything away. Deep inside. But the main thing I was told is this: don't be embarrassed. Let it flow. Don't hide behind words and smart phrases, readers will know. If you're feeling like shit, and writing rubbish, do it. Puke it out. Do anything. But write. write. write. 

They also said, it's like going to a shrink, only free. Writing is therapeutic.

This is me, then. This blog. No lies. No pretence. I'll try and stay as true as I can.

And I am going to make sure it's the most fun anyone's ever had in therapy. :)





Tuesday, May 15, 2012

The King and I: My favourite sightings of the elusive cat

Designed by Manish Mutalik.
 I've never left a national park without seeing a tiger, unless it's one that doesn't host any. I mean, it'd be alarming if I did spot one, say in Gir, yes? That'd cause quite a stir.
I digress. Where was I? Yes, I was showing off. 

I've always always seen the striped cat, and I think it's because I don't go to the park just so I do. Of course, I want to see tigers, I look for them too, but it's more, much more than that. The wilderness is a haven. I miss it when I am away from it, and this may seem infinitely crazy but I feel it misses me too. When I enter a forest, it feels like home, you know?
No? Okay, moving on.

Point is, when you're looking for a tiger, don't miss what's happening around you at that moment. Even if you don't see any, there'll be signs everywhere. Like pugmarks. I saw one in the first 10 minutes in Corbett. Fresh. Giant. Pugmarks. An hour later, we saw claw marks on the barks of trees. Tigers use the barks of trees to sharpen their claws and to leave their scents to ward off other cats. Powerful, long strokes. Definite evidence of their existence. For me, the forest had already delivered.

Having said all this, nothing beats seeing a tiger in its natural environment. It is a life-changing experience even for the most disinterested wildlife viewer. You will not be the same again. I've been lucky to have experienced some of these moments. These are my most memorable ones.

When she hypnotised us from less than 10ft away at Tadoba
(Two days and we've seen a lot of the forest, but no tiger).

It's a late but cloudy morning, around 11am, and the sunlight is just fabulous, bathing the dry, dry grassland of Tadoba in golden light.

And that's when she steps out of the tall grass in front of us.
 
Now, this is the beauty of a tiger experience like this. If you're chasing an alarm call, that's fine. You know it's around and that's why the animals are going bat-crazy. But this way, this unexpected appearance is unparalleled. You're driving for days searching for her, stopping every few hours, listening to the quiet forest for sounds, signs, and nothing. You've started fidgeting, it's hot, you're now in a relaxed stupor, looking at the forest, knowing that your morning safari's almost over, and you're not going to see anything more. And then she just steps out of the grass, so casually, so oblivious. It's really almost outrageous, that behaviour.

She gives us a sidelong glance and saunters across the path and into the dry grassland. "She's making her way to the other side of this meadow," our driver says, stepping on it. "We'll meet her as she gets out." We drive around the meadow and she catches sight of us waiting, pauses and stares. Yes, it's us again. Sorry about all the stalking. I don't know what she's thinking, but she changes direction, and makes directly for us. Directly for us. She doesn't take her eyes off us, and it's like we're hypnotised. We cannot look away, cannot move. She comes closer and closer, and we're mesmerised by her beauty. Her coat is dazzling in the sun, a brilliant orange and black, and she's heartbreakingly graceful, slow yet deliberate. Uff. It isn't until she's around 5ft away that the forest guard tears his eyes away, and says to the driver, "Abbe, peeche le!" The spell's broken, and we reverse, putting regrettably more distance between her and us. She pauses again, with one paw raised elegantly, mid step, follows our progress with those magnificent eyes, turns, and disappears into the foliage. This is the closest I've ever been to an animal this beautiful.

When she hung out with a herd of deer in a pond at Kanha
(This was a rare, rare sighting. Even the drivers and the guides with us were stumped).

We've just started the morning safari at Kanha, and within minutes, our driver pulls over and says, "Tiger." There's a pond some distance away, we're actually at a slight elevation to it. To the right side of the pond, a tigress is cooling herself off on a hot, hot summer afternoon. She's half submerged, her head and upper body leaning lazily on the bank. It's a pose that makes you forget this is a predator and go aww. To the extreme left side of the pond, completely oblivious to the cat, is a herd of sambar. Can you see it? The prey and the predator, chilling together. Now I've seen everything. Even the drivers in the jeeps around us are surprised.

No, but it gets so much weirder. The deer get into the water... deeper, towards the centre of the pond. Now, I've heard that the sambar deer is the tiger's favourite food for its poor eyesight and the wind is probably blowing the cat's scent in the other direction. But this is quite ridiculous. From her apparent disinterest, the guide assumes she's had her fill, but as the deer wade closer, she understandably tenses. She sort of sits up and we can actually see the incredulity in her body language as she squares her shoulders. I can almost see her thought bubble: "Hellooooo, tiger here, you blind bats." "Should I cough or something?" The sambar are now around 10ft away, romping around in the water. We're all frozen in place, much like the big cat. And then, one of the spotted deer on the shore lets out a LOUD alarm call, like a mini trumpet. The rest catch on, and the sambar herd, in great panic, leap and bound out of the pond, splashing around, falling down in terror, all of that. It's quite comical. The air is full of alarm calls, and the tigress, satisfied with this delayed but finally appropriate turn of events, slides back into slumber. 'About time,' she thinks. I agree.

When she roared, Kanha stilled
(This was my first trip to a national park. All those years ago. I didn't see her on that day but this remains a favourite).

We've heard a tigress is making her way up the hill with two cubs. Our driver takes us to the top, where she's sure to cross the mud track to get where she's headed. And then we wait. Half an hour goes by. The forest is noisy, and there's a jeep in front of us waiting as well, with a boy making an obscene amount of noise, despite being shushed by us a million times. While we wait, the driver tells us amazing stories of the jungle (the unlikely partnership between deer and langur, notice you'll never see one without the other; vultures circling over a spot in the sky equals a carcass equals a big cat, etc).

And then, she roars. It is like nothing I have ever heard before. Loud, overpowering, and striking an extremely primal chord in us, it comes from the left, some distance away, and the entire forest stills. I am not exaggerating. The entire forest, so busy just a few seconds ago, is literally stilled into silence. Monkeys stop chattering, birds stop chirping, even the crickets stop singing. You could hear a leaf drop to the forest floor, that is, if the wind hadn't suddenly died. Absolute, frightened silence. "Something must have stopped her progress," the driver whispers. "She's protecting her cubs." The boy in the other jeep lets out a whimper, and I am not proud to confess I feel a ruthless pleasure in his fright. How about a little respect now, noisy boy?

A few minutes later, the forest starts to move again, tentatively, cautiously. A bird here, a monkey there. Alarm calls ring out. The king is on the move. :)

With the one that got away in Corbett
 (This was my niece's first tiger experience in the wild. She, like us, will never see an animal in the zoo the same way again).

The herd's so chilled out, we're sure the drivers are lying to us. A herd of spotted deer is grazing under a tree. This is a good distance away, across a meadow, so it's tough to spot the tiger even if he's there. "He's here," our driver says. "Be patient." It's a family trip, my brother, Vaibhav (equally if not more fanatic about the wild), his wife, Mansi,  5-year-old daughter, Aarya and my mum. We're stuck in a canter, not even a jeep, which means noisy passengers, whom we wanted to feed to the cats.

Anyway, the herd's lazing about, not even standing in the alert way they do when they smell danger. I've seen deer act around a predator, they're alert, they're calling, they're never this unfazed. We wait for half hour. Nothing. The deer's chilling and every jeep in the vicinity is now pointing at random spots saying 'There he is!!" "No, there!" "It's that small mound, see??" And my mum, who keeps insisting she sees it, "There, I see it!" We try to explain that's not a tiger but she's refuses to budge till the photographer in the canter shows her his telelens photo and says, patiently, "Madam, that is a deer." Even then, she looks at me, and says conspiratorially, "He doesn't know, only."

Meanwhile, we wait amidst continuous calls from peacocks. But nothing from the deer. And then, quite bafflingly, the large group of deer on the other side of our cars, where our backs are facing, ups and runs away. At least 50 odd deer leap off to safety. We're stumped. Still not a peep out of the deer where the tiger's supposedly hiding. Has he slunk past our cars while weren't  looking, crossed the road to the other side to terrorise that herd? Not possible. A couple of jeeps drive off to see what's happening there. Our driver refuses. "He's here. Always look at the film crews. If they're still here, the cat's definitely here." So we wait. Another half hour ticks past. Some of the deer start to wander further from the herd, towards the centre of the meadow. The driver sits up. "Now watch." The small group moves closer and closer to a tree and suddenly, one jumps up, gives a frightened yelp and they start to leap away. Leaping gracefully, the herd moves as one to safety. The air is now FULL of alarm calls. Small little trumpets blasting through the forest. We're craning our necks, and he emerges from behind the tree. He's failed. The deer's got away. Now that he's in the open, we wonder how we ever mistook him for deer, or a boulder, or anything else. I mean, look at him. He's unique. and massive. He moves in graceful defeat right past the deer, who're watching him leave, every eye pointed at him. Poor guy.

Aarya has two very good questions (my heart is bursting with pride that she's thought of these).
a) Why did the deer not smell him?
b) Why did he not chase them while he was walking past less than 10ft from them?

a) The tiger is a clever cat. He deliberately hid where the direction of the wind blew his scent away from the deer. Which is why the deer, which were downwind, on the OTHER side of the plains, smelled him first and ran.

b) His advantage is stealth, not speed. He cannot outrun the deer. He knows that. He must have planned this hunt hours ago, from kms away, crouching closer and closer so he can spring on the unsuspecting herd. Once his cover was blown, he didn't bother to hang around. He left so he could find somewhere else and take position for a night hunt.

For all those who're thinking, a blog post about tigers? Ya, little mental I am that way. :)
Happy sighting.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Delhi: 2, Me: 1


I have hated Delhi for as long as I can remember.

And it's not because I am from Mumbai. It's not the stupid Mumbai vs Delhi argument. For the record, I do not understand that war. They're two different cities. There's no comparison.

No, this is not that. This is a personal dislike that has taken root since I've been old enough to read newspapers. Rape capital. Unsafe. Crimes towards women. Headlines screaming horrible things happening to women every day. Listening to friends with stories about revolting bus commutes, friends with a fear of crowded spaces with groping hands, rickshaw drivers being next to impossible... etc.

I would think to myself, what a horribly hostile place this seems to be.

As I grew older, Delhi started to reach out and make its presence felt. Close friends moved to Delhi, job opportunities tentatively tapped my shoulder, a lot of fun travel seemed to have its jump-off point in the capital. I kept my visits short. It IS a beautiful, beautiful city. But to visit. To move? Even for the job opportunities, I laughed at the mere thought. Never, I said. Never.

My fear and suspicion was exaggerated, even irrational. I knew that. My friends tried hard to understand it. See, I've travelled the world, stayed alone in forests, hiked alone, got lost in foreign countries, all of it. But ask me to take a rickshaw by myself in Delhi and I'd start to feel anxious. Everywhere else in the world, I'd set about knowing roads, and maps and trails. Here, my mind rejected the names of places I'd been to 50 times. I just didn't want to give it any space in my mind. Yes, that bad. Paranoia.

And to make it worse, just for fun, every time I visited this city, strange and unpleasant things happened. And my friends would look suitably dismayed and say, "This ALMOST NEVER happens. This is SO rare."

And that’s when I realized that the feeling was mutual. The city could smell my fear. She sensed my dislike. And she made sure I didn't feel welcome.

The first time I stayed for a longish period of time, we were targeted by a group of local boys out looking for a good time. It was late, and we'd just finished watching a movie. S and I were walking back home with her cousin, not 10 minutes from the theatre. I was tense about walking, what with all the stories I'd heard. A car filled with testosterone zoomed past with drunk catcalls. I looked very worried. S said, "Don't worry, we're almost home. Nothing's going to happen." A few minutes, I saw the car again, it had taken a U-turn. S's cousin, M, a lanky boy ushered us on. The car slowed as it passed us, and then stopped. I turned to see at least 10 drunk boys jump out the car. S grabbed my hand, "Don't look," she said, "just walk." I heard footsteps actually running behind us on the pavement. I was terrified. One of the boys passed us at a run and stopped in front of us, blocking our way. The group stood behind us. No question really of ignoring them now. He was well dressed, from a "nice home", and drunk out of his wits. He stepped closer to us, stopped a couple of inches from us; he was reeking of alcohol, and plucked a flower from a low branch next to us, came even closer, sniffed the flower ostentatiously, let us be very frightened, and then dropped his hand and strolled back to the car amidst hoots and uproarious laughter. S, M and I, relieved and shaken rushed home. Of course, we laughed about it after but when it happened, we were all sure this was going to get ugly. That was my first night in Delhi with S. She had spent the whole day trying to widen my narrow view of the city, to show me that it was an easy, good place to live. She said she had lived there for years. This had NEVER happened before. Of course not.

After that, it was regularly downhill. We got fleeced almost every time I attempted any transaction. A cab driver turned particularly nasty and potentially dangerous one night as we returned and tried to negotiate rates. I saw him stand downstairs, watch us climb up, see what floor the lights came on at, counted the flats, and leave. I was certain he would later come and do damage. A car had once tailed us after a brief altercation in traffic right to our doorstep. My friend's driver once told my pregnant friend to get out of the car if she didn't like the way he drove. Or threatened to leave the car, there in the middle of the road, with her in it (she didn't know how to drive) and so on...

I kept thinking with each trip, what is this place? I was always so happy to leave. And Delhi, I am sure, was always happy to see me go.

And now... in 2012, I've fled from Mumbai. Running from a toxic space in my head. To seek solace. To make some sense of how to pull this burning skewer out of my heart. And since irony is such a so-and-so, I've arrived, bags in tow, to Delhi, where my closest friends live. I haven't moved here, gosh, no. But I do want to spend more time with them. And in that, I am forced to rethink my battle with Delhi.

It's difficult enough I'd think to orient yourself to a new place and when one has a history that's based on mutual dislike and suspicion, it's hard work. But I am trying. The city is beautiful, and has some great places to walk around in, and the food is really to die for.

In the days I've been here, I've taken the metro (with friends), rickshaws (alone) and am meeting some very interesting people for fun creative work. And recuperating in the amazing love of P and SR, and the occasional hilarious, snarky comment from A. After a long time, my mind is deliciously blank. After a long time, I am at what could be close to peace.

So Delhi, in return, knew I was broken this time I'd come, and the war would have to wait. She was stepping back a bit, and letting me get up and dust myself off.

And in the middle of her blistering summer, she made it rain for me today. With my nth cup of tea, I stood in the balcony, the rain washing away all the burnt and scorched thoughts, the unexpected cool breeze blowing away the negativity that I'd carried along. The smell of wet earth was doubly divine as it wasn't scheduled for another few months.

It's almost like she was saying, the storm's over now, it's a beautiful day.
That's being more decent than I'd ever expected from her.

So tomorrow we'll start our battle again. Except now it's degenerated to a friendly match.
The score so far, Delhi: 2. Me: 1.
The game is a long one though. I will catch up. I am going to look her in the eye.
Let's see who blinks first. :)