Search This Blog

Friday, November 11, 2016

Old School

My parents are old school. And so are yours, I am sure. After all, if you are Indian and reside here and are still reading this, you are in the 74 % literate community and the 125 million that have access to the net. So the likelihood of you having parents who went to a school is 100 %.

But what I mean by old school is the no-nonsense variety. My Dad was a Menon - translate to tough malayali guy. Add second generation military. Result - A father who solved issues immediately with a thick black IAF leather belt. In fact, I feel that the behaviour of Air Force brats has been severely damaged by the change of the IAF uniform belt. My mom a devout Iyer, felt this was the correct manner in which severe crimes were to be dealt with. The ordinary issues were dispensed with a quick slap. Children were to be seen rarely and never heard.

This system of immediate justice was reserved almost exclusively for me; being the elder son. My brother, younger by almost three years was a cute kid. Very naughty, but super cute. So he escaped this legal system. My father by exercise of his ultimate authority had exempted my elder sister from this punishment. "Real men don't hit girls". (In my teenage years he explained to me while we don't hit girls, we ALWAYS hit on girls)

Now before we go ahead, please don't get me wrong. Dad was great; actually make that present continuous tense- Dad Is Great. It was his quick fire method of dealing with any and every of the weird things that the three of us would keep doing. Chopping up the entire banana grove in a game of 'chor-pooleece' - BAM, eating an entire bottle of Pork Pickle on mom's Santoshi Ma Friday fast - WHACK,  bunking school and going swimming - THWACK, outside the house in bathroom slippers - major crime - KA BANG.

The thing that I remember the most is there was no difference between the rules for us two boys and my elder sister. Restrictions were plenty and across the board with no gender bias. Kids will be home before dark - all of you. Likewise, all kids will wipe the kitchen counter, dry the dishes, set the table. My brother and I were taught to do the dishes, make tea, set beds, broom, mop - everything. Housework was OURS, and it better be done well - punctuated with a loving cuff on the ears.

That is why when some neo liberal lady says her husband helps her with HER housework, I see red. If some guy condescendingly says he makes the tea on f&%*ing Sundays, my blood boils. There is a couple i know; the guy proudly claims to have boiled eggs, all while grinning like Mr Bean - his wife listens to this with that glowing smile. Excuse me, I need a barf bag. And with the guy who says he takes his kid for a walk in the pram on the fourth Thursday of  every month, I wanna get violent.

Because, that is so damn wrong. I mean she is your wife. That is your kid. I used to hate Poha and I detest Sabusana Khichadi. But my wife and sons love this stuff. So I learnt it from my chef brother and made it. My mom taught us kids to do the bathrooms. The result is that today my wife knows that I have a very sound post retirement job as a safai kaaramchari. I cook, cut, clean chop, dust, wipe and mop like a professional. And it is no big deal. 

There are several who think that by this kind of house work stuff makes them a little un-macho . To them I say fuck you. The people who know me, can tell that I am an Alpha male. So was my dad. So is my younger brother. But our women mean the world to us.

As I said, my parents are old school.



Woman - Life to this Earth

My ode to women on 08 March 2012 - Womens Day

In this our world of today,
If you women decide to stand fast,
There is nothing that you cannot achieve.
With you tough times don’t last.

You can run that grueling marathon, 
test fly a chopper or a plane.
You can climb the highest mountain.
You are stars and you will win fame.

You are who gives life to this earth.
There is strength in your sinews.
Compassion, beauty, thought and wisdom,
Families are because of you.

So to you all my lovely women friends,
Nieces, sisters, mother and my wife,
On this Woman’s Day as on every day,
Thank you for the beauty in life.




I Fear a Fear

I wrote these lines in a flood of emotion in December 2012, when a young  girl was brutally raped in Delhi. She died subsequently having been assaulted with rods. The family and society continue to wait for justice. It is as relevant now as it was then.  


I Fear a fear

Does it have a name, this rage?
Anger so cold 
That is yet burning me.

As I struggle to make sense,
seek answers to questions
a torrent of doubts is drowning me.

I am gasping for breath.
There is a lump in my chest,
a sorrow that is choking me. 

The brutes, the man that does ravage,  
stays hidden, 
even kith and kin, 
yet inside a savage. 
Fathers and brothers, uncles be they may
shame them for being this way.
For smothering our lives, that should have been free 
for crushing us so brutally. 

They must be given a face
For only then will this surface. 
Only then will I become a cause
One that will bring a pause
In our mindless race
Towards lust, greed and disgrace.

I pray for a catharsis
A fire that will burn 
The evil amidst us
to never return.

But there is this lurking cynic
The demon, the serpent, the one  
That always mocks me. 
The one that brings me this fear,
A fear that is numbing me.
That you will forget 
soon as my soul ebbs away from me




Seedy Tales

There was this time in Staff College when our syndicate was tasked with a major research project. The stuff that we dug out through research papers, books and interviews was to be crammed into a multi-media presentation.

Yours truly was sort of detailed to compile the presentation. I had a pretty decent PC and was quite clued up on MS Power Point.  but I guess the real reasons were that I was single, had a very nice house, served authentic filter coffee and had a pretty maid (actually a maiden).

So the syndicate decided that every body would gather at my pad for making the slides. All through the day, the guys kept dropping. Somebody brought a hard drive, another guy brings in a CD, some people got their research on a  thumb drive or a pen drive. That was the time of floppies too. All day long went this geeky stuff.

Around four in the afternoon the bell rang yet again. Somebody sprawled over a sofa yelled "Come in". No reply. Again the bell and this time a long press. Pissed off, I got up and opened the door. There was a Tamil guy. He said in thickly accented Hindi, " Saar, mereygo Seedi chahiye". (I want a CD). I asked him " Ok, but which one". He said " the long one". Tired as I was, and now irritated, I asked him, " Are you crazy?".  He looked at me strangely, and then said," I am the cable guy. I want a seedi, seedi, SEEDI" Then with his hands he acted as if he was climbing. I fell down laughing. Rolling on the floor, there were tears in my eyes.

He meant a सीडी , the f***ing ladder.