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Archives for June 2008

Sky Harvest – An Ode to the Clouds

June 25, 2008 by Leave a Comment

Joining, mingling, often dazzling,
Streaks of ravishing hues colliding,
Cottoness weaving patchy dreams,
Culminating into willowy streams,
Feathery blues, such peaceful solitude,
In acres binding forgotten clues;
to absolute enlightenment.

Mirrored loneliness, a lofty citadel,
Breathless creamy flowers, an endless swell.
Challenged by winds, secrets scattering,
Cerulean lakes, rivers pregnant,
Flowing in love, a sighing tryst.

Plummeting ponds betwixt pearly plumes,
Icarus leaps, then naps, on ephemeral couch.

Operatic visions; tapping Eden of its sap.
A fluffy gathering, a spirited harmony.
Efflorescent compositions, yet,
undying melodies…a bubble of joy;

All listeners keep.

Spring blesses, summer beckons;
the invisible gleaners of visible flight,
Sweat-honeyed beads, jubilant drops,
Virgin softness, touch the earth.

A sanctified hymn,
A glorious plough,
The higher plains, those empyrean seeds;
bring humbling dew, to living beasts.

Us mortals blind, will only feel,

When Angels begin, their Sky Harvest.

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Pandora’s Kindness – An Ode to the Dying Planet

June 15, 2008 by 2 Comments

I sit speechless on ancient pyre,
Soul cooled by pagan choir,
On charcoal grass my head rolls,
Bemoaning to a tireless shore.

Is this where Pandora napped?
Until her peaceful dreams were snapped!

A broken world, a tyrant born, a hectic storm.

The human core, by gibberish powered,
Devised insane, scribed in glow-tablets,
Naïve, her pranks deemed disquieting,
But who be the judge, this mortal court?

Sewing huge patches into sky,
A bandaged day, a stapled night.

Sanity awake in prayers,
Life draws dark circles in air,
And the sun seems fatigued,
Thirsty, lost in the azure mirage,
Where each death we endure,
The pangs of her woe.

The lullaby is discordant,
When can it lull?
When she is no longer napping,
But trying to undo her kindness,
The world showed no trust,
So now she must turn to the tideless shore,
To seek that peaceful dream once more.

The fish-eye is dulled by oily frivolousness,
Silvery scaly sands, odors have sharpened,
Nonchalantly she tramples,
Over wasted efforts,
To create a world of usefulness.

Alas! But who was kinder?
We, who could have regained lost oceans,
Yet brewed pestilence, skeletons of worthiness,
Glorified kings of nothingness,
Wearing coats of ‘nobleness’?

After all….we should have left her napping.

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Life: Then and Now

June 14, 2008 by 6 Comments

June. The transition month. Gusts of wind invade the still and sweltering sauna heat of May. Little candy tufts of white cloud scurry across deep blue skies increasingly painted over by a dull grey as the days go by. Dry heat gives way to wet warmth. As the winds of change blow in from the south west, the first sprinkling of cool, cool water soaks the ground and wafts in the earthy smell of fresh mud.

THEN
Small droves of city pigeons pirouette above in patterns spiralling inwards till they settle back on their rooftop perch. Mynas announce their happiness to the world at large in fluted tweeting rhymes. Myriad varieties of sparrows hop and skip on the tree branches twittering away mindlessly. High up way above where any creature has the right to exist, the eagle meanders in seemingly irrational patterns. But look closely.

The wings spread wide and held firm he glides with the strong upper air currents. A sudden gust of wind and he swoops down like a falling stone, like a bungee jumper he seems to smash into the warm earth below before miraculously straightening up and he is back up into the currents. Now with a little grub dangling from his beak.

The first rains also call up so many members of the hither unseen insect community to attend the annual congregation in the world above. Suddenly the rocks are covered with thin dabs of tomato sauce each flowing down its own path. Thousands of maroon centipedes celebrate their existence scurrying here and there. Prod one with a little twig and he curls up immediately, playing dead. Joining the party soon are the black and silver striped ones who are bold enough to explore the crevices and gaps in the doorways and windows of our house. And of course the earthworm; painted like the flag of an African nation with shades of purple, orange, red and silver it lies in its shallow burrow and grows fatter and fatter day by day.

The year is 1986. I am in my early teens and as usual at the start of another school year. School is just 5 km from home. Putting on my windcheater, I wheel out my Hero cycle from the garage. Feet firmly planted on each pedal, I bulldoze my way up the 45 degree incline in front of home only to sail down the other side and onto the main road. 8 am. The road is smooth and slickly black. The wind and fine spray caressing my face I pedal my way past the Paradise signal and onto the mighty 3 lane x 3 lane Sardar Patel road.

A couple of RTC buses over take me on the right before pulling into the Anand Theater stop. The road is dotted with our national car – the Ambassador, a few Padminis, the new challenger – Maruti 800 and some yellow autorickshaws. At the Police Lines signal we all stop at red, maybe four or five rows of vehicles. I am in the midst of it and keeping to my straight path as is everyone else. Up the steep incline and down past Begumpet airport and I turn off into the school gate at 8.20 am. Not bad for a cycle. It is not much different on the way back and I am soon home by 5 pm after a pulsating game of football on the water logged school ground.

The sky has darkened menacingly and brings down a heavy pelting of rain. Streams of water flow down the sides of the road in front of my house. Small gutters have been burrowed into the earth there and crystal clear streams of water flowing down the slopes of the plots of land beside and behind our house collect into these and flow down towards the main road. Just like the streams flowing down the Western Ghats or Himalayas before forming one of our mighty rivers.

As the rain subsides to a steady drizzle, me and my friends are outside launching little paper boats into the rain water gutter. Like aartis floating on the Ganges at Haridwar these little boats of note paper may drown a quick death if not properly constructed or placed. Some of them are grounded further downstream as they hit a twig or fallen hibiscus or leaf. Both these are then picked out and deposited back into the garbage can in the house. The lucky ones sail all the way to the road each helped along by a running boatman whose job is to clear the path ahead and steer where necessary. These often sailed into the deeper waters on the Picket Main Road before the stream plunged into the cantonments storm water drain and was soon lost to sight forever. A short walk follows to the nearest kirana shop to exchange my weekly Rs.1 allowance for a bar of Rajaram chikki. This chikki is invariably consumed by the time I reach home only to throw the empty wrapper into the garbage can.

Now energised, we begin our forest trek on the steep vacant plot beside the house. The red earth sliding beneath our bare feet, we grasp the shrubs and small trees and make our way up to the top. A thick undergrowth of shrub near the top provides shelter from the rain and also hides us from sight of anyone passing on the road below. After a half hour of spying, we cut across the slippery face of the hill to reach the compound wall of my house. Clambering over the wall we drop into the garden and make our way to the guest bath room to clean ourselves of the fresh red soil clinging onto our feet and shorts.

After a cup of hot milk my friends bid good bye and walk back to their homes. Another exciting June day comes to a close as the lights came on at home.

NOW

The steady gurgling of pigeons on the roof greets us as we step outside. A couple of city crows forage in the garbage litter across the road. Mindless of our presence they peck and dig deep into the pile of refuse satiating their gluttony. Plastic bags, plastic tea cups, plastic bottles, paper cartons, cigarette packs, paper plates and plastic spoons with gooey remains sticking to them, shattered glass of beer bottles…… Transparent, translucent, opaque. White, black, multicoloured the plastic is everywhere on the rocks, on the semi wooded slope of the only open plot remaining in this colony.

A sudden gust of wind and a single transparent plastic bag lifts up and glides along with the current before plummeting down into the only tree remaining in front of my living room window. It hangs on the branch inspiring memories of the flowers which once were…. Like the single note of paper that was carried by the swirling winds at the end of the movie “Forrest Gump”, this single plastic bag conveys the understanding, thoughts and actions of this entire generation in its short journey from the refuse pile to the tree. This is the purpose for which God has provided us with wind. Stepping out onto the concrete front of the building I see a mash of red…a tomato sauce bottle shattered with force on the ground. A mass of dead centipedes…crushed by the tyres of the Honda City standing beside. The earthworm – what is that? asks my 4 year old daughter.

The year is 2008. At 35, I feel older than my father. We are going to pick up our daughter from school and take her to the swanky City Centre Mall to entertain her for the evening. Dark clouds gather menacingly overhead. Another gust of wind and in wafts the corrosive perfume of burning plastic accompanied by smoke. We cough instantly and move back inside to shut the windows facing the road.

Thick belches of greyish white smoke fly up the slope from the plot below. Reminiscent of the mist and cloud shooting up at Silent Valley point near Kodai. I look around. All the other houses are closed to the outside world. Windows sealed and giving the blank, dark stare of cooling glasses. The Air Conditioners are humming.

Clad in our Nike joggers, wearing our FILA jackets and an umbrella in hand we walk down the road. A blaring horn and we skip aside to allow a fast moving Toyota Innova to charge up the slope. We take a few steps down before another horn behind us forces us off again. A flame red Ford Fiesta shaking with the fury of dance music pumping from its system zips down the slope and turns off with a screech of tyres. We walk past the blackened face of earth to our right – a stunning canvas painted by the brush strokes of innumerable burnings of refuse. A couple of female construction workers have moved up the slope into the shrubs. Hitching up their skirts they relieve themselves without caution.

We step into our Zen and drive the 3 km to school. 20 minutes. It takes 5 minutes to turn right onto the main road as scores of vehicles speed onward unrelentingly. As an RTC bus stops in the middle of the road to offload passengers there is a temporary lull and I take advantage of it. Picking up my daughter we move towards Paradise signal. It is now pouring buckets of rain. We wait interminably at the signal. Taking 5 red lights to finally make the turn onto the mighty Sardar Patel road. Ragged women with babies tap on our window. As do old men in crutches. Skinny boys with tattered T shirts forcibly clean my windshield in the puring rain. Another three red lights to pass police lines signal. The road is flooded and jammed near my old school. It is a 6 lane road now and the entire width is crammed with countless cars, buses, bikes, autos all jockeying for position. Finally an hour after starting from the school we pull into the basement parking lot of the City centre. As the cool blast of the Air Conditioning hits us we relax. We are in heaven.

After an hour of window shopping in the air conditioned atmosphere, we splurge on a cup of coffee and pastries at the Coffee Shop. My daughter then has a toy train ride and rattles up a couple of video games all for the price of Rs.100 ticket. Then back to the car and the long drive of 10 km home. Just one hour and fifteen minutes as the road is flooded and jammed even more if that were possible. Streams of water are now flowing down the slopes near our house. Instead of paper boats, plastic cups, bags and cigarette cartons float merrily down the stream and are grounded on the banks of the gutter here and there.

We enter our home and towel off before switching on the cable TV to watch the latest release on HBO. Another draining June day comes to a close.

Later that night as I bury myself into the pillows, a photographic album of memories of 1986 extracts itself from the recesses of my mind and offers itself to me. A single drop disengages from the corner of my right eye and rolls down my cheek. As each photo flits past my closed eyes, the rain gathers force and many such drops appear in both eyes. They form streams of water that flow down both cheeks and plunge into the pillow buried under my face soon to be lost from sight for ever much as those rain water streams did in 1986.. ..I cry unashamedly for the life we have all lost and which our children will never see.

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World Enviroment Day – Whats the big deal about it?

June 5, 2008 by 1 Comment

We all want to go green, be eco-friendly and be happy about it. The only hitch is that we live in a world which makes it difficult for us.

Read on the comments and laments of so many people we have come across. While some have been lip-servicing, some have made us to sit up, think, and do something about it.

  • I go shopping for groceries and end up coming home with handful of plastic bags. Not that I wanted them, but I do not have a choice.
  • I remember my grandmother shopping with a cloth bag in hand. It looked so un-cool then. On that note, it still does.
  • I hate to use public transport. They are so crowded and dirty.
  • I just can’t do with one car. Not when there are so many eye catching beauties within my reach.
  • I would love to go to a virgin forest… where no man has gone before.
  • I love stuff that come with great packaging. It makes me pick it up right off the shelves. What the heck, it comes in plastic and aluminum. What do you expect me to do?
  • I want my kid to be eco-friendly but… the best toys I have come across for children – are made of plastic. What do you expect me to do about it?
  • OK! I will take my bicycle to work. Please ensure that I don’t choke myself to death by the time I reach there.
  • These genetically modified tomatoes look so Yummmm!
  • It is not mine, but the Government’s role to clean up this mess.
  • I am a cleanliness freak. My detergent shelf is stocked with the best scrubbers, abrasives, cans, and lot more. I give a damn if the contents are toxic to the environment.
  • Mosquito nets are such a hassle to use. I have the latest mosquito repellents in use. My health and by baby’s health is far more important to me.
  • I do go to church every Sunday for the world now looks a lot more like the revelations.
  • Is it wrong to indulge in pleasure, once in a while?
  • How can I survive without animal-tested cosmetics and leather in my wardrobe? I feel so left out when I meet my peers.
  • About the cosmetics, I would want a safe and well trialed product before it reaches my skin.
  • If you don’t give me a dust bin, how can I not litter?
  • The last thing I want is to be shunned down by my peers – for being so, ugh, grandmotherly.
  • Yeah, I wasted a glass of milk today. You want me to put it back in the cow?
  • It was so romantic to receive a thousand long stemmed roses on our thousandth day of our wedding.
  • Isn’t so amazing to see the Jumeria Island in Dubai coming up on sea? Man can indeed conquer nature.
  • What wrong did I do that I face these unprecedented power cuts, reduced water supply, higher than high gasoline prices, and so much misery. Why do I have to bear the brunt of others actions?
  • I am a non-vegetarian since I was a toddler. I still like to eat food that way. You want me to give it up just because of the environmental fad? Hugh!
  • Don’t blame me for answering my nature call in public. If you don’t give me a toilet in public place, where do I urinate?
  • In office, I need to print. I know I am using precious paper. I know the toner inks are not that ecologically great. I know the paper is not made the ecological way. It is not in my hands and I am powerless. What do you want me to do?
  • Online money has been a boon. But I have been suffering from more thefts and frauds.
  • Do I worry about making money and providing livelihood or extinction of some god-damned insects?
  • I want a car that won’t give bad emissions, leave lesser carbon footprints and blah blah. Do you have any – within my reach?
  • Now, where do I dump all the plastic that I have painstakingly been collecting since so long?
  • I live in an apartment where I can do nothing with kitchen waste recycling. I feel miserable.
  • So what wrong with air travel, especially when it is affordable?
  • My carbon footprints? You go and ask those in the so-called developed nations to answer first.
  • Why should I stop having children because the world is over populated? Demand-Supply economics is none of my business. It’s none of your business to ask me to do something about it either.
  • When it comes to entertainment, I am doing my conscientious bit. I vacation only at the eco-friendly resorts and forest lodges. It is none of my concern that I am adding up to the crowd that alters the ecology there.
  • How can I go to the office restroom to wash my coffee mug every time I have a coffee? I would rather use those disposable paper mugs and be done with it.
  • WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY? Oh! I have to wear green dress to the office today, write a slogan on how I am going to preserve the environment and possibly win a prize for that. My desk needs to be decorated too – in green color. We are going to have speeches and presentations on preserving the environment, where we will be served hot snacks in disposable plastic plates and coffee in the throw-away mugs.

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World Environment Day Today

June 5, 2008 by 5 Comments

Today is World Environment Day. A day set aside by the United Nations to sway non existent emotions or just nudge plain reason to ponder on the state of the living planet.

The slogan this year – CO2, Kick the Habit! Towards a Low Carbon Economy. Apt almost to a fault. Its a no brainer that Carbon footprints have to be erased for creating a smoother pathway to an eco-friendly approach to life. [Read more…] about World Environment Day Today

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