February 27, 2021

The Indian Phenomenon

The Soul, joy and pride of being an Indian, legally and by heart excludes no one since childhood, in my country. As a matter of fact, at school, we are made to pledge our dedication to the country daily, in the morning prayers. Oh! How great it used to feel to chant it like a song, together with the entire school. Our teachers would tell us- 'this pledge, our national anthem, they are our roots, they are our strength, they are you and they are me'.
After our morning pledge and national anthem, we would commemorate the 'assembly' by chanting prayers, some common ones suitable to all castes and sects in India. Although I sigh now remembering, they never included something for the kids who followed Islam; same pattern in all the schools I have been to (there have been a couple). But that is a story for another day.

The prayers would ring through the walls till they vibrate from the foundation deep down below and our ears were full, eventually making a place in our huge brains- which I later learnt that we as humans do not ever use more than 2%, scientifically and experientially proven. 
In most of the prayers, we were made to feel thankful for the life given to us, to all supposed Gods, to nature and our parents. It was so generalised, that it was almost inconsiderate to the kids who had abusive parents, to the people who were orphaned in childhood, to the kid who was being raised by a divorced parent, widow/widower, remarried, step-parent, guardian; the list goes on. As a bottom line, we were supposed to honour, without a second thought, everything our parents did for us. No matter if they are wrong, it was imbibed in us to respect them, never leave them and care for them for this lifetime. It was a concoction in our brain like a chemical by Professor Utonium, although this one mixed on purpose, in the name of culture, ethnicity, patriotism, rituals and also deep-rooted, visibly invisible patriarchy. 

How does this all co-relate, you ask? 
Well, does it not? 
As Indians, are we not one of those countries, where moving out after 18 years of age is frowned upon? Whereas in western countries (west from India), it is considered to be a sign of a well-cultured human being, a self-sufficient adult and most importantly, independence is seen as the most favourable quality, the most sought after goals.

Independence, you see, is a very fancy yet enviable word:
For my country, it meant everything; but as an individual, it is supposed to mean nothing. 
As a country, we wanted to be free from all the invaders throughout history; but as an individual, we long going to the same western countries for our jobs and studies.
We as a country, keep fighting the people who try to invade us to date; but if as an individual, you try to fight for your independence, you become the epitome of betrayal, of a bad person and also, a bad child. 
A bad child because of the chemical concoction in our brains, leaves traces of guilt, every time the chemical travels through our neurons.

As a child, an adolescent, an adult- we are repeatedly reminded of how we would be a failure in life if we were to choose for ourselves, how choosing ourselves is selfishness and mean-mindedness.
Meanwhile, no one taught us there is a thin line between choosing for ourselves and selfishness. No one told us independence does not mean betrayal, it means growing up, nurturing ourselves, taking care of the people you feel something towards. No one told us parents are our birth givers, caregivers are all true, but it is not true if we seek space and independence, has to be concluded into being a failed child. And lastly, no one told us, developing a bitter-sweet relationship with independence makes our brains handicapped.

Values, ethics, sincerity, honesty, loyalty- all being good qualities- can they not be merely a way of life? Is it difficult to see them as our branches, while the individual sits still as a trunk? Why do we judge the pattern the branches grew in?
Maybe, while growing up, we were taught to not let ourselves go and that trees had to have that dense foliage in our drawing book, otherwise, that would not be a tree at all. 
Maybe we were taught, if we live differently and grew independent, we would be termed as criminals without a crime. 

July 15, 2020

Workplace Dictatorship

I won a battle today.
Everyday, somewhere, someone is entering this battleground. The battleground of workplace dictatorship.

This supposedly predominant issue, racing from top tier to the bottom, receives utmost meagre limelight more so often. Leaving us with the feeling of no choice but acceptance of a broken system, a mis-spelled small problem and a *survival gear to keep our stomachs full.

Throughout history, refusal to gulp down injustice, dishonesty, violation of rules has been frowned upon. It is frowned upon, not merely by the people in power, but also the followers, who when given the minutest power to exhale even a spark of fire, would not fail to do so.
The question here is, if humankind is prone to change overnight and become a devil, when given slightest hint of power?
or
Is this a vicious loop of realization of the *survival gear, to keep their stomachs full?

In the name of fighting through to find your way, reaching the pinnacle by crushing shoulders instead of just brushing against them, we as humans fall prey to this broken system at a workplace. The cracks are so wide, yet camouflaged, if we dare pause on them to breathe fresh air, we would crash fall; hanging on the edge with one hand, to rescue ourselves. Before someone, from the herd within this broken system, crushes down on your hand till you let go.

This embedded phenomenon called ‘dictatorship’, at workplaces, is so common and widespread, we almost find it normal, natural and political. Out of the two black & white sects of employees, sincere & disingenuous, the ones who raise hand against the dictators are not black OR white. They are those who would tear wide open the camouflage and try to bridge those cracks.
They are in you,
they are in me,
they are in all those people who acknowledge & fight against this system; this wobbly broken system.

The honest gathering of courage to oppose this dictatorship, is what wrote wins in history. After all, injustice has no scale, dishonesty has no measure and violation of any rule is still, unacceptable.
Eyebrows are raised when one speaks about harassment at workplaces, as though it is their own home. It is laughed off to have a torturous boss, again with the feeling of having no choice but acceptance.

Although, in the end, the truth is, we spend 3/4th of our lives in a place that fills our stomach, builds our career and most importantly, is responsible for our happiness.

The question arises, should we accept dictatorship, sail that boat, which on overloading would throw you into the sea?
or
Should we swim through hard waters but till the finish line, happy and content? As though you have won some battle.

April 11, 2020

Collapse, Retract.

You see, how unfair life is?
'Giving lemons, making lemonades', going down the drain
Leaving you paralysed
Numb 
Dumbfounded
All at strike of a midnight

You see, isn't that how it's always been?
Or is this new?
This time
The place
This midnight
Deformating within self
Crushing the dawn
Into an uncomfortable silence

You see, you know that's how life's always been
Pushing into darkness today
Limelight tomorrow

So take the string,
Hold it tight,
Pull it through, 
And create symphonies.

January 25, 2019

I thought, maybe let's move to Madagascar

Did we get it all wrong?
The love, hate, sorrow & joy
Entangled in our head 
Smoothly so?

Ever so glorious
Figuratively figured out
Our brains so consumed
and thoughts infused
Did we get it all wrong?

Moving, believing, giving
Thinking it through
Breaking it through
Trying to shine all the way?

Worrying what isn't
Ignoring that is
Regretting what couldn't
Neglecting that may
Did we get it all wrong?

Maybe we did,
We got it all wrong..







January 21, 2019

The Thin Line

Are we fools, or are we madness?
Reading too much between the lines
Ignoring the one that shines
Catching the one that burns
Reducing the one that hides

Are we fools, or are we madness?
Reading too much between the lines..

Running away from reality
Far away from sanctity
Merging into the oddity

Are we fools, or are we madness?

Oh! I realize the scars that burn,
and memorize the rush that runs
'Cause I think we are fools, we are madness
We are all that heals
All that survives
We are humans
Reading between the lines..






February 18, 2018

Anti-Cylcone

'I beg young people to travel. If you don't have a passport, get one. Take a summer, get a backpack and go to Delhi, go to Saigon, go to Bangkok, go to Kenya. Have your mind blown, eat interesting food, dig some interesting people, have an adventure, be careful.
Come back and you are going to see your country differently, you're going to see your president differently, no matter who it is. Music, culture, food, water. You're going to see that global climate change is very real. And that for some people their day consists of walking twelve miles for four buckets of water. And so there are lessons you can't get out of a book that are waiting for you at the other end of the flight.'
-Henry Rollins

Every time I read these lines, it leaves an imprint; tells me why travel is important and not just over-rated, helps me become a traveler everyday, look at life non-materialistically and begs the young soul in me to travel more.

It does not matter how and where we travel, whether 2 miles or 2000 miles. It changes you, makes you look into yourself, look beyond the standard horizon, tells you where serenity lies and where peace resides. My recent trip to the Himalayas in India is one such example I set for myself to seek where my peace resides. Its in those little things when you watch a flowing river, hear a bird singing, feel that cold breeze brushing on your body and realizing how Science has created beautiful wonders.

Somewhat of a planned trip with friends, which went twisting around as we traveled along. After a good flight to the capital, Delhi, we merged into the most densely populated city in India. A short search and we easily found our way into Delhi metro with help from the local-ites, who by the way were the sweetest guides. I, personally, was amazed by the fact that Delhi metro was almost similar to what I experienced in Vienna, which is known for its transport connectivity. It was not my first time to travel by Delhi metro but the first time that I observed and realized how much importance these things hold. A short stay at the capital with expensive cab rides through the well known traffic got us through the day with a visit to the India gate, the Qutub Minar precinct & an awesome evening shopping at Sarojini nagar market (A must visit for any female, with an assurance of empty suitcase carried along). That freezing evening made us stop by a chai tapri for a quick recharge, where we accidently tried a "Fan" popularly known as khari. It tasted way more better than a cup of tea with a twist of ginger & honey and sided by crackers. We immediately bought a pack full of Fans and rushed to the station to catch our train to Rishikesh via Haridwar.

Touchdown Haridwar, which to be honest, I had never imagined would be a destination I will visit with my friends but I am glad, I did. Our delayed train to Rishikesh charged us with frustration as it ruined our plans in Rishikesh for the day and on reaching our hostel we had to cut short the activities we had planned, which ruined our moods furthermore. While gathering some positive energy we went for the 16kms river rafting in the Ganges, which turned out to be the best adventure sport I had done till date. The instructor guided us about the raft and consequences if any mistakes were committed. It scared me at first but then, that's what adventure is all about, isn't it?

As we sat on the raft, still, at intermediate segments without moving our rows, I looked at the instructor, looking past the Ganga, he looked so content with the job. So happy amidst that beautiful water. I asked him if this job is 365 days a year and while he told me with a slight sigh in his tone that it closes in monsoon, I felt like telling him he's lucky. He's lucky to sit here in full energy and force, unstoppable by the rapids and the flashy winds. He's lucky to have a work which gives him joy and not just money, lucky to be not stuck amongst the crowd but rather float in the Ganga and live his life king-size.
I wish I could tell him, people visit here for leisure and your daily job is associated with leisure. I wish I had told him what I thought. Not to prove how I romanticize all this but to tell him, just another human being, that hes's doing great in his life.

The instructor would say "Ganga maiyya ki jay!" before every rapid and we were supposed to repeat what he says. Not being a religious person, I am against chanting but something in his energy made me do it. Not because I started believing in Ganga as a goddess, but believing in the fact that religions definitely do not make people, people make religions, they believe in the force that drives them daily. These honest forces of his belief in Ganga, showed why people who stay the simplest are the happiest. How dedication to your work, no matter what work it is, is important and how these beliefs need to be just true at heart, not as a show-off.

As the massive force of the Ganga left me awestruck and we took a dip in that freezing cold water, the water currents ran past us and it struck me how deep that water must be but yet we were in it with our life jackets, trying to float and swim like babies.

Post rafting as we tried to rush at the Ganga aarti held everyday, we somehow missed it and instead had to settle for a dinner at Chotiwala dhaba which was an infamous restaurant in Rishikesh. Seeing all those sad faces because the trip wasn't going according to the plan, I tried inducing some motivation in everyone for the next day trip to Auli, the most awaited destination of the trip.

One hell of a roadtrip to Auli with all kinds of motion sickness, rocky roads, Himalayan ghats, and beautiful terrains led us to this small town of Joshimath, base to Auli. We reached there by night when all the dinner buffets were finished and we had to survive on Maggi for the night. We woke up to 0 degree Celsius with all the layers we could fit into and rushed for a cable car ride after a quick breakfast. Again missing the tickets for the cable car, we settled for a car ride to Auli, which fortunately was the best decision we had taken and took us through the best of roads covered with snow.

Snow, white, ice, everything nice. That's what Auli was all about. So peaceful, so serene and almost unreal views of the mountains left us overwhelmed. Slipping like babies and falling on our butts on the frozen ice surely gave us bad injuries but those seemed to have no attention while we were busy digesting the experience of that snowy mountain.

A further extension to Auli visit was a so called hot spring hidden somewhere between a small village called Tapovan near Joshimath. Though the hot spring was extremely disappointing, it left us with strong visual memories of that black rock formation and settlements tucked between the valleys and also, a taste of native Momos, after which, we returned to our base.

A planned overnight journey from Auli to Dehradun had to be replaced with a daytime journey till Rishikesh back, due to risky drives in the mountains overnight. Again, collecting some positive energy after cancelled plans, we traveled back to Rishikesh. This time, overlooking the Prayag Sangams of the rivers, where Science didn't fail to amaze me once again.
We reached just in time for the Ganga aarti, saw the aarti and went back to a hostel at night by the Ganges riding in a tuk-tuk. Tried a nice calm cafe by the river hidden inside a shop, which to our surprise served delicious food from around the world except for North-Indian food.

After a lot of contemplation, on our last night of this trip, we decided to let ourselves breathe and enjoy where we stood and so we did. Chilling on a night by the Ganges, chatting about life, how we fucked up, how we enjoyed this so called planned journey and how we should do this more often.

Today, when I write about this, I know it's not a story with a climax, it does not have a cyclonic action but as I sit here, I do know it was this experience which will count, this travel which taught me something, made me loosen up myself and tell myself how things never go your way, you have to find a path and keep going. Why I say this, is the very first quote in this post which holds true for a reason.

November 15, 2017

State Of Denial

Love is a forbidden thing nowadays, the most purest thing that exists on this planet is forbidden. Its deeply saddening to know people are afraid of love now, they are afraid of falling into it, thinking of it as a trap. It is suffocating for certain people and a feeling of bliss, only for a handful. Those who seek, do not get it, those who get loved do not want it. A feeling of oddity, one must say. 

There is a constant question in my head, why? Why are people becoming more afraid of love, of commitment, of desire and fire?
While I seek that answer, I realize how we think, how we develop in this modern age full of artificial intelligence. We find places to subside the feeling deep inside us because we are afraid. Afraid of that feeling of rush inside us. It is scary, sure; not the feeling of love, the will to hide.

The modern world is a monster, not just out of an article in a daily newspaper which suggests its eating our brain bit by bit, till we break down on small things and finally disappear nowhere to be found. The thumb lock condition, the mental breakdown, frustration on a cancelled plan, depression of a teenager; its all there but purposely overlooked. Why again? Too afraid to accept?

Its a normal day to see a person (age no bar) walking across a busy road, not looking up, not looking at the building that collapsed, a building that's shining, a rainbow that's arising, or a person that's drowning. Why? Too afraid to leave someone on a blue tick?

There is no love without feeling, there is no feeling without love. The human robot gets a citizenship and we feel the chill through us that the world is changing! How long did that feeling last? Did you Like it and scroll down? 

Love is a sacred thing for a holy being, who knows what it takes to love. To love a person, a thing, a family, a nation, the planet. The state of denial is what it will take to destroy us, not even leaving an expansion joint for the moment of truth before it collapses..