Emotions and Cognizance : The spectacle that it makes of life !!
Showing posts with label story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label story. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 October 2016

Smaller Ants, Big Ants, Lizard and Snake

Its strange how fast the fan rotates and it never falls off. And I can see through the rotating blade, the ceiling has lost the shine of its white colour. There are hints of recently removed spider webs on the ceiling.

The CFL bulb in the room removes the difference between day and night, its always glowing, its always the same. To remove the confusion, I look at my mobile, its 12.40 am. Its raining outside and the sound of rain outside and rotating fan inside is mixing up. Its not disturbing, its soothing.

The walls are light yellow and the room is small. The mosquito net on the other bed is swaying.The blue curtains are also swaying.

There is a hole in the wall. some big black ants are concentrated around it. They are all static. There is another line of smaller black ants running across the wall from floor to ceiling and disappearing into the ventilator. They just keep on following each other, one after another in a queue. Its monotonous, its repetitive. But I keep watching them. Those tiny bodies moving so fast, those tinier slender legs floating over the wall. The line of ants seems to stretch to infinity. The individual ants cease to exist, a dark line instead takes place of the queue.

The dark line breaks up in between. The smaller ants are in a disarray. A big ant has broken this line. The smaller ants are attacking this big ant. So many smaller ants are biting this big ant. But this big ant calls for help. Soon, from the hole of the wall, a number of big ants start swarming out. And there is a mayhem. Big ants break hell over smaller ants, they bit them and cut them into pieces. The severed bodies of smaller ants are falling on the floor.

One lizard is keenly lurking around the falling ants on the floor. It is interested in this free meal. It throws out his long tongue and sucks in one of the severed body. This makes other ant bodies run away towards the door. Some ants have only the upper half, others the lower half and they are dragging themselves away towards the door. The lizard is angry. It growls and fans out its ears. It raises its body on all four legs and swings its tongue out in the air. It moves towards the door and suddenly stops in horror.

A snake head appears beneath the door. It moves its body inside the room from below the door space. All the severed ant bodies are struck to the snakes body as it makes its way into the room. The lizard tries to stop the movement of snake by raising its front legs one by one and making growling noises. The snake raises its head and in one strike the lizard is gone into its long unending slimy body.

The size of the snake starts to increase. It is thicker and longer. It sees me on the bed lying terrified. Its body raises as a spring coil. The big thick sticky shiny curvatures one above others raising it to the ceiling height. The severed bodies of ants sticking to its body are also larger now. The fan blows those ants around the snake like a garland. The snake raises its head once again. I am paralyzed in fear. The big mouth of the snake opens and it strikes me. 

I am shaking. Its wet, hot and dark inside the snake.

Its power cut. I am sweating.    


Tuesday, 15 March 2016

On why I am not fat

Life throws you many challenges. Most of them, we accept humbly and try to fend it off. Some, we make a mess of it and still hold on to fight it off. And a few of the challenges get under our skin. Literally.

The baggage of those extra kilos under our skin is not only 'figure distorting' but also 'life threatening' as we are told. The booming business of fat burning never fails to get this off your head.

You open TV sets and it will be showing you 'slim and muscular' bodies on 'naaptol'. Order this now on '7373...' and get 70% off. Be it slimming belt or exercise rope or fat burning capsule or body shaping clothes, you feel like all the energy crisis in the world is due to over accumulation of bio energy in human bodies. Newspapers and magazines are not far behind. 'Fat go oil', 'body toner pills' etc are the main revenue sources of print media advertisement, it seems. You take a walk in food section of big bazaar and there you see 'less oily oils' , 'less sugary sugar', what the hell! All biscuits have fiber in it, all breakfast items have more fiber in them, as if we were born to munch wheat bran.

The neighbourhood Shukla aunty is the new local icon. She wakes up at 4 am in the morning, drinks warm water with lemon before relieving herself and launching herself onto the colony roads in sports shoes and knotted dupatta across waist. After huffing and puffing for one hour, she then goes to yoga classes and eats no rice. She once had a 46 inch waist, which is now only 38, as we are told. All this while we poor losers sleep our way to ever expanding waistline.

In this mean world, where everyone is looking for the 'perfect selfie', being branded in the 'MCG' category for long has been stressful. No, its not Melbourne Cricket Ground, its 'motu', 'chotu', 'golu'.

You look at our cinemas.The heroes are lean, muscular, tough characters. And so are the villains. The chubby ones are sidelined to play the role of dumb brothers or stupid nerds in the college. Not only ugliness, even inefficiency is attached with chubbiness. The fat guys are non performing couch potatoes.

So, this extra fat leads to extra stress which in turn leads to more fat and the the vicious circle keeps rolling on. 

To break this circle, its important to demolish the very notion that "I am fat". For that, I have decided to come up with factors why I am not fat -

  1. Most of the Indians are too thin. Half our kids are malnourished. I am just healthy, better than most Indians. You can not blame a guy for the theory of relativity. 
  2. My genetic code leads to round body structure. Being round is not being fat, its just the bone structure.
  3. My internal organs are prone to frost bite. Hence a thicker insulation layer. This is not being fat.
  4. This is mere 'character illusion'. 'Branding', some may say. Few people are branded as cool, others as fat. The reality may vary.
  5. I have a bad dressing sense. Clothes make me look fat. In good dresses, I will be as slim as any one else.
  6. My stomach keeps food for the longer than average time for digestion. Hence it swells up more. My rest of the body is ok. You can not blame the stomach for trying to digest food in a better way.
  7. People must not judge a book by its cover. Some faces have 'fat-friendly-package'. It inter-alia doesn't imply fatness.  
  8. It is the fault finding society, that is at fault. when people can not find anything against someone, they use physical appearances as excuse.
  9. Cameras are made for people with sharp physical and facial features. Light when reflected by round surfaces does not form a sharp image. Hence, people with round faces and figures get their pictures fatter than they truly are. Shame on cameras!
  10. Normal mortal beings can not appreciate things beyond their time and locality. My body shape and size will be considered ideal in ages to come. I am just ahead of my times.

Hmmm, after making this comprehensive list, I feel confident. To all the people who are being tormented for body shape make your own such list and stick it on the wall of your home. And feel good, feel handsome. Don't let business of fat reducing affect you. Kick them hard. You have got one life only. Sleep, eat and sleep again, as God intended us to do. Everything else is "moh-maya".

P.S. I know there is difference between excuses and solid reasoning. This is the latter one.



 
 

Saturday, 1 August 2015

From the ghats of Banares : Riksa baba and Firangi pataka



First of all, thanks to my employer, Indian Railways, which is on the verge of choking down under the weight of its own enormous system, for cancelling my train from Kanpur to Kolkata. This led me to travel by bus from Lucknow to Banares and then to Kolkata by train. And I utilised this opportunity for ‘moksha prapti’ at the holiest of the Hindu towns, the Banares.   

The start was the least perfect. After being jerked in every possible angle for eight and a half hours on a UP state transport bus, I was staring at a long jam just outside Banares. The time was three fifty five am. I was sleep deprived due to multidimensional bone exercise at the second last row of seat on a shock-absorber less bus. The sound of constant clattering of fiber windows throughout the journey was still echoing in my mind.

My train was at eight forty am. I saw auto wallas around the jam scene. They were shouting ‘station...station’. I dragged out my backpack from beneath the seat and got down to take one of the autos. As soon as I stepped down, the first thing I saw was this rickshaw wala staring at the bus door. I turned around in the other direction towards autos. But a black and white image of Bhagat Singh, with his hairs folded as ‘judda’, sitting on a cot, from old NCERT history book crossed through my mind. This rickshaw wala looked exactly like him. Taking it as a divine sign, I turned back towards this rickshaw wala.

He was old, around fifty five years of age. He had pulled up his long hairs and tied them on the top of his head in the form of ‘judda’. Most of his hairs were white. But his face was clean shaven , long and thin. The stature was short. “Station jana hai, kitna dur hai?” I enquired. “2 km hoga”. “Chaliye”, I climbed up on his rickshaw. “Jam mein kaise jayenge?” “Galiyon se chalenge, road pe jane ka kya jarwat hai!”, he replied. It was still four and a half hours for my train. I was in Banares and the temptation to visit the famous ghats was always there. “Ganga ghat yanha se kitna dur hai?” “5 km hoga”. “Wanha ja kar darshan karne aur wapis aane mein train na nikal jaye”, I put forward a genuine worry. “Kitne baje ki hai train?” “Aath challis” “Ho jayega darshan”.

So, this undersized rickshaw wala wearing a yellowish-white old football jersey and a blue lungi peddled the way through the galis of Banares.   His feet clad in socks and torn sports shoes were reaching the pedals with difficulty.  His shoulders and hips of one side went down as he pushed the pedal on one side and in the rhythmic movement from one side to another.   

It was still dark. The shops along the narrow galis were closed. The creaking sound of rickshaw and the occasional barking of dogs were the only noises noticeable. The yellow street lights casted interesting shadows of rickshaw on street. The shadows near the lights were small and they elongated along the street as we moved away from light and then slowly it faded into another small shadow. And on the top of shadows, rickshaw walla’s judda was always present.

To break the monotony of the situation and to keep myself awake, I started a conversation. “Judda to sanyasi rekhte hain?” He took off one hand from the handle and kept the palm on his judda and laughed. “Bhaiyajee, hum bhi sanyasi hain”. He was happy that someone has noticed. “Naga baba hain hum” he added. Imagining this man whom I will refer as “riksa baba”, completely nude smeared in ashes and running down in a kumbh mela disturbed me. It may be noted that naga babas are nude ‘sadhus’ who lead a difficult life in Himalayas, which can be imagined considering sub zero temperatures and no clothes on body! They descend to Allahabad during kumbh mela attracting a huge contingent of national and international ‘bakhts’ eagerly awaiting their holy ‘darshans’. But this little ‘bhagat singh’ look alike man was not in the Himalayas! I was confused.

“Aap rickshaw chalate hain per...” I left out an open ended question. It’s not that I consider rickshaw pulling lowly, but the whole concept of naga sadhus is based upon leaving behind materialism. “Bhaiyajee” he took a turn into a relatively wider road, “ hindutva kya hai?”. It was a tough question for any person at any time, but with whole night of sleep deprivation, I was really not prepared for this.  

Sensing my inability to comprehend the subject, his small hands pointed out to small groups of women and men heading towards the ghats. The darkness had died out and the sky was greyish orange. Small groups of devotees, which have diverged into this wide road leading to ghats, were carrying small plastic bags containing the change over clothes. “ Ye log kyun aaye hain yanha?”. “Ganga ghat mein nahane ke liye”, I replied. “Bhaiyajee, aur gahrayee se sochein”, he insisted. “punya prapt karenge naha ke, sare pap dhul jayenge”, I stretched my answer. “Sahi kaha aapne, pap dhone aate hain log, ghaton pe, mandiro mein, pahadon pe, har jagah”, riksa baba added with emphasis “pap dhone”. So, what was he trying to tell, that sin is the mother of all religion!! I was in no mood to contest and we were nearing the ghats as the numbers of temples were increasing, and the typical smell of flowers lying in water along with incense stick was becoming stronger.

“Hindutva to pap dhona hai, magar aap naga sadhu kaise?” I was hell bent to get an answer. “Bhaiyajee, hum hindutva ke wahak hain.” Wahak means bearer. “Kitne hi logon ko ganga ghat ke darshan karaye apne jivan mein aur logon ne apne pap bhi dho liye, magar humme kya mila?”. He continued, “ hum to das rupyee savari pe riksa kichte reh gaye”. His voice exhausted from pulling rickshaw also sounded choked in sadness. It turned into that of guilt, “Magar, jyun humne nangi daud lagayi Allahabad ke sangam mein, logon ne mujpe aise paise bahaye”, he enacted the throwing of money using his one hand. “naga sadhu ko log bhagwan mante, humne paise ke liye kumbh mein naga sadhu banna shuru kar diya”.

Well, religion is a twisted concept. It doesn’t follow normal economic theories; it mixes mass psychology with anthropological myths and is served as a power centre to bend customary social theories. It was no doubt the ‘riksa baba’ has realised that working day and night to carry passenger was no match to smearing ashes and pretending to be a sadhu once every four years.            

We were at the ghat. Riksa baba showed me the big mast having dozens of halogen lights towering over ancient temple structures. He told me that I will get stairs leading to ghats from there. I thanked him for the wonderful company and handed him over a hundred rupee note. I convinced him that extra ninety rupees were for an excellent narrative he had provided.

I moved towards the big mast. Even though the day was about to break, hundreds of devotees were already present. As I made my way through groups of people on the stairs, I got the first look of the Ganges. It was not beautiful. A large portion of the river width was silted. The side of river along the ghat was occupied with small boats, from which the boatmen were shouting for the ride. I moved further down the stairs which was crammed with people, their shoes and chappals, flowers, incense sticks, red sindoor, broken diyas, ghee, dirt, hope and prayers. I reached at the bottom where silty, polluted waters of the holy Ganges were touching the concrete stairs.

There I met ‘firangi pataka’. She was what I will humbly put as “smoking hot”.

Banares attracts large number of foreign tourists. This town sells Hinduism and ganja(marijuana), and foreigners make a bee line for both. I had a lot of questions for them, and here was an opportunity.

She, the firangi pataka, was sitting alone on the stairs. And like most places in India, here too in this holy place, were a bunch of perverts happy to see hundreds of women take dip in the Ganges and then change clothes. But these ‘dudes’ standing near me, were not interested in those ‘brown skinned fatties’. Their gaze was fixed at the ‘firangi pataka’. I got this name from their conversations. Firangi means Foreigner and pataka means cracker. “Abe nadi kya dekh rahi hai, naha le janeman” commented one of the dudes.   

The level of pervertedness may differ, but my gaze too was fixed on her. She was clad in clothes from head to toe. She was wearing a cream coloured kurta and a white pyjama. Her head was covered with stole. Her white socks were adorned in red floaters.

I moved closer to her and stood at a little distance in front of her. The first rays of rising Sun were falling on her face. It was radiant. The greenish brown eyes were looking divine staring at the yellowish orange rays of the Sun. She was gorgeous, poised, and full of elegance and of course “smoking hot”. She didn’t notice me. And why would she? When the beauty of nature and the beauty in nature were appreciating each other, where did I stand?  

Still, persistence pays. Her eyebrows and lips in smile raised in unison as she noticed me as if questioning ‘what’? And I raised my lips in smile and shoulders in unison as if saying ‘I don’t know’. She signalled me with her hands to come near her. Quickly remembering all the attributes of a ‘cool dude’, I approached casually towards her. “Hey”, I tried to sound as foreign as possible. “Namaste”, she responded in a tone that was neither English nor American, but was deep and gentle at the same time.  Feeling foolish for acting too cool, I sat beside her on the stairs. She reverted back at staring into the rising Sun. I relooked at the scene before me, but this time I couldn’t feel the ugliness. I was wondering how our kids would look like.

Regaining my senses from fictional thoughts, I focussed on reality. “Do you find this beautiful?”. All I could see, in front of me, was an over polluted river and the Sun rising above it would be too hot too soon. “It’s the way you look”. I couldn’t grasp the concept; she on one hand couldn’t look any less dazzling from whatever way we look, but this river? “I am confused”, I blurted out. She turned and her eyes seemed to peek directly into my soul. This particular moment will remain etched into my heart forever, those extraordinary divine eyes with the depths of an ocean looking directly into mine, and I could sense the Sun’s rays refracting into her eyes and reflecting back into mine. I stood bare in admiration.  

“What’s your name?”, I think she had repeated this question. I searched for my name with my mind and gaze completely transfixed into her face. “Aaa..aa..Abhinav”. “Aa.a..Avinow, my name is Evelina” and she smiled broadly. I felt ashamed of stammering and staring. I lowered my gaze onto the stairs. “And as for your question, let’s go to the boats” and she started walking towards the river. I followed her in disbelief, anticipation and with obedience.    

I could feel the jealous looks of the ‘dudes’ piercing the back of my head. But, who cared? I was walking with the ‘firangi pataka’. There was uproar among boatmen to get the ‘madame’ on their boat. The men on the ‘darshan’ of Goddess were truly blessed. The ‘brown fatties’ were irrelevant as usual. She ignored them all and along the sides of Ganges, she walked pulling herself away from the crowd and the ghat. I followed, feeling at times to wave at the crowd as superstars do, but I was just the personal assistant to a superstar here.      

 We made our way along the ghat towards one end, where large numbers of boats were tied up along the shoreline. The concrete stairs were not present here. I saw a little boy relieving himself near one of the boats. She looked at him and smiled at me. God, did I mention she was beautiful?! “What’s your age?” I went direct for the jugular. She pulled herself up on one of the boats and shouted, “What?”. I shouted back, “your age?” “Forty two”, she emphasised by showing fingers on her hand, four on one hand and two fingers on another. I went into a shock. Here I was wondering what our kids would look like and she was forty two! “ Do you need a hand, boy?” Never before had I been hurt like this by someone calling me a boy. I gave her a hand and she helped me to get up on the boat.    

“You were confused what I find beautiful here, look for yourself”. She pointed out towards the ghat. It was not for the rising Sun over a river that she was interested in. It was not the view from the ghat, but the view of the ghat that was magnificent. There were old temples with red and yellow pieces of clothes hanging around, the sound of bells in the temples getting lost somewhere in the murmur and prayers of a devoted crowd, thousands of people concentrated on a small stretch of concrete stairs finding their way half naked towards the holy Ganges, those who reached the waters stood in content with folded hands facing the Sun, the small diyas floated into the Ganges making a twinkling effect, men and women devoid of material possession stood dipped in the faith of the unknown.

“You have similar scenes at Rome and Mecca, religion does have such effect on masses?” I questioned. “Christianity and Islam, and by that matter even Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism, were propagated and started by some people at some point of recorded history. They are religions. This is civilization, the oldest surviving mass culture. No one started it. It is the masses that have created a religion.”       

I wished I had more time with her and with the ghats. I had a train to catch at 8.30 am. “You won’t take a dip?” She queried as we got down from the tied boat. “Will you?” I replied. And in the exchanged smile the meanings of physical dip were exhumed. We exchanged goodbyes.

As I moved up on the stairs away from the human miracle of God, I searched for the correct word of this “human miracle”. Was it religion or was it faith. Was it civilization or was it hope economics. Why for so many people taking a dip in the Ganges at Varanasi is the single most important thing they have done in their life? For riksa baba, this was his survival mechanism. Religion was a thing to earn livelihood, a thing that brought money. For firangi pataka, this was a subject of study, a research paper. A topic of fascination and romanticisation.

But for millions of other people religion is a hope of new start. A place where old sins are washed and blessings are taken for a fresh start. A mechanism to refuel yourself spiritually, emotionally and psychologically.   

Amen.

PS –
1.       Smoking hot is used for someone before whom you seem to lose control of your senses.
2.       “Brown skinned fatties” used for Indian women devotees is just an expression to bring out the contrast, viewing from the eyes of common ‘dudes’. It is not meant for generalisation and disrespect in any ways.
3.       Offense, if any, to Hinduism or the holy town is unintentional, and may be excused.          

Monday, 24 February 2014

To Abhinav, From Abhinav


Dear Abhinav,

Now that you are in your 50’s, you must be thinking that ‘younger you’ was stupid. I always have this problem. Whenever I think of my younger days, I find myself very idiotic. Even my actions last year or last month seem to be highly erratic. And since you are me, you must be thinking that Abhinav of present was not ‘worthy of listening to’.

Hence to clarify your prejudice, take this:
“Humans are only animals who know they will die one day and then they work day and night to earn money and call themselves the most intelligent creatures.”

You can search it on whatever is the most powerful search mechanism of your time. These days we Google it. You will not find this quote anywhere, this is my quote.

So when I have established my level of wisdom firmly, I think you are now all ears to listen me. I have a lot to tell and talk. And since you cannot reply me back, I will stick to only ‘telling’ part.

I hope you are healthy. If the tummy of yours is still bulging out, then probably it’s high time to start doing something about it. Most men whim I know in their 50’s have receding hairline predominated by whiter shade. I know I cannot expect my hair to be black at your age but I really want hairs to be intact on my head. If your hairs are still there, then eat a ‘Amul’ dark chocolate to celebrate, if this chocolate still sells in market and if you are not diabetic. Oh, the thought of a plump, bald and diabetic you is making me sick. It’s a lesson for present me to make more efforts to stay fit and healthy.

I hope you are taking good care of your parents. If you have become the kind of man who lives some place distant from parents and send them money through e-banking and posts ‘love u dad’ facebook messages on father’s day, then hang yourself right this moment. If ropes and fans have become obsolete, then shoot yourself. I am sure guns will be still there. Present me will never like such future you. If you are 50+ years old, then my (I hate writing ‘your’ in this case) parents will be 80+ years old. This is really very old age and if you are not living right now with them, just move to their place. Take it as a ‘God promise’ from a younger you; you will have to do it. Such thoughts are again making me sick. Why is future so complicated?

Between, by any chance have you become smart and handsome? And yes, you are thinking right, present me do believes that miracles happen. I hope you are not as dumb as I am today and you can make few middle aged women turn their heads. And that you are sporting a French cut beard that present me has always dreamt. How do you dress? Lately I have found out that I don’t think before dressing and people spend a lot of time thinking what they should wear. May be in this transition of more than two decades, you too have got some sense of fashion. But do people in your time wear clothes made of cotton or some ‘nano-fabric’? And are green vegetables, fruits and milk the most nutritious food in 2040’s also? I hope you still eat roti, dal and vegetables and not some ‘food-pill’ kind of thing.

How’s your house? I hope its small bungalow type of home. Present me doesn’t like the idea of living in a flat in a multi-storeyed building in a big city full of people. You still use mobile? Or people in 2040’s use some other device to communicate? At present the most advanced thing is a ‘tab’. I will buy it in few years. But I hope you have kept my present mobile safe. This black and white nokia mobile will remind you of your good days. And have you got a car? Present me loves ‘Honda city’ and ‘Tata safari’. Do you fly often now? I haven’t been on an aeroplane till date. I hope you will write all your experiences for a younger you and keep it safe for me read it in my next life.

Now about girls, of course. Rather women. From my very birth I have remained very*n times confused about them. (Where n is the largest non-zero positive number you can imagine). I just hope that by your time, the value of n has decreased significantly. You also must be having a wife. If she hasn’t divorced you till now citing your dumbness, just listen to me carefully. Treat her like a princess. No matter what is her mood, age or condition, love her in all possible ways you know and love her to the extent you can possibly love a person. You are 50+ and so is she, but does that matter? Present me will be very angry if you have made his future wife sad at any moment in these years.

And kids. Are you taking good care of them? I have so many plans for my kids. I will tell you one by one, and you make a ‘fulfilled promise list’ and tick each one you have kept. If it’s not filled with ticks, present me will never write again to future you. I want my children to grow in a place far away from maddening crowd. In the day time, under a lazy morning spring sun, they must sit watching flowers in the garden and the dead leaves fallen on green lawn to suddenly realise that one brown and yellow leaf which out of the blue jumps from ground onto a flower is actually a butterfly. In the night, they must lie on the ground watching twinkling stars against clear black night sky and between these stars; they will identify twinkling lights of fire flies. I don’t want them to waste their lives amidst schools, tuitions, music class, swimming class etc. I don’t want them to become ‘competition ready’, rather they must realise that life is too short for such antics. They must value honesty, truthfulness and simplicity. I want my kids to read good books and write stories rather than watching ‘tab’ and listening to ‘i-pod’. I want them to play hide and seek on streets rather than going for badminton classes. There is a long list of things I want for my kids and I desperately hope you have lived up to your own expectations.

Future seems to be lot more challenging. 2040 is still a long way to go. Your appearance, your fashion, your style may have changed. You must be thinking of crazy ‘past you’. But imagining future has been as tough and painful as has been the pleasure to tell you so many things. I don’t know why I am going to tell you this one last thing because you are me and you will remember. Still in case you forget, “I don’t want you to be you; I want you to be just me”.  

Yours ‘me’,
Abhinav.
                

Monday, 30 December 2013

Merry Marry



25th December is the time to say merry Christmas. But as Christianity has rightly enlightened us about the ‘original sin’, we the country with the most diversified ‘religious portfolio’ start a new yearly wedding season. The jingle bells sound like wedding bells for many wannables. And about the ‘sin’, Adam and Eve couldn’t resist the apple; we are hardly anyone to resist ‘shaadi ke laddu’.



It’s said about such laddus that “jo khaye wo pachtaye aur jo na khaye wo bhi pachtaye”. Meaning we are insects attracted to a tube light. For those who are less biologically inclined, insects are attracted to tube lights because they think they have got ‘available opposite sex’ there. Apparently there is some ‘wavelength locha’. Insects ready to mate and tube lights emit similar signals. Only that they end up in lizard’s stomach after a brief period of excitement.



This really sums up marriage. We are insects, tube light is the institution of marriage and lizard is our society. Needless to say, brief period of excitement is the honeymoon period.  



From where we arrived at the modern concept of marriage? Had our lords told so? No. Krishna was more interested in his Gopis. Lord Rama’s father had three wives. The five pandavas were married to one woman and they freely ‘dated’ other women. Hail Hindu! Had our national heroes told so? No. Gandhi’s marriage was based on the oath of celibacy. Nehru, well, we all know. Raja Ram Mohan Roy, the biggest reformer of modern India was married thrice. And still, we the faithful followers stick to one man one woman policy of perfect marriage.



Why marriage in the first place? Academicians suggest - because we cannot control. All other species have a well defined mating periods and they procreate obeying nature’s cycle. We humans on the other hand are ever ready. So we need a strong institution like marriage to stop anarchy in the society. Even with so many bondages, look at our population, we indeed are God’s best creation.   



For many of us who don’t like being compared with insects and being called ‘control freak maniacs’, let’s get into real ‘marriage business’. How do we choose mates?



For women, they have three different categories to choose from.



Type I is the NRI type. Those who were hot in the late 90’s in the marriage market. They promised of a future in a far away land, the ideal prince charming in the wonderland with lot of money. They meant an opportunity to break free from “saree-saas-sasural” triangle. But with the world economy taking a plunge, these potential grooms now lie grounded. They are out of flavour for ‘informed’ girls. The families are more sceptical in ‘giving their daughters’ to NRI husbands. Their fortune in marriage market is as sensitive as sensex.



Type II is the metro man. He is the company guy. He will spend all his life at one or two place. He will go office, remain there, remain a little longer, come back and sleep. He will speak the perfect words, thanks to high overdose of management slides. He is fair and handsome, not because of genes, but because he is confined to AC cubicles whole day and night and he is aware of the use of ‘guy-cosmetics’. In the present day marriage market, they are selling like hot cakes. Stability, money and presentable, they have it all. Girls are doing all in their disposals to catch such a ‘catch’. Parents are eager to consent. Perfect arm candies for modern day women.



Type III is the sarkari babu. Posted some place infected with abject poverty, they are opposite of fair and handsome, whatever that may be. Again not because of genes but because of Mother Nature and job nature. They still believe that writing is the ‘most in thing’ to do. Parents love such ‘damads’. Girls hate such ‘dumbos’. Such babus are ending up with perfect desi bahus. A complete family man for ‘praying women’.



For men, it’s the matter of being picked up. NRI types get picked up in colleges. Metro men get picked up in companies. Sarkari babus get picked up not by girls but by Godfathers – men with white kurtas and gold garlands for their ‘little girls’.



Going personal, its twilight for me. Lights are getting dim. I can sense tube light’s light. It’s my time to be the insect. And have a last laugh about it. Anyways I can’t control it. Quiet.



PS- This article is the best example of how to ruin your marriage-pickability. So, to keep my chances alive, here’s the disclaimer. This is a piece of write-art, describing a point of view. The views expressed are not really what I feel about marriage and its process. I will love getting married.