Sunday, May 18, 2014

The Charcoal Canvas

I personally don't think this piece is quite complete, but this piece has been sitting thus for quite sometime as a draft and I seem to be lost in direction to complete it. I'll experiment if incompleteness lends it any beauty....

The canvas of my mind,
was once strewn with colors.
A vibrant motif splashed across,
she certainly was,
a good painter of my mind.

She knew me for what I was,
I respected her for what she was.
Life thus was very colorful,
it all seemed to fall in place.

Till one day she decided
to look for someone more special than me.
Reasons yet hazy for me than for her,
when she decided to take my canvas
away from me.
When she decided to take herself,
away from me.
I was bad I know,
but was I this bad?

My mind was gone,
all that remained there,
was a sketch with charcoal.
Did she know,
what her shuffling out would mean to me?
Maybe she didn’t know,
maybe she didn’t care.
The charcoal canvas was all that was left of me.

Thus far, thus alone,
I took solace on loan.
Comfort was scarce,
grievance aplenty.
I had no one to blame sans me.
I stood alone, staring at nowhere,
the cascade of pain, let it start and end with me.

How bad can the face of consolation be…
If only someone could laugh out loud,
so that the noise of my sob,
is drowned in the pitch of the guffaw.


The Broken Pencil

Some things in life are indeed priceless. But the tag of pricelessness associated with things change as perspectives change. Things that seem trivial today might get a heavy emotional tag attached to it tomorrow. There existed a time when my worldly possessions could be counted with fingers of both my hands. School days.

Primary school. I owned only a handful of material possessions back in the days. A few pencils, an eraser, a ruler neatly packed by a loving mother daily into a cute pencil box was a prized possession for everyone. Lending a pencil to a classmate when he or she forgot hers was accompanied by stringent set of conditions. If someone broke someone else’s pencil or lost another person’s eraser, tempers used to flare. Those situations could result anywhere from threats to complain to the class teacher all the way up to fistfights.

Sometime then, I had a Staedtler pencil in my pencil box. Personally I used to consider her as the queen in my pencil box, in the middle of handful of Nataraj and Apsara pencils, which were much more prevalent in those days. She had a very different yellow and black striped skin, which stood much in contrast with the red and black striped Nataraj and the bluish tinged Apsara. For my little mind, she seemed to have an aristocratic aura to herself, which manifested in the way I treated her compared to others. She was the queen in my possessions, my trump card of sorts. I never used her for day-to-day trivialities in class, only special occasions like test papers warranted me taking her out of the pencil box to perform her worldly obligations. There was one other thing – no one else got to touch her. Lending her to someone was a strict taboo.

Rules, they say, are meant to have exceptions. My rule was no exception to the exception to rule concept. She was beautiful. No, am not talking about my pencil here, the “she” here refers to what it is actually meant to refer to. She was someone who had recently transferred to my school from another place, and to summarize, she did have a lot of boys staring at her. The feelings of a boy in primary school to a classmate of his is highly difficult to phrase, given the freedom of expression I have I’ll convey it as a primary school version of romance. To be fair to myself, I was not the only one. Competition is a hallmark of this cruel world, isn’t it?

So this lovely lass leaves me stumped when she comes up to me one day asking for a pencil. She broke her pencil and doesn’t have a spare one, and for some divine reason, it is me she chose to approach for a replacement. I do not know the emotions that ran through my mind, but in contemporary jargon, it would be much along the lines of “mere mann mei laddu phoota”. And that was the state of mind with which I broke possibly the biggest rule of my life of those days – I lent her my priceless Steadtler pencil.

It was possibly the first time in my life that I was faced with the phenomenon of readdressing priorities. The request was put forward, the temptation was irresistible and priorities were shuffled. And my priceless possession changed hands. For a good part of rest of the day, I snuck peeks in her direction, and watched her beautiful hand adorned with my beautiful pencil, scribbling away in her notebook. Priceless moments.
One of the most ecstatic days of my school life thus passed. At the end of the day, she did not return the pencil. Even though I was a little disappointed at not getting back my pencil, I took comfort in the fact that it was in her safe hands.

The sun dawned over the skies of my small town one more time the subsequent day. Although I can’t vouch for it, but am reasonably certain that my mother had a much easier day getting me up from bed and getting me ready for school. All the while I was dreaming about striking a conversation with her. Nowadayd, they say a lot can happen over a cup of coffee but back in those days, a lot could happen over a pencil. Off I marched to school, thinking of all probable scenarios of how would I confront her, how best to possibly open up a conversation with her, and so on. I waited at the school gate to try and catch her when she entered the premises, that certainly would’ve given me ample time to talk while walking from the gate to our classroom. I waited for as long as possible before the bell went off, but she didn’t come. She was absent for the day. Darn, my luck..!

I was luckier next day. I’d like to believe I forged my luck. After I woke up the next day morning, I meticulously recounted the details of my modus operandi the previous day and I tried not to emulate that as much as possible so that my actions were not jinxing, in any way. So I went to school displaying the usual reluctance, was not overly fast when walking to school, did not wait at the gate… and lo, behold! My planning paid off and she was present.

It took me till lunch time to muster enough courage to walk up to her. I remember very distinctly, that my mind was blank. The entire setup was something akin to what are so eloquently portrayed in Bollywood movies, minus the flowers flowing around and the background music that usually accompanies such situations. I asked her in the sweetest possible voice a twelve year old could bring to fore.

“Errr, you had borrowed my pencil the other day. If you are done using that, can I have that back?”

I knew something was wrong the instant I saw her reaction. I knew for certain that I hadn’t screwed up anything with my approach. Not yet, so far. But her face paled, her little smile faded.

“I am sorry. My little brother broke it the day before, when I was trying to do my homework with that pencil.”

At that instant, my whole world turned upside down. My favorite pencil, which I myself used so sparingly, which I made myself to give to her, lay broken in pieces in some trash bin somewhere. I couldn’t believe she had done it to me.

As I turned my back on her and rushed away from her I heard the first syllable of sorry sputtering out from her mouth. I didn’t listen, I didn’t pause, and I simply couldn’t be consoled. I turned my back on her, for once, for all.


If you are reading this by any chance, ma’am, you owe me a pencil. And much more. 

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

cout << “Happy Onam..!” << endl;

Today….is Onam.

Nostalgia is too light a term to signify, in all its intensity, its meaning. All those folktales and songs associated with Onam, the floral decorations and the spirit enshrined in the concept of Onam… all those are irrelevant when viewing the world outside from the glassy confines of my software company. I wear spotlessly cleaned and ironed formal attire to office everyday so that my clients are impressed, but that hides the financial pauperism I am undergoing. The company pays me when it feels, and when it feels is a question of probability tilted heavily against employees like me trapped somewhere in the bottom rungs of the hierarchical pyramid. I had asked my manager for an advance payment of the month’s salary because I wanted to gift something to my parents for Onam, but his ominous visage told me to mind my own business than to keep refreshing my bank statement online.

And today, of all days, a series of meeting got scheduled to discuss some project proposals with my client. My manager being a Keralite, I expected him to find a way to schedule the meetings at an alternate date so that we could have a lighter business day today, the day of Onam. Instead, he, the veteran of many more Onams than myself, drilled into my head the fact that Onams might come and go, but the same wasn’t necessarily true with clients. So on this day, which all these previous years used to start with a temple visit followed by a nice breakfast made by a loving mother, it began in a most dreary way when my alarm didn’t go off and I found myself half awake in my bed half an hour before I was supposed to report for my meeting at office, cursing anyone and everyone who had anything to do with computers and software. An auspicious start to a pious day.

Reaching fifteen minutes late for the meeting was probably one of the better moments of the day, for, those fifteen minutes, I was NOT drilled. The entire day, merciless souls took pleasure in butchering me and pointing out flaws with my proposed design. I was supposed to presenting, but the amount of time I spoke paled in comparison with the amount of time my revered guests spent critiquing and tearing apart my design. Just before lunch, my manager approached me and asked me to come up with a fresh design in the next four hours, he was rescheduling a design meeting with clients after that and would like me to present a modified design, taking into consideration the feedback I received.

Onasadhya, the traditional feast is the highlight of Onam day.

I forgot the traditions and heritage of Onam as I sat bleary eyed in front of computer thinking how best to reduce the number rotten eggs I had earned in my portfolio earlier in the day. The clock continued its journey past lunch time, going at its nice leisurely pace. The concept of time had melted away in front of me, I just knew the deadline, nothing else. I kept pecking away at my computer, rest of the world numb and frozen.
The evening meeting seemed to stretch on forever, and it was not much different from the morning sessions. Sometimes I wondered if I were sitting in the Parliament House, the ruckus these people were creating would’ve certainly give the honorable parliamentarians a run for their money. The endless debates and discussions were led to nowhere till they finally decide to succumb to natural forces and conclude for the day, the discussion to be continued next morning.


The clock struck ten. Suddenly I remembered I was hungry, the last meal I had was a bowl of stale cereal before I rushed off to office at seven in the morning. I opened Paint. Drew a couple of flowers with the most elementary drawing skills I had. Typed in Happy Onam. Set it as my desktop background. Shrugging, I wished myself a Happy Onam two hours before my clock moved on to the next date on the calendar.