(C) Rahul Tiwary
“Beauty
is in the eyes of the beholder”, the famous quote from Shakespeare is obviously
very true. I got to see it recently. One of my nephews who is very fond
of me, is at an age of curiosity and he asks too many questions. When possible,
I tried to answer those in a manner which satisfied his curiosity.
Around
that time, he was seeing elders take tea or coffee and hence he was asking
about why people take tea at all! I explained to him that since he was too
young, he did not feel a need to drink it, but when we grew older, our body
felt a kind of laziness which went away when we took tea and that was the
reason only older people liked to drink tea. He was satisfied, but then he said, “I think
you won’t be needing it, because merely by looking at your face we can see that
you do not feel laziness anytime!”
Well, I like
tea too much and take at least 2 times a day. He said that because I used to play
with him and hence perhaps he saw me as a kid like himself, and could not
imagine me being lazy. But he said that about my “face” and I noticed that in
his eyes, definitely my face meant something special.
Well, I
can only feel his love when I remember this episode.
- Rahul
Uptown
Girls (2003): a comedy about a reckless woman getting reformed when she
started babysitting a little girl.
Jerry
Maguire (1996): a brilliant rom-com starring Tom Cruise and Renee Zellweger
(both my favourites)
White
Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & Fitch (documentary):
Interesting subject which tracks the rise and fall of this famous apparel and
lifestyle brand. The original company founded in 1892 went bust in 1970s and was
taken over by new management. Ultimately it saw its best time under CEO Michael
Jeffries who positioned the brand for the popular culture of young boys and
girls and it gained a cult image. The documentary mainly focusses on defaming
the company for targeting mainly White youth which may not be accurate, but the
company definitely was “exclusivist”. The documentary painted the company with
so much accusations of racial and other accusations that it became too uninteresting
and akin to propaganda. After finishing this, I checked out the company’s
website and I saw that now all models featured on the website were non-Whites.
Perhaps no one has any problem with that. I read that the company now targets older
customers, hires mostly non-Whites, etc as an image makeover strategy. But the
company is also struggling financially again and is making losses. Perhaps this
has become a case study of how “excesses” can ruin the company and political
correctness can not go well with businesses.
Fargo (TV
Series): This is a gangster crime series with 4 seasons. I watched
seasons 1-3. Loved first season most, then second and did not like 3rd
one much. First season of most TV series are much better as compared to later seasons.
Fargo’s first season came in 2014 and is so great mainly because of its
storyline and absolutely brilliant performances by Billy Bob Thornton and
Martin Freeman. I am a fan of both these actors. Second season came in 2015 and
although its theme is good, but I did not like the way story is developed and
particularly its ending.
The
Kissing Booth (2018): A brilliant rom-com. Young actress Joey King
is at her peak in this movie and the movie is able to move our heartbeats on a
song. I got to know that sequels of this movie came out, but again, I would
recommend only the original or first movie, because next ones are so
repetitive.
The Pink
Panther (2006): This is a hilarious comedy and one of the few films
I can watch multiple times and loved every scene. The comedy is mind blowing. Steve
Martin is an angel sent by God.
Have you
noticed that we have limited imagination of great people from the history;
about how they looked? We come across only a few pictures of them every time
and hence we tend to develop an image about them in our mind, which sometimes seems
injustice.
For
example, here is a picture of Albert Einstein. When we think of Albert
Einstein, most of the time we remember his white disheveled hair. How about
this for your ‘memory’?
Many of
us have lost the habit of reading daily newspapers due to many reasons. One
major reason is the convenience of ‘news apps’ and portals. If you use Android
phone or Edge browser, it shows latest news at the bottom of the page. We are
able to scroll through the news and get updated. Plus, if you use any social
media platform, it is impossible to remain disconnected with latest major news
whether in our country or globally. But, this has a pitfall.
The other
day, while scrolling through news headlines on my mobile browser, I came across
a news where a man had killed someone from his family. I tried to avoid going
into details, but the second time the same news was shown, I opened the details
and found that some laborer (manual worker) had killed someone from his family.
Now, is that really the kind of “news” I would bother to read? In a typical
newspaper, such news get featured on internal pages, like page# 4-5. National
news appear on front page for a reason. If we have less time, we can also only
read the first and last pages, in order to do catch up with major news. We normally
do not bother to read localized crime news. But “internet news” often shows us
such news without discrimination.
I know
that we have options to choose what kind of news we want to read first, but if
we open our browser many times a day, it is likely that the priority news would
get exhausted and hence the service provider would start showing us such
mundane localized crime news.
Newspapers
provide more advantages other than arranging news as per priority and relevance
which I told about. Newspapers are typically published after midnight and hence
they have advantage of being able to do quality reporting based on the findings
gathered all through the day. Internet news, on the other hand, often show us
in a “developing piece” mode, where editors keep adding to the piece all
through the day, starting with almost only a headline. Internet news also
breaks a news into 10 different articles, in order to engage users more, which
the newspapers would not do in their publication.
Reading
newspapers has one more advantage that we can get through all the “important
news” in those 30 minutes of time we are reading it and within those many
pages. A good newspaper will never leave any important development through the
previous day and hence can be relied upon, unlike internet news which cannot be
relied since it is almost unmanageable to cover in a set of time.
Therefore,
from all angles, reading newspapers is much better idea as compared to reading
internet news. But, reading hardcopies of newspapers results in trees being cut
for making paper and hence this is one evil side of it. This can however be
overcome if we read daily newspapers “electronically”. I am talking about “e-paper”.
Therefore,
I think the best thing to do is to read “e-paper” daily. This will save our
time, let us have a disciplined routine, avoid us from toxicity of random internet
news, and even be environment friendly. I have started reading an e-paper daily
and hope to continue it as a habit.
What do
you think?
- Rahul
First
phase of Covid pandemic in India (Y2020) will be remembered for mass migration
and huge trouble and atrocities for the poor population. It was a pathetic phase for the ‘labor class’, who
lost their jobs, did not get public transportation to return to their native places,
had to become beggars to get food and were hated for merely being ‘visible’. A
lot will be forgotten out of convenience, but the hell India went through can’t
be denied. On the contrary, the second phase/wave (Y2021) saw mass deaths of
middle and upper class young people where money could not save them; rich people begging for
“Oxygen beds” at hospitals, and young people dying sudden deaths, as if in a random
manner. If there was an apocalyptic moment in Generation X/Y India, that was it.
Everyone saw with one’s eyes that death was a possibility and it was real. Although only
in a few months after the second wave passed, life returned to normalcy, as if
nothing happened. Only, if you come across a few social media accounts of dead/disappeared people, you get to stop and reflect, before moving on. I would recall two such cases.
First,
there was a guy whose first name was Rahul. He was an assistant movie director, a bright young handsome Gujarati guy in his 30s, lived in South Delhi; was married too.
I came across his profile only when people were using his name as a ‘Hashtag’
to pay their condolences. Scrolling through few of his last posts, it was understood
that first he had Covid with breathing difficulties and he wrote many social
media posts asking any politician or authority to give him any Oxygen bed in a
hospital. He wrote few posts in Hindi, expressing frustration, including cuss
words which perhaps were because it was totally “cool” to use those. In the end
he got a hospital bed with Oxygen but by that time he was not improving at all.
In a couple of days at hospital, his situation became worse. He wrote a post in
the morning that “I could have survived if I got a hospital bed earlier”. And
then he died by evening. It was shocking, cruel and totally inhuman. Out of his
last few social media posts, several had cuss words. I guess
he won’t have spoken like that if he really knew he was going to die. Perhaps he
thought he would recover and survive.
The
second person was a girl I came across in news only today. After she died,
Anand Mahindra who is always on social media had written, “your death won’t go
in vein”. She was again a bright young girl like the earlier guy. Initially she
was not getting a bed in hospital too and when she was admitted to a hospital, her
doctor wrote a social media post appreciating her strength and zeal for life
and also posted a video where she was seen waving and dancing while listening to music and sitting in
her hospital bed with her Oxygen mask on. It was pathetic. What kind of a
doctor (she was a lady doctor, so perhaps tried to make a good feminist story
out of her female patient) would do that to her patient? The social media post
was expected to get people’s prayers for her life. And then there was a reply to
that post from the lady patient’s husband or some family member, writing that
after 3 hours post this social media post/video, her condition deteriorated fast,
and she died. Once again news portals shared the same video and picture where
the girl is singing, dancing in her hospital bed, with a title that the brave girl
is dead. I don’t know what benefit the patient or her doctor got by posting that video few hours before her death. It was almost making mockery of death and of medical
profession too!
Why is it
necessary to share social media post till our last breath? Making a social
media post for help to get a hospital bed is still ok, though lot of people won’t
even do that, but to share video from death bed and trying to become famous
that way, seeking blessings (as if those really work), are all so wasteful. Perhaps
if the girl survived, this episode won’t be seen in the wrong light but now
that she died (last year this time in May month), it looks all so bad. No matter what, she should have been resting
and not dancing, and her doctor should be busy thinking about her patients
rather than making videos of dying patients and posting on the social media. Such
things make social media appear as a dark evil place which is not good for noble people.
Hope
everyone moves on and social media users are more sensible about the kind of
impact their posts and videos create on their audiences’ minds. Death is supposed
to have some dignity and a personal event and making mockery out of it by
posting stuff on social media from those last moments is wrong.
- Rahul
Bhool
Bhulaiyaa 2 is return of the classic Bollywood magic. It is entertaining and a laughter
riot. At the same time, the horror is realistic and really frightening. The
combination of comedy and horror has become magical.
Kartik
Aaryan has given a champion’s performance. His comedy, comic timing, dialogues,
expressions, acting and dance performances, all are superb. Tabu, whom I am not
a great fan of as such, has also given a very powerful performance. She is
really scary as a ghost and at the same time, some of the scenes have become memorable because of her perfect acting. Sanjay Mishra has created another magic with his performance along with many other characters who make the movie so enjoyable.
Bhool
Bhulaiyaa 2 is also a family entertainer. There is not much violence or
objectionable content and that is like the icing on the cake.
All the
best to a winning movie from Bollywood we are all proud of.
- Rahul
Last
year, around Holi time at our village, once a group of kids were passing by
while I walked. There were about 20 kids, all of age around 5-7, making merry
and enjoying themselves while going somewhere. And then I heard something and
looked back. I saw a small kid of around 4-5 who was looking up at me and then
he said, “Maalik! Pranam!” I blessed him and moved on. While I moved on, I was
surprised and touched by the kid’s gesture. There was so much love and respect
in his voice that I felt a bit shy. I wondered who the kid was and why he
saluted me that day. I came to home and asked my mother who said he must one
son of one of the laborers who work in our fields and hence paid his respect
when he saw me. I forgot the incident until yesterday.
Yesterday,
I was walking in front of our house when the same kid came in. He was accompanying
another kid of his own age (around 5-6). The kid from last year saw me and said,
“Maalik!” I looked at him and when he saw that he caught my eye, he just smiled
in a way which melted my heart. This time, he did not say “Pranam” or anything
else, but he just smiled looking at me. Who was this baby Krishna?
I smiled
back and did not say anything. Then I saw that he took his friend towards the open
field besides our house where goats and cattle graze and he showed the area to
him. At times many kids come to play in that field and perhaps he was showing the
field to his friend as a playground. Then the two kids returned and while they
were passing besides me, I saw that his friend was continuously starring at my
face as if trying to remember my face. That was touching too.
Every time
I remember the kid and his “Maalik!” resonates in my mind, my heart warms up
and melts a bit.
- Rahul
In our
village, a laborer was doing something in front of the neighboring house. There
was some amount of grains which he was cleaning and keeping in a bag. I noticed
that somehow a little kid, most probably his son was ‘watching’ him do the work.
He would stand and look at what his father was doing. Then, the man took the husk
and went to some distance to throw it away and the boy also followed him, saw him
throw it away and came back. Then again he watched his father do some more
work, followed him when he went to throw some dust at some distance and came
back. The way this little boy of 5-6 walked behind his father and just kept
watching him, without either saying a word, looked curious.
I remembered
that when my son had come last time at around 4 years of age, he would do the
same to me. When I came back from office, he would start following me wherever
I went in the house. When I went to the bathroom and washed my hands and feet,
he would enter and declare that he also wanted his feet and hands to be washed.
This
phenomenon basically tells about the way small kids, especially sons are
influenced by their father. And it is a lovely thing.
In our
village, a bitch (female dog) gave birth to at least three pups recently. Kids
from the village started playing with the pups and the pups also responded with
equal enthusiasm. A boy hid the pups below a ‘bedhi’ (cottage for grain storage)
and they made it their home for a few days. Once in a while their mother used
to visit and meet them. Once I saw her approaching and even before reaching
there, she sensed that the pups were safe inside the bedhi and hence went
for sleep. Some kids from the village saw that and came nearby. They called the
pups from inside and brought them near her so that they could start drinking
milk. The mother-dog did not feel intimidated by kids and allowed them to
handle her pups. After a few days, one of the three pups vanished and only two
pups (in the picture above) were seen playing around. Watching them play was
fun. As part of their game, they would just fall back on ground, roll over the
ground and of course push each other to force the other fell down. Similarities
with human kids were startling. After a few more days, those also vanished.
Then, one day I saw all three of them at a nearby field and all three pups were
playing. Then the bitch tried to bring one of the pups back to the original
place (below the bedhi) but once the pup came nearby and saw it (as you
can see in above picture), he ran back. That was the last time any one of the
three pups were seen. But I am sure they are safe and playing somewhere and
their mother is feeding them since they are still so small.
In our
village recently, I saw a funny scene. A boy was being chased by a calf. He was
trying to outrun it and failing in the job, when the calf was stopped in its track
by someone else who shouted at it. The calf backed off and started looking here
and there. Then it made a sound “baaaaan” two times. After a while, it turned back
and disappeared.
Later in
the evening, the boy was seen chasing the same calf by beating it with a stick.
Life had turned full circle in half a day!
Later, I
got to know about the whole thing. The calf was a baby ‘bull’ and here is its
life story.
There was
a death in one of our relatives’ families and as part of the custom, a milk
giving cow and a calf were given away to Pandit ji. The Pandit lived in nearby
village, so the cow and its calf were taken there. But the calf was ‘male’,
which means it was of not much use to anyone. Since the bull was given away, no
one could keep it or convert it into an ox. So, after a month when the ‘baby
bull’ was big enough to survive by wandering, he would have been abandoned and
set free to roam. Or may be the bull was supposed to be left wild as part of the
custom. Now, somehow after being sent away from there, the baby bull had traced
its path and come back to its old home in our neighborhood! Since this family
had given it away, it could not keep it or feed it. So, the baby bull became an
uninvited guest and no one’s liability.
The baby
bull kept living on the land outside its original house. There were 3-4 other
cows in the house who were fed and being taken care of regularly. The baby bull
tried to go near them. Those cows didn’t resist; perhaps they remembered it
from a month ago while it also lived here. I never saw those cows resisting or
getting scared when the baby bull went near them. So, every once in a while,
when the baby bull felt like, it would sneak into the cowshed and eat whatever
green grass and other stuff the cows were eating. But its real enemies were the
men and boys who were employed to take care of cows. They would chase the baby
bull away whenever they saw it. And the baby bull would go away, make a full circle
of the house and come back right where it started. It was an endless game which
is going on even now.
On several
evenings, I saw the baby bull walking away towards the fields and vanishing.
And when it was morning, it would come back to the house. Its skin and fur
which was originally so shining white, became spotted with soil here and there.
Its body language was also confused though steady. The baby bull did not know
its place in this world, and it was painful to watch.
One
morning, the baby bull rose and went away from the house towards the fields, and
then made sound “baaaaan” two-three times while looking towards the house. Then
it went towards the fields and disappeared. I wondered if the baby bull had
finally given up and left forever. But it came back again just after a few
hours!
Although
all stray bulls live a lonely life, I had a closer look at this baby bull’s lonely
life only now. No one cares about it, no one feeds it, the other cows also do
not interact with it, and the small boys from the village start beating it with
sticks whenever they see it. On a few occasions, the baby bull attacked and
dragged a few people, but so far it has not caused any real damage to anyone. I
wonder how long will the baby bull live here. Certainly, it won’t be allowed to
live here forever. May be, they are waiting for it to grow up more and then
chase it away. Where will it go after here? Wherever it goes, will that place
be better or worse than here? Will anyone really care about it in its current life?
On these
thoughts, I shall leave this story open. May the baby bull get to live here for
a little longer before it goes away. And may it enjoy a healthy and safe life and
does not attack anyone else too. That is all I can wish.
- Rahul
Recently,
I came to know about late Leela Naidu, a former ‘Miss India’ (1954), actress
and socialite. She was the daughter of Dr. Pattipati Ramaiah Naidu, a well-known
nuclear physicist of his time and Dr. Marthe Mange Naidu, who was of
Swiss-French origin. Leela Naidu grew up in Europe, went to an elite school in
Geneva, Switzerland, and later returned to India.
I
happened to read some magazine articles written immediately after her death, which
focused more on her marital history (she had got married and divorced twice)
and on her last years during which she suffered from alcohol addition, health issues
and lived a reclusive life in Mumbai. This is natural because the readers are
in that somber mood after learning about a famous person’s death and writers
and journalists try to feed to his curiosity by talking more about the “last
years”. I think this is a huge injustice to the deceased. When we look at a
person like Leela Naidu’s whole life in totality, we would find them as
winners. But if we focus on multiple divorces, drinking problem, and pitiful
death in the end, we lose perspective and are deceived. Therefore, by making
this argument, I am trying to dispel all the negativity that was fed into my
mind by those journalists and writers who wrote sober obituaries of a splendid
person like late Leela Naidu. I can say that after knowing about her life and
times, I felt empathy and respect for her.
I also
came across a book which was written by Leela Naidu co-authoring Jerry Pinto,
titled ‘Leela: A Patchwork Life’. It is interesting to read a portion where she
recalls her earliest memories and thoughts on religion. Here is a page where
she describes what she thought about Hinduism and how Western people misjudged it.
Leela Naidu
on Hinduism:
After
reading this, we can only agree with her and feel proud that she had the
courage to argue with her instructor at the Catholic school in Geneva and she
came out in flying colors! How can some people from other religions brush off
symbolisms in Hinduism by taking those literally and then praise their own
religions’ similar practices as things of great value?
I hope
you enjoyed reading above page from her book. You can find the book here.
- Rahul Tiwary
Watched a documentary on Gerald Cotten and it did seem that sometimes real life stories are more interesting than fiction. You can read about it here:
Attached to above article, I found below one about another scandal. Tells how we are all living in the midst of frauds.
Reminds me of another fraud story I read a few months back, about Anna Delvy
Talking about scams and scamsters, recently a businessman tried to dupe me of a large sum of money. I was not foolish but I was not cautious too and now I am going to the court to sue him. I have thought about how I could be duped because I know that we should not easily trust people, and I have come to the conclusion that at the end of the day, I did not value money over human trust. I had a suspicion about what if the person does not return the money as promised, but I still went ahead with the transaction because somewhere I did not "value" money that much. I have tried to tell me that it is a weakness and I need to get over it. But, at the same time despite all our precautions, scamsters do scam us with their nice words and all once in a while.