Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Thank You

There are very few things that manage to bowl me over. Make me feel complete, joyous to new bounds, content. I think that I am at an age and at a level in my career where additional money does not necessarily bring additional happiness in the true sense of the word. Its got to be more than green, more than just climbing the corporate ladder. I am happy to report that I have found my "it" factor. I have finally found it and I could not be happier.

There are very few things that make one gloat with pride. Pride that you are associated with this amazing thing. That you are part of a culture, a sorority of sorts.

I feel like I am taken over and swept with a glow, I have a sprinkling of stardust on my shoulders and I feel like I am doing something that is extremely rewarding. For being the sole person who managed to do this to me, I thank You. I thank You for everything you have done, for every lesson You taught me and I hope continue to teach me, for every smile that it ended up bringing to my face, I thank You.  I bow down to You, my teacher. I bow down to everything You stand for. You have managed to make me happier today than I have felt in many many years now. For that and so much more, I thank You, Didi.

Thursday, February 09, 2012

Once upon a time..

Once upon a time, there was an ordinary girl who came upon an extraordinary woman. The
morning began like every morning right before a vacation. I've had no sleep for the past couple of days because there is too much to take care of work-wise, too many one off things to cross off on the shopping list and juggling everything has made me, not surprisingly, grumpy. Needless to say, we are running behind schedule, the 5:00AM shuttle guy calls and my grumpy side is not merciful. I begin one of those ranting sessions which is oh-so-unnecessary, making life more difficult than it should be so early in the morning. My eyes are barely open, I am half running, half donning my boots and cursing beneath my breath, get onto the shuttle. Once in, I breathe, albeit for a second before my mind starts racing again. Passport, check. Boarding passes, check. Bitchy before vacation for no real reason, check. I barely hear the voice from the front seat, as I push back strands of hair falling on my face. "Going off on vacation, I presume", the lady says.  "Oh, yes", I mumble. "Where are you off to?", she asks. "Amsterdam, Paris and Brussels", I say, checking off items from my mental checklist as I speak, half wishing I got one moment of silence. Almost mechanically, I ask, "What about you? Are you off on vacation too?". "Yes, to Central America. With that crossed off, I will have 23 countries remaining to visit in the world.  At my age, it is an ambitious goal".That is when I look up and try to take a look at her face.  She would've been 80-something, has wrinkles, her hands are a little shaky as she sips coffee from her mug. "23 countries, that's it?  You must be quite the traveller", I venture, intrigued.At this time, she has my full attention, no mental math, no checklists, I am here, one hundred percent.


She tells me that she used to be part of an institution that set up schools for girls in
Saudi Arabia, Iran and many other countries in Asia. "My husband was an International Consultant", she says, "I went where he went and where I went, I worked to set up schools for girls". I am very silent by now, listening intently when she goes, "You must be into computers?". "Yes, I work with Qualcomm". "Ah, Qualcomm! We made a lot of money when the stock went up to 200 in the late nineties", she continues, "I must get technologically sound. I don't own a cell phone. Didn't keep me from getting about so far".  I smile and think of the enthusiasm she must have, to learn new things at this age. "Did you live in the Middle East for a while then?", I ask, trying to get her tell me more about her travels around the world. "For some time, before my husband and kids were murdered in Iran. My husband had this habit of asking a lot of questions, you know. We were always interested in other cultures, so we always asked questions. I guess they thought he was the CIA or something. He was out in the market with my kids and they shot him. They got my kids in the cross fire. They were 3 and 5. They made me go back to the States, I had all of 56 cents, 10 cents of which I used to make a collect call to my mom. The kind soul that she was, she scraped up enough to get me back home. Took me 25 years to become sane again". Everyone in the shuttle is quiet. I sense tears trickling down my face. I feel numb. "Ah, well", she says, "I love India. All the colors!". The shuttle stops. "Have a great trip", she says, looking back into at me, smiling. I get out and find myself staring at her from outside. I knock on her window, and she opens the door. "You are an inspiration, you know that?", I say, tears in my eyes. Her eyes twinkle, "I like you very much. Have a good life. Take care of your children".


Every once in a very rare while, we get lucky enough to meet people who are celebrities, in the true sense of the word. Every once in a while, we get a virtual slap from God. Today, I was bestowed with one. I feel petty for misbehaving all morning, and right there in the drop off area of Terminal 1, I burst out crying. Uncontrollably. I've met a woman who is my hero and all it took was a 45 minute shuttle ride.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Have we met?

Over and over, I find the title of this blog, extremely apt. Life hits you at 100 miles an hour, time and again and here I am. Stumped. This has never happened to me. I think there are bleak chances that it'd ever happen again. You think you've known someone for more than a decade, and given that time, you've probably come to learn quite a bit and have settled in to form a certain view of them, their personality, you've defined the give-some, take-some of the relationship. And then, right under your feet, everything changes. The person, your view of the person, you, your perspectives, the relationship.

There's this certain fun-shakiness in how unsettling the feeling is, there're spurts of exhilaration of this new discovery mixed with moments that make you "huh"? Needless to say, nothing is the same, ever again. It's this new thing, a new phase and it all feels fresh. You discover new sides to your own self because as humans, we never exist in isolation. If you find that you are smiling more, it's probably got little to do with yourself. Everything about you is feeding off of something new, something different and something that has changed. I think its futile to classify change as a positive or negative one. It's meant to be taken at face value. It's change. It has happened and every action in your life will now be taken given the altered artifact.

I am pleasantly taken by this alteration and I believe that there are aspects to me that I will discover,  new things that I will learn, all of which will blow my mind away, just like I was, merely some time ago.

Friday, September 09, 2011

Blessings

I always feel fortunate when I meet people who really get me. I feel fortunate that despite the minimal amount of time we've spent together, we have now laid foundation to a great friendship. We have now begun on a path of being there for each other, of being each other's support systems, of really having what, in my opinion, very few people have and that is extremely hard to find and keep. I, for one, have been extremely lucky in this aspect. I have few but very dear support systems and I cannot go one day without them. I said something to someone today which I liked very much (this is certainly the limit of loving oneself, I reminisce about things I said! Good God, I am a lost cause). Anyway, this is what I said - "I am awesome because I am associated with awesome people". Sounds a bit pompous eh? It most certainly is not meant to sound that way at all.

All of my associations are key contributors to this eclectic, now bordering on eccentric stuff I put out. I don't know if I just insulted my dear dear friends or praised the living daylights out of them. You see, that's the beautiful part of having people who get you, close to you. You almost never have to explain. And while I have so much to take, so much to learn from these inspiring people around me, I have so little to give back. And when they tell me that some of the things I give back are a level of comfort, act as a sounding board, a punching bag, I feel blessed. It's indeed hard to find the wonderful wonderful people that I have managed to find in my life. This one's dedicated to the newest addition to my precious list. You know who you are. Awesomeness thou art, personified. I am keeping you close to my heart for a long time starting 2 days ago. :) 

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

La vie à 100 miles une heure

Life at 100 miles an hour. That's been the title of my blog for 7 years now. Little did I know how life at 100 miles an hour actually feels like. When things come crashing down on your visibly quaint life and rock your world like nothing else. That is when you realize, you had NO IDEA how unsettling that situation is. Its not even funny how, when things are calm and in cruise control mode, we tend to take peace of mind, whether in personal or professional life so much for granted.

The good thing about the boat getting rocked is this. Actually it is a great thing about things being totally out of whack. Your relationships are tested. Your priorities are tested. The choices you make, when nothing makes sense, the people who remain by your side at the end of it all, the smiles you can manage to sport between tears, almost every aspect of adulthood is put to test. Almost always, things work out for the better. And hopefully at the end of it all, you have emerged a better person, a bigger person and a saner one at that.

La vie à 100 miles une heure. Life's hit me at 100 miles an hour and I've never felt better. I guess it's because I now know that something's gotta give, but in the process, I'll have managed to take so much.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Togetherness in separation

Can you ever really be detached from someone you have loved? Can you ever really not be interested in one another's life? We all train ourselves to move on, sometimes out of choice, sometimes because there is no other option.

Why do couples fall apart? Why do they no longer remain a "we"? We separate because we feel (and are extremely confident at that when we make that decision) that we have good reasons not to be with the other. Valid, reasonable reasons that drive us to a decision as sombre as a break-up. We quote irreconcilable circumstances, occurrence of things that one or both parties cannot compromise on and so many more points that makes being an adult, so heavy on the shoulders. All that said and done, well understood and digested, what really happens when two individuals separate? Where does that love, so-intense-that-it-almost-hurt go?

In my opinion, the love doesn't ever go away. There are moments when you think about the other and feel pure unadulterated hatred/anger, but more often than not, its only love that you still feel for the other. It cannot be anything other than love, even when you feel the hatred/anger. The reason being this. It is simply not possible to hate someone you loved so much. Doesn't work that way. And if all you feel is hatred/anger/viciousness, maybe what you had when you were together was not love at all.

Love, in all its jaded glory, still remains the most powerful emotion that one can ever feel. If you have ever felt love for someone in the true sense of the word, for even one moment, there is no way, ego, anger, even separation can wash it away. It is a futile attempt to refute it and I know better than to pursue that. If the love was honest, you become these invisible conjoined twins, maybe never together but never ever apart.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Five ticks

There are certain moments in every one's life where time seems to stop. Moments for which you have created a play in your head, carefully added each and every detail, arranged it with a background score (oh, the drama!), played and replayed in your mind over and over, so much so that you dream about those moments. Sometimes you are the graceful one, sometimes you crumble down to dust. Sometimes you are surprised at a particular outcome of that piece of fiction, sometimes you realize that you know better than to expect anything different. Like every run of a play, the moment is executed differently each and every time.

In reality, when that moment actually arrives, it happens for less than an instant. You look up, your stomach is up in knots, you stare and its over. And before you know it, all the previous replays, all the previous runs are now replaced by this one piece of reality. Sure, when the reality is now replayed, it is in slow motion, where you try to re-capture every little detail that actually ended up being the truth of the matter. It hurts to realize that you knew better than to expect something different.

Snobs that we humans are, we fool ourselves into feeling that, we are different, that our relationships with people are better, stronger and more meaningful than those with others. The fact of the matter is that all it takes is those five seconds of reality to slap you in the face and bring you back to facing the bitter truth. And for better or for worse, those five seconds teach you to deal with it, take it in your stride and keep walking. A dear dear friend once told me this - "We humans are wired to fix ourselves and live without anyone". Someone you thought was closest to your heart, someone you trusted the most, someone you almost messed your life for - turns out, you can live without them. And any foolish expectation that you have, from the remains, is driven to closure by five ticks of a clock.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Got respect?

Ever wonder why some days, events, phases of life have meaning only when the people involved uphold respect solemnized (albeit subtly) to one another? In absence of this, these days, events, even phases of life just crumble to become bitter memories that come back to haunt one. Respect is such a hard 7 letter word. Hard to get it, hard to keep it. Also, such an involuntary emotion one feels for another. Extremely tough to manipulate, is that mutual sense of respect two individuals have for one another.

Love, hate, anger, happiness manifest themselves much more easily and are so fleeting. Feeling that sense of respect for another person and gaining that from another, needs time, mutual-interest and is something which cannot be handed out lightly. Precisely why, it hurts so much more, if one shows utter disrespect - to your emotions, to your actions, to you. It makes all those days, events and life-instances suddenly seem meaningless, almost mocking one for having gone through those.

Here's the million dollar question - Is there any meaning to a relationship, ANY relationship, if there is no mutual sense of respect? To me, presence or absence of it is a make or break deal. We humans are pack animals. I would assume that anyone with a little bit of sanity, would want to be in the company of individuals who make us happy. Being respected for what we are, me thinks, makes us feel happy. Sounds pretty straightforward, doesn't it?

How then, do people, with intelligent minds and reasonable intellects end up in the company of folks who have absolutely no respect for them? Why do we, against all better judgment, let that happen to us? Love/affection,  I think cause each and every one of us to face this humiliation at some point or another in our lives.  It's the fine print that comes with every relationship which none of us reads. Sometimes it works out, most times it doesn't. And what we are left with are, days, events and phases of life which are now just moments of shame, pain and remorse. Meaningless days, lost events and empty phases.





Monday, September 20, 2010

The player, the bully

I am becoming too predictable for my own good. It has become imperative that I write every time I fly. It's mostly because my mind runs at a 100 miles an hour when I am alone. It's really hard to keep it thinking one thought. There's just so much to assimilate, so much of the present to record, so much of the past to rewind and play, so much to erase to ring in the new.

Why do we mortals become philosophers when we are flying, at the beach or on vacation? Anything and everything seems possible and our agenda includes conquering nothing lesser than the world itself. And the same locations bring sadness perpetuated through nostalgia, the lost and the freed. It's almost like we fill our lives with so much just so that we aren't surrounded by silence and complain when there is no peace and quiet. We set ourselves up for something that is either painful or irksome at the very least.

Among all the relationships I share with the people around me, extremely precious are the ones that make me think. Such people are so enriching, they bring so much to my life and what I can give back is but minimal. These folks, just by being themselves, input so much content into the eclectic stuff I put out in these blogs.

One such thought process began late last night and has been messing with my head since then. Why is it that some of us get beaten up constantly? It's almost like high school never ended and life ended up being the bully. Yes, we all taught ourselves to survive and tackle the bully, for lack of any other option to react otherwise. But it's almost like some of us get no redemption. Well, let me not sound that extreme. Some of us get no redemption in certain aspects of our life.

In my opinion, each one of us has a partial win in life. Some know what they want and fight the bully, knowing all too well that it is a negotiated out-of-court settlement. Others don't even realize what's missing till it's too late. At that point, they make their peace with life and learn to live with and get stuck with an out-of-court settlement on the bully's terms. Frustrated are both these sets of people, but at least the former probably end up with sort of an upper hand.

The point I am trying to make? By now, you must have realized that I ask more questions than answer any with reasonable conviction. What do I know about solving life's convoluted puzzle? I am but a mere player who happens to think that at the very least, I must keep asking questions, keep jumping contexts (this entry just goes to prove that!), keep the bully challenged and on his toes enough to warrant a break from messing with me.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Half empty?

I am silenced. If you know me, but at all, very few things have this effect on me. I don't know how to react to what I just saw. It is uplifting, saddening, humbling and deeply thought provoking all at the same time.

It's about a couple of kids. Remember childhood? How it was, to be kids? Endless fights with siblings about things which became unimportant somewhere between the hair pulling and the scratching, waiting for that recess period which never seemed to arrive, starting the day with a clean uniform, hair in place, all oiled and in pig tails, ending the day with dusty shoes, tiny stones inside them after all the boisterous sports, not one hair strand in place as the other kids got hold of you in kabaddi as you made it your life goal to touch that line, that victory giving you a happiness that no monetary/professional gain has given you, hating to go back home because home meant homework amongst other irksome things?

These kids, they hate going home too. Not because home means the end of fun and games, not because home means dad hogging TV to watch the 8:30PM news, not because home means mom's incessant calls that its dinner time. The kids hate going home because home means the red light district of Calcutta.  These are kids, born into brothels, and for no obvious fault/choice of theirs, either steadily reaching the age to join the family "line" or becoming pimps. The boys have no respect for women as they grow up to be young men, the girls swear without batting an eye lid, death is no shock and life is merely another day spent in a visibly toxic environment.

In the midst of what was a sick feeling in my tummy for 60 minutes, I noticed that these kids are actually terribly optimistic. They love their mothers, they know they work very hard to make a living, they respect their mothers, they try to love the fathers (ones that cared/needed to stick around) and dream big about their future.  They don't start their day complaining about the overflowing sewage, nor are they mad at their mothers for hitting them, much less complain about traffic from inside a high-end German car on an all American freeway or cringe because the guy in front cut the line at the airport as you ignore the 2 screaming kids and all that luggage in his hand.

Identify with this, my dear reader? If so, I needn't say more. My work here, is truly done.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Not a genius, barely a thinker

Is it possible to feel a sense of loss over something that is not yours to begin with? Humans are such strange beings! Blogs such as this, get any audience because people, being the way they are, never cease to stump themselves. We are a work of art, someone or something's finest pride and glory, yet, so often we manage to display little variation from chimps hanging off trees.


Some genius thinker once said, "If its absence doesn't hurt, its probably not worth the time you are giving it". That person is not a genius by any means and barely a thinker. Just someone random, walking the face of earth trying to make some sense out of a predominantly self induced chaotic existence.


Social beings that we inadvertently are, we are all wired to fit together in a certain way. Some relationships give us a sense of security, some give us pure unadulterated joy, some give us a terrible adrenaline rush, some let us fly free, and others make us feel comfy cozy. Of the above five manifestations of emotions, most of us tend towards folks that provide at least one of these to us. People who make us feel two or more of these emotions are in our list of folks who pretty much make our lives what they are, thus making them life support systems. If we are lucky enough to find that someone who can provide all of these emotions, it is a fairy tale beginning to something stupendous.


Needless to say, fairy tales find a better place in the fiction section of Barnes and Noble than in real life. In this instance, it is primarily due to the fact that it is almost impossible (dare I?) for more than three of the above manifestations to co-exist. Check out the portfolio of your relationships. You have your careless friends (ones that make you feel like superman), the adorable caring/giving ones (ones you tend to take for granted) and ones that challenge and tingle your thinking (ones that keep our lives on toes).


While each one of us stumble upon some combination of traits in every relationship we encounter in the course of our lives, which are the ones which leave the biggest impressions in our life? Which are the ones we cannot do without? Which are the ones that make us feel like the statement the not-a-genius-barely-a-thinker made?

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Life of an eternal romantic

I spent a lot of time by myself this past week. Got me doing a lot of reading, a lot of thinking. Something I so rarely get a chance to do. I was listening to a lot of music, but music bugs me at times. Reminds me of days past and the phase of life that that piece influenced. Something incredibly romantic about the pangs of sadness nostalgia brings. One of the few things that tops it, is the phenomenon of falling in love. Getting to know a new person, a new presence, and getting washed all over. In the age where hand-written love letters have been replaced with electronic media and electronic media alone, this usually translates to waiting for that email notification to pop-up, that phone to buzz with the incoming text or call - definitely less romantic but having the potential to set the heart racing just as much.

That got me thinking - man (err pardon me, woman too), is so in love with the idea of being in love, that there is that eternal need to feel like a teenager having a massive crush. Well, maybe not all men (yes, and women). But there is a certain percentage of the human race (present company included), who are such die-hard romantics that, this drama and the sense of being weak-in-the-knees is almost like a life supply. At the risk of coming across as a maniac, I will continue to present the train of my thought.

I realize that one of my biggest fears in life, is the idea of falling out of love. If asked to portray a mental image of myself, it would be so. A certain character in a certain movie who is totally in love with the idea of being in love, causing her to sprint across vast expanses of green, dressed in white, trusting that He would give her a sign when she found her love. Sounds pretty corny, doesn't it? But that's me. When I saw that on screen, me, along with my co-inhabiters of the "being-foolishly-in-love" world, established a picture of themselves in their heads.

Leads me to think - what happened to that dreamer when she found her soul mate (dang it, I am setting myself up to be considered a totally crazy person today, aren't I? My take on soul mates needs a whole other  blog)?  Did she settle down to have a family of 2 kids, a dog and a house in the burbs? Or did she yearn for that romance to be alive and kicking for years to come, despite the blah of everyday life?

I leave you, dearest reader, with this thought - When the magic of it all fizzles out, how do romantics survive? What keeps them going? My take? - A romantic is never ever really out of that state of being in love, never really out of that state of having a muse. That, and only that, keeps them smiling, keeps them floating, keeps them sprinting across imaginary greens.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Care for a do-over?

Ever wonder how your life would be, had you got one do-over? I was doing my usual routine when I fly. I nap for about 30 seconds, reach out for the airline magazine, make a mental note of our next destination somewhere between the amazing hotels advertised and the things to do in a certain vacation spot, open my iPad to read, read for about 45 seconds before switching over to Solitaire. I was on a particularly bad streak of losing when i realized that the game allows you one do-over. That practically changed the course of my game. And that got me thinking - if the face of a game can change with one do-over, how would one do over alter the course of one's life?

More interestingly, I started to think of things that I would change, events/decisions/moments I would want to erase from my life and start over again with that one do-over. There are things that come to mind right away - that extremely embarrassing moment when I waved back to a person only to realize that the person was waving at someone behind me, the numerous heartbreaks, the bad hair style choices that ended up in pictures, the mere thought of which make me cringe, the genius moment when I decided to color my hair red, moments of utter dismal weakness, the multiple overseas flights alone, only to name a few. That's when I realize, this list will never end - for ANYone.

I WISH I could find one person who would attest that their life, it's course, their decisions, where they've been and where they are going, everything in their life choices was perfect. I KNOW that despite the unending list, my life feels perfect. It fits. It makes sense. Every single life experience has made me the person I am, and in its own crazy, twisted and imperfect way, my life is that of a very happy person.

I realize that I am weird and whacked out and to me, that's the only way to be. How can one take life too seriously? When the tick-tocks chime away unnoticed, how much sense does running behind making a grand big picture make? In its own convoluted form, my life, in all it's drama, in all its beautiful and bitter moments, in all its glory and darkness, has taught me a very simple thing. Almost too simple. The smiles that were, will always make you smile, and the tears that were, are gone. Life, in that vein, cannot get much more perfect now, can it? How would one do-over fix something that is already perfect?

Ever wonder how your life would be, had you got one do-over? Turns out you don't need that one do-over or for that matter any number of do-overs to look back and admire the magnificence of your current life story.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Power wars

Power. Even saying the word creates a stir. Makes one feel invincible, undefeated. Makes one do things according to whim and fancy. These very things make it terribly important to arbitrate the handing out of power. The power of decision making, of altering the course of actions, of breaking something that was visibly alright. I cannot even begin mentioning the people that get sucked into these power wars, who have absolutely no control or say, have no option but to watch as well functioning entities which they have put a lot of effort and hard work into, drop to, as one of my good friends puts it, "things that go poof".

The point I guess I am trying to make is, this power battle almost seems like a game called "dog and the bone" we used to play when we were kids. Two folks at each turn, try to grab a piece of cloth and bolt out. The one who is the faster one, and can manage to grab that thing without the other one touching his/her arm takes the honors. The key though is, the win IS a short lived one. You have to give another person his/her turn to try for the "big" guns. Whether you like it or not, you surrender your victory for others to go for it. Since that piece of cloth has little to no value to one, surrendering it almost always barely hurts. But as we grow older, as things at stake become more and more precious, so does the desperation to keep fighting and never give them up.

This inevitably leads me to think - When does this power struggle end in the course of one's life? The more important thing is, when power gets granted to the "wrong" person (well, who am I to judge?), do you suck it up and live with it, or do you break free? And is this decision, by any means, an easy one? There is that inertia to change, there is comfort in the current state, there is familiarity in the current state. Does exploring the unknown become more and more difficult as one grows older? Or is it just a personality thing?

Either way, I believe that in profession as in relationships, there are clear signs planted all through one's life. Signs that will guide one to make the right decision. The difficult part is knowing and accepting that the decision is a good one and will be a positive reinforcement to one's life, which will become apparent later, if not then. I truly believe that this trust, in and itself is such an empowerment. Faith that life has something amazing in store for you. That each and every day is here to unfold itself to you and take your breath away. That confidence in itself is such a high. On that note, I wish that this self-empowerment washes over your life, my dear reader. I wish I can infect you with the happiness and rush that this confidence brings to me. I wish that today and everyday of your life makes you feel like you and only you can hold life by its reigns and keep it galloping like you cant care less about the end to this wonderful ride.

Friday, January 29, 2010

True happiness - Fact/Myth?

Being genuine. What am I, if I am not genuine? On this blog, in my mind, with my people. I am an imperfect person. I have my weaknesses and my fears. I have my moments of absolute happiness and elation. The reasons behind either of these extreme emotions are so simple. Imperfection around me. Around each and every one of us. We need to learn to co-exist with the chaos, to silence the demons in our head, to live with the melodrama that each passing day poses to us.

Before I am branded of eternal cynicism, I do have some positivity at the end of this sentence.

In the midst of this mess that we have managed to make out of a seemingly simple life, there is that smile, there is that hug, there is that presence that makes it all worth it. It's really astounding that the vast majority of us barely even notice this presence, let alone thanking it, or reciprocating. We take it for granted and we complain that we have nothing to make out this complexity that we, in reality, have perpetuated. I am no different.

But there is this one thing by which I can guarantee happiness. In the true sense of the word. Terribly pompous claim for a 29 year old who has little to no life-experience, eh? Humor me and read on.

Stop focusing on what is lacking in your loved ones. Realize that you lack in a lot of ways too. You are less than perfect too. What matters, what really matters is this: Are they there for you when you need them? Do they love you for what you are and more for what you are not? Recognize these support systems, be there for them, treasure them. Genuinely try.

I will guarantee another thing too. It will be HARD. Loving things that are ours, that are jaded with time, is a hard thing. The mind is trained to see bad in what we have. To see fault is anything that is even close to perfect. It is within us, to calm the crazy within and choose to be happy.

At the risk of sounding terribly preachy, I will leave you with one thing: Today, before you go to bed, close your eyes for 2 minutes and sense where you are - literally and figuratively. I am SURE you will smile at what you know at the end of those 120 seconds.

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

Moving ahead but never moving on

One year. One year of silence. One year of memories where smiles turned to tears and tears turned to smiles. One year of never being able to forget a single day. One year of passing through the same street and reliving the same pain over and over again.

There are certain people who walk into your life and you know right then, it's never going to be the same after that very instant. Every instance that made you feel like that was a larger than life moment, will make you cry a million times. It's so strange how "at peace" one looks on the face, when there is a storm within. How one can try and try but never successfully bury any portion of this surreal past life.

For one, when you know that you can try your best but never fall out of being one spirit, every attempt you make to disengage is unfruitful. You can teach yourself to hate, a lesson that will never be learnt, a desperate albeit futile process.

I wish I did not remember. The dates, the incidences, the laughs, the jokes, the tears, the moments of complete and absolute silence, the moments of incessant laughter. I wish I could somehow let go, in the true sense of the word. I am never away from the surreal. I am never departed from it. I have never really gotten over it, and I don't think I ever will.

One year. One year of silence. One year of moving ahead but never being able to move on.

Monday, July 06, 2009

My Hero

Aaah I jest you not. The past month has whizzed past like nothing else. I spent quality time with my father and see traits of him that only a die hard fan can.

There may be few people in this world who do not love their father to death. My emotion is hardly any different. And by no means do I feel that I could do any justice to my view of my procreator in these few paragraphs.

He is an absolute super star. An A1 personality. Bright, charming personality, strongly grounded to his roots, humble beginnings, star studded aspirations yet heavily conscious of his ground zero. That's what keeps him sane in an undoubtedly crazy world around him.

From where I see him, I see my hero. A man who can falter but never do any wrong, a man who wouldn't think twice before coming to the aid of the same person who may have stabbed him on the back.

From where I see him, its his imperfections that have made him a perfect son, a perfect brother, a perfect husband, a perfect father and a perfect human being.

From where I see him, he loves nothing more than seeing my mother smile, enjoys nothing more than seeing my sibling and me hug, prides nothing more than our small victories in life.

From where I see him, he is perfect. My father, with his short temper, with his insane necessity to be more than perfect, his need to be super super crazy clean, his zest for life, with his "never say die" attitude, is nothing short of perfect.

From where I see him, my hero has his head high, his ego low, his eyes on the stars, his feet firmly grounded. My hero sits high up that pedestal and I shall forever be grateful to have this beautiful person, to have and to hold, and to lovingly call, my father.

Tears in heaven

I looked out of the flight window, thinking why is it that I have gotten so many signs of my past over and over. Past memories flood through my brain. Remind me of the lost. Things that I let go, things that let go of me. Nevertheless, they seem etched in my mind and soul.

How can one ever stop loving, I asked aloud once. I finally did. I gave up. Gave up trying to fool myself. Gave up the girl in me who was the dreamer aka the "self-pain-inflicter". When hearts break, there is no noise. It feels like an explosion but if I were to describe it, it would be so.

Two people staring into each other's eyes fooling themselves and each other that the moment would last forever, that the pain would not, that there could be some sane way of making things work, that the insanity that lead to this moment is unreal, that the imagined happiness is fact, and the factual pain inflicted is fiction.

Why is it that happiness and joy are never as long lasting as pain and tears? Why then are memories of happy times recollected more than the reasons for which the present is in fact present? The smiles that used to be smiles thought of more?

Some of us have a very special gift. Of forgiving and forgetting. I seem to be able to forgive or at least try to but can never seem to forget. What is a very romantic quality to have when you are in the middle of a relationship becomes an extremely painstaking delusion when it ends. Works something like this: reflections and stories fly past my mind almost like a movie but with no reasonable starting or ending point. It's like a super sonic flow of happy and sad.

Today I ask... How can one ever forget? How do you shut off the images, erase the virtually endless reels running through your head?

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

A dash of "faith", a dollop of "do"

The power of action versus the power of faith is such an old long standing battle. Is one bigger than the other? Who is to say? Does any of us have concrete evidence to declare one the winner? Can belief exist without action or vice versa? Is power of prayer interspersed with power of action, the sure shot to success, happiness etcetera?

Faith is such a powerful emotion. The ability to give in and surrender to a "greater" power. To be big enough in mind to accept that there is a stronger energy source who may be capable of doing more and be all pervasive.

While there may be more believers than atheists in the world, is it because we are all that humble or because we want to leave the decision/action as well as be able to blame an entity for our failures? Faith is seriously misundestood. Faith ought not be our answer for our shortcomings.

And it's this misuse that makes faith the obvious option for most of us. Defintely, pushing forth, trusting oneself and holding only oneself responsible for the downfall in addition to the sucesses seems very very hard to do. How can we ordinary mortals be sfrong enough to look at the man in the mirror and chide ourselves for failing? Isn't it much easier to blame it on fate, destiny and this is the best one of all...GOD.

If only we had the maturity to believe that while not all of our happiness is fed by us but all of our misery surely is. If only we had the guts to accept that we do possess a great deal of pathos and that while people who love us choose to ignore them and deal with them we most certainly should not. It all starts with us opening our eyes wide enough to even come close to this simple simple realization.

Oh my dear dear friend, you ain't any more perfect than me. And the sooner you wake up, and burst that bubble you are living in, the sooner you shall see meaning in my words. Till then, all I can do is hope that that day shall in fact arrive, if ever.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Get me?

It's strange really. How the same things, the same person seem totally different when your perspective in life changes. It's such a powerful thing, perspective. All you really do is put yourself in people's shoes. You will realize that it's much easier to let things go. Much easier to move on without the bickering, the arguments, the mess.

IMHO, there's no mantra to it. We just happen to love ourselves much more. We give ourselves more leway, way much more benefit of the doubt. And it's simply because of this that we find ourselves forgiving others more when we put things into perspective.

And why not? Surely it must make us better people, no? Just making an attempt shouldn't hurt? If it does help, we may just manage to make our already short life span somewhat simpler. And bring in more smiles. Now that seems worth a shot.

Almost appears to be a no-brainer to do the same for people on our speed dial. I mean these folks who you want to be able to reach at the touch of a button surely deserve that much, I would assume.

And somehow most of us fail, terribly. I by no means am any exception. And it really is a pity that we humans find understanding, adjusting, empathizing so incredibly difficult.

I have no sermons to give and most definitely no "life-experience" to add. But I do hope that this be your takeaway if you cared enough to read thus far. Each day as you complain about the weather, the long morning flight that finally got you to work that Monday morning as you got back from that vacation, broccoli for dinner, perhaps you will hold close to your mind and heart - one little almost magical word-perspective.