Posts Tagged ‘Love’

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Fast forward

November 22, 2009

One day, my friend, you will meet her.

She’ll make your heart quicken a bit, she’ll make you happy.

It won’t be love at first sight.

You will enjoy her company, you will want to spend time with her.

You will seek happiness in her laughing eyes and comfort in her company.

She will always be there for you.

You will get married to her.

The marriage won’t be perfect. There will be fights. Which couple doesn’t fight?

But you will know, one day, that this is meant to be.

This, my friend, is your destiny.

Till then, keep searching.

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Neil Gaiman says…

June 4, 2009

Have you even been in love? Horrible, isn’t it? It makes you so vulnerable. It opens your chest and it opens your heart and it means someone can get inside you and mess you up. You build up all these defenses. You build up this whole armor, for years, so nothing can hurt you, then one stupid person, no different from any other stupid person, wanders into your stupid life…

You give them a piece of you. They don’t ask for it. They do something dumb one day like kiss you, or smile at you, and then your life isn’t your own anymore. Love takes hostages. It gets inside you. It eats you out and leaves you crying in the darkness, so a simple phrase like “maybe we should just be friends” or “how very perceptive” turns into a glass splinter working its way into your heart. It hurts. Not just in the imagination. Not just in the mind. It’s a soul-hurt, a body-hurt, a real gets-inside-you-and-rips-you-apart pain. I hate love.

in Sandman: The Kindly Ones by Neil Gaiman

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The Quarter Life Crysis

April 3, 2009

The time when every end of the month brings you a monthly paycheck on your account and your heart soars- just a little.

The time when things become just a little clear, like looking through a fogged up window and just seeing the Promised Land a little far away. And then you wonder, how transient the mirage will be. The Jews were never, after all, left in peace in their own homeland.

The time when you laugh for your friends, and you grieve with them, but then suddenly wake up and realise that you need to take care of yourself. Noone’s going to do you THAT favour.

The time when, on one hand, you have realised that you simply do not want to sacrifice your independence- travelling where you want to, enjoying the books you want to, spending nights driving around aimlessly, talking to a million people, cooking when you want to, eating out when you want to and heck, sleeping till 1 PM if you want to. On the other hand, hoping, suddenly, just to have someone to share all these whims with.

The time that your relatives pointedly ask you, “So, when are YOU getting married?”. The time that you roll your eyes at your parents and shrug. The time that you beg for more time, just because there’s so much more you want to do with your life.

The time that you get a million mass wedding invitations in your mailbox and think, “Why?” Then, you go and discuss with your (very few) single (mostly male now) friends about what a pity it is that people are in such a hurry to get settled.

After all, you don’t want to, right? And, somehow, both of you know that’s not the whole truth.

The Quarter Life Crysis. You’re just yet another confused twenty year old.

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Saying Goodbye is Difficult

May 26, 2008

Two days after convocation, I woke up on a mattress shorn of its linen, in a room that did not look like my home for the past year, in a block that was defeaning in its silence.
This had been the scene of the block parties, midnight gossip sessions, of friendship, of laughter and tears, of companionship, of late night meals from Athica’s and hot coffee for 2 AM cram sessions followed by 3 AM Bracket sessions, of lazy weekends spent lolling around, of trying to get back after L^2s (or get to), of charged up weekends seeing volleyball matches and hours spent reading books. This was the home I ran to- the cool refuge, an oasis of green and pink calm and most of all, cleanliness!

I have left the proof on the table…see… that ring was left by my coffee mug. Look at these walls- the paint is peeling because I stuck my pictures and those tiny stars. Look at those flowers painted on the bookshelf. That was done in a burst of creativity that subsided later.
These little signs are all that’s left of my existence in B-204. The rest has been packed up and sent away. Those memories have been filed away neatly. I am feeling a bit nostalgic already… How will the future be?

Maybe I will be that alumna that goes eagerly to her room 10 years hence, look around and explain that this had been my room for my PGP2 year. Or maybe I shall be that alumna who said that IIMB was WAY better then. Maybe I shall never bother coming back… to those faded yellow walls, the dust that had to be swept everyday and the light that woke me up when the sun rose, the lovely blanket I snuggled in at night.

But I bid adieu to that stone maze that was IIMB, knowing I’d come back again.

I take my bags to Mumbai to attend a wedding. It’s 2 days of roaming around and talking. And again the same hugs and promises to keep in touch. I wave my hand at the girls and blow them kisses. The feelings are the same. I am saying bye to the people I lived with and loved.
I reserve a special hug for Vinay and Saikat… It’s been 2 years of bibliophiling with them. Strand book fairs aplenty, loads of birthday mails, sleisha shady stories and again, lovely memories. Another farewell said, and another promise to keep in touch. This time, I can’t seem to let go of their hands…

But, go I must. The auto makes sure of that.

One month later, we’re back for Sonal’s wedding. The whole gang is at Udaipur (minus a few notables who know who they are!) and attending the ceremonies. All of us stay till 2 AM for the phera and then I suddenly realise I have a flight to catch. We get back to the guesthouse in a hurry.

Half an hour later, Sonal is back. We all rush down to see her. She looks like a little doll made to life in her deep red skirt. I watch her take her first steps into the room, her red feet leaving prints on the marble floor.
Noone’s saying a word, but everyone feels it… the gravity of the situation. This does not feel like the other weddings I have been to. A lump rises in my throat and my eyes suddenly feel slightly wet.
The ending is anti-climactic. All of us walk quietly away from the passage and agree that this was… poignant.

I greedily hold those memories close to my heart, looking around trying to blaze into my mind those last moments. Our last card game, the last night talking together, our last trip (Rooti Rani anyone?!), throwing the peas at each other.
We’re still gloriously together but soon it’ll be time to go.

And all too soon, I need to leave to the airport to go to Mumbai. I need to get my visa. And four guys have volunteered to drop me off! Karan says, “Georgy, last night I was the only one who said I’d come. And today you seem ultra popular.”
Abhay*, Ken and Jayarama squeeze into the Maruti as well. I am giggling like a small child and my spirits are high.

Half an hour later, I have been deposited at the small Udaipur airport. I hug them all and stand waving till the car leaves. Suddenly, I feel alone and my heart is heavy. I have just bid farewell to the best days of my life.**

This time, it’s just that distance.

I walk into the marble tiled departure hall. It’s the start of a new life.

It’s hard to say goodbye… To IIMB, my friends, to the life I led, to India, to my family. To those who have made me who I am, to the ones I love so much, this is not a goodbye.

*Yes, the selfsame one.
**Till now anyway.

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2006: A New Age Love Story

October 13, 2006

The crow was flying in a straight line because that is what was expected of it everytime someone uttered that ill-fated phrase “as far as the crow flies.” Poor crow. It had an errand to do; it had to reach a Land Far Far Away. Was this crow a harbinger of doom? Or filling in for a dove of peace? Or, was it just an average Crow in search of a refreshing drink of Sprite from one of those open terraces? Perhaps, it was a messenger of love… a disguised lovebird? But, I digress, or get ahead of myself in this chronicle. This is not the story of that crow, though even that tale must be told. All I ask of you at this moment is to spare a moment of thought for that poor crow with aching wings that had to fly as far as a crow flies.
So, in a Land Far Far Away, 14 hours by Volvo bus ride; this part of the world which is known as Madras in parts of India north of the Aravalli mountains, known as Dawg’s Own Country in circs travelled by sages as perpetually The Angry Old Man as certain avatars of Vishnu we wouldn’t like to name, lived a pretty curly haired princess named Kuruvi. Picture to yourself a polished young lady with alabaster skin and a voice like the tinkling of silver bells, the big doe eyes of classical Indian mythology, and sweeping eyelashes. Keep that picture in mind, it might make you feel better!

Her high heeled shoes trampled the bleeding hearts of many a young prince who serenaded her in her impregnable castle. But her heart was not to be turned. She had other pressing matters of state to discuss with more influential old kings.
She was of the really royal kind: the kind with blood blue enough to be used as ink (royal blue Chelpark might give you an idea!) This was the direct result of fifteen centuries of carefully conducted swayamvaras where her grandmothers (to the power infinity) were asked to pick their favourite blue blooded alpha prince.

The blue bloods were of a different kind. Faced with expulsion from the Pretty World of Far Far Away, they married and remarried so much that invariably the next nuptials would be between fourth cousins at the best. Their grapevine was the envy of the BBC and CNN. The most talked about news item was “Who is marrying who?” and “How long will the engagement be?” The answer to the second used to be 27 years more often than not because they decided their partners at the not-so-tender age of 1 month.
The conversations between parents used to run in these lines:

Boy’s Mother: “My dear Varghesekutty is 2 months old.”
Girl’s Mother (holding 10 day old baby in cradle): “Oh my god! You haven’t got him engaged? He’s not getting any younger you know!”
Boy’s Mother (looking fondly at boy blowing spittle bubbles): “Yeah, but he’s such a handsome young man. I would like the best girl for him. So, Thomachan and I decided to wait for the right young lady.”
Girl’s Mother: “Look at Dolly here. I think we ought to get the two engaged.”Boy’s Mother (mentally sizing baby Dolly up and finding her nose crooked) “Oh-KAY. I will ask Thomachan and we’ll get back to you.”

And that’s how blue blooded engagements took place.

Now, young Kuruvi’s parents were proud of their not-so-little one and hoped that they wouldn’t have to settle down for anyone less than the best. How could they not, wasn’t she of the alabaster smooth skin and the pretty curly hair? So, Kuruvi waited; for 21 long ringless years, all the while hoping for a solitaire (set in platinum) to grace the fourth finger of her left hand, counted from the thumb.

What of Kuruvi’s dreams? Had she set her mind on some charming young whipper snapper with ordinary red blood? Had her hormones run away with her? Unknown to her parents and her best friends, Kuruvi harboured dreams and dark secrets. She was a closet romantic! Literally!

On opening her cupboards, you would find women swooning in arms of large muscled men. On the cover of books, you pervert! One was almost tempted to put down the fainting fits to bouts of heat waves, except for the singular lack of clothes on the duos. But that’s the stuff for another story.

Coming to her Royal Highness’ four friends, (“Oh! You need to learn how to mingle with the commoners too, Kuruvi.”) they were her “bestest friends in the whole wide institute of higher learning in spite of your red corpuscles”, as she so beautifully put forth in her tinkling voice. Her greatest expression of love came when she asserted “Hum tum dushman” which she supposed was the highest compliment she could pay humans of the same persuasion.

The five had already decided what turns their life would take. KuPi wanted to follow ol’ Chris Columbus in his discovery of the New World, and take the world to GREater heights, the divine one would study to become a scientist: the kind that blew you up if you moved the wrong muscle, the shrewd one wanted to mismanage the world, and the loveliest person in Hyderabad, though she was yet to assume that title, had modest aspirations: she wanted to stop electrocuting herself every time she went into the lab.

But, what of Princess Kuruvi, you ask? “I want to be the first princess with a job,” she tinkled two weeks into first year. “After my Prince and I are one, it depends on his royal wishes.”

“I want a dog,” asserted KuPi, “they’re better than any man.” A loud bout of coughing followed this statement.

Kuruvi continued, unperturbed, “I will be engaged by the time I am 21.” The shrewd one spent 1 minute calculating how many days that would be. She didn’t want to run out of practice. In the meanwhile, the bells of Doom were ringing loudly. Oblivious to the cacophony, Kuruvi’s eyes misted over. “I’d like a solitaire diamond platinum ring.”

I did say she was a pampered princess.

Four years flew by on dragon’s wings, and Li’l Kuruvi found herself in the Silicon Valley of Further Away. No, not Los Angeles, gutter mind. She was single and jobbed, or so her friends thought. Save the hapless KuPi who found herself the confidante of the Princess. They even found lodgings together and walked daily.

When, one fine day…
Princess Kuruvi was walking down the Boulevard of Shattered and Trampled Upon Dreams. Behind her, bled the thousand hearts of Roadside Romeos. When suddenly, she was ambushed from all sides by a dacoit called Gabber Sing, so named because of his peculiar way of talking.

“Muahahaha… Now, you are MINE, Kuruvi…”
“Nooooo…,” tinkled Kuruvi frantically, “Some Prince please help me.”
There was the sudden thundering of hooves and in rode the charming, dashing prince on white horse.

Kuruvi’s eyes lit up. Was this the chance for her closet romantic dreams come true? The horse, unfortunately, tripped on the nearest cobblestone and the prince found himself tangled in his shining armour.

Gabber laughed some more for dramatic effect. “Arrey oh Sambar! Yeh kaun hain bhai? Maybe he will entertain me.”
His henchmen laughed dutifully.
The Prince stood up and declared, “I’m the blue blooded Prince from the Land Two Hours Away and I’ve come to meet Kuruvi. She’s MINE.”
Gabber was amused (or not) “If you want her, you have to sing, sing for me… unknown prince.”

The handsome prince opened his mouth…
“Twinkle, twinkle little star…”
Kuruvi swooned. This was her brave young prince, Suddenly, the skies opened up and the rains fall down. The three henchmen melted. Gabber was all alone now! Helpless! Now was the Prince’s chance. He pounced on Gabber and beat him up.

Gabber was reduced to a blubbering mass, “You just can’t decent henchmen nowadays. Nowadays, they all melt…”
The Prince untied Kuruvi lovingly and stared deep into her eyes. Kuruvi’s heart turned somersaults and she whispered, “Hamesha.”

“Huh?” asked the Prince, breaking the spell.
“I said ‘I love you’”
“Is that what Hamesha means?””Doesn’t it?”
…And off they went to see Lagey Raho Munnabhai in the local PVR, all the while singing, “Pyaar hua, ikraar hua hain.”

Princess Kuruvi suddenly had a doubt. “By the way, what is your name, Oh Prince??”
“I am Novino Kuruvi, Kuruvi…”
The bells rang out in deference of fate.

Here’s to the Kuruvis and their wonderful almost-love story…

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Love & All That Jazz

January 25, 2006

“Noooo, you can’t make me do this. Please?!”
Aswin closed into the hapless Shrutz, rubbing his hands together and cackling in a fiendish manner. “Err, why am I cackling fiendishly?”
Shrutz was annoyed, “Because you just tagged me, you… FIEND.”
“Ahh, yes. You have to tell me who your perfect *cough cough* lover is.”,
continued the devil in human guise.
Shrutz nearly choked on her scream, or would have if the scream were solid. “I thought my feelings on *gah* LOVE were pretty well documented…. Please, buddy boy, don’t make me do this! Main tumhaare pair padti hoon. Mujhse yeh NAHIN hoga!”
But alas! This was to fall on the deaf ears of the So-called-Casanova formerly known as Aswin. Knowing the fellow as well as I did, if I didn’t listen to him, there would be HELL to pay when I saw him next, mainly in the form of food and Sprite. My pockets weren’t that deep.
All complaints about this here post maybe addressed to the link given above.

Here’s the funda behind the tag. Yeah, apparently, there’s a funda.
1) I am supposed to talk about eight characteristics of my soul-mate. (Yes, I did substitute the original word used. ;) I am kinda li’l prim and propah in some ways.)
2) Tag eight other people. Yes, that would be unsuspecting people who would HATE doing the tag. Yes, that is the reason I took up the tag without much fuss. Yes, I am a sadist. No, you can’t do anything about it.
3) Inform them in their comments that they “been issued a lurve tag”. Hmm, maybe there are perks to this tag.
4) Go back to sleep, a happy camper, secure in the knowledge that the blogger world is a slightly unhappier place since your last post.

At the outset, I’d like to inform all and sundry these pertinent points about the Shrutz behind the blog.
1) I don’t believe in soul mates.
2) The last time I made a list about the “ideal guy” in my life, Angel and I had a wonderful Yahoo discussion for two hours. At the end of this wonderful conversation, both of us had a long list which we promptly agreed was a cartload of crap.
3) No person is a list of qualities. Everyone is above and over a bunch of adjectives.
4) I don’t believe in knights in shining armour, or white stallions or soft pink confetti.

Yes, the preliminaries have been concluded. You, little boy, you may open your eyes. Aunty Shrutz promises she won’t be mean anymore!

Without further ado, with a flourish of trumpets, here’re eight things about my dream guy.

  • He must just be goodlooking enough. Weird sentence, right? It means he shouldn’t be prettier than me. Yeah, I do hear the whispers of “That must be REALLLLY hard.” That’s okay. If the guy is more goodlooking than I am, I expect him to go break his nose and a few teeth to boot in order to level the playing field out!
  • He must be empathetic and a strong shoulder to cry on, doze off and rest my head on when things get too hectic in my brain; what with all those multiple Shrutz’s clamouring for attention and all that, my brain DOES get overheated!
  • The unlucky fellow must be calm and capable of handling my craziness and periodic outbursts. My heart already goes out to him in commiseration for the torture he will have to undergo. I know of at least three guys who have hit their heads repeatedly on whatever flat surface was available to them when I started on my weird logic.
  • Intelligent conversation is a must. Pretence annoys me and silliness bores me. The definition of intelligent conversation, to me, is not a lengthy discourse on the works of John Milton or the Rise & Fall of the Roman Empire. Everyday talk would do fine, as long as it doesn’t get too dull & prosaic. I can while away any amount of time talking about anything under the sun. Unfortunately, the listener must reciprocate too!
  • He mustn’t make weird noises while eating with his mouth open… HUGE turn off, people!
  • Oh wait! The guy must be tall. I am so vertically deprived, I’d like a tall person around to take the books off the top shelf!
  • THE guy must not live in low-waist-fall-off-if-I-sneeze jeans 24/7. In fact, these are more or less a no-no. Long hair, NEVER!!! There’s only room for one person’s hair brushes and shampoos in this relationship, buster and it ain’t you!!!
  • Respect. Given and taken.

I am tagging these unfortunate souls to share the torture.
DJK because she specifically asked me not to.
Ranj, ‘cos I am curious.
Puneet He was in the wrong place at 3:30 am.
Angel because we’ve already had this conversation.
Binu, he WANTS to do it, crazy guy.
Jax He’s been propositioned to by a guy. NOW, I am curious.
Girish It’s an open-ended question for the SAP dude.
Vignesh He’s too obsessed with this.

An afterthought… Rishab. Which way does the river flow, dude?!