Sunday, November 24, 2013

What did Tendulkar do?

I have read more articles on Sachin Tendulkar’s cricketing skills than the number of times Inzamam said ‘is’ in his illustrious post-match presentations career (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xK70NhcmQws). None of those articles have been able to do justice to Tendulkar as a sportsman. Let me clarify that this was not in any way a reflection of the writers' inadequacy. Not in the least. It is because he truly is unfathomable in words. And while I am at it, let me also declare right away that the following words are not going to do justice to him either. Not in the least.

I’ve shamelessly day-dreamed about Tendulkar more number of times than the number of hundreds and fifties he has scored in international cricket. In my head, I’ve replayed each of his innumerable impactful innings, ball-by-ball, run-by-run, four-by-four, six-by-six and goosebump-by-goosebump. This was way before YouTube privileges. He’s had the same effect on a lot of people I know and admire. Tendulkar has meant more to us than the sport itself. It’s not about numbers. Not about statistics. Rather, it’s not JUST about that. Tendulkar has unassumingly groomed my generation. We were teenagers, unsure of a lot of things. We were uncertain of our likes, our dislikes, our vocation, our looks, our sense of humour. The list is really endless. But Tendulkar ensured that we were sure of him. He has been the constant among all the other mercurial variables. When faced with situations where I could have chosen one of many paths, I’ve consciously asked myself “What did Tendulkar do?” The answer has never disappointed.

“He is quite the Tendulkar fan”, said my Dad, referring to me as the conversation drifted to sports. He was talking to Mr Murthy, a South Indian friend of his, settled in Delhi. My Dad had taken Mr Murthy out for dinner when he was visiting us, when the ‘13 year old’ I tagged along. Now Mr Murthy was a pleasant guy, but he saw this as a harmless opportunity to fluster a boy just entering teenagehood. “Tendulkar”, he said matter-of-factly, “is not the greatest batsman in the world”. He was looking at me with eyes filled with mischievous anticipation of a debate that would perturb me. I looked at him. I smiled and silently asked myself ‘What did Tendulkar do?’
A few days ago, a reporter had asked Tendulkar what he thought of a gentleman who had criticised him. Tendulkar had smiled his boyish smile and replied “It is his opinion. That’s his job and I respect it. My job is to play cricket”.
Mr Murthy was still looking at me. “It’s your opinion, Uncle, and I respect it”, I said. The resemblance between Mr Murthy’s ‘pleasantly surprised’ look and that of the reporter’s was uncanny.

I’ve seen Shetty, being a gifted sportsman and an extraordinarily funny guy, receive innumerable compliments from several people. I’ve also seen Shetty being the epitome of modesty and humility to the extent of sheepishly struggling to accept these compliments. If I may take the liberty to speak on his behalf, it most certainly roots from a Tendulkar influence. So what did Tendulkar do? Tendulkar had just scored a truly magical hundred in Australia. After the match, Tendulkar was hooked up with an ear piece for being interviewed by Harsha Bhogle, Ian Chappell, Sunil Gavaskar and Navjot Singh Siddhu. Now these guys were more than aware of Tendulkar’s discomfort towards direct praise, when they playfully decided to shower him with embarrassing compliments, just to have some good-hearted fun. Tendulkar managed to evade every accolade, every praise with his signature “The ball was coming nicely onto the bat”. This was when his idol, Mr Gavaskar, cornered him with “Sachin, I am so fortunate to have witnessed your hundred today. I can proudly tell my grandchildren that when Sachin scored this magical hundred, I was there!” Everyone was waiting to see how Tendulkar would wriggle out of that one. After an awkward pause, a smiling sheepish Tendulkar touching his ear piece went “I am sorry, there’s too much wind, I didn’t catch that!”, only to be at the receiving end of prolonged laughter.  

Only very recently, I had to go through the rigorous ordeal of facing my PhD viva. Although thoroughly well prepared, I was expectedly nervous. ‘What did Tendulkar do?’, I thought. It is common knowledge that just before walking out into the stadium, where he not only encounters the wrath of the opposition team bowlers, but also the unimaginable expectations of the crowd and the cameras, Tendulkar sits in his chair in the pavilion, puts his headphones on and visualizes. He visualizes getting up from his chair and walking on to the green turf. He visualizes looking up to the skies and letting his eyes adjust to the light. He visualizes stepping on to the pitch and taking guard. And then he visualizes himself bat. The cover drives and the square cuts, the hooks and the pulls, the leg glances and the straight drives. He visualizes it all. He visualizes winning the game for India. When it’s his turn to actually get up and do the thing that he does best, he is effectively doing it a second time around. Hence, lesser nerves and better focus leading to a more controlled and relaxed performance.
And so I tried what Tendulkar does. I sat in my chair. I closed my eyes and I visualized walking up the stairs and entering the examination room. I visualized taking a seat after greeting the viva panel and providing a summary of my research. And then I visualized the panel asking me all the probable questions and me answering them. I opened my eyes and effectively walked up to the room a second time, thus helping me focus on the task at hand and keep away those proverbial nerves. The fact that I decided to NOT do the characteristic Tendulkar ‘groin twitch’ at the very last minute must also have surely helped.

Considering the simpleton that I can be, there have been several times when I’ve been outsmarted, outwitted, or simply outperformed by a person or situation at a given moment. The question has always been how should I react at that specific moment? More importantly, what did Tendulkar do? Shoaib Akhtar, the new kid on the block, runs in and bowls Tendulkar out, clearly outclassing him with sheer pace. In that fraction of a second, when I felt nothing but pure hatred for Mr Akhtar, Tendulkar chose to acknowledge being outsmarted by that particular ball – with a subtle yet sure nod of the head. It was almost as if he was coaxing me to acknowledge it as well. He hated that he was bowled, but he loved the game more. That doesn’t mean he accepted defeat. He has played the same bowler several times over and what he did to him in the 2003 World Cup was nothing short of poetry. However, it was important to acknowledge that particular ball, and he did. He acknowledged it, absorbed it, got better and came back wiser.

This ‘What did Tendulkar do?’ saga can run for as long as he has in his career spanning 24 years. The fact that he never visibly engaged in a rebuttal with the attempted sledging tactics of the many menacing fast bowlers he faced; the fact that he reassuringly stated that he loved Mumbai, but he was an Indian first, when agenda-ridden politicians were suggesting otherwise; the fact that he counts his toes even today in the presence of yesteryear greats like Sunil Gavaskar or Viv Richards, the fact that he did not react when some comments made by his friend Vinod Kambli about him on national television were misconstrued/blown out of proportion by the media, the fact that he never had to pay a fine for arriving late at team practice sessions for 24 years – the list could go on.

There truly have been innumerable instances when Tendulkar taught my generation solely by example and not words, which probably is the reason why words don’t do justice when used to describe him. As a Tendulkar fan, I say this with a dose of hesitation yet pragmatism. There may be better batsmen to come in future. His records and numbers may also be overtaken. However, there is not an ounce of hesitation when I say this. There won’t be another Tendulkar. As Gavaskar rightly put it, “When Sachin scores a run, every Indian feels he/she has scored a run”. He somehow makes you feel that those alarming number of runs are yours. Tendulkar’s career wasn’t meant to be seen, heard or counted. It was meant to be felt. I certainly did.


Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Fact scarier than fiction

You know we've erred, when your eyes frantically search for a word,
That could describe the opposite of a Utopian world,
Dsytopia, you learn, is a society strictly fictional,
That is in some important way frightening or undesirable.

You know we've erred, when dystopia as a word,
Fails miserably at describing what your society recently offered,
When it seems obsolete and disease-stricken,
When it doesn't grasp the graveness of the situation.

You know we've erred, when reading a story clenches your teeth,
When your lungs hold back a silent scream underneath,
When you watch your heart quietly grieve,
When you close your eyes in disbelief,
When neither the story leaves you long after,
Nor does the helplessness or the anger.

You know we've erred, when a girl is raped in the capital of our country,
When daylight seems feeble in protecting her dignity,
When she pays for nothing but her existence,
And when deeds performed with hands and feet,
Seem worse than those by bombs and guns.

As she battles for her life on that woeful hospital bed,
It wasn't really her who was to be dead,
As she was struck with that shameful iron rod, it can surely be said,
'Twas humanity that took a mighty blow on the head.

You know we've erred, when you can't possibly feel her unavoidable pain, her undeserved shame,
When any penalty seems a little too soft, a little too lame,
When peace loving eyes are filled with aggressive disappointment,
When they unflinchingly suggest a solution in capital punishment,
You know its time to not feign, but accept this predicament,
Yes we have erred and it is our responsibility,
Dystopia can no longer be a reality.          

Friday, July 13, 2012

SAVE ME - Volume 1 - "What a shoRt"

So. The situation is simple. An average day. Chirag, Shetty, Ankit and I hanging out at Chirag's place. Normal. Right? Think again.

"I'm bored dude, let's play cricket", said Chirag. Ankit lazily switched on Chirag's computer. Chirag even more lethargically said, "Not EA Sports Cricket dude....The real thing..."

As soon as Shetty heard Chirag utter those words, he sprung up from his half asleep state, wiped the drool off his face and whizzed passed us with a bat, ball and three stumps in his hands. The mention of sports changed Shetty's nonchalant, unassuming and forgetful personality to an agile, sharp and energetic self. Ankit and I followed him.

"Aren't you coming Chirag?", I asked.
"I'll join you guys in a minute. I'll change into something more comfortable. You go ahead", he said.

Even before Ankit and I reached downstairs, Shetty had rooted the stumps, placed the bat next to them, taken his run-up and was ready to bowl. Ankit took the bat in hand as I diligently stood behind the stumps. Shetty bowled the first ball and Ankit managed to beautifully place it back to Shetty. Shetty collected it, Ankit took his stance again as Chirag arrived on the scene, wearing something 'more comfortable'. The three of us looked at him at the same time, froze for 2 seconds and continued with the game. Chirag was  wearing shorts. Tight shorts. Short shorts. Shorts that moved up his thighs with every step he took. After 5 steps, they became really short shorts. Chirag as usual couldn't care less. To make things worse, his strides became longer. If only his shorts could do the same....

Chirag stood next to Shetty, so that they could bowl alternatively. I could see Shetty fighting to avoid eye-contact with the ever-shrinking piece of cloth and the glory that it was now struggling to cover. He bowled the next ball, obviously with a much disturbed concentration. Ankit swung hard, only to send the ball sailing over the 6 feet wall to his offside, to the next society.

As soon as Shetty saw the ball fly, he ran to the wall and in one swift motion, placed his left hand on it and jumped across to the other side like a samurai. Ankit and I followed him. Obviously, our jump was not as graceful. We used our left hand to catapult us to the top of the wall as well, but had to take support with one foot before jumping off of it. We started looking for the ball when Chirag decided to join the search committee.

Chirag lifted himself up using both hands, making Ankit and I look relatively heroic. The decisions that Chirag took from this moment on, made that day special enough to be included in this blog. One could see discomfort in Chirag's eyes as he lifted himself up that wall. Instead of jumping off of it right away, he decided to clumsily put his right leg across. Chirag was now riding the wall as if it were a horse. The thickness of the wall ensured a thorough stretch. For the first time in Chirag's life, his underwear, which was now unfortunately visible, was experiencing a superiority complex, because it was covering more of his skin than the then shamefully redundant shorts. He held the wall with both his hands and tightened his grip with his thighs for about 5 seconds. He then dismounted the wall, a little too slowly and a little too steadily. On reaching sea level, he looked at us with the anticipation of a standing ovation, but it was not to be. We continued our search for the ball, when we suddenly heard slapping noises.

We turned around. Chirag was frantically slapping his thighs while shouting at the top of his voice "GUYS!! SAVE ME!! SAVE ME GUYS!!". We ran towards him. Chirag was panting, sweating and slapping his thighs even more ruthlessly. "SAVE ME GUYS!", his voice cracking with fear. This was the first time we saw them. They were big. They were red. They were monstrous and biting RED ANTS. From the wall that Chirag should have chosen not to ride a few seconds ago. They were all over the area that his shorts should have covered, had the strides been shorter, had the jump been swifter and hang on, had the shorts been longer!! At the risk of losing all respect on this blog, I must confess that Ankit and I started laughing uncontrollably. We wanted to do something, but one can do very little when one is lying down on the ground paralysed with laughter. To make matters worse, Shetty ran off somewhere till we couldn't hear his laughter anymore! "GUYS!! SAVE ME!! SAAAVE ME GUYS!!!", Chirag yelled again, pleading with shock! Ankit and I seriously have issues, we started laughing convulsively.

Chirag might have been at the brink of shedding his 'comfortable wear', when from nowhere, we could hear Shetty's laughter again. We saw him. He was laughing alright, but his other bodily functions were working. He had a water pipe in his hand. He ran towards Chirag and hosed off the ants in true superhero fashion. "YES YES! SAVE ME! YES YES YES! SAAAAAVE ME!", Chirag exclaimed orgasmically! Then came the request, that was weirder than the word itself! "MAKE THE FORCE HARDER USING YOUR THUMB!! MAKE IT HARDER!!! PLEASE HARDER!!!", he begged Shetty. Shetty submitted to the demand. "YES!! HARDER! HARDER!! SHETTYYY HARDERRRR!", went Chirag.

Shetty could faintly hear Chirag's thank you's in the midst of our 'hard' laughter. I'm sure the experience of Chirag yelling the words 'Shetty', 'harder' and 'thank you' in one sentence contributed less towards Shetty feeling humbly acknowledged but more towards his worst nightmare coming true. Chirag didn't thank Ankit and me. I wonder what stopped him. As with every incident, a few things changed after. Ankit, the staunch atheist, started worshipping red ants. Shetty still has trouble looking at his thumb directly. And yes, Chirag started trusting Shetty. A little too much, as will be evident in the next post - "SAVE ME - Volume 2 - The ROLL reversal" :).


Friday, May 6, 2011

Breath strokes

Now that I think about it, Chirag was the undeniable attention grabber amongst the last benchers at Kalra Shukla classes. I know what you guys are thinking and let me stop you right there. His curly hair had very little to do with it, if at all. Chirag unleashed his full potential as the 'naughty yet likeable' guy who appeals to girls that age, with a force that is just too strong to resist. Add to that his raw, manly and rugged looks and you had a combination which would make the genetic combination of Hrithik Roshan and Tom Cruise wimp with envy.

Let's give Chirag a few moments to gather himself and realize that from this moment on, this blog will never be taken seriously. Now a few minutes for Shetty to start blinking again. Ok.

There were six seats on the last row of our class, three on each side of the central space through which one could exit. There were seven of us who desperately claimed the last row. Hence, everyday, each of us had to take turns to sit on the world's most uncomfortable stool placed right in the centre of the two three-seat rows. That fateful day, it was Chirag's turn.

The lecture was being taken by this chemistry teacher who bore a little too much resemblance to the cricketer Sunil Joshi. He used to be very soft spoken, but we soon realised, he was sharper than we thought. To keep the 'last benchers' flag' flying high, we were as usual up to no good. Chirag started narrating (whispering) something funny that happened the previous evening. He had this mischievous glint in his eyes as he was nearing his punch line. In the meantime, our teacher had spotted Mr Chirag and his glint, so he started walking towards him slowly without changing the tone of his lecture. Chirag, completely oblivious of this, was now getting a bit too animated for an ongoing lecture. We spotted the teacher, but couldn't convey this to Chirag since our energy was being spent on flaring our nostrils to control our laughter.

Before he sensed it, the teacher was staring down on him, too close for comfort. Chirag was literally under his nose. Chirag looked up. We could hardly see Chirag's eyeballs. In this confusion, Chirag didn't realise that the teacher had framed a long and complicated question while walking up to him. All Chirag heard was, "Hmmm?".

The teacher was breathing down his neck. Droplets of water started accumulating on Chirag's forehead. We couldn't figure out if they were sweat droplets or just breath condensation due to all the 'nasal warming'. He tried to locate the answer on the teacher's brain, which was now exclusively visible to Chirag. As if the teacher's normal exhale was not enough, he decided to let go a long sigh of disappointment on Chirag. Chirag stopped breathing with the fear of poisoning himself with carbon dioxide overdose. He had to do something quick. He had to think fast, save face. He had to come up with something before the next exhale!

Just when our teacher thought he had his prey in his grasp, Chirag asked with diligent innocence, "Can you please repeat the question, Sir?". The teacher realized what Chirag had done. He had killed two birds with one stone. First, he had bought himself precious time. If the teacher had to frame the long curvy question again, he would have to turn back and move away from Chirag. Hence, second, Chirag had earned himself the opportunity to inhale. Amidst the other students' mumbled laughter, the teacher turned back and started framing the question. Chirag had enough time to get the answer from someone else. The teacher reached the black board and turned back. Chirag answered with a nonchalance that might have made you think he knew the answer since 'Fair and Lovely' stopped sponsoring Ankit.

Moral of the story: If you want Chirag to think fast during an intense pressure situation, breathe on him.

Monday, July 27, 2009

C(ass)anovas

"Look at her man!", Chirag nudged me.
"Hmmm", I said.
"I am telling you man! No Hmmm! Ask Bhakti to introduce us".
"Chirag wait yaar. It will be weird to get introduced on Valentine's day man!"
"Thats all the more reason to do it. Dude... its the way you look at it... Come on! I can see she has a friend too... Even you can........"
"No no no no no no..... Chirag.................. NO!"
"BHAT MAN.... Let's do this together.... Please..."


That's all the convincing I needed. I looked around for Bhakti.... she was THE girl you needed if you wanted to get introduced to someone in college. It wasn't really difficult to spot her. She was hanging out with Ankit and a few guys. By then, Ankit was under the firm impression that not attending lectures was somehow meant for the greater good. This was because the only time Chirag and I had pushed him (no really...... PUSHED him) into the lecture hall to get his attendance to > 0%, was when the teacher failed to show up because she apparently fell sick. Since that day, Ankit swore never to attend a lecture owing to the good health of teachers all over the world. Don't worry, you are not the only one choking up.


I didn't feel guilty when I had to interrupt Bhakti's cacophonous high pitched laughter for two reasons. Firstly, Ankit coming up with smart one liners wasn't a rare phenomenon. Secondly, bats deserved to sleep during daytime. Although it was just a formality, I asked her if she knew the girl who was making Chirag sway around a tree with one hand. She obviously did. In 2 minutes she came back with a huge smile on her face. "Alright guys.... they got to go somewhere.. but coincidentally they were checking you out too... I told them you will meet them under that tree at 2 today afternoon... And yes... Chirag... your girl is Shweta.. and Bhat.. Deepa".


1:50 p.m. "Chirag... This doesn't feel right man", my voice box never felt so dry.
"Dude, just follow my lead".
"Chirag.... Its embarassing... It really is..."
"What?!"
"Chirag.. I said its embarassing..."
"Bhat.. Its not embarassing ok............................ Its awkward...."
"So what!!!"
"All I am saying is... embarassing is not the right word for this situation.... Awkward just fits better..."

Looking at Chirag with disbelief while gulping air in, we headed for 'the tree'.

"Bhat really.... Just follow my lead. You don't look comfortable. Let me do the talking...."

Somehow Chirag managed to make me feel a tad bit better. All I had to do was follow Chirag's lead. I was prepared to be led. We could see the girls standing under the tree. I was hoping Chirag would give me one final dose of nonchalant confidence before we went in....

"Bhat... Really.... Trust me on this one... I won't tell you anything just for the heck of it. I am sure awkward fits much better.... "

It was too late to react.... we were there...

The girls smiled. We smiled. Exhales all around.. One shot of inhales for everyone then. Silence. I looked at my leader. Chirag was looking into the horizon with a creased forehead with a concentration of 100 IIT students. I didn't know what to do. I rubbished the idea of duplicating the expression. 'Give him some time to get into his groove', I thought. I looked at him again. He had his hands dug up into his jeans pockets. Neck jutted out. Blowing puffs of air at regular intervals. Looking left and right... never looking at ..... Shweta was she? I don't know what the girls were doing because I, the casanova, was looking at Chirag. After I saw Chirag stand up on his toes and then back down for about 60 long seconds, I thought I had to do something. I had to save the situation. With that firm resolve, I turned back and started walking to base camp. In the subdued confusion, I forgot to tell Chirag I was leaving. After about 10 seconds when he thought he had made the entire horizon towards his left blush, he turned to his right to discover I wasn't there. After making a small 'mmch' noise, he turned back and ironically followed me.

We reached the canteen area with an expression as if Mahatma Gandhi had slapped us. Bhakti welcomed us with naughty eyes. Jabbing our shoulders and ruffling our hair she goes.... "SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO..... How did it goooooooooooooooo... huh huh huh huh huh..... " while punching our stomachs. We looked at each other; and then we told her. NOW her punches actually started hurting. "Wh.......................y? Go back.... go back RIGHT NOW.... ".

We were on the dreaded path once again. "Bhat... I am feeling more confident now... This time.. I got it... Just follow my lead... ", Chirag said. My emotions were as clueless as Shetty was during his Bangalore CET written Kannada test.

I have to hand it to those girls. They were still there... standing under Bodh Gaya. As soon as we reached the place... Chirag went back into his 'What the hell is happening... As if I care.." posture. Someone had got to say something. Anything. ANYTHING.

"Which stream?", I asked. I really should have let Chirag say something. "Which stream?" it seems. All credit to Deepa, she was kind. She told me she was from Arts with a pleasant smile. I felt more comfortable. I looked at Chirag. He was trying to move a small stone 20 metres away with his eyes. Deepa and I spoke for about 2 minutes about stuff that only great conversations are made of. Our 10th standard marks - itemised subject wise. All this while, Shweta was trying hard to make eye contact with Chirag. Chirag was too busy figuring out whether the metal object he made contact with in his pocket was a 50 paise coin or a 5 rupee coin.

Meanwhile, the conversation between Deepa and me was steering to unimaginable flirtatious directions - our caste. It turned out we were both originally from South India. She asked where in South India I was from. I told her I was born and brought up in Bombay but my dad is from Karnataka. She told me where her parents were from. The conversation was getting too hot to handle. But Deepa was unstoppable... She asked me which SPECIFIC part of Karnataka I was from. Attention to detail I tell you. I told her I was from Udipi. I was just about to shed my inhibitions and get downright dirty by asking her what her surname was when Chirag unslumbered.

The first 2 words that Chirag uttered for Shweta were probably the most weird 2 words he would have ever asked a person upfront. In a suavely confident and loud manly voice he goes, "WHICH VILLAGE?". I looked at Chirag with 'What?' eyes, 'Why?' hands and a 'How?' pout. 'Awkward' could be used perfectly to describle the 15 seconds silence that followed. I don't know how our conversation ended. I really don't remember.

Well, I just spoke to Chirag and he helped me demystify the end. Yes, we somehow managed to exchange numbers. We didn't have cell phones then. I wrote the numbers in my phone diary (oooo) against the names 'Deepa' and 'Shweta Village'. I remember receiving a couple of calls from Deepa after which, for reasons that I am not going to delve into, I started ignoring them. Chirag and my problems share a sort of a love-hate relationship. He builds them and he solves them. I was at Chirag's place one day when Chirag picks up the phone. It was Deepa.

After looking at my frantic gestures, he managed to tell Deepa that I had just left his place. As he continued talking to her for a bit, I almost felt sorry for pulling Chirag's leg a little too many times. Before I could spank myself as punishment, Chirag hangs up the phone and in his best mischievous voice (and his famous ear to ear smile of course) says, "Dude, I told her to call your place in 15 minutes!".

"Chiraag man... This is NOT cool man...". It didn't come out as serious I had thought because I couldn't help but appreciate the subtleness of the prank. I rushed back home while thinking what to do next. There was only one person who would help me in this situation. Chirag.

I picked up the phone as soon as I got home and dialled Chirag's number. "Chirag, you have to help me.... Please....".

"Ya ya I know. I was waiting for your call", he said. We spoke for over two hours till the second call beep stopped beeping. 'Phew!' we both thought. That was close. I thanked Chirag and we hung up proudly. We had everything under control. Nothing can go wrong now. I turned back and felt a huge thud on my cheek. It was my Mom.

"What happened? Why are you slapping me?!!!!"

"What's wrong with you? I forgot my keys.. I have been stuck outside for 2 hours and you haven't been picking up my calls!!!!"

This episode changed a lot of things. We stopped believing in Valentine's Day. Bhakti made Chirag write down "How is it going?" a 1000 times in his notebook, just in case another opportunity arose. My parents cut my allowance and bought a caller id with the profit. What didn't change was Ankit's attendance.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Fake IPL Player @#$!#$#$$^$%&!!#!$#$%@

There’s a new blog that seems to have grabbed the eyeballs. No it’s not this; it’s the Fake IPL player blog. Now the reason why we are spending blog time with this article is that Bhat and me (hopefully Shetty too) believe that it’s shocking to see people enjoying this blog; as Bhat puts it- shockingly shallow.
People love it, Google trends on the blog reports a phenomenal number of visitors in the last month. Now who is this person, the speculation grows. But our point being, we do not see anything amazing in this blog. It’s a mere publicity stint or a cricketer who did not make money from this lucrative sport!!!
The curiosity in me wonders about how this blog in such a short time got so famous. IPL started in mid April, and in 2 weeks the blog gains a fan following in millions. Either this guy has one hell of a marketing mind or is extremely lucky. How many people (assuming this blog is true) will want to screw their careers as well as write weird stuff online without wanting someone to read it?
People, read this blog instead, it has more quality and logic embedded in it.

Yuva!!!

Recently on a Lazy Saturday afternoon, I caught up with a relatively new Hindi movie-Yuva. I had seen the movie when it was released 5-6 years ago but it managed to grab my attention again. The central theme of the movie was young minds in Indian Politics.
With the ongoing general elections, I connected better with the movie’s ideology and hence began a thought process that made me pen this down. I would love to see more young minds in politics; but what really defines a young mind?
As I come across articles that talk about this, it seems as though a Young Mind is a youth in line with what today’s generation’s wants- a 30 year old something in comparison to a 50 year old.
Now this is where my understanding takes a full stop! How does this concept make sense; what I believe India needs is, a politician who can reach out to both the youth and the not so youth.
I love the tag name- largest democratic nation in the world, but it seems as though this has also been a hindrance. In this whole process of adopting the best concepts from the top nations we seemed to have been short sighted. And of course let me not go down the corruption path. Don’t get me wrong but I respect people with Government jobs and I feel for them when I hear that they feed a family on Rs.2-3K per month – which is ridiculous for the amount of tax people pay. If one was to open a local newspaper (online for me) almost every page highlights the gap between the legislation and implementation
Basically I don’t think I care it’s a 30 or an 80 year old politician, I want a better country to live in; and yes I am frustrated!!!