A compelling set of true stories about my life, passions, adventures, travels, motivations, innovations and random ideas about life and love.
Wednesday, 31 July 2013
I shall lay down my worthless life
Scribbled by
Unknown
On a six pence parchment draw me damned line,
Give me a flag and a staff to hold,
A song to sing and a worthless lie,
Tell me a story and give me a speech,
Give me one reason and I shall ask no more
I shall lay down my worthless life
For every worthless lie you so tell me.
Tuesday, 16 July 2013
The Cardinal Sin
Scribbled by
Unknown
For they have eyes yet seldom see,
For they have ears yet seldom hear,
For the have hearts yet seldom feel,
For they have hands yet seldom act,
For all the cardinal sins upon this grave world,
The supreme sin is but this,
For they have minds they seldom think.
Thursday, 11 July 2013
The Missing Girl Child
Scribbled by
Unknown
I still remember the joy my
sister brought to our household, my sister would be my maternal aunt’s
daughter, but she is not my cousin but my very sister itself. I have always
wanted a sister, ever since I can remember. I always wish I had an elder sister
who would scold me and whom I could fight with and I wish I had a younger
sister whom I could cajole and spoil. I know these dreams are meant to remain
unfulfilled, there is only so much one can do, no replacement would ever be
real thing would it? Then what I can do is a have a daughter whom I can spoil,
with whom I can fight and whom I can scold. Someone that I can say is truly
mine and who will always be daddy’s best girl.
When I saw the woman in this
video, who has murdered with her bare hands her several children on the eve of
their birth, my heart was shaken. There was not a speck of remorse in her
words, not a moment of self-doubt about her actions only the cold dignity of
doing what she thought was right. What would have turned her into this ominous
creature that stands defiantly in the face of modern society, a scar upon the
face of civilization? To imagine those bleak hands wound around the neck of her
own child who is still covered in blood and matter. The suppressed cries of the
new born girl escaping from the otherwise strangled throat. The new born eyes
vaguely making out the devil that her own mother has turned out to be, helpless
and bewildered. For what has she done wrong to live the life of a may fly, to
come and go and be forgotten in a heap of soil by the solitary fields.
Is being born a girl a crime, a
mishap or one of the great misfortunes of the 21st century? Why does
a moment that would otherwise be a celebration of life turn into persistent
gloom and prolonged misfortune? These are questions in the face of which the
modern society shudders and lowers its head in shame. The so called pantheons
of culture that we ourselves proclaim to be, has wittingly or unwittingly
brought upon the women great misfortune and has subjected them to what can be
called nothing other than slavery.
They can no longer legally find
if the child is a girl before being born and hence they can’t kill her before
she is even born so they lurk around till the moment of birth to don the black
cloak of doom and kill there very daughters in the most cruel of ways
imaginable. Many a visions of heal are much less revolting and terrifying than
the sight of father bashing his own daughter to death under the silence of her
mother. Where happens in utopia this gruesome scene.
Every child has the right to be
born and every child irrespective of gender be allowed the world. I have longed
for a daughter all my life and when at the moment it happened to be a boy,
would I kill him? Would I even think about harming him? Even in the face of my
many a dreams being shattered would I for one moment think that this innocent
life in my hands deserves not to live? How could I even think that, for in my
hand lies the miracle of life? All I could ever do is to love him and all I
could ever think is to be his hero. Come what may be to kill a child is
revolting and killing on the basis of its gender may very well be like buying a
first class non-refundable ticket to the bottom hell.
We have the blunder of many a
millennia to correct before us, we have to rectify the mistakes of several
hundred generations which has caused, encouraged and supported this injustice.
We have to with great patience and utmost dedication purify the society of its
evils that has poisoned its very fabric. How this can be done is not for me to
say for that we are well aware of. What we must ask ourselves is that whether
we want it done? Whether the urgency is felt in our hearts and if so then the
way is but a matter of taking.
Monday, 8 July 2013
Romi and Gang by Tushar Raheja
Scribbled by
Unknown
“The quintessential Indian story of a quintessential small town Indian teen.”
In India where cricket is a many a times much more than just a sport, it becomes a religion. Though this is a cliché so seldom used the truth is not far from it. Romi is a small town Indian boy, in love with cricket and religious in worship of his god ‘Sachin Tendulkar’, living in a room filled with the legends of the game and a ball hanging from the ceiling. His obsession with cricket is among the many things that makes him not so unique in the nation. He and his gang of similar minded friends who ballet over the coveted pitches in the large maidans are what can be claimed a familiar sighting almost everywhere in India.
The many mischiefs and the petty
rivalries, the apprehension with girls and the secret infatuations are
something every Indian boy would know all too well. The technicalities of this story and the
various aspects of cricket, though it gives the story authenticity is not what
makes it a great story but the simple things that every one of us can relate to
is what makes it possible for us.
The author, Mr. Raheja has
attempted to recreate the life of a quintessential kid and his life, his
emotions, the complexities and challenges of life faced by them with
substantial success. The narrative is fluid as it travels from one encounter to
another. The way the friendships are build and fostered and the many lessons of
life that we learn as we walk alongside Romi and his gang of friends as they
chase down their dreams on and off the pitch is mesmerizing.
With such a seemingly simple
story the author attempts to drive home many great virtues that we now find
only in the sleepy town and fosters the idea that winning is not everything. He
shows us through Romi and his life that there are something more important that
winning and that there is always a factor of luck involved in it. He makes one
realize that certain failures in life are not really failures and that they
most certainly does not mean that we are not good enough but on the contrary
that we are good enough
Romi is what every one of us has
been, or is still is. The various images that the author draws up are things we
ourselves have lived through in our childhood days. Either we are Romi or one
among his gang or we know Romi or one among his gang. Part of Tushar Raheja’s success lays in the
fact that the story is so close to most us on a personal basis and that one can
easily relate to the many characters in the story. He has done away with
needless descriptions and literary opulence in exchange for simple to read
story that one can take with him. This after all is a quintessential Indian
story of a quintessential small town Indian teen.
Amazon India
Flipkart
Junglee
Snapdeal
Amazon India
Flipkart
Junglee
Snapdeal
Friday, 5 July 2013
Oh! My Lovely Lass
Scribbled by
Unknown
Oh! My lovely lass, why don’t come sit by my side and lay
your head upon my lap. Let me rock you to sleep and ever so slowly to the world
of a million dreams. Why don’t you tell me your weary day and I promise thee
that I shall listen with all my heart. Of all the people in this world so wide,
I for one know that there are times when you look not for advice and opinion
but an understanding shoulder to rest your heavy head.
It may not be always that I am the ideal husband, but for
the wonderful wife that you are, I sure will work my way up there. For a lass
so lovely like you deserve but the very best and the best alone shall suffice.
Oh my Lovely lass, tell me of all the vistas that you have
seen, the people you met and the life you experienced. Let us be that teens
again, who sat on a mossy rock by the ravishing sea and talked of all the
wonders under the sun, the moon and the million stars. Let me bet that guys who
used to listen to your ever heart beat and who reveled in the rhyme of your
breath. I confess to the time that was once, when my very existence clang onto
thine like a drowning man to straw.
Oh my love, tell me your tale and do fill those many a blank
pages that I in my mindless slumber missed, I promise thee to miss not another
page of our wonderful saga of love, I will with religious adherence etch every
word of our life to be in the beautiful script that ought to be. Oh my love
this I promise.
Oh my dear, do come and sit by my side, lay you dainty head
on my lap, let me cajole you, let me relish you, Oh my love be here with me as
if you knew that I belonged to thee.
Oh my love, look at me like you used to look, your eyes so
moist and dreamy. Let me behold the love, the love know has not died, not yet.
Wednesday, 3 July 2013
The Plucking of the Daffodil
Scribbled by
Unknown
Leaving beneath the great oak tree,
Who was also her dear uncle Bill,
Under his shade she dreamt a life free
Of chasing her dreams, ever so many.
Under the million stars, her dreams she kindled,
Of the faraway lands and knights in shining armor,
There she lay awake, night after night so splendid.
She had a smile to stop a king and humour,
A pretty face too to match.
Every night she dreamt of many a great things,
Of singing to the birds in early mountain dawn,
Of kissing the queen and of donning her mighty crown,
Of touching a prince and forever be in him gone,
But alas that was not so to be.
One fateful day came the great merchant doom,
He asked Uncle Bill so artfully for his dear little niece,
Many a great things awaits he said, not a drop of gloom,
For this beautiful daffodil would make a garland for ladies
fair and nice,
Promised him of a place so fair, and all that’s good for his
little niece.
The lovely little daffodil wept and wept and wept all right,
“I am so young, yet so tender for my dreams be forever
crushed,
It is too early for me, to lose all of life from sight”
She pleaded and begged, but yet her opinion away was
brushed,
Oh dear, Oh our poor little daffodil.
Her dear Uncle Bill did seldom put up a face so stern,
Pointed at his niece and said in a voice ever so hoarse.
“I wish only well, my dear little child, all I wish is you
not burn
For you are to me precious as the short king’s mighty horse”
I wish only good and all the glittering glory to you.
I know of your dreams, so high and mighty,
Of wandering the worlds and of the royal garden,
But you are only a daffodil and take that not so lightly,
I am old and weak and with you future laden,
This is for you good my dear little one.”
On the day of the great plucking, came the merchant doom,
She was plucked ceremoniously, our little miss daffodil,
No more a miss but ever so young and yet to bloom,
She cried so hard that night and lost was her dreams and
will,
Only to wither away in the dark shadows of an alley way
back.
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