I landed on the wrong planet

The bell chimed as he walked in for the second time. "Hey! It's been a while," said the man at the bar. "I need a drink," said he as he shook his head, trying to dispel the uncomfortable truth repeatedly spanking him sensuously. And that is how we find our hero, sipping something muddy on another planet.

Name:
Location: Yaadhum Oore. Yaavarum Kelir

I am a bad imitation of don Quixote.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Let's Talk

People are like the graffitti of a dog's urine on the sidewalk - smelly and evanescent.

They come in all sizes and colors. Some are good. Some are bad. But all of them are stuck on you. They leave their mark that is indelible - like that gooey thing on the underside of your shoe. And picking them apart is disgustingly satisfying.

"Fucker! You are a writer?!"

He was wearing thick, dorky glasses and his eyes were bloodshot. He had a t-shirt with words that were as inconsequential as this man in my life. The things a writer has to do to write - they are laid down in the contract. And top among them is to converse. So, I played along.

"Yes," I replied, trying hard to resist my temptation to turn my back and order for one more pint.

"Fucker! That's bullshit man!"

Some people really test you, making you discover new limits of patience.

"I am sorry?"

"Yeah, you should be! No one can be a writer, dude! Asshole, that's not a job!"

A few people around us had taken to staring over the top of their glasses, happy at the prospect of a bar brawl.

"I write for a living."

"I don't buy that crap! You're just sittin there with your beard and your kurta and your pen & paper, tryin to impress some arty chicks. That's all you're doing - selling your wares like a whore!"

This should have angered me. And it did.

"And what do YOU do?"

"I work for a software company, dude!"

I stared at him long, trying to make him see that he was a lost soul. Trying to beat it into his head that he was a nobody. No passion. No dreams. C'mon 'dude'! See the irony!

"I make a lot of money," he continued, refusing to accept defeat. "I buy a house. A car. Date a chick. Marry someone else. Grow old and die."

What was this person doing - digging his own grave?! Was this a practical joke that he was playing on himself? I discreetly looked around the bar for any hidden cameras with Pogo's label on it.

"And that is better because......?" My raised eyebrow ought to have burnt down his sceptical ones. But he ploughed on.

"It is better because my life ain't complicated. I don't bother about my dreams. I don't give a shit about my passion."

"But what about what you really want to do?"

He sat there, sipping and thinking.

"What was the biggest sorrow you've ever had to face?" he asked, countering my question with one of his own.

"I lost a loved one recently." Why was I even answering?

"You aren't dead because of that, right? You pulled through. You will pull through when you lose someone else. I pulled through even after knowing that I can't do what I want to. And that, motherfucker, is the kicker!"

I looked at the seat he had vacated after that punchline. It was closing time and the other patrons had left, disappointed at not seeing a joust.

"Sir? We are closing." It was Mani, the bartender.

"Tell me, Mani. Why do you work here?" The question had shot forth without my meaning to.

"I like listening to conversations, Sir. That'll be 450 rupees."

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

A rainbow in my water

Some words have been sculpted to perfection. But these words do not reveal their meanings to us often. Today, I was privy to a few of them:

Dazzling, Shattering, Scintillating, Stupendous, Glittering, Overwhelming...

There was a rainbow in my water. It was fed by the rays of the sun. The glass was half full and the rainbow was fully gone. It carried with it solitude's stench. But there was a rainbow, though there was no thirst to quench.

The bamboo chairs gleamed in the afternoon sunlight streaming through straw-curtains while elderly germans peered into their laptops. There was an Indian kid next to me, trying very hard to impress his quasi-americanness on everyone around him. Or was it quasi-germanness?

The steak was red and peppered, while the potato was creamy and looked a little sick. A hungry squirrel entertained everyone there with his fight for survival while the bamboo chairs gleamed on.

The streets welcomed me back with purple and indigo and yellow. How many colors! How many trees! Where had they gone? The buildings scattered around the street blocked the sunlight every now and then, creating pools of gloom that still glittered with the multitude of markets stacked with fruits. The fruits were dancing, shamelessly displaying their peels and their seeds.

I had long since taken a decision to travel and write and enlighten myself. But I never thought that I would be travelling between my house and various little pieces of heaven fifteen minutes away. The road is always there - the same road that leads out of the house leads to the mountains. It is the same road that connects people. And it dazzles with the dust off the shoes of fellow dreamers.

Put me on a highway. Show me a sign. And take it to the limit - one more time...

PS: While on the subject, I have started a new blog that I may never update but hope to. You can visit it at http://diamondsoflucy.blogspot.com I am planning to use it as a blog meant only for my weird translations of various works in Tamil. That's all.