tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7282773582041664842024-02-07T15:03:07.352-08:00Neither Short Nor SweetRandom RamblingsBaishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-11864998134384769152016-05-20T02:12:00.002-07:002016-05-20T02:12:29.599-07:00Nokia<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhT1ImjsamfidxN0I9AWKLK1we4U7EYXOp7E-O346tMhisJkYAqpd4wnH7VQ7WVlH5Tdqk3facKTVHELD0Thi2oW90nk_9QxB9X5LLpw5I-fpzfUTwaCVJwayPzi3ChtjvuFBAh1VWpNEVu/s1600/download.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhT1ImjsamfidxN0I9AWKLK1we4U7EYXOp7E-O346tMhisJkYAqpd4wnH7VQ7WVlH5Tdqk3facKTVHELD0Thi2oW90nk_9QxB9X5LLpw5I-fpzfUTwaCVJwayPzi3ChtjvuFBAh1VWpNEVu/s1600/download.jpg" /></a>It seldom bothers me that companies merge, get acquired, get funded or try long enough for funding and finally shut down. But Nokia CEO and mgmt. team crying over the Microsoft acquisition does make me sad. Nokia 3310 was my first cellphone gifted by my father. And it withstood much metaphorical and physical battering. This phone was almost made of steel, it disintegrated into 3 neat pieces if it fell and could be assembled back in perfect working condition in a minute. It se<span class="text_exposed_show" style="display: inline;">ldom ran out of battery. The audio was perfect. And thankfully as the era of “connectivity” hadn’t arrived – this phone did everything a phone was meant to do – talk , text, stay in touch, and not be invasive. I LOVED my 3310. And eventually had to trade it in for a touchphone after much resistance. My friends and IT team at work know that I kept my sophisticated touchphones in my cupboard for a year and continued using my Nokia as I couldn’t give it up. Maybe some people are just like that.</span></div>
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Nokia management team have so much to be proud of. They created one of the most reliable brands in the world and made mobile phone affordable and accessible for the common man. While I am not the expert on technology, I do know many who worked for Nokia and loved what they created.</div>
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I see some friends working in startups, some successful and funded and some not. Like Nokia if they do get acquired (or shut down), would they regret anything? I personally am full of admiration that they pursued what they felt was their calling and took the risk to make their dream a reality. Being</div>
successful (or funded) has a lot to do with being at the right place at the right time. But being acquired by another company is by no means reason to believe that the experiences, the journey and the creation mattered any less to the customer.<br />
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I hope people can share Nokia’s successes and legacy, success for Nokia and other companies is so much more than just the balance sheet.</div>
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Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-4241387826273785232013-09-28T10:53:00.000-07:002013-09-28T18:48:52.538-07:00Mylapor-ed!<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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As a kid I used to believe India has two communities except Bengalis - Punjabis and Madrasis. The divide between the north and south of India is possibly
one of the most overrated and underrated beliefs of our times. Overrated as it
actually keeps employable talent, infrastructure investments and people in
general curtailed to one region while it could be more porous. And underrated as
there really are a few essential differences which are way fundamental to be
bridged in a few generations. <o:p></o:p></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhN2QkZBXSkx-z03d5yblwAYZ82lW6OvTN8LK1gA7WhD8gcrtJNHcoFDB0LtdrWktvpf2JckpW3h2dsCvEPsUKIaxoBshZ1zLXV5zeZU7XXMtHCVldAt-vcxaK0SV-8mk-_fOkbhuN2z-cf/s1600/south-indian-food-on-leaf.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="180" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhN2QkZBXSkx-z03d5yblwAYZ82lW6OvTN8LK1gA7WhD8gcrtJNHcoFDB0LtdrWktvpf2JckpW3h2dsCvEPsUKIaxoBshZ1zLXV5zeZU7XXMtHCVldAt-vcxaK0SV-8mk-_fOkbhuN2z-cf/s320/south-indian-food-on-leaf.jpg" width="320" /></a>Up north people love wheat. Down south people love rice. Up
north people have summer and winter. Down south people only have eternal summer!
Up north the big fat Indian wedding can last a whole week. Down south it lasts
a whole day. Up north you typically need to own a big bungalow and car to have
arrived in life. Down south its enough to have arrived intellectually to
where one desires, and walk around in Bata slippers. I could go on and on , but
the point is that despite belonging to somewhere up north (if Kolkata
qualifies as that) , I feel more connected to the south. And to me Chennai is the epicenter of the 'Madrasi' world. </div>
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It might be an exaggeration of sorts to say there is no
downside to Chennai. Of source there is the aggressive auto guy , the constant
chettinad restaurants and the overall conservative homogeneity on the surface
of things. However , this city has some character and unlike other cities I have
seen. The trigger to putting stuff on paper is the visit to Mylapore this
evening. <o:p></o:p></div>
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Mylapore is like a very traditional New York. Busy. Crowded.
Street hawkers. Heavy traffic. Interesting little curio shops. And tonne of
character. The air smells at once of fresh ground filter coffee , camphor and
incense. The fulcrum of the area is the Mylapore Kovil or the Temple , which is
very old and extremely beautiful. It’s intricately carved and there is a
traditional water tank inside the temple. All around it is the temple linked economy
that has grown over years. Small shops sell idols of gods, earthen dolls , toys
for kids and knick knacks. In Mylapore
you have some of the best Sari shops with exquisite silk weaves from all over the
south of India. People jostle around trying to buy stuff. But there is nothing aggressive
about the place. The heat is unbearable. It’s sweaty. However people are
gentle. And it’s a gentle evening. <o:p></o:p></div>
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A very dear friend recommended I check out Mylapore and the
small curio stores there, and I am glad I did. The place echoes what I like most
about Chennai. The people. Educated and simple, non-flamboyant and layered.
There just might be an unassuming rocket scientist sitting next to you on the
public bus with a packed lunch box of curd rice, but you’ll never realize it!<o:p></o:p></div>
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Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-45053949742829958162012-09-28T09:52:00.001-07:002013-09-28T19:25:00.812-07:00Old travels, old scribbles<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<strong><span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Amsterdam ( Netherlands)</span></strong></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQ98MzKZWPwcJGYZVlMsdbeHzi8jxQKweK3PO7oVQPWIFoGarxJ174u1QDd4xh1n09spl5WosU6g-lh4iXA_a-siYjaMKZ9EYjtvZTr1odgmJ_rPBW-fazP3z2Co29Asf0XEhoo3EeQEkP/s1600/AMS.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjQ98MzKZWPwcJGYZVlMsdbeHzi8jxQKweK3PO7oVQPWIFoGarxJ174u1QDd4xh1n09spl5WosU6g-lh4iXA_a-siYjaMKZ9EYjtvZTr1odgmJ_rPBW-fazP3z2Co29Asf0XEhoo3EeQEkP/s320/AMS.jpg" width="320" /></a><span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">For first time travelers in Europe, Amsterdam is a must see destination. It combines the beauty of Venetian canals with the bohemian freedom of choosing to visit art galleries, museums, take a canal cruise , do your own barbeque in Vondelpark, soak in the sun at Dam square, take a look at the famous red-light districts or just spend the afternoon at the much talked about ‘ coffee shops’. Amsterdam has so much to offer. It has some of the best restaurants serving world cuisine. It has beautiful architecture that frame the canals and it’s a treat to see the bright windows studded on these old buildings. While in Amsterdam it’s a good idea to see the Rijksmuseum, the Van Gogh Museum, Stedelijk Museum, Hermitage Amsterdam and Anne Frank House.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Most of all , it’s the spirit of the city. It has people from all over the world and is a melting pot of culture, ethnicity and experiences.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">There are some great weekend getaways close to Amsterdam like Paris, Brussels , Antwerp. Keukenhof or the tulip fields, Volendam is a small fishing village close by, Rotterdam etc are good day trips.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Amsterdam is a place best seen at a leisurely pace. Rushing through the city doesn’t do justice to the place. So pick up a bite to eat and walk around town, sit by the canals and savor the beauty of this lovely city.</span></div>
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<strong><span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Travelers tip:</span></strong></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Amsterdam has great trams, bus and overall public transportation. You can buy discounted pass for day / week / month at the Central Railway Station. Try local cuisine while in Netherlands, its easily available and tastes great. It’s perfectly safe to be out at night as long as you are careful. You can also buy calling cards at the station to call back home – it’s cost effective and gives you sufficient talk time.</span></div>
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<strong><span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Paris ( France)</span></strong></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">This city has always been heralded as the original city of romance. It has been the backdrop of much art, culture, movies, literature and music. And quite deservingly so. There are few cities in the world that manage to balance modernity with history as well as Paris. From the right and left bank of the River Sienne that is dotted with beautiful old architecture , to the Sacre Coeur and the winding roads of Abbesses dotted with artists and small French patisseries , to one of the best public transportation system.. . Paris has it all! </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;"> If you are lucky and are traveling in summer, you will also walk alongside the river while street musicians playing softly on their accordion and violins , while you can just halt for a while and take in the magic of it all. Stop at small Parisian cafes for crepes and coffee before you explore more of this enchanting city. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;"><strong>Traveler's tip:</strong> ensure that you see the Eifel when it lights up gloriously at close of each hour . Buy day passes for the metro for the duration of your stay. The metro connects you to every part of the city and is the most economical and fastest way to travel. If you love Indian food, there are some excellent Indian / Pakistani restaurants near the two main rail stations - Gare Du Lest and Gare Du Nord.</span></div>
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<strong><span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Innsbruck ( Austria)</span></strong></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Anyone who has seen the movie ' Sound of Music' would have wanted to see the Austrian alps, and among the choice of towns scattered on the Alps in Austria…Innsbruck is one of the must see places . Known as a tourist attraction for the Golden Dachl and other sights it has some lesser known secrets to offer. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;">Not many explore the Alps on foot and that's something one must try. Each day early morning a group of mountain lovers departs from the city centre by bus to the foothills. You can even borrow trekking boots at no extra cost. From the foothills the trekkers go up the hill on ropeway to the summit of the trek. The guides are seasoned trekkers and they know the distance, trail and difficulty level. This is one of the best ways to experience the alps as you climb with other enthusiasts , pass cattle grazing on the meadows and experience the beautiful mountains as they should be. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Trebuchet MS, sans-serif;"><strong>Traveler's tip:</strong> try the famous apple strudel and herring sandwich. There are good hostels that offer nice rooms at affordable rates. Use public transport as much as possible. The restaurants near the train station have some good deals on buffet meals</span></div>
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Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-65996528304114020322011-06-20T09:00:00.000-07:002011-06-20T09:12:39.010-07:00Maggie and Chai<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3Yvrx0W9uLL4yja6wIVtVn-Z3uBP9l2GIfRiNrZaFYDrwgEFqIVVz-xYiZunFQ-b0UMM_y2Q_4hLH8ntZMn2ggqhwEsW6u2P0xLj5IkKJSRpogvAxb3YgsvQNzEzi842BHNBZgmKPjz4P/s1600/him.JPG" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 134px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3Yvrx0W9uLL4yja6wIVtVn-Z3uBP9l2GIfRiNrZaFYDrwgEFqIVVz-xYiZunFQ-b0UMM_y2Q_4hLH8ntZMn2ggqhwEsW6u2P0xLj5IkKJSRpogvAxb3YgsvQNzEzi842BHNBZgmKPjz4P/s200/him.JPG" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5620335446154446338" /></a><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0xzoadz1PD37Yg-OYU5PNTfxbPDVeeqCf0umKMwhGkHLHSrzUkmiqvVWDR19wBWmc9RU5SusV95gD-6UdJS8L15rxTPMH2cZi7dri2i1JIQdLVfRuDctzCDyIQdg0z7mVQTO3edzrK-8P/s1600/mum.jpg" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0xzoadz1PD37Yg-OYU5PNTfxbPDVeeqCf0umKMwhGkHLHSrzUkmiqvVWDR19wBWmc9RU5SusV95gD-6UdJS8L15rxTPMH2cZi7dri2i1JIQdLVfRuDctzCDyIQdg0z7mVQTO3edzrK-8P/s320/mum.jpg" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5620335250296247890" /></a><br /><br />Scoffing at the humble Maggie Noodles was routine for me, as I saw my friends and cousins stir up a hot bowl of noodles through the years. To me it appeared a compromise of sorts to eat ' instant noodles' while there existed the more gastronomically evolved chow mein, pasta etc. All this attitude stayed with me till I did my first real Himalayan trek.<br />After 4 days of trudging up the cold slopes and eating half dried rotis with potato and pickle, I had enough! I could have killed for a hot meal of rice, dal and the works. Combined with the sub zero temperature, was the unending mountain slope, which just kept sloping up. For a first timer, this was as difficult as it could get.<br />In such hostile terrain...on an overcast stormy day as we tired trekkers lumbered though the last few kilometers of snow...did I discover my love for ' Maggie'. On a small clearing just across the snow...was a small man with a mobile shop of sorts...making hot tea, omelettes and Maggie. We followed the delicious smell till we reached him and stood there transfixed and he broke one egg after another and made the perfect ‘Omelette Maggie’ combo. He charged us thrice as much, and frankly I would have paid much more than that! Thus was the affair with Maggie rediscovered and has been rekindled with love on lazy weekends.<br /><br />I longed to feel the same thing again...and as they say ' When you want something, all the universe conspires in helping you get it :)<br />This trip to Mumbai was so special. It was raining cats and dogs...and everything else along with it. The skies had kind of opened up and wouldn't close.<br />I was staying close to the sea in Colaba and needless to mention the wind was wild...each time I ventured out, it turned my umbrella inside out and I had to get drenched. Despite all the hazards...I risked myself that Saturday morning to see the morning sea. The muddy brown Arabian Sea seemed starved...it lapped at the shores with a frenzy that scared me. Huge waves broke on the promenade and carried away stuff strewn on the road. For once I thanked my weight...the sea couldn't sweep me off.<br />I walked cold and windblown alongside the sea wishing for something hot. And there he was...out of nowhere a tall man with few plastic cups and a thermas of tea. He knew the look when he saw it...stopped unasked...poured me a cup...and took the money and left.<br />The cup of tea has got to be the best I’ve had in years...it was regular tea spiced with some ginger and masala. And to stand in the rain...with drops falling into the tea…and watch the sea crash on the gate way of India.<br /><br />For lack of inspiration, the ' Mastercard' tag line kept playing in my head...cab to Mumbai 5000 Rupees, stay in hotel 4000 Rupees, cup of tea on a rainy morning by the sea...priceless!!Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-4520845144548784862011-04-25T19:37:00.000-07:002011-04-25T19:38:18.062-07:00The Rockstar!I have met quite a few Pastors in churches across India in the last few years. They were wise, knowledgeable and had the special quality unique to spiritually inclined people. <br /><br />This Easter was special. And I have concluded that the Pastor in our church in Pune is by far the most talented man ever. It isn’t an exaggeration if you read through the rest. <br /><br />We were a little late for the Sunday service and tip toed to the empty seats. The singing wrapped up and the Pastor climbed the pulpit. In his usual mellifluous voice he proceeded to talk about Easter and brining out the symbolism of the rising of Jesus. He does speak well, among the best orators I have ever heard. The intonations of the pitch are perfect and he also adds a subtle theatrical touch to the talk. <br /><br />I was listening to him, like the rest of the church, in wrapped attention. At a certain point in the message, he wanted to make a point about the story of how Jesus was betrayed and how he came back on Easter. Pastor broke into a song! I have heard him singing hymn before and he is melodious. But this was different!!<br /><br />He had a tiny jingling handheld instrument that he shook with the beat of the song, and he broke into this almost rock like anthem. For a moment I was stunned. Everything in the periphery melted away, and I could only see our Pastor, standing in the pulpit, singing the song. If I had to compare it with any rock number I know, it would have to be ‘Hotel California’. The beats were kind of similar and so was his style of singing it. <br />His voice did the works…he slowed down , recited few lines in a different tone , had just the right accent and gave the finishing touches to a performance I’ll never forget. <br /><br />The audience watched spellbound...I looked around to see people’s faces. Such talent is rare, combined with the kind of person he is. There was an element of surprise as well, as not many are musically gifted and instances of people singing completely out of tune is not rare. <br /><br />I haven’t heard anyone of late who can compare with his voice, skill and ability to perform without any accompaniment. <br />For me, the man is a rockstar!!Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-31285168387867133102010-12-03T21:01:00.000-08:002013-09-28T19:28:08.315-07:00The music plays on<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I spy a bit of winter blue sky broken by the branches of the gulmohar tree, with leaves browning in the dry air, and no sign of the blushing red blossoms that weigh its branches all through spring. The branches sway to the rhythm of ‘ thandi hawayein’ as Lata’s timeless voice goes on unendingly about the beautiful cold breeze. <br />
Time doth fly. Am listening to a very old collection of oldies with voices and melody which till date remain unparalleled. Pity most of these folks aren’t around anymore. <br />
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Am thinking of Kolkata, when as a kid I used to be sent to a music school around my house. I loved music, but hated the regimental style of learning it. And to learn it from someone who I thought croaked like a frog! As a kid I used to despise the day of the week when my music teacher would come home and ask me to bring out the harmonium. She would systematically plonk it on the bed, make me sit opposite and then with a sense of grandeur sing a song that I would have to learn and sing the same way post practice. <br />
I would occasionally gather some courage to say – “ I don’t like this song, can you teach me this instead”. She would size up this 4 feet something eight year old sitting opposite and then on second thought give in. <br />
My mom would bring in the teacher’s tea and goad me on to sing louder. There never existed any sense of delicacy about the whole process. <br />
In retrospect, it was actually quite funny. I would on purpose mess up the ragas, go off tune on Tagore songs and upset my teacher….till she gave up. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVnHa6at-Fedj3nUK02Qh6Gy47FsxdA7U7COKmKSzuTup-ObWmtMX3fs2Fh9hK5UAB9PE9Cs_431EqVpld-cChxyhK03cyyhVqDG2HivxV1BgsN_P1rlppw2un9kk-rqpHBghcz6d4W896/s1600/music.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="191" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgVnHa6at-Fedj3nUK02Qh6Gy47FsxdA7U7COKmKSzuTup-ObWmtMX3fs2Fh9hK5UAB9PE9Cs_431EqVpld-cChxyhK03cyyhVqDG2HivxV1BgsN_P1rlppw2un9kk-rqpHBghcz6d4W896/s320/music.jpg" width="320" /></a>With my mission accomplished, I joined a little more democratic music school that I walked to post school few times each week. I would initially be intimidated by the enormity of talent around me. Most of my country cousins seemed so bursting with talent, that I felt pretty inadequate in every possible sense. I looked around and saw kids who would grow to sing and play music in big talent shows and with maestros like Pandit Hari Prasad Chaurasia and Zakhir Hussain. I usually saw myself in the audience and staring at them and clapping. I did harbour some fleeting dreams of being in the spotlight and in a resplendent red gown, with my hair done up with huge glittering earnings – entering a stage and all standing up to applaud. But it was a fleeting dream usually interrupted with my mom pulling my quilt off to get ready for school. <br />
<br />
All of these musical rendezvous did end with pragmatism taking over…other things took priority. When I look back on all of this – I almost have an out of body experience. Doesn’t feel like it all happened to me. Seems like I was observing my life happening around me. And taking notes. Some of those notes make me cringe. Some make me smile. And some make me wonder, if it was really me. <br />
The one thing am certain of is that if time could be turned around, I would indeed be in the black and white era, where most things existed in black and white. Where the white was white and the black was unadulterated black. Absolutes. Not many greys. And these golden voices sang unendingly.</div>
Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-37992385884454784732010-07-29T10:13:00.001-07:002010-07-29T10:13:49.583-07:00BachpanMom used to say that when she dropped my brother off to kindergarten, he would be the most composed of all the kids. He was a brave, independent child and not afraid of most things ( he's legendary…really!) . Anything novel interested him. But once in the school, the composure was challenged as he saw a dozen kids howling for their mother. Amidst the cacophony of the children, he would look confused over his shoulder and then decide to join in the howl. And there he would be crying, some real, and some crocodile tears looking more at the other kids and less for familiar faces. I have no clue how I was : ) Maybe someone else in my family has stories from my childhood, maybe not. I hope there are some stories.<br /><br />But the story I like most was of my mom leaving me home alone to pick my brother from school, when I was 2 or 3, and me clambering up the couch to reach the low curtain rod and grab this delicate doll made of sea shells. All I knew was that the white stuff had something to do with the sea (Shomudro in Bengali). The colours painted on it looked good to me and in the process of admiring the tiny doll I obviously dropped it and broke it into a gazillion pieces. <br /><br />Mom came home to see this apologetic looking kid at the doorway - and she tells me that I ran to her wide eyed and mumbled in baby tongue "Ami Shomuddo Bhenge Diyechi" which loosely means " I broke the sea". She couldn't do much except smile with such overwhelming apology coming from a kid who professed to have broken the mighty sea. And yes, I was spared the spanking and the tale was passed around to all and sundry. <br /><br />Am home alone again, and know that even if I break all the sea shells around - she ain't coming by to chide me and make me understand that I can't break the sea. <br />And after all these years, maybe I do really miss all her nagging and bullying and coaxing. <br />Coming to think of it...lemme try dropping one of those bone china cups - just to be sure that she really doesn't spring up from thin air to give me a piece of her mind :)Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-51500576464153326602010-07-13T09:41:00.000-07:002010-07-13T09:48:01.442-07:00Braving the Zanskar<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_6FWrjvMFVPxwzcJ8b28S8Ikqodm2FXlwiJcPQBpfEJO1KMb2ddXFcXTQ34A0I_vdBGhA1FmMi8sueJ7GVwO7zk-6sY2mpgDtNwnLtLIsjHYPfYQfHyPQnoUjoczIA-iImCydUSEVeHr3/s1600/Picture+233.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_6FWrjvMFVPxwzcJ8b28S8Ikqodm2FXlwiJcPQBpfEJO1KMb2ddXFcXTQ34A0I_vdBGhA1FmMi8sueJ7GVwO7zk-6sY2mpgDtNwnLtLIsjHYPfYQfHyPQnoUjoczIA-iImCydUSEVeHr3/s400/Picture+233.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493433155161618738" /></a><br /><br />The notion that one realizes what fear is, when you face death or an extreme life threatening event, seemed a little over the top to me. I didn’t quite buy into the idea, that till you were painted into a corner with the option of fleeing or facing the object of your fear – you wouldn’t quite know what you were capable of. <br /><br />But some recent events have taught me otherwise. I now know why people do extreme sports – why they jump off cantilevers suspended by one slim rope – why they jump out of helicopters with a parachute bag. <br />Might qualify as less dangerous (but enough for my appetite of adrenalin) White Water Rafting is what I did in the Zanskar river this summer. <br /><br />The Zanskar flows through Ladakh in the Northern most provinces of India and is one of the largest tributaries of the Indus. It flows through the rocky terrains in its muddy brown splendor with sky high rock facades on each side, intercepted by boulders which it crashes into creating white foaming whirlpools and then flows along its way. This river isn’t pretty. It’s powerful. It’s strong. And it’s loud. <br />As our vehicle moved along the rocky mountain with the river flowing through the gorge – I got occasional shivers hearing the sound of the water breaking on the rocks.<br />It sounded like it could crush steel leave alone human bones. With nervous grins on our face, we alighted on the bank of the river and slipped into our life jackets and helmets. <br /><br />None of us had done white water rafting before. But strangely, a couple of us loitered ahead and picked up the oars – which prompted the coach to nominate us as the ‘leaders’. <br />Big word – ‘leader’ – not someone who needs to motivate the group with verbose speeches – simply, someone who would sit on the first seat of the raft and face the waves head-on!! <br />My stomach churned…I silently waited for the butterflies to settle…questioned my need to be the first one to pick up the oar and look brave – and chastised myself. <br />There was no going back – the choice was made. The two leaders were chosen, an urban war cry was shouted and we waded into the river and climbed the raft. <br />Me and Tanu – two women – very different in demographics and statistics (of all kinds) sat in the first seats. We exchanged looks, and gritted our teeth as the coach instructed us on the rowing techniques and how to rhythmically count “1 – 2” as we paddled the boat. <br /><br />But NOTHING prepared us for the first wave which greeted us into the foaming white conundrum. It seemed nothing less than a tsunami wave to me. It started at a little distance with a surge in the water, grew into a gigantic wave in a matter of seconds, rose like a serpent way above our head and then with one huge crash, landed on the two shivering ladies on the first seat. We literally ‘faced the blows’ head on!! <br />Our vision disappeared into the watery wall. I gritted my teeth and feigned courage – while the not so adept at theatre let their fear show. I’ll never forget the look on friend’s face who also had her son on the raft. It was a mix of horror combined with regret at deciding to do this dangerous sport, risking not only her, but her son’s existence. The wave post crashing into us proceeded to rush into the raft and inundate it and evoked a collective high pitched scream from all. The scream bounced off the rocky walls and echoed across and amplified the fear. <br /><br />Post the first hit, it was rough. But we had learnt the much needed art of controlling the expression of fear. Me and Tanu, like two possessed women shouted “1-2” loud enough to wake up the snow leopards in the forests. We paddled the raft and moved it through choppy waters and whirlpools. Cannot take credit away from the coach who guided us through it. <br /><br />Would it be less brave to accept that setting foot on hard rocky ground post the hour long watery rollercoaster felt like heaven? To add to the sense of drama – the point where we alighted was the confluence of the Blue Indus and the Brown Zanskar – the aquamarine blue Indus mingled slowly into the brown muddy Zanskar creating a vision worth the ride in the raft. <br /><br />The rafting episode sure was nerve wracking, but I would do it again. And in wilder rapids! Why? Guess my appetite for adrenalin has increased.Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-42390976752225356672010-07-12T08:30:00.000-07:002010-07-12T23:17:12.609-07:00A small village called Kitpi<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsIlHeNBTNbkdb0-qmgu4oRmpezaeN7Ahub6za4cVBUgeWDT4pnMeeQHD5Q3qhJmAAsvMq22SXblRxus-XDCCT53vGXAJFPwBUtrmGjmHDb-YHAZo28n4CGQTieYRr1hOj6lpQkyiOYoi1/s1600/Monpatribe_22255.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 154px; height: 175px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsIlHeNBTNbkdb0-qmgu4oRmpezaeN7Ahub6za4cVBUgeWDT4pnMeeQHD5Q3qhJmAAsvMq22SXblRxus-XDCCT53vGXAJFPwBUtrmGjmHDb-YHAZo28n4CGQTieYRr1hOj6lpQkyiOYoi1/s320/Monpatribe_22255.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493046481881129490" /></a><br />A part of my family hails from Assam and I assumed that my ability to follow assamese and wear a ' Mekla' qualified me as 'fairly well informed' about the North East. But was proved thoroughly wrong with a trip to Arunachal a while back. <br /><br />Arunachal Pradesh, and to be specific Tawang and the adjoining villages, are a melting pot of culture and heritage that has been delicately preserved through the invasion of electricity , television , tourism, politics and last but definitely the most important “ the Indo china War. <br /><br />Among the 5 days spent in and around Tawang, the trip to Kitpi is very close to my heart. After a brief drive to see a few waterfalls, we stopped on the fringes of a mountain. Then begun our 4 hour descent through dense foliage. With the weight of my rucksack and of course my own weight, gravity wasn't of much help!! I had to clutch onto vines and trees as I dangled down the slope. Then we crossed a slushy paddy field (rice is their staple food) to reach Kitpi. <br /><br />A village of ten families. This community is called the Mompa tribe. Each with their wood and rock layered houses, each house 300 + years old and strong as any steel structure here. The people are like the houses. Layered and extremely warm inside! <br /><br />After they dressed me in their traditional attire ( a local wollen knit wrap around skit and top) and we washed off the grime - began a dance and drink ritual (Chang is to Mompas what tea is to us) to welcome us. <br /><br />Initial fear turned to amusement and then to laughter as I witnessed an 80 something year old lady dancing like a grasshopper and slurping on the local arrack. She pulled me along with her to dance and wouldn't hear of my protests to down the fourth cup of Chang. You cannot refuse Chang as its tantamount to disrespecting the Mompas, and you cannot drink too much, cos you lose it after 2 cup. I won't delve further on my evening, as I have little memory of how I reached our room. <br /><br />A peaceful lunch and a siesta wore off all effects of Chang. We spent the evening handpicking cabbages and spring onions from the fields to make momos for dinner. To imagine picking vegetable for my own dinner from the fields now seems like a distant luxury . Dinner was another musical panorama, as that was the only common language between us and the locals. <br /><br />The Mompa community lives in their own little word that is untouched by modern day values and comforts. Our hostess in the village is my mother's age ( 57) and she works from 7am to 5pm ( sun goes down at 5pm) in the fields all by herself - everyday. And she comes back with a toothy smile and fusses around guests. <br />That what I call spirit! <br /><br />The evening with the Mompas was an inspiration to preserve innocence . Else, can you imagine a world where you have one electric bulb to light up the dark evening and all you hear is the gurgling of laughter and the haunting tones of the mountain songs?Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-886506966873049532010-07-12T00:47:00.001-07:002010-07-12T08:20:12.464-07:00Rubix!<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZZhxeL9NYqR4D-wEJ4CHm5BcYu08Td6_6mB7kTNDbtlUZXUX0zMDQvewDfX_rdNp6-TU9SShP17EDO76HkKugw1LfPCibU6MYzn3ibVbza1cNNpYeOH92rrOmd43GzcdGYa7RW3d30PIj/s1600/rubik_s_cube.png"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 192px; height: 200px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZZhxeL9NYqR4D-wEJ4CHm5BcYu08Td6_6mB7kTNDbtlUZXUX0zMDQvewDfX_rdNp6-TU9SShP17EDO76HkKugw1LfPCibU6MYzn3ibVbza1cNNpYeOH92rrOmd43GzcdGYa7RW3d30PIj/s200/rubik_s_cube.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493039836899759314" /></a><br /><br />Freud would be terribly pleased to rent me as a specimen for dream analysis on my early morning hallucinatory escapades.Some mornings are little commonplace than the rest. I am just about sprinting at 100km/hr jumping from one roof top to another, not sure trying to escape something or running towards something.Other mornings are more eventful. I find myself atop the mast of a ship in the midst of a storm, the mast swaying and me attempting to climb down. Once on the deck of the ship, I find the ship sinking and a zillion voices crying to be rescued, mine being the loudest. The only thought of self preservation buoyant in the watery grave, I grab onto something and stay afloat dodging hungry sharks, reptiles. It usually ends with me swimming against gigantic waves which engulf me and the dream is lost in a whirlpool of panic.<br /><br />This is the pattern when some subconscious panic sets in. Which usually follows news which I am not completely insulated against. Yesterday – a plane with 200 odd people crashed in an airport I had landed in a while back. A few days back, my favorite haunt for German savories and Tea was blown to smithereens. And the list goes on.<br />Does it make me insecure? Like hell it does.I donot know when this little music box with dancing figures is going to run out of battery – after all it is all ‘ random selection’ right.<br /><br />So there are days when I wake up with thoughts as crazy as this and stumble onto the joggers’ park. And the sight that meets my eyes leaves me smiling. A BIG grin is what it elicits.Irrespective of all the planes, trains and buses which crashed the previous day – my joggers’ park stays unaffected. I find people walking as briskly, jogging as rhythmically as every other day. I find older folks doing yoga with the kind of sincerity that’s rare – each breath pulled in with as much passion as existed in a living form. There are folks who just jump – randomly with arms swinging wildly in a frenzied attempt at losing weight and staying healthy. Frenzy is what describes the disciplined attempt at keeping to this routine and not letting anything get in the way. I sure admire it.<br /><br />I look around and find the frenzy all around. <br />The man who parties real hard and cannot stop talking of the drink he downed or the women he went home with.<br />The millionaire who floats one venture after another making more money than the combined income of a mini country and yet eats oats and tasteless gruel – all to keep fit and create more wealth. I hear it’s called ‘wealth for wealth’s sake’ and not because it can add further to an already swank quality of life which cannot be perfected.<br />I see the frenzy in spiritual folks as well. It’s this deep desire to know the self and realize god through the understanding of their purpose on earth. They spend time, money, energy and emotion in visiting holy places and spreading the word of the lord and themselves living in abstinence of all sorts.<br />There is the frenzied executive working longer hours and trying to create value and equity within the organization.<br />The frenzied femme fatale making more efforts to look better and find more admirers.<br />Young couples procreating in frenzy. One child isn’t enough – you got to battle randomness of life.<br />And of course the neurotic few like me attempting all of this and making frenzied observations and conclusions.<br /><br />It’s a sense of running the marathon not knowing the distance of the finish line. For some it ends prematurely. It’s tragic, but like a dear friend says “they are spared the grind”.<br />For some, its goes on longer – they are Nature’s pride. They don’t question. They go with the ‘motions’ – accept it as it comes and do what nature leads them to.<br /><br />And then there are some – who go through the motions, and usually with a bewildered expression as nature hands them one rubix cube after another – go, run and solve!Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-70938473921488817682010-07-12T00:44:00.000-07:002010-07-12T00:46:57.404-07:00Obsessions and OpinionsTo stop obsessing about things and people was on my agenda this year. Let things flow. Let things happen to you. Let life come to you. Don’t push the accelerator!A couple of week into another year of my life I find it a struggle to break out of old habits. They persist. More than that in fact – they find ingenious excuses to make an even deeper habitat inside. They have managed to convince me that we all obsess about something. The obsession in some cases seems harmless – I mean, as long as it isn’t the “I am obsessed with you and will stalk you” variety – it seems fairly harmless right? Well, think again! The more I look around the more obsessions I find and here are few to make you wonder if you are ‘obsessed’:<br />1. Facebook – this is top of mind cause I guess I am fairly obsessed with updates and sharing stuff with friends. This obviously creates a fair amount of controversy among more ‘private’ people who would want their opinions and life to be layered and not exposed to the scrutiny of random acquaintances. But each one to his own. Facebook to me if the best way to stay in touch with friends who I don’t have the bandwidth to call frequently, and yet you would want to keep in touch in some way.<br />2. Food – Gluttony is a sin. I don't know how to sustain entire conversations about food which last for hours. So is obsessing about the calories that you added to your already perfect body with one freaking cup of coffee!! I am frankly done with people who eat cattle feed or worse vitamin supplements and endless protein shakes in the hope of a muscular toned body. Of course you need to be healthy – but there was a reason why desserts were created…just like why fire was invented.<br />3. Blackberry – You must have noticed people who obsessively check their hi-tech cell phones or blackberry for the latest email that would have popped into their mailbox. The email could be as inane as “ FYI..” on an issue – yet to check the phone every 5 minutes and reply to every mail is more a non verbal expression of “ I am busy and sought after”. Please grow up – we know you are busy.<br />4. Music – I love good music and most music other than house, grunge, rap and other stuff which can be attributed to my age – am from a different generation. Have you noticed people with their ear plugs on in queues grooving to the music and strumming invisible guitar strings? All this on Howrah station which is the most chaotic station ever with people being shoved around, smelly fish being ferried out of trains, and people clambering onto unreserved compartments while stepping on each others toes. I know you love music dude – just pull up those low waist jeans before they slip off your backside and stop acting like you were born listening to rap!<br />5. Pronunciations – Find me a soul who doesn’t get irritated when someone picks on them compulsively to correct the pronunciation of each word uttered. We are Indians and our mother tongue isn’t unfortunately the alien language where the the ‘d’ is silent in Wednesday and the ‘p’ is silent is psychology! Come on, we all appreciate corrections – but not to the extent of it being a superiority thing. Look at Professor Higgins – he taught the language to the flower girl and made a duchess out of her – all without ridicule and mockery.<br />6. Clothes – A friend of mine was telling me about his girl friend who was a beauty pageant winner. She would obsess about what to wear for an occasion that she would drive the man out of his mind. Guess what – some men do the same! Do I pair the grey pants with the white shirt or the black, do my pink sandals go with my pink dress? This is so “last season” - what on earth does that mean? I love your Prada shirt – I would love fro such people to find the exact duplicate of their “prada” on linking road in Mumbai and then find the difference.<br />7. Travels outside India – Am sure each one of us knows people who have traveled extensively and appreciate the experience and culture. Am sure – we also know people who fly over a country and pick up its accent. They come back with every conceivable comparison between that country and ours and donot miss any opportunity to point out how much life outside India is better. Please stay back in that country and save India some population explosion is its so unpalatable here.<br />8. Spouse – this is rare, yet in people who have this – its fairly unbearable. Talking about your spouse / partner to some extent can be attributed to love, hormones and mutual dependency – yet making every conversation an eulogy to the larger than life spouse is not cool. People ought to realize that not everyone would be interested in the person.<br />9. Looks – Ah! This more often than not affects women. The constant checking out the reflection in the mirror ( I do it too) , the toss of the head and resetting the hair, the widening of the eyes to accentuate the effect it has on the observer and the periodic fishing for compliments by implying they aren’t attractive. Men suffer from this too – they never fail to expose muscular arms and shoulder muscles if they happen to have them. I am biased – the type I like best are the “carefully careless” types whose hair is just a tad out of place and the shirt loosely tucked into the jeans.<br />10. Gadgets – Call me archaic and anti technology – but gadgets just complicate life more. You cannot take a holiday without being hounded by calls. You cannot watch tv without emails dropping into your phone. Come on – I think the 2 best big discoveries were the fridge and camera – it lets me store food and lets me store good memories!! People sitting and discussing the latest model of cell phones, cars, bikes, laptops, music systems drive me mad. You can travel on a bullock cart if u love traveling and you can play flute by yourself if you love music. The rest is a want, not a need. I could go on forever with this – and it isn’t stuff that I am spared from. Rather I suffer from a far longer list of obsessions I cannot possibly write down. Yet this stuff gets to me!Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-728277358204166484.post-5469020050363999752010-07-12T00:41:00.000-07:002010-07-12T08:25:02.146-07:00Banaras : where time does rewind<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6p8oN7hScpuTOydjyj7Pedeg69VOx0ZNm-3BgTSWJlV-3EvS3eHU4oJAvnb2t5z2We9Kj85NFkXhGX0a85l1rfg52562nEa1EeJqCE7uwP8h3JAeAHqRyNtJgUinFsfS0TsiDO36wT3Mm/s1600/Picture+185.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6p8oN7hScpuTOydjyj7Pedeg69VOx0ZNm-3BgTSWJlV-3EvS3eHU4oJAvnb2t5z2We9Kj85NFkXhGX0a85l1rfg52562nEa1EeJqCE7uwP8h3JAeAHqRyNtJgUinFsfS0TsiDO36wT3Mm/s320/Picture+185.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5493041084217953010" /></a><br /><p>Sitting at my work station, it isn’t too difficult to close my eyes and hear the oar splashing into the river and coming out rhythmically. “ Log kehte hai hamari Ganga Maiya apawitra ho gayi hai, aap dekhiye, isse swachcha pani aapko kahan milega?” said the boatman as he ferried us across to the other side of the river. Loosely translated it means “who would say that the Ganga is polluted looking at its pristine water”. </p><p>It’s the river of life truly and like life, it collects all things unnecessary as it flows along and can’t really be blamed for having a pollution density multiple times of the permissible limits. </p><p>But what stayed with me once I experienced the river, aren’t facts and figures pointing at pollution and when the north India rivers are going to dry up – but the life that sprouts around it. </p><p>I assumed it to be an exaggeration when people said that you see “life” in all its stages on the ghats. They couldn’t have been more accurate!I saw people courting by the ghats, newly married couples, couples with young children, older couples vacationing, old people who had come to live their last days in the holy city in the quest for ‘moksha’ and – I saw a multitude of people who had passed away being carried away with holy chants decorated in bright brocade and being cremated on the burning ghats. Death ceases to be unnatural once you visit the place and you see how effortlessly the people have transformed this phenomenon into a ritual that beats our regular understanding. By virtue of having our guest house located close to one of the burning ghats, trespassing through the ghat was the fastest way to get to the other ghats – I passed the burning ghat and saw the pyres burning and many a strong breeze from the river blew ashes on us. Ashes unknown. Ashes all the same. There was something strong about it that I am unable to define. </p><p>As closely as you experience the last stage of life in Banaras, can you experience life in a multitude of colours. Colours antiquated and old and utterly beautiful. The town in not a heritage town by virtue of its buildings – its language, food, culture and I suspect the beautiful people are heritage people too! There were more than one occasion when I was unable to answer a question asked in ‘ khadi boli’ as I was mesmerized by the sheer sound of it. I mean who uses words like “ parichay”, “ swachcha”, “ pawitra”, “ sandhya” anymore – it’s a world of abbreviations isn’t it : )</p><p>Food is more than a gastronomic experience in Banaras – it’s a spiritual experience. Having the pot bellied sweet faced man with the lilt in his language make piping hot tea is something. So is the pleasure of eating the best samosas and kachoris I have ever sampled. What took the cake is obviously Malaiyo! A 3 year quest to find this perfect milk dessert post seeing Vir Sanghwi on Travel and Living eating Malaiyo in Banaras was also one of the reasons that drew me to the place. </p><p>Confession – I didn’t take the dip in the Ganga. I didn’t feel I wanted to seeing the hygiene of certain tourists on the ghats - and more importantly, maybe I don’t want moksha! Maybe I want to go through the cycle of life and death as a human being, bird, ant, rodent something again! And maybe it’s all mythology – and we all just disintegrate into soil at the end of it.</p>Baishali Senhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15431075096627989326noreply@blogger.com1