Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Na trital, na jhaptal





Since this story does not require any introduction let me get straight into it. Many years ago, actually only five, that is, in my second year of college I woke up to the fact that I had been involved in minimal extra-curricular activities that involved singing. Actually it began with a dream one fine morning. The dream was a real incident that had happened a little more than a year ago. That was the time when I had shifted to Bombay and my mother had come down to settle me in my hostel. The scene was pretty dramatic and it was between me and my mother. I was seeing her off at the railway station and her advice to her younger sister, my aunt, was to be strict with me. After that she and I got a few moments to ourselves when it happened. I expected her to say “I trust you and I know you will stay out of trouble. Be good. Study well and do us proud” but No! She said “promise me…promise me you’ll participate in Indian Idol this year” The train was about to leave and it had almost started moving. I said “yes amma, I promise. I will participate in it and with your prayers I WILL become the next Indian Idol”
Needless to say, my resolve to not be known as a singer (again) did not allow me to go as much as anywhere near the microphone in my college. Hey, college is all about image building right? And thanks to this brilliant theory of mine I ended up doing a lot of other things that I would have never imagined before. But in my second year, the promise that I had made to my mother started nagging me no end. Finally I decided that I would participate in some group singing competition (morbid fear of singing solos in public) in the next college festival that came. And yes, It happened to be everyone’s favourite Malhar or in a Sophiate’s case, not-so-favorite-but-it-still-happens-to-be-the-most-popular-college-fest-teeming-with-boys-who-are-like-angels-forbidden-in-Sophia-grounds. Any-hoo, unaware that I was till the very last minute of the auditions, I came to know that the only spot left for singing was in the Qawwali troupe and the person who told me this took my audition in front of a bania store outside college on her way home. So there, I was in the Qawwali team. Practice began zoron-shoron-se and Kajra mohabbat wala became our anthem for the next ten days.
Disaster struck when a couple of days before the event we came to know that a percussion instrument was mandatory. The only instrument we poor poor bathroom-singers could handle was the tambourine which did not quite fit the bill. Someone suggested we hire a tabla player but the budget committee refused to give us any money (bi*^#es). Something had to be done. We couldn’t withdraw and neither could we sing without a tabla player. Woe to that moment when I had that brilliant idea. I remembered seeing tablas in the store room, procured them and took them to Sr. Ananda, the only person I knew who could play the tabla and asked her to tune them for me.
Just in case you are wondering, no, I do not know how to play the instrument. The only way I can play it is how aunties play the dholak at weddings.
So the day finally came. We looked resplendent in our parrot green costumes (courtesy- Maganlal Dresswala) and our topis made us look like real princesses from The Arabian Nights. We went into the room and tried to seat ourselves as inconspicuously as possible because we knew how exactly we were going to perform (our two lead singers from the opposing teams were heavily dependent on their papers for the lyrics) and of course, Ustad Tess Joss was the tablist, how could things go wrong?
One look at the judges was enough to make me feel depressed. Judge no 1- hot Malayalee boy, seemingly from the music industry, Judge no 2- girl with a sweet smile with hair as long as Rapunzel’s who I was sure was a singer. I don't want to sound petty but I do not like making a fool out of myself in front of people prettier than me. On top of that, the group that performed before us were pros at everything they did on stage and their performance also included a jugal-bandi between the opposing Sardarjee tablists. After their performance we got onto the stage. Let me say that we had the brightest and the classiest costumes and our entrance had an aura of confidence. But the list of our strengths ends there. Before starting I looked at the judge- Miss Rapunzel. Seeing me behind the tabla she gave me the look, the look that said- show these guys that a girl can play the tabla too. Show them! Show them! Show them! I nodded back, promising that I would deliver.
The singing started. It started off well, except for the sloppy tabla beats. In my mad attempt to avoid looking at the faces of those expert sardarjee tablists sitting right in the front I put my heart and soul into making the taal coming out of the tablas as tolerable as possible. And then it happened. The lead of one of the teams forgot her lines very obviously which broke my attention and I started beating the smaller tabla harder. To my horror and before I even knew it, this tabla rolled off its stand and kept rolling ahead till the lead of the team on my right stopped it and pushed it towards me. Although this made the singer forget even more lines, at least the tabla was back in my custody and while the singing part went on dutifully, I, very humbly, kept the tabla back in its position and continued playing (talk about sportsmanship spirit). The song was coming to an end and by this time I had simply given up on trying to play the instrument. So the last part of the Qawwali was a capella! Wonder why they’ve never tried it in real…
When we finished singing I looked at the judges. Honestly, I felt sorry for them. You could see that they were dying to laugh but couldn’t because of the position they held in the audience. The rest of the audience however was not so kind. We were greeted by a stunned silence and muffled sniggers as we came down the stage.
This story usually generates a humungous amount of laughter whenever I narrate it and although it makes me laugh equally hard now the day that it happened was perhaps the most embarrassing moment of my life

Monday, February 21, 2011

In praise of Appi

Without any theological training, I, a child, grasped the incompatibility of God and shit and thus came to question the basic thesis of Christian anthropology, namely, that man was created in God’s image. Either/or: either man was created in God’s image — and God has intestines — or God lacks intestines and man is not like him…” Shit is a more onerous problem than evil. Since God gave man freedom, we can, if need be, accept the idea that He is not responsible for man’s crimes. The responsibility for shit, however, rests entirely with Him, the Creator of man.- Milan Kundera


Bombay and her people are used to a lot of things that people outside it may find weird. I mean, where else would you see people use cutting chai as a dip for French fries or refuse to step out of their homes at the first sign of monsoon or brag about the bargaining process involved in their buying a factory reject of a branded bag from Colaba Causeway?

If you ask my godfather, who by the way is a big cynic, he’ll define Bombay in two words- shit hole, literally! Having lived in Bombay since the moment he was born I can only imagine what the poor man goes through when he compares the Bombay of his childhood to the Mumbai it has become now. Anyway, this is totally not what I wanted to talk about. The Bombay I know has always been kind to me, teaching me hard lessons the subtle way, so you can imagine why I’m in love with Bombay and probably will always be. So much so that when people tell me that Bombay’s dirty I think they are seeing things because I have never thought the same of this place. No, it is not a matter of me being so used to the muck here that it does not seem dirty to me anymore. I just have never felt that this place is dirty since the day I stepped here. Nevertheless, this is a sorry yet light tale of how this dirt, after almost six years of humble existence in the city, got the better of me.
After a really long day in the University that included three consecutive 2 hour-sessions with no lunch break, my friends Candice, Harsha and I were walking to the railway station relieved that we could finally go home and sleep. Now, I, owing to my mild OCD (or that’s what they say) walk with my eyes on the floor, especially if it has a pattern. You know, just so that I step on the right tiles while I am walking. I could have got too engrossed in what we were talking about because that day I did not pay attention to the yellow tiles between the red ones I was accidentally stepping on and before I knew it my foot was in a pile of shit. My immediate response was to laugh like a blanked out idiot but good sense kicked in just when these two turned back to see why I had stopped.
Yes, it was human shit if you were wondering and thankfully it was not warm but I’m pretty sure it belonged to a vegetarian or someone who hadn’t had non-vegetarian food in some time. You see, being pretty obsessed with shit (not just me but all my cousins), helps me make out the kind of diet a person is on by the quality of their shit. I stood there motionless unable to believe this had happened to me while Candice and Harsha giggled away to glory until I had to tell them to bugger off and get me a bottle of water. The next three minutes were quite humiliating with people walking by and smirking at my soiled foot that I had unassumingly kept at a safe distance from me- as much as I could. When I looked down at my poor foot to see how it was faring I got further befuddled at the sight of pear-sized flies fighting over shit- on my foot. That is when I started trying to rub my foot on every little mount of mud I could find on the generally clean footpath. Despite all that and the water treatment that soon followed, the yellow sunshine managed to shine forth from the minute striations of my floaters.
Appi (the Malayalam word for shit) is probably my area of prime interest. In fact Appi is my favourite expression. You may easily catch me saying it once every 3-4 minutes. According to inspirational speakers like Rhonda Byrne, Mike Dooley, etc., the idea that your mind conceives and manifests in thoughts and deeds is what you will ultimately get. I am assuming that by introducing Appi into my normal day vocabulary and reading the theodicy of it by the literary gem Milan Kundera it is I who ‘summoned’ Appi into my life.
As I sat next to Candice in the train I found myself amused and strangely proud of the fact that I had finally had a physical experience of Appi that did not belong to me or to a baby. Strange but I guess that’s what the city does to you- value even the absurdest of experiences and make you feel better for having had such an experience in the first place. As for me, yet another lesson I learnt tells me that Potty potty pe likha hai kuchalne wale ka naam. J