Sunday, March 28, 2010

Sunday is for worship.

Mrs. Perumalythoma exited home at 5:30 this morning.
To participate in a 10 km run.
(For which she travelled 50 km to and fro.)

She came back, caught hold of unfortunate Family Dog,
gave him a scrub and shower.
Then (thankfully) took one herself.

Now she's in the kitchen, singing loudly.
And intends to go shopping in the evening.

Mr., as in self, read all the Sunday papers.
And is considering resting for the rest of the day.
To recover from the effort.
[Dozing on the couch with IPL on,
sounds like a plan.]

Go shopping?
Why can't we devote Sunday to worship?
Just worship self?

P.S. Here's more on the IPL.
http://www.yentha.com/news/view/5

Monday, March 22, 2010

The game-changer.

IPL has changed the game.
Whoever thought that a franchise in Kochi, would cost many times what Roman Abramovich paid for Chelsea a few years back?
That too in a state not known too much for its love for cricket?

Soon we will have 94 games where we have 60.
We’ll have a game or two every day during the season!

The boundary ropes have come in.
DJs are busy trying to get Mexican waves going.
We have been introduced to the Mongoose.

We see Indian players we’ve never heard of before, perform.
That’s helped a few players make themselves known.

It’s fun to watch.
(Even if you are not an ardent IPL fan.)

But I have a question.
What will this do for/to Indian cricket?

When Rahul, Sachin, Laxman are gone,
how will the new breed play Test cricket for India?
Who will even train himself for long innings?
And how, when the Mongoose is what you carry to the nets?

Will this be the end of tests as we know it?
Will we never get to see the likes of Gambhir batting a whole day to save a Test?
Will we even have 5 day Tests?

P.S. Also, if you have the time,
here's a new Thiruvananthapuram local search portal.

http://www.yentha.com/news/view/5/93

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Mr. Perreira to IEDs

Life was so much simpler in the 80s.
All we Mals had to worry about was Jose Prakash.

Every single movie had Jose Prakash as smuggler.
His interests were restricted to smuggling,
pipes, badly dressed women and welcoming the ubiquitous Mr. Perreira.

What is it with the name?
I don’t have a clue.
In every single Mal film that featured Jose Prakash,
the smuggler from abroad was always a Mr. Perreira.
“HaLLo, Meester Perera!” JP would go.
Accompanied by much rolling in the aisles.

But then, those were simpler days.
All you had to worry about were smugglers.
Not one of which you had ever glimpsed.
One assumed they used the night and sheltered coves.

Later, we had Bhiman Raghu and the gang.
Men who wore tight shirts and tighter pants.
And looked like their villainous masters didn’t pay enough to keep them in clothes that accommodated their bulging physiques.
They would get routinely beaten up by equally corpulent heroes.
“Ninne pinne kandolam”, was their favourite rejoinder.
Whichthe King of Bulge, Arnold, copied in ‘I’ll be back!”.

But today?
Today you have intense looking young men.
Who talk about causes.
With Kalashnikovs and IEDs.

Men who work with blueprints.
And use extremely evolved technology.
(Which in Malayalam cinema means they perpetually open PowerPoint.)

The day before, I heard that Kochi was on high alert.
The newsreader spoke of 'commandos in Jew Street'.
In the 80s, we never heard things like this.

It was so much better.
The most you had to worry about was the college rowdy.
Or the guys with reserved tables in the toddy shop.
(Both of which, fortunately, were very friendly with you.)

It was so much better.
I wish we could have Mr. Perreira back.
With his endearing schemes to disrupt the national economy.
HaLLo, Meester Perera, where are you?

Monday, March 8, 2010

Nobody loves me.

I am a Nasrani, male.
For those not clued in into 36 million sub-sects of the Catholic Church, I am a Syrian Catholic.

I am not SC / ST / OBC.
So when it comes to school and college,
and jobs and promotions, no reservation.
In Karnataka, that means you are the slogging 50.3%.
Karnataka and for that matter India, don't love me.

That makes me a 49.7% unloved Indian.

Technically, mine is a minority community.
But of course, 'minority' depends on how big a noise you make.
So I can't be considered minority, either.
You heard the Yadavs shout when it came to the Women's Reservation Bill in Parliament.
Muslims and OBCs were worried about.
Not this poor Nasrani.
Mulayam and Laloo don't love me.

That makes me an 'unspecified small slice' of a 49.7% unloved Indian.

To add to this, I made one big mistake.
I married a caste Hindu.
Which, now leaves me and future generations nowhere.
And Pramod Muthalik doesn't love me.

Which makes me an 'unspecified small slice' of a 49.7% unloved Indian who Pramod Muthalik hates.

So I slog.
And through sheer dint of hard work, earn some money.
Which promptly cheers the IT department.
And puts me in the 33% plus bracket.
The IT guys, if none else, love me.

Now I am part of an even smaller set.
Now I am an 'unspecified small slice' of a 49.7% unloved Indian who Pramod Muthalik hates who is forced to pay 33% taxes.

After the 33%, I can't share in the company's profits.
To do that, I have to pay another 16%.
Because unlike IT and IT services, there ain't no tax holidays for what I do.
Which, in Bangalore, makes me 33% of 49.7% of 20.2%.
On second thoughts, even the IT guys don't love me.

But hey, if I talk about profits and money,
that makes me a capitalist pig.
The red flag bearers don't love me either.
[That too, after all the writing I did for them in the romantic days of my youth.]

So here's an 'unspecified small slice' of a 49.7% unloved Indian who Pramod Muthalik and the Reds hate who is forced to pay 33% taxes + 16% of profits.

And soon, women will have 33% reservation in Parliament.
Which of course, is a great thing to happen from the empowerment perspective.
Didn't we all see how even though unlettered, Laloo's wife Rabri Devi could get empowered?
Didn't we see how Mulayam's son Akhilesh Yadav's wife almost got empowered?
Don't we know how Karunakaran's daughter Padmaja got empowered?
But then, one second, why are we referring to these empowered women in relation to their husbands and fathers?
That's unfair to women's lib.
And the Pink Chaddis might take after me!

So, let the Bill be passed, I pray.
Now I am an 'unspecified small slice' of 66% of 49.7% unloved Indian who Pramod Muthalik and the Reds and the Pink Chaddis hate who is forced to pay 33% taxes + 16% of profits.

What does that make me?
There's only one person who can answer that.
My CA.
And if I ask him that, I'll lose the only person in the country who loves me.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Phir dil diya hockey ko.

I had been watching the commercials.
With Viru and Rathore and Priyanka Chopra.
And, I liked the idea.

Phir dil do hockey ko.
There is an air of honesty to it.

I know how easy it would have been
to do a ‘jeetenge ya marenge’ or
‘duniya ko dikha denge’ or
‘hockey phir hamari’ or
‘chak de India’ campaign.
(I can almost smell the jingle.)

But someone had a better approach.
Whoever it was, thanks.

But in spite of the commercials,
in spite of Sunil Shetty’s Bollywood-ish appeal,
I doubt if hockey will ever catch on, again.

[For the ones who came in late,
Sunil Shetty, out of the goodness of his larger-than-life chest,
appealed that there was only one trick to save Indian hockey.
Rahul Gandhi had to step in!

Hmm… I can picture it.
Shot 1: Rahul Gandhi drives in, in a white Ambassador.
Shot 2: You see his sneaker clad shoe as he steps out.
Shot 3: He walks into a conference room filled with
fat ex-players, federation officials and assorted mavens.
Shot 4: He pulls off his sneakers and plonks them
on the conference table.
Shot 5: Mavens look at officials look at fat ex-players.
Shot 6: 6 minute monologue by Rahul Beta that begins thus:
“Main neta hoon, Kolhapuri chappal pehenta hoon, size 8.
Lekin aaj maine apna size 8 Kolhapuri jala diya. Aur yeh joote pehen liye.
Aur yeh joote main tab hi utaroonga jab
India phir hockey param koti par pahoonchega. Tab tak….”
Shot 7: After the 6 minute monologue, Indian hockey is on its way
to the top and ex-players, officials and mavens are singing ‘chak de’.]

Sorry, couldn’t resist the digression.
But Indian hockey is in the abyss and it will take more
than the well-intentioned Sunil Shettys of the world to pull it out.

1. People, need to watch hockey.
2. Kids need to play hockey.
3. We need more Astroturf.
4. We need to eat beef.

Look, the game has changed.
Dutch kids play hockey on Astroturf.
The few foolish kids here, who still play hockey,
play on the little stony, unpredictable patches.

They develop, not the skills needed for power hockey.
But Rapid Eye Movement and knowledge of the Uncertainty Principle.
[Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: If you determine an object's position with uncertainty x, there must be an uncertainty in momentum, p, such that xp > h/4pi, where h is Planck's constant.]

This, no give World Cup.
This give bruised elbows, bruised knees.

But then, but then.
Why worry about World Cups?
Can’t we just enjoy the game?

Which is what I did this Sunday.
I sat back and watched hockey.
Watched hockey after a long, long time.

In the many years that have passed,
from the 6 years I spent 2-3 hours a day,
6 days a week wielding a stick on rocky, stony grounds,
much has changed.

1. My knees and elbows have healed.
2. You don’t hear any off-side whistles.
3. The feints have changed.
4. The sticks have changed.
5. The corners have a better understanding of projectile motion.

In the stands, I could not spot a single person.
Who could possibly have had Zafar Iqbal and Mohammed Shahid posters.
Who would know a Jagbir Singh or a Jude Felix.
Who would have tried, time and again unsuccessfully,
Pargat Singh’s dash from outside his D into the opposition’s.

But the thonk of ball hitting back of board,
is still the same.
The exultation, still the same.
And so, the despair.

It felt good, to see the Prabhjots, Rajpals and Chandis
run rings around the Pakistanis.
And Mahadik display some really inspired moves
from the midfield.
Thank you, Brasa.

I felt old.
And I was watching a new game.
But maybe that’s our salvation.
The young people in the stadium will adopt what they see.
And a new generation of Indian hockey will take root.

After many long years, I cheered for Indian hockey.
And I will do it again, tonight.

We might not win the World Cup.
Hockey, might again go back into the basement.
But for a few evenings, I will be able to live through
the many evenings of my youth.

Phir dil diya.
Phir dil chillaya, muskuraya, roya.