Friday 25 June 2021

Vaccination exhilaration

 It started on a quiet Sunday afternoon. 

I was lazing on my sofa when my vaccination API provider told me that Covaxin slots opened up somewhere. I did not want Covaxin. But, right before I junked that message, I had a brilliant thought about checking the portal anyway. So, I logged in as quickly as I could. And when I scrolled down the portal, there they were. One hundred slots for Covishield at a nearby hospital. 

There could not have been a better opportunity to get vaccinated. In a jiffy I weighed the pros and cons of missing the first half of my working Monday for this. I could afford to. 

So, I booked my slot. The story begins now. 

Like a truly dramatic person, coupled with the thrill and excitement of getting vaccinated, I dreamt of running into someone at the vaccination centre. So, I spent my Sunday evening grooming my face and picking the right clothes to impress. That I would look like an exhausted zombie in clothes that I would pick in a hurry after yoga in the morning was something I did not foresee. 

On the day of the vaccination, I was ready to leave home at 8 AM. My vaccine slot was going to begin at 9 AM. I knew that every second counted. Every second I let pass would delay my vaccination by those many minutes. You see, I wanted to go back home and log into work as soon as I could. So, I left. 

There was rain and there was wind. The perfect companions for my voyage. A peppy "Tan tanatan tantantana" joined me on the car radio. Pumped, I drove at acceptable speeds towards the centre. It was a very smooth and pleasant drive. 

I reached the hospital soon enough. But, I was conscious of time. I kept my calm even as the parking ushers made me park in the second level basement. The vaccination centre was on the fifteenth floor. What kept my nerves calm was to see that they hadn't opened the lifts to the fifteenth floor. I was the first to take the lift when it opened. But, that satisfaction did not last for long. As soon as I reached the fifteenth floor, I saw a couple already sitting there. 

Thankfully, the ushers had not started distributing tokens. So, I could still be first. I picked the most strategically located seat from where I could see the usher announcing tokens before anyone else. Yet, my tension increased when an Uncle came to sit right next to me. My direct competition. Something about him made me dislike him - his arrogance and ignorance to sit beside me without leaving a seat in between. So, in NO way was I going to give up my pole position to him. Or, anyone else.

When I noticed the usher change his body language, I knew he was going to ask us to form a line. So, I shifted in my seat to get up the moment he announced it. When he did, I sailed to the desk. First. I know I charged towards the desk, but I did it so smoothly that I doubt anyone noticed the race track I was picturing in my head. 

I got the first token for the day - 101. I entered the vaccination hall. Still first.
I picked a seat in the second row of the auditorium to sit in. That was an annoying decision. Soon enough people asked me to move my legs so that they could brush past my legs to the other seats. So, I changed my seat. I took the seat right in front of the processing desk in the front row. That was a good call, because I was right there when the nurse called my number. I chose the nurse sitting on the left, rightly. The other nurse, sitting on the right, was stalled in her work.

So, I kept my lead. I finished my payment, too. But, the vaccine administrators were not ready. They asked me to wait. It was me and another person. The Uncle slipped to third position by then. This was the home stretch. No slots, no numbers, no preference. It was the law of the jungle. The free market. I snooze I lose. So, I kept my senses up like an assassin - scanning every movement that might preempt the call.

So, when they did, I made sure I was first.

Excitement soon became nervousness.  You see, it was all games until now. I thought of this event as an adventure where I enter through one door and leave through another. It was only when I saw the nurse load the syringe that I realised what was about to happen - it would sting. But, I had to be first. 

So I stayed strong and got jabbed. 

I won. 

It didn't matter that I had to spend 15 minutes after the jab. That was a cool-off lap. It didn't matter who left before me. They were risking things. I played it safe and I played it right and I won. 

On my way home, I bought breakfast and a lot of things from the bakery.

The heat of the race only got to me in the evening. I fell ill and lost all of Tuesday.

I lost Tuesday, but I won my 33% immunity.  

____________________________________________________________
That was the story. Thanks for your time. Hope you enjoyed it and hope you will recommend to others. This has been an attempt to articulate the adventure that getting vaccinated in the city can be. But, perhaps, it also shows that anything can look like an adventure if you can bend your mind for it. 

 



 



Friday 5 February 2021

Gray

It was evening time. The sky had just turned purple after a short dusk. I was in a building with a very familiar corridor. It was where my Bombay Peddananna and Sunitha Peddamma stayed. Yet, the house we entered was not really their house. The house looked like someone's house in Rohan Mithila. This house was dimly lit - nothing but a yellow lamp in the corner. As I stepped on the door frame, I realised I was there for a family gathering.

The first face I saw as I stepped in was my late Leela Peddananna's. He was holding a glass of rum in his hand, as he usually did. He was in his typical inebriated, jolly, calm mood childishly making fun of us. I heard someone laugh on my right. I realised it was my father. I saw many more people, but I did not notice them. I knew they were all the usual suspects - all the aunts and uncles I had to say hello to.

At that moment, I felt a longing in my heart. I wanted to be elsewhere. There was a woman who I wanted to meet. She stayed close by. I knew this woman. I knew her in real life, too. Someone vaguely present in my memory. In the dream, I felt very strongly for her. But, I don't remember her face. I remember her being short, lean, with straight shoulder-length hair. I wanted to meet her.

So, I picked the most opportune moment to leave. I ignored everyone who wanted me to stay for a while. I went to meet her. Outside, I noticed the building was also like Rohan Mithila, with a massive garden in between the blocks. There, she stood waiting for me.

The floodlights, combined with purple of the sky, made everything hazy gray. We ran through that gray. We sat down together for a while and spoke in the mist. I could feel the touch of this person, feel her embrace when we hugged and when she leaned onto my hand. I remember feeling peaceful and calm in my head at this point in the dream. 

But, I knew that this was a dream. I knew that this woman who feels real is probably a puff of smoke in my head. I didn't want that moment to end abruptly. So, I told her that I had to go back. She walked with me until my Peddamma's house. She stood outside the door and said bye. 

I opened the door, and as I stepped into it, I woke up. 

Wednesday 20 January 2021

Half-real

Last night, I dreamt. I was in a movie, and then I was out. I was sitting in the theatre watching the movie. Then, I was inside the screen grasping at the people and the objects in the movie as if they were real. There was a lot of movement. I could feel my head spin. Then, I was back in my seat.

In the movie, there were three people standing on green soil. Soon after, a force collapsed them into one-dimensional beings. An entire world was squashed into one graphene-thin tile. The three white people with blonde hair suddenly turned into an image of black people with black, shaggy and braided hair. They shouted about oppression in their street patois. 

Their words became louder. At this point, I was standing right above this tile as it spun in vacuum. There were stars in the distance, occasionally blocked by the face of the tile. I was confused about what was happening. This scene bore an uncanny resemblance to the scene from Superman, and yet it was different. The three people stared at me from inside the tile, continuously shifting their weight between their legs. I stared at them curiously. And just as I was about to reach out to touch the tile, another force struck the tile hard at its corner. 

The tile went hurling into space at an unimaginable speed. At this point, I was back in my seat. My friends were sitting beside me. On the screen I could see the tile spinning and rotating, trailblazing to the left. The screen seemed like a window on a spaceship opening itself to a cosmic event. Courtesy this spaceship, or the deft cinematographer, I felt my stomach churn. I was sitting, but I was travelling with this tile at its dizzying speed. My mind was racing, matching the movements of the tile. 

Every upwards rotation knocked my mind up. Every downwards rotation knocked it down. Every spin made my mind contort and twist. The tile started emitting lights. Bright lasers of blue, white and yellow blinding my eyes. An eerie, faint music accompanied all of this. "He would trip real hard on this movie," I remember thinking to myself. "What a great scene," I remarked. This mind-quake continued for a few seconds. It felt like I watched a brilliantly edited scene that left me feeling fulfilled. It was cut not before it left its mark and not after it served its purpose. I felt one with the tile. 

By the time it was over, I was upside down on the ground. My friends insisted I got up, but they did not reach out to me. I did not move. I shouted about how amazingly well done the scene was. I pitied them for not living the scene and for not joining me on the floor. I pitied everyone in the theatre for being glued to their seats. 

When I woke up, I could feel my brain twist and turn. I felt like I lived through this reality. I felt fresh and adventurous. I reached out to my phone so that I could tell my friend about this dream. At this point, I remembered a lot more about the dream. I knew who the three people were, why they were standing on green soil, what force struck them and why they were hurling through space. I knew why I felt connected to them. I knew why I was in a threatre (or in the spaceship). 

I reached my phone. I started typing my dream to her, right before my mind continued to twist. An unprecedented feeling of drowsiness swept over me. My fingers were moving by instinct. I could feel sleep paralyse my body and numb my mind slowly.

When I became conscious, I was standing in my school wearing my school uniform. After a few curious incidents and lots of locomotion, I was once again in my room. I opened my eyes to my steel cupboard which dully reflected the purple-grey of dawn filtering through the windows. I was confused. I was unsure about where I was. I half-hoped this adventure was finished. 

All of this happened and at the same time only some of it did.           


Thursday 20 February 2020

Say no to deep breaths

I moved houses recently. In fact, this is the second house I am living in in this city. Oh, I moved cities a few months ago. I am in Mumbai now. The weird thing is that I never realise I am in Mumbai. It strikes me as a wayward thought now and then, surprising me every time. 

The first time it struck me that I am moving cities is when I was in the aeroplane between Hyderabad and Mumbai. The skies were a sunny yellow when I took off from Hyderabad. They began to turn into dull grey as the plane approached Bombay. In that instant, it struck me for the first time. The second time it struck me was whe-- I actually don't remember, but that does not matter. Trust me, I barely ever remember that I am in Mumbai. Don't take this as a romanticisation of Mumbai. The city is fun and everything, but this post is not about that. This post is about how I did not give myself time to let things sink in.

It is not easy to let things sink in nowadays thanks to technology and easy travel options. Every place is either a tap away or a few hours away. I remember that as a child all I could get with a tap was the lift, and all I could travel in a few hours was to my father's factory on the outskirts of Hyderabad. Now I can reach my friend in the USA with a tap or travel to Chennai and to Indore in those few hours' time. It feels like I am as omnipresent as humanly possible. Great as that may sound for some of you I can guarantee that it gets horrible quickly. Coming back to point- I did not let things sink in. And that has been a problem, I realise, that is persisting for a few years now. 

It probably began four and half years ago when I took a deep breath and exhaled instead of letting It hit me with full force. I think it was in that moment I learnt how to suck it up. No matter what came my way -death, break ups, bad marks, strained relationships, failure, insult and even bad toilets- I took a deep breath and exhaled. It was a great fix for me to keep hustling. Interestingly, I did it in this very moment to brush away some bad memories (more than bad toilets). I did not let them sink in- a persisting problem. 

It was two and a half years ago when things turned for the worse. I had to (still have to, at times) push myself to live a normal life. By normal life I mean to be able to think and do things without putting in unusual amounts of effort. To help you imagine, let me tie this to a picture-perfect Mumbai problem. Blame the roads or clogged drains, Mumbai does not let the rain sink in. So the city floods (neck deep at times) and life as you know it ceases. What comes in place of normal life is the Spirit of Mumbai: heightened levels of rage, determination and desperation to conquer adversity and keep hustling. I hope you can see the parallels between Mumbai and what I have been telling you. I did not let things sink in so they became too much for me to handle. Today I can feel myself exerting an unusual amount of effort to do basic things.  

What is unfortunate is that I still don't let things sink in. To give myself credit I don't think I know how to and I don't know if I can afford to. I am definitive that letting things sink in is the healthier option, but  I am unsure if I can afford to lose the amount of time I will in the process. If I tie it back to the Spirit of Mumbai example it sounds ridiculous. How can the Municipal Corporation argue that it does not know how to fix the problem or that it cannot afford to? The Municipal Corporation needs help in both cases if it cannot solve the problem on its own. It can ask the State Government, private organisations or NGOs. It can also ask its constituent people to be responsible and to not clog the drains with trash; to dispose trash in ways that won't clog the city's drains. To humanise these examples, I am obviously thinking about talking to experts, family, friends and (even) strangers. At the same time I am thinking about making changes to my own wiring and I am thinking about figuring out healthy ways to handle adversity. 

I moved houses recently and I don't feel like I am at home. This house and my room are too big for my taste. I think I should let that sink in. That along with a hundred other things.     


     

Saturday 17 August 2019

When They Leave


I have been having a great time this weekend in Delhi. I came here to say bye-bye to my brother and sister-in-law whom I absolutely adore. Today, one night after they left, I was able to articulate what I was feeling about them leaving. I usually do not prefer giving context so that you can read it in your own voice. But, this is much closer to the heart.  

When they leave
They take their conversations with them.
They take their smell with them,
Take their voice with them,
Their laughter and their gestures;
Their affection, their expectations, their opinions and impressions.

When they leave
They take their existence with them
And you are left trying to reach for them in
The images of when they were here.

When they leave
They leave the space, the room and the pedestal
That you had given them in your heart
In a place that is rarely ever filled.

When they leave
You are left reminiscing everything that happened and
You are left wondering about everything which could have happened-
Infinite possibilities nipped in the buds.

When they leave,
They return, too.
And then, everything rushes back like fresh wind into a stale room.
When they return
Everything is a celebration.

Wednesday 13 March 2019

Harken, friend!

Dear Abhilash & Sai, 

I watched a movie called 'Ee Nagaraniki Emaindi?' today. It is about a group of four friends who rediscover themselves and their cherished relationship under the most comic situations in Goa. It reminded me of the two of you- my best friends from school. There is a churning in my chest as I write these words. I hope that will paint this letter sufficiently when you are reading it. 

When I think about the three of us, I remember pizza atop the water tank, getting busted by your sister, pretending to have western showdowns, garden cricket, proper cricket, fart jokes, the never-ending rant about my "love-life", Nanking, ice cream from Country Oven... so many -objectively speaking- inconsequential things which have cemented our friendship. We have broken the law with our excitement to drive without licenses. We have ignored parental curfews to go to Creamstone in the middle of the night. We have disregarded work deadlines to chill. We have stood by each other -and not, at times- when each of us had a heartbreak. We volunteered to wingman for each other. We fought with each other for others. We fought with others for each other.

Today, we meet once in a blue moon- on birthdays, if we're lucky. Or in some happenstance situation like we did in Bangalore. Why aren't we doing such mad things, anymore? What happened to our customs and why have we abandoned them? I was in Goa a few days ago. I saw a group of 40-year olds enjoying themselves like they were 16. We're barely 23. I spent moments in Goa imagining how it would have been if you guys were there with me- the long drives, the beach, the alcohol and the gossip. We should add Goa to our list- if we have one which we remember. We do not remember when we met last, at times.

Hyderabad, for me, is scattered across many moments which I spent with you. My first steps in the city as a teenager and as an adolescent were with you. I believe we took these challenging steps in the confidence that we're here for each other. Yet, I have committed the sin of forgetting leaning on you when my life got difficult. It wasn't until you asked me why I didn't tell you that I realized what had happened. I am sorry about that. This letter is, perhaps, one of those cathartic expressions telling you that I miss the three of us deeply. I haven't done justice to this feeling. I want to write more. But, the words are stuck in a clutter of memories which I cannot choose from. 

We should spend time like how we used to and that's that.   

  

Sunday 23 September 2018

Thinking About Privilege

[This post seemed to have been both an academic as well as an emotional element. So, I have also posted this on the blog I use for academic opinions which is accessible at https://thepublicparticipant.wordpress.com/

I often wonder what privilege feels like- what it looks like. Having been a tall, light-toned, English-speaking, urban-dwelling, middle class, OC Hindu male in India, I have always felt envious of another person with a similar identity who probably had more money, a little more freedom and more lenient parents. I spent most moments of my teenage describing that marginal excess as Privilege. Today, a few years later, I have begun to understand how privileged I really am. 

If I had altered any of my aforementioned characteristics, I would have understood privilege a long time ago. But, by the relentless effort of my parents, the rigidity of social beliefs and my personal vanity, none of them have ever been altered. In my little time in Pune where the world showed itself to me, I have learnt to see things from the eyes of a person who is different from me in these aspects.

A shorter person is ridiculed more; a darker person is considered to be inferior; a person who speaks their mother-tongue is considered to be irrelevant; a rural dweller is considered to be dumb; a lower-class person is on the brink of civil death; persons of all the other castes are scorned at for inexplicable reasons; and a non-Hindu is believed to be full of malice. Today, I witnessed two events that reminded me about privilege. They were both relatable with the privilege that comes with being in the upper tranches of the economic classes.  

My friend and I set out to look for a florist who would sell us some flowers we were looking for. I live in an area which is filled with students and families with young children. It also has several street food joints which are frequented by each of them. Over the years, it became a market for mendicants and poor street hawkers who sell balloons, kids' colouring books, stationery and jigsaw puzzles. As my friend and I reached the end of a street, I saw a man carrying lots of balloons tied at the end of a long stick. He was going from person to person standing by the momo-stand trying to sell his balloons. When he finally approached us, he very softly said, "Bhaiyya, ek balloon khareed lijiye. Aaj danda hua nahin." 

I was going to refuse. My face twitched enough to say no. But, fortunately, before the words left my mouth, I looked up at the balloons. There were red ones, green ones and some glossy ones. "Who laal wala  deejiye," I said. 

He put the stick down to look for the red balloon. "Ye vala?" he asked.
"Haan" I said when it struck me that I did not ask for the price. "Kithne ka hain?" I added. 
"Bees rupai ka hain," he said, without looking at me. 

Twenty rupees was nothing for me. I momentarily recollected the amount of money I spent today on food which I could easily substitute for cheaper alternatives- I had the luxury to spend hundreds on fried rice and fancy ice cream desserts. I wondered if twenty rupees helped him purchase a necessity that I would take for granted. I may be overthinking, but, it is very much probable that he (and his family) was living on the brink of civil death and those twenty rupees delayed that by one more day. 


The balloon which we had purchased was tied with a strip of thin, elastic rubber- the kind which I remember reading about in Jeremy Seabrook's People Without History- made by burning rubber collected from garbage and burning it inhaling its toxic fumes. How much does it cost for him to buy those balloons? How much does he make on a given day? There are many questions that are haunting me in this moment. It is unfair that a man with little skill, no finance or insurance must compete with the competition of those who make enough to own a store in a prime area, earn enough to have functional bank accounts and also insure their businesses.

On a micro-level, all of us have to make financial choices that help us last longer. For the Middle and Upper Classes, making this choice is easier because they have more money and resources to fall back on. The risk of these Classes going off the brink is buffered by many factors. This is not the case with the balloon-man. If he makes one wrong choice, or if one of the variables he depends on changes for the worse, he sinks into a chasm of minimal existence. His dependents sink along with him. This buffer which stops one from falling into this chasm is privilege. 

The second event which I had witnessed was at the florists' shop. My friend and I reached the nursery from where we had to buy our flowers. The fifth shop which we had visited came the second closest to what we wanted. The nursery was spread across a very large area divided into several stalls made of tarpaulin and aluminium sheets filled with different kinds of flowers, saplings, wall-hangings and diyas. The shop we had gone to was being managed by a young man who was probably in his late-twenties. We asked him if he had what we were looking for. 

"Beej nahin hain. Par, pauda hain," he said. 
"Usse doosri shehr bhej na hain. Munkin hoga kya?" I asked. 
"Nahin, woh tho raaste mein mar jaayega," he said. 
"Achcha, kya aap beej mangvasakthe ho?" I asked. 
"Haan," he said. 
"Kithna padega?"
"40-50 rupey mein aapko 80-100 beej miljayenge. Aap pauda nahin lenge?" he asked, with a smile of hope and an attempt to please us. 
"Achcha, theek hain. Kab tak laa sakthe ho?" I asked, disregarding the offer to buy the plant.
"Agle hafthe tak aa jayega," he said, a little withdrawn. 
"Haan, tho, agle hafthe hum aake beej khareed lenge aapse," I said. With this, his demeanour changed completely. His arms were folded, his back was slightly slouched and he was nodding like I had given him an order. It gave me an impression of complete naivety innocence.
"Theek hain," he said. 
"Tho, bhaiyya, hum agle hafthe aake beej aur pauda khareed lenge," my friend said at the end. He nodded and we left. 

As soon as we left the stall, my friend said, "If we don't tell him that we will buy the plant, why will he get the seeds? The plant gives him 140 rupees and the seeds get him 40," she said, gesturing the disparity with her hands. What she said made sense. Any sound businessperson would not be that Quixotic enough. But, the doubt that I had was: Did he possess that wisdom to think like my friend did? I would not be too hopeful about it from what I saw in the man. 

After we left his stall, we walked to another stall. We wanted to try our luck at finding the plant's seeds. This new stall was visible from the previous one although it was a little far away from it. While we were negotiating with the manager of this stall, I saw the late twenty-year old look at us from his stall. His posture was one of insecurity and anxiousness. He slowly walked towards this stall to see if we were purchasing from them- contrary to what we promised him. If I had not seen this, I would have probably accepted the new stall's offer- something that showed that the manager was experienced in the art, strongly linked to the market and aware of the simple services that his customers would require. I did not buy it. 

This episode reminded me about how more knowledge about the market and its demands would have made the twenty-year old's business better. It also made me wonder if there was any power play involved when his posture became one of strict obedience when I told him what I wanted. The anxiousness he showed when we were speaking to a competitor made me wonder if he, too, was one of those people who were on the brink.  

When I was a child I would hear my parents say, "They should find some work instead of begging on the roads. They should polish shoes and sustain, if necessary." Today, most of the poor people I see are not begging on the streets. They are trying to sell all of the items which I have mentioned above to make an earnest living. Has it really lead to more income in their pockets? Has it helped them create a better standard of living for themselves? I do not have anecdotes or data to answer these questions. But, what I observe is that people refuse to buy their products because they apparently lack credibility, quality or presentation. It is difficult for a street-vendor to compete with a retail seller- just like it is difficult for a retail-seller to compete with a Metro Cash N' Carry. In a country where skilling, market linkage and financial do not properly reach the Middle Class, it is impossible to think about how they would reach this section of the population. The market and the competition are entirely unfavourable to the balloon-man- who has invested his value into the balloons which -as it seems on most days- remain unsold.

During my previous internship with UNDP in Karnataka, I went to the Pattadakal temples for a brief recess. What I saw there shook me. Outside the gates of the temple, there were close to 6 old women who had wrinkled faces and wore old, light sarees. In the heat of late Summer, they were selling a product that is usually bought in decent numbers- buttermilk; packaged in old Kinley bottles. The old women were walking to every tourist to sell their product. Beside the gate to the temple, there was a middle-aged blind man who was selling guide books and picture books about the temples- grand remnants of a glorious dynasty. Neither my friends nor I purchased any of these products. 

When we were leaving the temple, one woman determinately walked up to the window by which I was sitting. She offered me a bottle for which she was charging 20 rupees. She was looking at me with an affectionate smile while holding the bottle out towards me. She was hoping for me to buy it. I refused to buy it. What stopped me was not my disinterest in buttermilk but the manner in which it was packed. If the same product were packaged more neatly in some other bottle or container, I would have purchased it. It made me question what I was working on- "Am I targeting the right section of the society in my work?" My brother told me that the work I am doing would eventually benefit all of them. But, does the old woman have that much time? Does the balloon-man have that much time? 

These are not problems that are new to our society. They have existed for decades. They have been dealt with, too. The problem, here, is not poverty. The problem is an information gap that we are not attempting to bridge. Some of our policies aimed at creating safety nets and fostering human development policies must be designed to reach this section first before its benefits are consumed wholly by those higher in the ladder. I believe that if the balloon-man could be better informed about how to sell his balloons (or substitute his product), if the florist could be taught how to make more money in the business; and if the old lady could be taught about the importance of packaging her products better, they will all witness a better standard of living. While so many people live on the brink everyday, time is not a luxury anybody has to help them make their lives safer.