Thursday, 15 November 2018

Snow in November

It is snowing.
Snow transforms.
Transforms the window into a TV frame. Through which
the people come and go
passing by the christmas trees that line up outside the door
of Ace Hardware.
The orange trash truck, "Tenleytown Trash", leaves figure 8s
in its wake.
People on the street
anonymous indistinguishable yesterday,
are characters in a very American show.
A man takes out a wiping device
attached to a long stick
and cleans his car. Sketching neat patterns in the snowy layer,
falling snow outspeeds his progress
and he drives off.
Little ones walk,
overwhelmed by their protective jackets,
tottering balls of fur with hoodies and legs.
The cars, commonplace, parked in the lot every day,
become semi black-and-white, like the subjects
of photos in the 50's.
One man
has donned a summer beach hat
as he bikes on the pavement
crossing the christmas trees.
But it's 9am, on a Thursday after all, and my turn
to turn towards another screen.

Saturday, 13 October 2018

Leaving from Vermont

Do we live in a world 
That’s already past its peak 
Small and big computers 
Fragment my distractions like the shredder of Banksy

Since I was born
I keep trying to go back in time
To simpler meals in huts and homes 
To the evening silence in villages of Udaipur 
Lately I strayed into the woods 
And I couldn’t leave without wrenching my self from them

Friday, 7 September 2018

Restaurant Table

You discuss your favourite philosophy and I frown, and so we talk,
till one by one, the rest of the party trickles by to say goodbye, and we are the last two left.
We order greek salad and continue the discussion and the frowning.
But the large table, communal a few minutes ago, becomes yours and mine.
The air becomes cooler, and the fairy lights dot the space above in a bright blur.

Boatman

(Volta river, Ada, Ghana.)

The clouds close overhead,
the water takes on a grey hue, mutedly shining like some molten metal,
the treeline in the distance is unchanged, muted and graceful now as it was in the sun.

The boatman is standing, one leg on the boat's edge,
a long oar piercing into the water, perhaps it could churn the molten silver all around, if he were a hero in an epic.

I try in vain to photograph the beauty of him, old man in an old boat,
strong, weather-worn, old.
Should I ask him first? He is too far. And moreover, he is part of the river.

Wednesday, 4 July 2018

Before the fireworks on the 4th of July

Big hallways up the pillars of the Supreme Court
(one of the three equal pillars of government, I overhear),
The smell of homemade sandwiches wafts, and the soft spray of the fountain drifts, light teal like the couch at home, on which I napped. And the quarterfinals are discussed.
Everyone's two hours early, in a tranquil wait for sundown,
And in these minutes before my friend arrives,
I think of you.

Sunday, 1 July 2018

Lucknow III: Tourism


One evening I decided that enough was enough, the situation was getting out of hand, I needed to stop living by the screen light of my laptop. The clinching moment was when I ordered Domino’s pizza in the middle of answering emails. Here I was, on my tenth day in the city, a stone’s throw from the Hazratganj market with all the spiced kebabs of Lucknow on offer, for less than 200 rupees no less, and I was inside a guest room ordering Domino’s. (It was cheese-burst though, so I can’t say it wasn’t worth it.) And the European girl staying in the room upstairs had already been for a ‘history walk’ to the bhool-bhulaiya, after having arrived just the previous night. Unacceptable.

So the next day, on the way back from office, I got off at the Hazratganj bus stop and allowed myself to be absorbed into the beehive of people that was permanently present at the entrance of the market. The first order of the evening was to get a taste of the famous Lucknow kebabs. I floated along the waves of the crowd, using my elbows to convince myself that I was carving my own route, and slipped into the largest restaurant that wasn’t called Moti Mahal. (Every single city seems to have at least a few Moti Mahals, offering varying quality of what they consider North Indian fare, though many of them have nothing to do with each other. Of course, Hazratganj had one too. The common-ness of the name made dining in a Moti Mahal an un-novel thing to do.) The inside was grand in a familiar way, with tables and chairs wrapped in white cloth till the floor. The menu looked pretty regular, more or less the same selection of kebabs that the Delhi places offer. I ordered a safe-looking chicken kebab, with roomali roti that is ever a mystery with all the folds and whatnot, and a Coca-Cola which in my head was an essential part of the authentic kebab experience.

They took at least 25 minutes to bring the kebab and roomali roti, leaving me to stew in grumpiness from hunger. But when the food arrived, I got a taste of that Lucknow kebab magic after all. They were the simplest and softest kebabs I’d ever eaten, chicken with the scent of elaichi, delicate and powerful. The roomali roti was fairly Delhi-like, but with swirlier fairy folds, and even the coke tasted better after a bite of the kebabs. This thoroughly satisfied me, and I could happily go back to living in front of the laptop and ordering guiltless Domino’s in the homestay.

Lucknow II: Commute


The homestay was located behind Mayawati’s house, which was its claim to fame apart from the word of mouth from happy guests. I soon grew fond of the commute. The journey had three legs. The first was a walk along the winding lanes behind Mayawati’s house (the fifteen foot walls were safeguarded with five foot fences) till one found a (manual) rickshaw that would take one to the auto-rickshaw stop near the Hazratganj Market. Said winding lanes were below a highway, and passed by a number of interesting semi-underground havens. One was a large wall which had become a canvass for a variety of human expressions, including chalk graffiti, slogans, plain-paper posters of the local politicians, and urine from Indian males. Another was a nondescript shop of all the odds and ends that one can ever need, from biscuits in-lieu of breakfast to cigarettes, coke, chips, paan sachets, and tiny bottles of coconut hair-oil. The classic Indian kinara shop. Yet another haven was a nondescript temple, barely as big as the kinara shop, and with a vague gota-trimmed triangular flag waving above its orange-covered roof and a deity seated in the dark interior from where incense fragrance wafted out and mingled with the humid hanging air.

Once you arrived at Hazratganj Market, the second leg of the journey began. The auto-rickshaw stop stood across the archway of the old market, offering a packed glimpse of the place. Encrusted with shops on at least three or four storeys, the entrance was like a layered cake with a tuition centre on top of a restaurant on top of a garment store. My favourite was a tuition centre named ‘Epic’, which had the tagline ‘Even failed can pass!’. From here you took the shared-auto, which for fifteen rupees took you across an amazing distance at an alarming speed. Unlike the more expensive ‘personal’-auto, the shared-auto followed a definite, pre-defined path and had at least three other people, both major safety points as a young woman. We would zip by the detailed chaos of Hazratganj, and in a matter of minutes find ourselves along the massive, broad, vast highway with the bare building architecture, broad pillars, statues and waterless fountains gleaming under the sun, signifying the new glory of Lucknow. A few more minutes, and we would be among the shady groves of one of the V-khands, a residential neighbourhood where the office was located. 

This is where the third leg began. The shared-auto dropped you off at X and Y prominent hospital. At this point it was crucial to figure out which direction you needed to take. So packed was this area with identical sized shops, that the four points of the crossroads were impossible to distinguish as a newcomer. It was only once I had the names of all the shops memorised that the direction became intuitive. From here, you could either walk the final kilometre to the office, or, if you were lucky, take another (manual) rickshaw, feeling like a princess on this light-wheeled chariot. 

The most vibrant part of the commute was on the way home. The evening would start cooling the streets, and various impromptu kitchens would spring up on both sides of the road. Everyone who lived in the streets, from beggar men to women selling bhuttas, would come to the road with their pots and pans, large, clean and sturdy. They would light firewood and coal, and begin cooking dals, chopping onions, green chilis, tomatoes and potatoes. The evening would soon become fragrant with the smell of freshly cut herbs, and the street would be lit by the fires and embers of the open kitchen. It was a moving and organic sight, this communal daily dinner.