Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Get A Life!

To begin with, I’d just like to thank TOI for making my week. Ever since they started their Get A Life campaign, I have been almost hopeful. Well done, guys! As a matter of fact, this post is completely for them.

Those who know me, know that I don’t want to live in this country. Above and beyond, the reason is the sick mentality of men who think we are sex objects living to give them pleasure. If my own experiences on the road were not enough, I found the scary neighbor – newspapers. I won’t even begin with all the rape stories I read in the newspapers but safe to say, it is all very disturbing. Do I want to live in the country where even 3 year olds get raped? Unlikely. So yes, the first chance I get, I’m out of here. There is no way to change mindset of the public who blames the victim; the ministers who say girls shouldn’t be wearing inappropriate clothes or getting out of the house after 8 pm. May be they should teach some values to men but eh, they have testosterone and that’s enough in this country. I was born unlucky; ergo I have to suffer.

All men may not think that way. But I can bet my life on this – most of them do. They may not grope women but they do pass comments, call them ‘maal’ and sing cheap songs. What is this Munni-Shiela anyway? Don’t we have enough problems that Bollywood is adding up more to the lot? Stop with these songs already. They are demeaning, derogatory and IDIOTIC! This is not artistic; this is simply being oblivious to the issues we are facing as a nation. Are you guys dense or something? Portray women as strong and independent, not as sex objects you morons!

What TOI is doing is a beginning. If all the newspapers pick up the cause, people might wake up! They just might. May be then we will feel safe in this country. 

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

SMS-less Citizen of the Country


Yes, I am really upset with the recent ban on SMS but not for the reasons you might think. I have no problem with restriction on SMSes but all I need is a valid explanation. The first two days, I was under the misconception that may be networks didn't quite understand the ban imposed by the government and I spent so much time trying to make them. Later, I found out it was the collective decision of the network operators. Then why couldn't they just say so? I did ask a number of times.

As customers, it is my right to demand an explanation. When it was clearly state in newspaper reports that bulk SMSes were banned, they couldn't just make their own rules, could they? Many simple ignored me, newspapers and news channels included, and others quoted the same thing again and again. I am not an idiot - I get it that you have been instructed by the government to impose the ban but it was supposed to be on bulk SMSes. I just want to know what exactly is it? Did you not get it right or were the newspapers misinterpreted things? If TRAI changed the rule, could you not simply say so rather than going in circles when I'm asking such a simple question. 

I really like Vodafone, I honestly do but this was just not done. Goes to show that there is no transparency in this country. Anyone can do anything while we are left shouting and screaming which they "censor" as per their whims and fancies. 

No, I'm not some teenager fretting about the ban because I have to text my friends or perhaps boyfriend. I'm a citizen of this country who has been robbed off her constitutional rights; a citizen who no one is ready to give answers to. 

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Let. It. Go.


A little less than a year ago, I was reading blogs related to deaths – how the people who get left behind feel and cope with it, if it is painful for them to talk about it and whether the victims go through the 5 stages of grief. Months later standing at those crossroads, facing two deaths in a row, I’m not sure if I’m ready to answer it.

It is different for everybody, as much as I’ve seen these past few months. Some people cry their eyes out, make certain everyone around knows how painful the loss is and others, like me, block it all out, put on a happy face and refuse to think about it. It’s no pretence. There is no feeling inside, nothing to cry about, nothing to fight, no emotion at all. Everything is fine. It is just that when you say it out loud you’re called insensitive or perhaps, heartless. The “appropriate” emotion would be sadness, grief, resentment and if you’re not experiencing that, you are abnormal; something is really wrong with you! I know this is what I came to be known as – cold. What I would have suggested as the right word is numb. Incapable of feeling anything. It wears off, the numbness, the denial but not as quickly as others would have liked but it does. Taking tiny steps, it moves away from you and leaves a little hole inside. When it happened to me, only thought I had was “What do I do now?”

If you’re not miserable, be sure people will make you – with their talks, with their actions and even with their looks. You’re not supposed to be okay. Anything but fine. Cry. Yell. Do something crazy. Sit in the corner and don’t talk to anyone. Maintain a face that shouts ‘I JUST LOST SOMEONE’. Do anything other than that and they’ll eat you up alive. And then there’s guilt – ‘why am I not as wretched as others? Why am I over it so soon?’ You’re not; it has just started.

The Nile. My brain represses bad memories – anything that causes me tit bit of pain is blackened, forgotten, engulfed by the black hole. It gives me a chance to fully analyse the situation. It gives me a chance to deal with it one step at a time. ‘No need to make haste. You’ll deal with it when you deal with it’, it says. He’s not asking my permission or waiting for me to nod in approval – he is doing it in his way and not letting me know. My protective brain wants what’s best for me and he doesn’t care what anyone else makes of it. Sadly, I do. May be it is cowardice; may be it is a weakness; may be its apprehension; may be it is just how your system works. Period. I will get there, to the point where I’ll accept what’s happening but today is not the time. It will tell me on its own; I’m counting on it too. Someday, I will be fully aware of what I’ve lost. Why, is another story.

It is different for everybody but not everything is different. You can either believe that you don’t react like others or make yourself believe that you don’t react well. I chose the latter one and then the guilt was too much to handle. Surely, someone needs more than that – that someone who is not there anymore would want you to remember him, would want you to shed a few tears and not be all smiles. That someone deserves more and you should give him that acknowledgment that you care he’s gone. That someone needs to know you miss him. That someone should be certain that you will remember him always and never let him vanish off the earth. But he should also know that you are mourning in your own way. This is who you are and nothing can change this about you. Regardless to what people deem appropriate, you are coping with the loss, you are feeling the burden of the death. It might not show but he should know this – it is all there in the heart. One day, the leash would restrain it no longer and you’d be ready to unwind. Just because you are not making a public display of your misery doesn't mean the affection is lost.