31 Jul 2007

Where is your undergarment...?!!

So you read the previous post of mine below this one..eh. And you think you have a pretty good idea of what a sample I should be. Right you may be. But come on man. The displays of my gems were at least not as dazzling as those our physics teacher, the much revered (???) Mr. Gera, flashed that day in the midst of our Maths class! Yeah...the same Mr. Gera whom we all were so jealous of, for he had that distinguished luck of having two additional sister-in-laws in his home over and above a personal wife of his.

"Wow! Such a lucky man" remarked Gautam, who joined with me new in class 12th in the DPS.

I always write DPS for Deewan Public School. That gives me some pseudo satisfaction of having studied at a DPS at some point in my school life. And then, recently due to the much envied MMS scandal, DPS has acquired that cult image among all us youngsters. By the way Gautam and I were seat mates for the entire last year of our school. A dashing dude he was. Crush of girls. Envy of mine. He had all those junior cukoos of our school in his colony whose profile I still sometimes visit on orkut. He was after all from a military family. All those military people have such pretty daughters. I sometimes think I would be able to ask someone out, someday. Gautam knew all those bad things I considered would spoil your future career. Coz you know bad guys do badly in studies. And as my mother sang to me when I was even smaller 'Padhoge likhoge banoge nawab, gandi baatein karoge to hoge kharab.' So I was a good guy. Though what I have become today is a different matter altogether. And that I was largely and more importantly correctly perceived as a moron was far from my awareness.

And when Kargil war happened the fund collection effort picked up in our DPS too. Vinod sir started calling people by roll numbers and the people would come and pull a hundred rupee or fifty rupee note, all of them.

"Whoops...what do all their dads do! They all sure make good dough." I said.

Their khoon pasina must be very efficiently convertible to currency notes.
I brainwashed Gautam throughout the 41 roll numbers that came before us that since our dads had already given a day's salary to Kargil effort we would give only 5 rupees.

"You see, we don't even earn yet!" I explained. Gautam's eyes glistened with admiration.

"Roll number 42" called Vinod IAS.

Yeah he was an IAS, for he was practically Invisible After Sunset. And we all feared the black. But that was much before the Pulsar 180 hit the streets. May be one of my classmates' dad later switched over to Bajaj Auto Ltd.

And so Gautam marched to the front of the class to the class teacher's desk and offered a 5 rupee note for contribution.
Potato curry to someone expecting chicken for dinner.
I admired him now for more than his looks.

"Katora le ke bahar sadak pe khada ho ja!" growled Vinod IAS with an unbelievable saturnine face.

The class burst into a laughter. Yeah I too giggled, for his face was flushed blood red and the idiot was looking at me accusingly. I had just suggested pal. It was all your decision. My eyes conveyed. He immediately pulled out a fifty rupee note and put that on the table. And my heart sank. What the hell. Now I would also have to give a fifty.

"Roll number 43" came the roar.

So here tottered the comrade with sunken spirits, for his dad was the 'Ek akela insaan jo subah se shaam tak..khoon pasina ek karke ghar mein kuch kama ke laata hai aur tum....', as my mother used to tell me whenever I did some loss because of my stupidities, and here I was going to throw away another of a fifty out of the family bowl when that 'Ek akela insaan jo khoon pasina ek karke kama ke laata hai' had already paid a day's salary for the effort. No. I can't do that to my dad. All that khoon and pasina, that somehow mixed daily and got stored somewhere to convert into green colored thick currency notes at the end of every month, flashed before my eyes in that short journey from my seat to the class teacher's desk. Sometimes that Khoon Pasina mixture did not convert itself into currency notes on time and we would have to be extra frugal until it got converted which sometimes would not be until the end of next month and in very rare cases until the end of next to next month. No. I can't do this. My embarrassment would be my contribution to the family earnings. And with my new found confidence I offered a 20 rupee note to Vinod IAS.

Thud! Went the final nail into the coffin. Hammered by roll number 43. His expressions were like those of an Indian soldier who had fired at a Pakistani soldier in the Siachen glacier only to find the rifle empty because a class 12th student in DPS had not paid a full fifty rupees towards the Kargil effort. But the impact was lighter this time. Gautam had taken the initial and stronger blow. The Soldier was already half expecting an empty gun. Besides his favorite student I was, for I got a 95 in the first term exam just 5 days after joining the school. Gautam, Mayank and all other cursed me for what I had done. They all had to bear all that flak from Vinod IAS before their mothers in the PTM after the exams. No excuses worked for them this time. They could not explain how I 'Garib' (As Vinod IAS would refer to me who had been deprived of his blessings so far) who had not got Vinod IAS's guidance at all had still scored a 95 even as they all had had his full guidance throughout. The reason we all soon found out though. My score never crossed an 80 in Maths after his valuable guidance bore its fruits on me for the next two terms.

"Tu bhi!" was all he said.

But I had taken off for my seat in that brief moment while the nail was going into the coffin and the soldier was gazing at his empty rifle.

"Whoa...mumma...I saved a whole 30 rupees today."

And this exercise had barely finished when Mr. Gera, that lucky man with two sisters-in-law in his home and with a personal wife, and with a threatening face with a funny mustache on it, and whose home all my class mates visited, strode into the class room. Fat man he was. Built for comfort than for speed. A sly smile on his face. As that I had on my face when I pulled the stool off from below my mumma when she was washing dishes on the kitchen floor. I was 11 years old and very narrowly escaped that slipper thrashing afterwards, thanks to my Nani's intervention. I got only a sweet homily. So Mr. Gera, with two sisters-in-law at home and a personal wife, a saturnine face and a sly smile below his funny mustache, asked loudly

"Which girl has lost her undergarment in the assembly ground this morning?"

Eeeeeerie silence. You could hear the sound as a pin traveled through the air during its fall from your hand to the ground. The noise it made after it fell on the floor would be deafening. Yeah my vocab was pathetic. But still. How could a girl have lost her undergarment in the assembly ground in the morning! I understood the meaning of all the words in this sentence and was not confusing a blazer with a brassier this time. And I was correct, for the entire class looked as if a news of another post of Siachen having been occupied by Pakistan had broken despite all our 50 rupee notes and a 20 rupee note of mine having been sent to the border so that our troops could get all our posts back.

Pakistan fired one more grenade. Mr. Gera repeated his question with that confident and sly smile. I still wonder if all the girls did check their undergarments if they had not been lost in the assembly ground that morning, Mr. Gera's visage was so calm and composed that I would definitely have checked mine had the question been for boys rather than Girls. But they must have checked, for no girl came up even after a few seconds of funereal silence..the pin travel silence. Or else how would they all have been so confident! Vinod IAS had long forgotten the 5 rupee and 20 rupee shock by now.

Finally the fog cleared over the Siachen border. The Pakistani general showed up from behind the newly occupied post of Siachen. Mr. Gera now with his sly smile slightly annoyed beneth his funny mustache, flashed a gold chain dangling tentatively from the end of his middle finger.

"This chain has been found in the assembly ground a few minutes back"

wurr woo.. uhoo uhoo.. uhhhhooo...!! Mayank, who had been eating his tiffin from last few minutes with his head bowed down on the back seat of mine, spat in shock the food in his mouth on the floor.

...a chain for an undergarment !

'...isey laga daala.. to life jhingalaala' !! The TATA sky campaign had not been conceived by then and I am sure as hell, the ad company would have sold this punch line to this undergarment manufacturing company had there been a contract between the two.

But my knowledge of human anatomy must be real weak man! Some one tell me now which girl wears a gold chain for an undergarment!

But before I could pose my question to the have-answers-for-everything-bad Gautam whose face had now become white from an earlier flushed blood red, an exasperated Vinod IAS with a wry face told Mr. Gera

"Gera Sir...isse Ornament kehte hain...Undergarment nahin!"

30 Jul 2007

Ahh...those were the days!

"Okay..Please frame a sentence on 'Capital Punishment'"
And she asked one hand among the many to stand up and speak.

"The cricket players are often given capital punishment for misbehavior with other players and umpires during the match" said the B.Tech. Mechanical Engineering First Year student with proud.

"whooops...I guess that would be a rather strict punishment for this offence" Said an amused Ms. Gaur, our communications teacher.

Shitttt !! I had shone my gem again. Derived the meaning of an idiom from the literal meaning of its components!
But perhaps it wasn't as bad as when I told that day, regretfully, to one of my batch mates in the first year hostel that my 'Vulcubatory' was weak. "Indeed your 'Vocabulary' is rather pathetic pal", said an amused abhishek too. But how he knew! I wondered.

And then there is the classic I have never dared mention to anybody. My first month in an english medium school after studying in a hindi medium school up to class 6th. Late admission I was because of the timing of the transfer of my dad. Winters came and the annual circular came to all the classes. Our beloved class teacher V.P.Singh (alias Videshi Pilla for the initials V.P.) signed the circular register and announced:

"Everybody has to wear blazer from 15th of this month."

Whattt! Had he gone crazy, asked a bewildered I to my bench mate in a hushed voice after the initial impact settled down.

"Why! Whats wrong?"
"You are asking me whats wrong! Can't you just see whats wrong!"

After 2 minutes of bewildered exchange of words from both sides, realizing what I was confusing it with, Maninder explained to me that 'Blazer' and 'Brassier' are two different things!

Ah..if that's the case then it's okay. I would feel more confident in a blazer than in a...err..

26 Jul 2007

Bye Bye President Kalam

So many titles given to Dr. Kalam by the people and by the media. Does he really deserve all the titles that have been bestowed upon him !

A look into what is rightfully his and what's not. Based on the facts.

Chacha Kalam: A title given to the outgoing president by the media in the last week of his office truly symbolizes the eulogy thrust upon the person media hypes for its own TRPs. I never heard of reports where people on their own called him Chacha Kalam. Did we miss something! Was it the media which likened his emphasis on making the children of today into the achievers of tomorrow to Pt. Nehru's popular love for the children!

Rocket Scientist:
In fact Dr. Kalam is an aeronautical engineer. He has been a scientific manager. We usually speak loudly what we want to hear.

People's President:
Now this one is the one I agree with. Whatever the reason. His credentials, his disinclination from politics, his egalitarianism, his appeal to the masses as an ascetic or something else, he has undoubtedly been loved by the country. He, accompanied by former Uttaranchal CM N D Tiwari, came to the convocation function of my institute when I was in third year. And I remember our entire hostel standing on the hostel wall and the 3rd floor corridors to catch a glimpse of him (which we couldn't) through the dark window panes of his car. On the other hand when in the next car CM N D Tiwari waved his hand to us, to his embarrassment, we all pointed at him and laughed aloud. Such was the difference of stature. By shunning the presidential protocols at times Dr. Kalam struck a chord with the masses.

A great visionary:
In this I agree with his critics that his vision is not a very practical one and the details have been phrased in a rather simplified manner in his books. This lack of practicality and depth of analysis of real time problems in achieving this dream of India 2020 doesn't suit the kind of great visionary and scientific stature we have thrust upon him.

A great Scientist:
Now who do we call a great scientist? Has our definition of a great scientist become so narrow! With thousands of outstanding Ph.D.s across the world researching in science, the category of 'Great Scientist' suits at least those who win the Nobel prize when this prize is given in various fields of science every year ! At least those who truly innovate. Whereas his contributions to the Indian defense are enormous and highly appreciable in a climate of total incapability, I doubt if his accomplishments match the standards of a 'great' scientist.

But in the end,
I credit him for his tremendous popularity and for his contribution to the nation as a president in the sense that he truly upped the ante of performance for the common man who so easily identified with him. It was because of this that people debated this time if Narayan Murthy should be our next President. He achievements exemplified and showed the masses that we can also think big. That dreaming and thinking big is the key to achieving success and greatness. Today many many more people believe in the possibility of a developed India by 2020 than could 5 years ago.

Hats off to you The People's President! We love you!

24 Jul 2007

"the 'below post' for those whom I hate the most.."

One of the things I hate the most in the daily official mails is the use of the word 'below'.
Some gems from the mails in my office inbox:

1. "Today work on yesterday's issues as mentioned in below mail..."
2. "In the below figure I mention the problem I am facing..."
3. "Below solution doesn't work..."
4. "Please accommodate the below list of people to the Tuesday training session..."

Spicing up all this is the fact that while writing such sentences these people think that they are writing perfectly correct and, to my horror, even elegant English.

What made me cry my throat out was the fact that those people did NOT change their usage when I patiently explained two of them for an exclusive 5 minutes that 'below' is an adverb or a preposition rather than an adjective. The legends apparently convinced themselves that so many people can not be wrong.
Where do YOU come from loser !!! Who the hell are you to teach us how to write official mails when we have been in the industry for n times the number of years than you have been !

Very well; I accept my defeat pal.

So why the hell do I freak out. That’s simple. In my usage of the language I mostly rely on my instinct whether the sentence SOUNDS and LOOKS correct or wrong. After reading this usage of 'below' almost DAILY for the last 2 years I fear that one day, somehow, I would subconsciously start finding it correct.. :( !!



Another of my sorrows is the use of verbs 'do' and 'does' by those legends. So many times I have fought my instinct to pull my hair off my head when I read the mails using, not to mention with all the styles of font and colors, -es with do (=does) for the plural subject !

1. The two approaches does not work here.
2. Satya do not want you to work on this project.

Their logic is simple. Singular goes with singular. Plural goes with plural. What's wrong with YOU you know-it-all SOB !

And I am silent sitting in front of my computer in a 3X3 cubicle clutching my hair. Hats off to ya sunshine !


And the list doesn't end here though. Start counting them in your inbox and there are as many of them as are the integral Pythagorean triplets in mathematics. I would better leave them for my daily morning dose than live though all those here once more :( !!

13 Jul 2007

To those who talk in english even to their spouse or children in their very own and native hindi speaking regions

इंग्लिश काहे बोलता,
करे हिंदी भाई से बात !

भाषा रही विवादन की,
जो साक्षर है गुण बाँट !!
------------------------
English kaahe bolta,
Kare hindi bhai se baat !

Bhasha rahi vivadan ki,
Jo sakshar hai gur baant !!

-- Sodium

6 Jul 2007

Implications of Inflation...Kabira reinvented !

काल मरे सो आज मर,
आज मरे सो अब..
,,लकडी महँगी होयेगी,
बहुरि मरेगो कब !!

I asked.. Musibat ri Musibat...kya tum mere saath ho !!...Musibat boli haan maalik koi rahe na rahe mein tumhara saath kabhi na chhorungi !!

इंडियन आईटी देख कर,
दिया सोडियम रोय...
फ़ालतू काम इंडस्ट्री में,
कैरियर दिया सब खोय

Jai AMC :)

This one is a hats off to my previous project team at office...the royal AMC :)

Ajgar kare na chakri
Panchhi kare na kaam...

Das maluka keh gaye
Sabke daata Ram !!