For the first time since I was 12, I am without a dog. Pomo waited till I got back to town, and in the end went peacefully. I am grateful to her for many things, but most of all for being a great hot water bottle and teaching me how to be affectionate. Thanks to her, I have never been lonely when I have been sad. She was old, almost 16. Apart from childbirth and being mauled by a pack of strays once, she has never been ill till this last time. She was affectionate, and slept in my bed every night I was home. Many of my friends have woken up hungover with a dachshund's bum in their face. She lost her appetite three weeks ago and was on a drip for a week. Liver and kidney failure in an old, small dog has no cure. She still had energy though and was going for a walk. She got really bad 3 days ago, but she waited for me to return from a trip before dying in her sleep. She was good dog, very distinguished. She looked at thrown balls with disdain - too aristocratic to fetch. She was inordinately susceptible to the cold for a teutonic creature. Here ears flopped and flapped very endearingly when she ran. She made me a much better person than I am. I will miss her dearly.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Friday, June 13, 2014
Grandparents
A very old piece I found while rifling through the computer
I never knew
my grandfathers. Commander Tapan Kumar Chatterjee, my nana, had the good
fortune of dying before his failures reached their zenith. At fifty-two, he was
a complete an utter drunk, hated his sons and didn’t much care for his wife.
His daughter, on whom he doted in an unserious sort of way, had run off to do
an IB in Canada. He had been passed over for the hundredth time, and was
probably going to be forced to retire early, as a consequence of his drinking.
The bloody puke, when it came must have been a happy purging before the end. He
was dead within a week, and his children are fucked up in their own ways,
Heroin for one, and booze for the other two.
My other
grandfather, P.C Joshi, lived through every failure, and despite his place
(small as it is) in Indian history, I know next to nothing about him. He was
the first and youngest General Secretary of the undivided CPI, was expelled
from the party for, you guessed it, being a revisionist. He was decried because
he didn’t think national movement was complete hokum, and thought Gandhi and
Nehru were worth admiring. No point blaming the party, they had a point.
Everywhere commies have taken on social democrats as comrades, they have stayed
commies no more, and end up having too many comrades on the wrong side. He
didn’t take it well though, and while he was re-admitted to the party, the rest
of his life was spent reconciling political idealism and organisational loyalty
with a deep bitterness. He had a number
of strokes in his sixties, tried to set up a trust in Kumaon, which never
worked out because he died before it could.
My
grandmothers on the other hand were a distinct track in my childhood and beyond.
They were both stuck with sons who were dealing with stupendous complexes about
their fathers’ and despite their best efforts, they only seemed to exacerbate
the problem.
Thakuma was
at least as famous as her husband, one of the few women directly engaged in the
armed struggle against the Brits, went to jail, became a communist, and was
(and still is to some degree) something of minor folk hero in Bengal. After
Kalpana Dutt became Comrade Kalpana Joshi, she was if anything exposed to a
wider world both in terms of ideas , people and the actual world. She travelled
to the Soviet Union, spoke fluent Russian, got a series of awards et al. Before Alzheimer’s took her, she was still
bus-ing it to work at ICCR in her late seventies. At seventy-something she fell
down the stairs at our flat and broke her hip. The doctor assured her she would
walk normally soon enough. She was worried about when she would be able to
resume her morning skipping regimen.
Basically,
she was for her time, a wholly remarkable woman. And she left a train of fucked up souls
across generations. So her sons, born
one year apart, were both supposed geniuses. They were throwing out hints at potential,
with double promotions and university-topping across Delhi (my father) and
Moscow (my jethu). This potential
exhausted itself, as potential often does, before their prime. They were good with women, as coddled Bengali
boys tend to be. And for their part, within the limits of their personalities
and poisons they were good to them as well.
Kalpana Dutt - wielder of guns and makers of bombs at seventeen –
independent through marriage and much of what had to be pre Alzheimer’s
dementia – was blind to her sons faults. More than that, she was blind to them
as human beings, to their choices and their deeply warped sense of being.
My father is thirty-five years old.
He is drunk and playing table tennis at the Hindustan Times building. His
mother, old already and venerable as all fuck, takes a bus from ICCR to his
house in Hauz Khas heats up the lunch she has taken for him and lands up HT. He
has eaten of course, and is passed out in what was meant to be a union meeting.
‘What the fuck!,’ you ask. Will this
heroine of the freedom struggle, stalwart of the communist party stand for
this.
“Khokon aajke beshi khe neichelo. His
friends force him you know, he is a good boy otherwise.”
Shipra
Chatterjee has been carried through life, just so much driftwood flaking away
with age. Her father had died when she was quite young, thirteen I think, and
she had to suffer the ignominy of living in her mama’r baadi. Her sister grew
up to be quite the intellectual, but she never had a chance. She trudged her
way through school in Bengali backwaters. A distant uncle visited once, was
impressed with her singing or recitation or something and decided to wed her to
his son. His eldest son, Lieutenant T.K Chatterjee. It was a match made in
arranged marriage hell. Dida had inherited her mother’s lithium imbalance and
Nana, who had wanted to be a tabla teacher cowed under his father and left a
white girlfriend, discovered he was colourblind and promptly became an
alcoholic. Her sons, such as they were turned out to be disappointments and ass
holes, in equal measure. Her daughter made choices that were far from a
conservative families dream. Her nervous breakdowns, schizophrenic episodes
were dismissed or explained away. Her husband didn’t beat her, not to my
knowledge anyway, but it seems to be a marriage with a monotonous wretchedness
as its undercurrent rather like a job you’re in just for the money. It was
sometime after his death that she found something of herself. It didn’t turn
out to be all that much of a self, not a Kalpanadutttype identity, but more
than a lot of women with her background can find. The bosom of the Government
of India opened up, and she was (and still is) entitled to a reasonable
pension. They also gave her a flat. A fourth floor two bedroom in West Delhi,
which was even further back of beyond then. Her children, apart from the Junkie
were out of the house for the most part.
The auto cant go any further. The
road has just ends and all she can see are sprawling lanes. Babu mama is
sweating and shaking. The dealer is surprisingly unshady, skinny as hell but
dressed in a button down shirt and pants. Dida, still slim and only with the
faintest hint of gray in her hair, scores some heroin for her puking
incontinent youngest son.
Monday, June 9, 2014
Untitled Little Moan
What if I left, just
walked away? Its been ages since I
cared about a weekday. I am terrible at my
work, which as often as not I shirk. I have some friends
in this place. They are all quitting, for a better state.
Of mind and body.
I have nothing in
hand, I have no plans. If I stay home, I am
afraid. Afraid that I will watch tv shows, and eat cheese and excavate
affection from an old dog who would rather sleep.
I no longer
understand my city or my country. They all know more than me. Prophecy
is easy for them, and television is smarter than a book or a newspaper. I barely
read either anymore.
How long
could I lie? Get up in
the morning and put on a (metaphorical) tie. Go to a
coffee place and have chai after chai after chai. In the evening get
drunk. Come back
home in a funk. I could do it for a while, then someone would tell. I'd be
out of money. And my bastard friends would bitch, about this little
hitch.
I'd give
their little minds, a little bit of fun. A chance
to feel superior, while they drink Sangria's like men drink rum. Each
wanting to intellectualise, a partial friend's demise.
Is that
why I stay? No I lie, I do that by the way. I like the money, I really do. I
just wish something interesting would give me some too.
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Narritivum
Since killing the idea of India wasn't bad enough, the PM-select has taken away my favourite thing. It is an element inferred, like dark matter. As the not-so-subtle teleological principle that permeates the chronicles from Discworld, it let me know that things work out, though not always as we foresee. The only thing us mere mortals need to know about narritivum is that it makes the million to one chance come through.
Yesterday's government has been accused of many things and it appears not even a million to one chance can save it. But its greatest fault, the one most germane to its impending loss, is the failure to recognise the power of a story well told. That is the essence of propaganda. And unlike its country cousin libel, truth is no defence against it.
Dear leader's manifest destiny has come to fruition. The money, hate, cadre, advertisements and salivating NRI techies are each a condition of possibility for the coming Utopia. None however, are a Necessary Condition. Mr. Modi recognises the importance of a story, and how beginnings determine ends. Terryda told me that narrative force is far more powerful than logic. It is here that the Man of Steel covered all his bases. He is both the return to a glorious past as well as the one to take us marching to modernity. He is the authoritarian centre as well as the federalist. He is the vegetarian butcher, the abstinent symbol of virility. In a million to one chance, he is both the million and the one.
Till recently, I thought Narritivum would save us. That when push comes to cliff we are not a people who had decency and open-ness foisted on us by the euro-centric generation of leaders responsible for the constitution. That in some deep part of us we are a decent society. And it is likely that we are.
That is why Mr Modi scares so many of us (most of 'us' are not muslims or christians). Not for what he will do as the head of government, but what he brings out in the people who elected him. Mr. Modi's Idea of India is not new. It is part of the earliest debates about who we are as a people. It is the worst of us - selfish, conservative, materialist and so so many things. An open society is a fragile thing and Mr. Modi's story has shattered it. Like the bile of a boozer long suppressed, the worst of it is on its way.
I hope I am wrong. That enough people still know what this country is and protect it. Or failing that, the next five years are the expectorant our diseased collective consciousness needs.
Yesterday's government has been accused of many things and it appears not even a million to one chance can save it. But its greatest fault, the one most germane to its impending loss, is the failure to recognise the power of a story well told. That is the essence of propaganda. And unlike its country cousin libel, truth is no defence against it.
Dear leader's manifest destiny has come to fruition. The money, hate, cadre, advertisements and salivating NRI techies are each a condition of possibility for the coming Utopia. None however, are a Necessary Condition. Mr. Modi recognises the importance of a story, and how beginnings determine ends. Terryda told me that narrative force is far more powerful than logic. It is here that the Man of Steel covered all his bases. He is both the return to a glorious past as well as the one to take us marching to modernity. He is the authoritarian centre as well as the federalist. He is the vegetarian butcher, the abstinent symbol of virility. In a million to one chance, he is both the million and the one.
Till recently, I thought Narritivum would save us. That when push comes to cliff we are not a people who had decency and open-ness foisted on us by the euro-centric generation of leaders responsible for the constitution. That in some deep part of us we are a decent society. And it is likely that we are.
That is why Mr Modi scares so many of us (most of 'us' are not muslims or christians). Not for what he will do as the head of government, but what he brings out in the people who elected him. Mr. Modi's Idea of India is not new. It is part of the earliest debates about who we are as a people. It is the worst of us - selfish, conservative, materialist and so so many things. An open society is a fragile thing and Mr. Modi's story has shattered it. Like the bile of a boozer long suppressed, the worst of it is on its way.
I hope I am wrong. That enough people still know what this country is and protect it. Or failing that, the next five years are the expectorant our diseased collective consciousness needs.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Boss Chronicle Part -1
The conference room feels like its being roasted in farts. The air conditioners, liberators from the fat heat of the summer, let out fermented air slimy like the inside of a bum rash. The place is packed - chairs and people brought in from various work stations fill every corner. Too many new employees and not enough planning. The COO holds forth, while the rookie of rookies does his best not to pass out.
He catches Shruti's eye, his colleague who has been more than kind and smiles. She had warned him about the interminable boredom of the weekly meeting.
A joke is cracked by the COO - people smile audibly - and one man laughs. Not a laugh of the amused. It is a clear laugh, goes up and down with precision. Its the opposite of when you laugh at a clown.
He looks around, the man with the laugh. Around the room his eyes go, the laugh ebbing away without the company that public obsequiousness requires. He splutters on for far too many seconds, I can't take it anymore. I meet his gaze and smile audibly.
It is not taken as a mark of solidarity, but rather seen through for what it is. A condescending gesture, half sucking up half charity.
As his gaze passes over mine it is obvious that he realises, with uncharacteristic intelligence the arrogance of my acknowledgement. He has been used to being a sad little man for a long time now. He stumbled into this job. He is agreeable and personable, and over five years rose to a position of relative importance in a small organisation by the sheer inertia of bureaucratic promotions and raises.
It is hard to say whether he realises the picture he paints. A chubby little man, out of his depth. Asking questions to appear intelligent and failing miserably. Surrounded by young women, clad in the latest NGO chic with twangs in their accents - some american and a few english. They are below him in the hierarchy, but listened to more.
He does not acknowledge this to himself often. He knows that greater renumeration for what he does will be hard. In your fifties, trying to keep up with grating little words like ideate isn't going to be easy. Difficult enough to be not worth a try.
His department has trudged along quite well the last few years. But the whole place is expanding. Offices have multiplied and so have the people. It was only a matter of time before he got an idiot, over eager and over smart. The way the 'sir' and 'ji' roll of my tongue is far too deliberate. To him, I know I am better and calling the boss by his first name like everyone else make it far too obvious.
The boss feels a pain in his knee and his stomach and his back. It all emanates from the mildest of paunches. He thinks of ways to reign the new boy in.
He does not acknowledge this to himself often. He knows that greater renumeration for what he does will be hard. In your fifties, trying to keep up with grating little words like ideate isn't going to be easy. Difficult enough to be not worth a try.
His department has trudged along quite well the last few years. But the whole place is expanding. Offices have multiplied and so have the people. It was only a matter of time before he got an idiot, over eager and over smart. The way the 'sir' and 'ji' roll of my tongue is far too deliberate. To him, I know I am better and calling the boss by his first name like everyone else make it far too obvious.
The boss feels a pain in his knee and his stomach and his back. It all emanates from the mildest of paunches. He thinks of ways to reign the new boy in.
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