Two on Trail

Our Journey

My Mother

Photo Credits: Aniruddha Saha, January 2019.

My mother, like most mothers of people my age, is a woman in her mid fifties. Like most Indian mothers, she has always been very protective of me. Often in my mid teens, I mistook her acute level of protectiveness for a strong feeling of possessiveness and extra control on my life. Initially, I revolted, trying to break free. Then I realized, it only made her sad and consequently a little headstrong. Then I eventually gave up the fight. I started taking it as it was. And then I got smart and learnt to outdo her in certain ways.

I understood very early on in my life as a teenager that my mother could accept anything if one could convince her that it would help my career. I had realized, that even though she was a working mother, her daily hobby was to be involved in whatever I was doing. I remember, when I was in the tenth standard, my mother would build schedules for me with time slots assigned to all the disciplines that we would study at school. Not only that, she would strictly see to it that I followed all of that was listed in my schedule. She would come back from her school and ask me about every job assigned. In my eleventh and twelfth standards, she kept doing the same and additionally accommodating all the tuition classes I would take. She would sit with me in the study room and stay with me as long as I would be awake grading students’ notebooks from school. She would never leave me alone. She was always tired with the amount of work she did at school, home and then staying awake with me. So, sometimes when I would have to study deep into the night, she would lie down on the same bed I would study on, with a large Chemistry book under her head as a support. There were days when I felt bad for her, imagining the amount of work she was putting in and given the uncertainty that I would do anything good with my life. And then there were the more frequent days when I was angry with her for not letting me be, for not letting me breathe a little.

After school, I decided to leave for a different city for my college. The decision was taken keeping multiple aspects in mind. One of those aspects was to be away from my family and grow up independently. I needed that and I absolutely desired that. My being away never made my mother sad. She was so strong in her heart; someone (I still do not know who) or something (I still do not know what) managed to convince her that this was good for my career. But she would miss being around me and trying to tell me what to do every time something went wrong. So she would write letters to me and wrap it around the monthly medicine stocks that she would parcel to me to Delhi. In the letters she would sometimes send me a time table, much like before, where she would accommodate Organic and Inorganic and Physical Chemistry slots so that I would give equal attention to all of them. I would sometimes look at them and laugh. Sometimes I would get angry and shove them under the mattress somewhere. But I never understood where she got this immense urge to be there with me no matter what. I still never do.

There was this one thing that deeply hurt me often. Every time I would make plans to visit home, my mother would always be paranoid about the classes I would miss, the amount of work I would not get done when I am on vacation or how much I would offend my “boss” if I ask for break. It would always seem, as if she did not want me to come, which after a lot of contemplation I would understand is not true. She simply did not want me to face problems later on when I went back to work, she did not want me to fall out of my work routine. She is one of those teachers in her school that as a student I absolutely did not like, because they would never take a day off! I think in her 10 years of being a teacher in the same school, my mother has not taken more than 10 days of extra leave, other than what the school already provides. It becomes exceedingly difficult to make a person of the above mindset understand that while doing a PhD, if you do not take breaks, you do not survive! Anyway, I have realized, my mother loves her job. I am sure, 70% of the love for her job is for the work as a teacher that she quite nobly does. But 30% of the reason why she desperately loves her job is because, it keeps her occupied. I think it keeps her mind off of things she misses to think about, a large part of which was me, for a very long time.

My mother was born and grew up for most of her life in the city of Durgapur, in the state of West Bengal in India. Born as an elder sister in a not-so-well-to-do family of four siblings, two brothers and a sister other than her, and parents, with a sickly mother, she grew up to be the next mother of the family. For the most part of her life she was so busy taking care of others, first her siblings, then the husband and his family, and then me, that she never grew a passion of her own that she absolutely loved to do. When asked what is she passionate about, she ends up saying, “I love my job. I do not know what I would do if I didn’t have that”. When asked, what about the time before she had the job? She would say, “I would take care of you and the family”.

I was intrigued to write this piece today, when I observed something very strikingly different with my mother lately, and specifically after the hour long phone call that I have with her every Sunday. She has been very excited about a reunion that the girls from her batch in primary school have organized. The reunion took place this Saturday, 7th of December 2019. It was the first of its kind and my mother played a crucial role in bringing the girls together on Whatsapp and hosting them at our house on the eve of the reunion. She even took a day off from school, she said. This is the first time, perhaps since eternity, that my mother took a day off of her work, for herself and I could feel the excitement in her. She could not stop talking about the whole event this morning. She explained to me how two of the girls could not stop admiring how good my father has been to all of them and ended up clicking a picture with him in the middle with two of them on either side of him! I could not help feeling a little jealous myself after this! I do not really like unknown women tampering with my father! I wonder how my mother did not! She went on about how she told them about me and explained to me how everybody else’s sons and daughters have also left them to go abroad for work. How she anchored the reunion event of the night in their school auditorium. How women of her age managed to dance to songs with full costumes on. She could not stop.

Durgapur Akbar Road School girls in full retro! At 15 years of age the level of perfection in draping sarees of these girls is not to be compared with what girls of 25 manage these days. My mother: Second from Right.
Durgapur Akbar Road School girls at the 2019 Reunion. My mother: Third from Right.

It was nice to see her caring less about her work and me, even though for a day. I wonder, how much women of her generation got to think about what they wanted to do for themselves in life! I wonder, if anybody ever asked them! Maybe the answers would be astonishing and indeed, beautiful to know! If not this life, what would they have liked to do? I am interested. Aren’t you?

Engagement

Since I have moved to the US and gradually matured, the conversations between me and my parents have evolved in their own way. Often times, my mother would ask me, “When are you finishing up and coming back home?” I would never have an answer to please her. And when I would ask her “Why don’t you come and stay here for a while?”. Her usual response would be, “What will we do there alone at home all day? We don’t have any engagement.”

A few days ago I rode with a jolly old man who welcomed me into his car. The app on his phone displayed Chinese characters and the navigation lady was fluently speaking – possibly in Mandarin. I started talking to him and he struggled to comprehend and respond in English. It was clear that he’s not fluent in English. But I persisted and listened to him intently. Having emigrated from China 4 years ago, he said he has been driving around people in his cab for 1 year now. “Do you work at Google?” he asked me. I was confused. Then he proceeded to show me that my destination was close to the Google campus in Mountain View. I replied that I don’t.

On asking, he told me that he’s from a place close to Beijing in China and he moved here to San Jose with his wife close to his daughter. It was quite intriguing to see such an elderly immigrant, having stayed in this country for such a short period of time, making his own living driving around people in a new country.

He would have guessed by now that I hail from India and when I told him that he remarked with glowing eyes, “I love Indian music and movies.”. Shortly after, we reached our destination and I got off. I was left thinking – this person has found his own engagement in a new place among new people. What do you think your engagement is? Your work? It’s very likely that you’ll end up working somewhere else in a few years doing something different – something which your employer asks you to. That’s quite difficult to own up as one’s engagement. Your vacations? How soon after you get back from a vacation that you feel like going away on another? Is there something you gravitate towards when you wake up late on a Sunday and have the whole day to yourself? Something that engages your mind so much that hours feel like minutes and you end up feeling fulfilled at the end of the day?

Something which you plan to do when you are alone at home all day?

The Midnight Cab

I stepped out of his cab in front of the house Aniruddha used to live in then, shut the door, bent down to look at his face across the window and specifically remember to have said, “Take care”. I genuinely meant that when I said that, I recollect. After a while we came in and we lay on the ground staring at the ceiling and I asked Aniruddha, “Why do you think he shared so much with us?”

The story I am going to share with you tonight, was perhaps the first inspiration for this series. It was hard to come up with the right way to write about it and is probably the reason why it is the third article in the series.

It was the 13th of November, 2017. Aniruddha’s friend Raka had been experiencing blinding abdominal and back pains for over a month and had finally decided to consult a doctor at the hospital. Her boyfriend came down from Amherst. Her roommates and Aniruddha were quite concerned. They wanted to be with her when she was at the hospital. I was visiting Aniruddha from Texas for a week and quite inevitably I became a part of the process. One of her roommates drove us to the St. Agnes Hospital, Baltimore at around 9.30 in the evening. We went, waited and at about 11.30 in the night, Raka came out and let us know that she had been asked to take some tests and would have to stay back. Her boyfriend and the roommates wanted to stay back with her. Aniruddha and I somehow planned to get back home because we had some early morning plans the next day.

It was 11.50 PM when we booked our cab home. The driver’s name was Deependra, a familiar Indian name, about mid-aged. We hopped into the car. I took the front seat beside the driver and Aniruddha took the back one. Now that I think about it, I generally don’t do that. I always prefer the back seat to the front. That day was an exception, I guess.

He started with asking the reason for our visit to the hospital, paused for a moment and said, “Aniruddha… That seems like an Indian name. Which part of India are you from?” “West Bengal”, Aniruddha said. Almost in a reflex I asked, “And you?” “What do you think?”, he asked. “Ummm… West Bengal? Your name is a familiar Bengali name”, I said. “Well, Nepal. I am from Nepal”, he mentioned.

We were about seven minutes away from home. I could see the face of this man only partially. It was dark and the only light entering the car was from the streets. His face had some acne marks and he had a big flat nose. I could see the apple in his neck and could figure out he wanted to talk. One thing I had learnt from the warm people of Texas was how to strike up a conversation. Asking about the weather, or the time they started driving that day, or whether they are from the city can be easy starters for a casual conversation. I somehow chose a different question this time, “So, how long have you been here?” “I have been here for about 10 years now”, he said and took a pause. “Wow! That’s a long time. Do you have family here?”, I said. And I did not need to say anything more. He took a short glimpse at me and said, “I do”. His answer sounded quite terminating. At first I thought maybe I had gone way too off board with my questions. But then after a while, I realized maybe it was actually a small push that he needed.

” Well, I do and I dont”, he went on. I could sense a sting of pain in his voice. “What do you mean?” I said.

“My brother stays here”, he said. “And his wife.”

I could sense the situation from the way he punctuated his sentence with the pause. “So, do you stay with them?”, I asked.

“I used to stay with my brother till last year. And then, my brother got married to the girl he wanted. You know when you are in love, you don’t really see things through. She doesn’t want me to stay with them anymore. We did not see this coming, my brother and I. He got married and after a few weeks I found out that probably she would become the reason for the crack in the relationship between me and my brother. I know my brother still wants to keep contact, but you know things are different after you get married”, he just blurted out. I was at a loss of words. I did not know what to say or how to react to all of this. Our ride was nearing its end as he took the last turn. Here was a man who had just shared with me a story of perhaps his deepest of pains, the bruise of which was clearly very fresh in his heart and I had to get down just because my ride with him had ended. I felt helpless.

His cab stopped at our destination. I had not spoken a word until then. I gathered my thoughts together, looked him in the eye and said, “I am glad you could share this with me. I do not know what to say. I do not know if it is true if I say that I think I can understand you, but in a situation as this, probably being able to share your pain with someone is a big achievement in itself.” To this he replied,”I apologize if I made you uncomfortable with all of my story. But sometimes it just comes out, what you feel inside, you know”, he rubbed his chest as he said this. I looked him in the eye and said, “People change. Even the closest ones, who you thought would never leave your side no matter what, change. One has to adapt and recover. I guess you’ll have to do the same.” He nodded his head as he looked down acknowledging, looked up and said, “I am sorry.” “Don’t be. I am glad you shared,” and smiled at him. Aniruddha and I unlocked the car door almost in unison after that.

I stepped out of his cab, bent down to look at his face across the window and specifically remember to have said, “Take care”. I genuinely meant the words when I said that, I recollect. After a while we came in and we lay on the ground staring at the ceiling and I asked Aniruddha, “Why do you think he shared so much with us? He does not even know us.” He had been quiet the whole time.

“I think he shared his story with us BECAUSE he doesn’t know us. His secret is safe.”, Aniruddha said. I have always marvelled at how he is capable of saying so much with so less.

All About Food

We haven’t said much about our cab rides in a while. Well, as I said in my previous post, getting into a meaningful conversation needs that spark, that openness from both ends and sometimes everything doesn’t come into place together.

Guess what! After quite some time searching for that spark, today I found it. We were beginning to wonder whether we will have any more stories to share with you. But no, life always presents opportunities if you keep your eyes open.

I had a mid-term examination today and I was running late. Expecting a short and uneventful ride I requested an Uber. I think for the first time ever in the US, the driver cancelled my ride and Uber asked me to request again. My next request was assigned to Forest – like in Forest Whitaker, not Forrest Gump! Oh how much I would have liked to say “Drive! Forrest. Drive!”.

Forest came in a beautiful light blue sedan and as I was walking to the car from my doorstep, I saw him moving around the car and opening all the exits one after the other. As I moved closer, I could see him – a man in his seventies, white hair and moustache with a pair of glasses on. He immediately greeted me and I could feel the positive energy, enthusiasm and goodwill in him – just from that short exchange. He said he had a tall passenger for his previous ride and so he had to re-adjust all his seats.

As he reversed the car to start the trip, we had a short exchange about the correct way to pronounce my name. He asked me at least a few times and was very eager to get it right. I liked how effortless and soothing his words were and I could already sense something interesting coming up in the next few minutes.

He asked me about my academics and how things are going. He correctly guessed my major which I think is not too difficult to predict considering the current demographic of the United States. He went on to talk about his son-in-law who graduated from Johns Hopkins with a masters degree in computer systems and now has a satisfying job at NASA. He was curious to know about my plans after graduating – whether I would want to return to my country or stay here.

One other thing that happened in the meanwhile was that he also guessed that I’m from India. Forest then asked me “Which part of India?”. I replied “East. From Bengal”.

He said “I love Indian culture and Indian food. I would like to visit India someday. I haven’t met a single American who doesn’t like Indian food.” All this while, I was thinking about our dinner at Chutney (http://chutneymd.com/) last weekend. I remember Oindrila remarking about the presence of people from different countries of origin at all the tables. We were possibly the only Indians there. And if you haven’t yet tried Chutney out, please do. Being an Indian myself, some of my friends ask me about the authenticity of Indian food in US restaurants and I would say I highly recommend Chutney if you want authentic Indian.

What Forest said next has kept me thinking since morning and was the single most important push for writing something after a long time. He said “I think that is why the Anglo-Saxons colonized your country. They fell in love with your food.” We shared a round of laughter. My trip ended soon after and we parted ways after a warm and firm handshake.

I wondered how true his statement might be and I did some digging myself. It seems that “Britain did indeed get the hots for Indian curry”.

The first British cookery book containing an Indian recipe was ‘The Art of Cookery Made Plain & Easy’ by Hannah Glasse. The first edition, published in 1747, had three recipes of Indian pilau. Later editions included recipes for fowl or rabbit curry and Indian pickle.

The lucrative spice trade prompted various European powers to establish their presence in India, either through trading companies or colonisation.
A 19th Century account records the British in India eating curry for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Curry became so popular, an 1852 cookbook stated “few dinners are thought complete unless one is on the table”.

However, the bloody revolt of 1857 changed the British attitude towards India. Englishmen were banned from wearing Indian clothes; recently educated public officials disparaged old company men who had gone native. Curry too ‘lost caste’ and became less popular in fashionable tables but was still served in army mess halls, clubs and in the homes of common civilians, mainly during lunch. “At the beginning of the 20th Century, curry was not very popular,” says Dr Lizzie Collingham, author of Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors. “It was not well-to-do to have a house that smells of curry.” Instead, the British diet was dominated by red meat, accompanied by home-grown vegetables such as cabbage and potatoes.

After 1971, there was an influx of Bangladeshis following the war in their homeland, particularly to London’s rundown East End. Many entered the catering trade, and today they dominate the curry industry.

The UK now celebrates National Curry Week every October. Although curry is an Indian dish modified for British tastes, it’s so popular that it contributes more than £5bn to the British economy. Hence it was hardly surprising when in 2001, Britain’s foreign secretary Robin Cook referred to Chicken Tikka Masala as a “true British national dish”.

Today there are more Indian restaurants in Greater London than in Delhi and Mumbai combined (Fact check required).

Though I have chosen to leave my country to get a good education, I still see how my culture fills gaps in the lives of people all around the world and it makes me answer with ever more fervour the next time someone asks me “Are you from India?”.


      Sources

Something Good

The new year eve of 2007. It was the age when we did not have a computer at home and my father, ever excited to watch and make me watch the well known classics of his time, used to get a DVD player from a store that rented out DVD players and DVDs. I loved every film that he ever suggested and this time it was the 1965 American musical drama The Sound of Music. I was in the seventh standard when I watched it and I was absolutely mesmerized.

I kept suggesting more of the same movie to all of my friends in the following years and even made them watch it with me. I believe I made five of my friends watch it; which means I re-watched the film five times after the one first time. I had a stupid notion that I was destined to watch the film five times so that I could appreciate it five times over, much as a justification to the five Academy Awards that it had won. I managed to break that stupid belief when I made Aniruddha watch it in a small hotel room in Patna on the laptop.

I do not know whether the film impacted my friends or even Aniruddha as much as it did to me at that age. Later in 2009, I confessed to my father that I actually fantasize that I am in the green meadows amidst the Alps with Maria (the protagonist of the movie played by Julie Andrews), playing and singing around with her. I imagined I was one of the Von Trapp family kids. I believe the impact of the watch was so strong, that I used to play the tape that my father had mixed, of all the songs of the musical, about once everyday until I knew all the songs by heart. However, after the confession, I was not encouraged to play the mix tape at home anymore. I believe I was building a parallel universe in my head and that was not allowing me to focus on my current surroundings. I recovered from the fantasizing syndrome soon enough and in 2010, after I cleared my ICSE Board exams, my father gifted me the DVD of the film. I remember, I actually smuggled that same DVD in my bag later in 2016 when I wanted to screen the film for Aniruddha when he came to visit me in Patna for five days after four months of staying away.

Yes! Life was hard with all the travelling that we had to do back then just to be with each other for a couple of days. The distance relationship brought installments of love and surprise to our lives for about six years, until 2017. Things changed in 2018, a year after we moved in US. 2018 was the year when we got to be in one city and one school. 2018 was the year I realized the purity of this song, ‘Something Good’ from my most loved musical drama.

I attach the lyrics of the song below:

Maria:
Perhaps I had a wicked childhood
Perhaps I had a miserable youth
But somewhere in my wicked, miserable past
There must have been a moment of truth

For here you are, standing there, loving me
Whether or not you should
So somewhere in my youth or childhood
I must have done something good

Nothing comes from nothing
Nothing ever could
So somewhere in my youth or childhood
I must have done something good

Captain:
For here you are, standing there, loving me
Whether or not you should

Maria:
So somewhere in my youth or childhood
I must have done something good

Maria and the Captain:
Nothing comes from nothing
Nothing ever could

Maria:
So somewhere in my youth
Captain:
Or childhood
Maria:
I must have done something . . .
Maria and the Captain:
Something good

The World’s Best Lasagna

This post essentially marks the end of my first semester at UMBC.

H-u-r-r-a-y!! This, in itself calls for all the celebrations irrespective of all the festivities of this wintry season! The end of my first semester at UMBC has officially marked the end of a dreary six months. This year has not been easy with all the transfer of school and people around me. I have failed terribly to adjust to some situations while managed to live through few tougher ones!

At this point I am quite confused with my tenure as a graduate student. I often feel I am still in my first year, while the truth is that I am already half way through my second year. I guess, the major reason of this confusion roots back to my transfer of school from Texas A&M to UMBC this Fall. It often gets tricky to keep track of the amount of time spent at each school. So, if you see, I spent two semesters at Texas A&M and one at UMBC, which translates to the fact that I am just 6 months old to this school and this city. Having said that, I think this is also one of the reasons I still feel so fresh in this city, as if I just started.  However, this freshness is hard to feel when one is drowned in the web of assignments and mid-term examinations and troubles of life. But now that the semester is over, I feel great!

Throughout the last few weeks, which were presumably the toughest and busiest few days of this semester, we at our abode had given up cooking altogether. I was tired of the taste of food made by me and Aniruddha was busy with his submission deadlines. His deadlines ended and mine dropped in and this resulted in a pile of doordash and Papa-Johns pizza delivery bills stacked in the recycle bin. The sad and ludicrous characteristic of developing the habit of ordering food from restaurants and surviving on frozen meals is that eventually it turns you lazy. You tend to give up cooking as a choice rather than having to give up forcefully. However, Aniruddha insisted me on starting to cook again. And so we decided.

The best lasagna in the world. The recipe was looked up online at Allrecipes.com. They called it “World’s Best Lasagna”. The recipe looked a little ingredient heavy, but I bet you, it was all worth it. The day before the cooking is always the more important and tiring day, because that is when you hunt down the ingredients at a grocery store that has sausages on the east end and lasagna sheets on the west end. However, we did a good homework to jot down the list.

The night of 22nd, my dining table was overflowing with all the ingredients for the lasagna. That brings me to the enumeration of the ingredients which included:

  • 1lb sweet Italian sausage,
  • 0.75lb ground beef,
  • One large white onion (We used the whole onion minced even though it was mentioned in the recipe that we need only half a cup),
  • 3 garlic cloves (crushed even though the recipe mentioned 2 cloves needed)
  • 1 (6 ounce) cans of tomato paste
  • 2 (6.5 ounce) cans of tomato sauce.
  • White sugar and salt (It is always hard for me to give the exact amount of salt and sugar added, because I believe it is always up to you and the people you feed how salty-sugary you want the sauce to be. So, I would say add salt and sugar according to your taste preferences.)
  • 1 table spoon chopped basil leaves (In the recipe they mentioned 1.5 teaspoons of dried basil leaves. I however used fresh basil leaves to enhance the fresh taste)
  • 4 tablespoons of freshly chopped parsley
  • Total seasoning for cooking and grilling (I use the Lawry’s Casero Total Seasoning because it is a wholesome one including salt, onion, garlic, parsley, oregano and cilantro. I used this instead of the Italian seasoning mentioned in the recipe. It is also hard to mention the exact amount added. I added it according to my taste and would recommend you to do the same).
  • Chilli powder (This is my improvisation to the recipe. The chilli powder used here is available in any Asian store. I got it from the Catonsville branch of Lotte Plaza Market. The recipe uses ground black pepper. But I personally cannot take the spiciness of black pepper; hurts my throat. I used about 2 teaspoons of chilli powder because I like it spicy. You can use less than that if you prefer it less spicy)
  • 12 lasagna sheets
  • 16-ounce jar of ricotta cheese
  • 1 egg
  • 0.75 lb of sliced mozzarella cheese
  • 0.75 cups of grated parmesan cheese

I skipped the 28 ounces of crushed tomatoes. I felt we had enough tomato sauce and tomato paste to make up the meat sauce already. I also skipped adding fennel seeds because I am not a big fan of using it in my cooking unless the dish specifically requires the essence of them. I believe fennel seeds have a very characteristic smell and that should not be wasted in a hub of other contradicting stronger essences.

23rd morning at around 11am, Aniruddha was struggling to open the cans of the tomato paste and the tomato sauce and helped me mince the onion. This was the first time we were using the white onion, we are more used to the red ones. While he was at it, I defrosted the ground beef and the sausages. I would not say I was highly successful in cleanly peeling off the outer covering of the sausage, but I did alright in dismantling them.

The sausages, ground beef, minced onion and garlic cloves were cooked in a large pan over the stove on mild heat until the meat turned red to brown in color. The tomato paste and tomato sauce were stirred in with the seasonings of chopped basil and parsley, chilli powder, salt, sugar and total seasoning. A small amount of water was added to help the cooking, lest the spices stick to the pan and burn. The ingredients were left to get cooked with the lid placed over the pan. I kept checking the status of the sauce every 2 mins, sprinkling some water and stirring it well to prevent any sticking. After about cooking the ingredients for about 15 minutes, with the lid covered, it was cooked for about another 7-10 minutes with the lid open to let the water evaporate a little letting the sauce thicken in consistency.

Generally at this point I am interested in knowing if I am going in the right direction. It is almost like a puzzle. If you know that at least you are thinking straight, or seeing things through you will solve it. So, I summoned Aniruddha to the mission and accomplished the test results. He approached with the tasting spoon and took a sip of the meat sauce. I seemingly had passed the test of the right amounts of salt and sugar and seasonings without a doubt. Everything was in proportion, he said.

In the meantime, Aniruddha prepared the cheese dressing. The ricotta cheese, added to my famous yellow soup bowl was combined with the one egg and seasoned with a half teaspoon of salt and the remaining part of the chopped parsley. The yellow soup bowl is one which was bought with the motive of drinking soup from. However, the bowl turned out to be too shallow for the purpose. In spite of the failed motive of the bowl, I have managed to accomplish almost every task starting from whipping in a cake mix to drinking soup from, in it.

A separate large pot of lightly salted water was brought to boil. The lasagna sheets were cooked in this for 8-10 minutes. The water was then drained and the noodles rinsed in cold water to avoid sticking to each other. The lasagna was then assembled in a 9X13 inch baking tray with the first bottom layer of a 1.5 cups of meat sauce, followed by 6 overlapping lasagna sheets spread lengthwise. This was followed by a layer of the ricotta cheese dressing with a layer of sliced mozzarella cheese on top. The mozzarella cheese slices were then topped with 1.5 cups of meat sauce, the lasagna sheets, the cheese dressing and another layer of mozzarella one after the other just like before. Lastly, another 1.5 cups of the meat sauce was spread on top and the Parmesan cheese was sprinkled over it evenly. The baking tray was then covered with an aluminum foil sprayed with some cooking spray to prevent sticking of the cheese to the foil and transferred to a pre-heated oven at 350 degrees Fahrenheit. It was baked for 25 minutes with the foil on, and 15 minutes with the foil taken off.

When Aniruddha took out the fully baked lasagna from the oven, it was smoky hot. Fortunately, the file alarm was still tolerant towards us.

After about 15 minutes, I cut out two slabs of the world’s best lasagna on two plates. We sat on the couch. Our matinee for the afternoon was Leon, The Professional. Aniruddha took a bite of the lasagna, looked at me and said, “It is hard to say that it is home-cooked.”

It was indeed the World’s Best Lasagna.

Create

Dreams and desires – aren’t they fascinating beings? Don’t they form the grand scheme of things in our survival? What are our lives if not just a search for the direction to guide us towards them? 

Someone once told me, “Original ideas are pretty hard to come by.”

Well, there are times when I ponder and daydream about ideas.

I see people, people whom I care about, toiling hard every day on their own paths – some grand, some modest – but driven by dreams nonetheless.

I have always thought about the reasons why a person beginsto admire somebody else. When does he start feeling an attachment to another human being? My guess – it all starts with a conversation. Speak to someone for hours and it leaves you feeling enervated but then you meet a stranger for a few minutes and it feels like you just can’t stop talking.

We all have the opportunities to meet strangers like these -some pass on the chance and some take the leap of faith. Every once in a while,we take cab rides which take us from our source to our destination. On quite a few trips, my mind is preoccupied with a lot of thoughts – thoughts mostly about how I am faring in the grand scheme of things. Occasionally, I look around and see this person entrusted with the responsibility of taking us safely to our destination, the contraption he’s stuck in for hours on end and the way he has made it a way of life. Sometimes they speak first, sometimes youlisten to these stories to say – about their lives, their experiences, theirfailures. They share with you a piece of themselves and often they are so valuable that you keep it forever within you on your journey. This is my way to bring to you some of these stories which we carry with us and to let you know that once in a while it doesn’t hurt to take that leap of faith, to open up and soak in the experience. This is my original idea and I hope I can reach out to you in some way or the other. I hope you carry this with you on your journeys.

We were enjoying ourselves at a friend’s place. It was Thanksgiving and we were part of a wholly satisfying evening. But it had to end at some point.  We had to take leave and embark on our journey back home. And that night, as a lot of other nights, we entrusted the responsibility of driving us safely back home to a cab driver.

It was late in the cold night in Downtown Baltimore and we hurriedly jumped up in the cab. There were three passengers in the car – Oindrila, one of her friends, and me. Theycomforted themselves on the rear seat while I sat in the front. We had a minor hiccup when we realized that one of the doors was not properly shut. The man who was driving seemed to be in his early sixties, an African-American with a wrinkled, unshaven face and with a cap on his head. When the door indicator of this dash alerted him about the mistake, he politely asked us to check which door was open. We found it and once it was closed properly, we took up speed towards our destination.

A few minutes into the ride I started noticing the dash of the car. Right before me, I saw two photographs attached on top of the glovebox. On the left, the photo showed a handsome young man in his twenties dressed in a blue suit and white shirt with a blue cap on. It looked like the attire of one of the wings of defence, but I wasn’t sure which. Right next to it was the picture of an old man who looked like the person driving the car.

I was curious. I asked him about the man in the photo on the left. He seemed excited to tell me “That’s me, back when I was in the AirForce.” I was drawn into his story right away and wanted to know more. Hewas kind enough to continue saying more about him.

He got enrolled in the Air Force right out of college in the 70s and his dream was to fly a jet. But in his long tenure of about 10 years, though he visited places like Germany and Thailand, he never got the opportunity to train for flying one. Sadly, he was a passenger. “I have been a lot of places and what I saw is that there’s love all around”, he remarked.

His tenure at the Air Force ended and all the education he had was in Business Administration. He dreamed of going back to college to pursue studies but he life drew him in a different direction. He pursued photography. I was fascinated because I am an amateur photographer myself. We heard how he spent a lot of years doing fashion and clothing photography. He did not really like the darkroom, he said. He never liked playing with all the chemicals and the whole process of developing a photograph. “It’s mostly digital today”, I told him. He agreed and then we spoke about how some photographers and filmmakers still shoot on film today. I was thinking about all those articles I have read about Christopher Nolan using IMAX cameras and encouraging distribution and screening of movies on film. He said at the end of his professional life, he worked on a project which piqued his interest a lot -restoring old photos digitally.

Photography is such a subjective and nuanced art form. The same scene can be captured by two different people in completely different ways and somehow so often one seems so much more appealing than the other. He told us about the enchanting nature of imagination and creativity – there’s so much new to bring to this world.

We were nearing the end of our trip and I guided him with the directions to our home. He parked the car right in front of our house and I realized that all this while we didn’t know each other’s names. I asked him his name. He said, “Create. Create, like in creating something new.” I thanked him and got off, still intrigued by the name.

This was my humble attempt to share one of those innumerablestories we all keep within us. From today, Oindrila and I are going to share those pieces of other people’s journeys we have within us. I hope you like them and the next time you are looking out of the window sitting on the back seat of a cab maybe, just maybe, these stories motivate you enough to take the leap of faith and start a conversation. 


A Jazz Performance

This article was written on 14th April, 2014 after the mesmerizing SPIC MACAY event hosted at Miranda House, University of Delhi.

The fingers ran, the breath ran out..Lips pressed tight onto the hard metal tube. The hands clutched the sticks hard and struck with a boom on the tight skin of the drum. 

A perfect extravaganza of strength of a man’s muscles, an economic use of the air in the lungs, and the perfect way to touch the tight strings, as if running across the smooth skin of a feminine froth. That was the perfect three combo of musicians.
         The lights shone bright on their faces, sweat on cheeks and forehead sparkled. The odor of the sweat mingled with the arrogance of the stinking brass-the saxophone, the fragrance of the dry wood-the flute, the pungent fuzzy smell of the empty drum and the sultry audience, even on a spring morning. A jazz performance, by Arild Anderson, Tommy Smith and Paolo Vinaccia.


          Now was the time to head for a bash of the drum, the strains on the strings , the blow on the saxophone. The audience waited, few held their breath back, few didn’t care, few fidgety with the ‘Golden Trash Technology’ called ‘Mobile Phones’, and few engrossed in gossiping. And then, awestruck, the hall gave out a werewolf bay- ‘AWWOOOOOOOOO’..’AWWOOOOOOOO’, followed by the perfect succession of the air-pipe, which ushered upon the hall a scene of the forest. Music and picture seemed to blend at a precise junction. And then the strings gave out their buzz and suddenly a hard brush sprang across the plate- a stick struck another and that was from Paolo Vinaccia at the drums- a man, knowledgeable enough how to use the power of muscles on the hard drums that lay before him. They played ‘The Dream Horse’.
The music galloped all through..a wild white horse let free through the woods, showing in every move, the strength, power, the endurance, the virility, and the sexual prowess.
It was a day. It really was a day. Anxiety, put aside, peace entangled all worries.

When Dream Breaks

It has been a week of rain now,

She saw her panes grow hazy.

A hundred new thoughts,

A thousand new words to shed –

Why is it everyone talks of ‘Love’?

She wanted to talk something new.

She came to you to feel anew and all she felt was lazy.

They said, you feel intoxicated,

She thought crazy they are! The lunatic lot!

The jealous crowd, the wrath stricken lot!


She painted her canvas red and blue and yellow and green

She hued her sky with all her colours,

Her city with all her hopes,

And then this rain-It washed away all,

It made her city the same colourless.

Four walls need not be home,

Four walls may not be rest,

Four walls mean an open roof-

It was that sky she saw everyday!

It was the rain of that sky she dreamt!

Yet it drenched her,

Made her wet all over…

She rose from her sleep,

Brought out a new canvas and gave a new streak on it.

The old wet canvas saw her back..

A night of Odissi

To live in the midst of hills and open your eyes in the morning to hills, makes you inexplicably poetic and drives the poet in you to fall for everything you see around you. Here I am, a wretched soul with an explicit excitement bubbling every now and then in me to vent out a little more of the charm I feel all around, to radiate the positive vibe I gather all throughout the day. A day has no better destiny than to end with an art. 7th of August  2015 was such a day.

Dance is an explicit way of expression where, if the language not known, you seem to be a part of an unknown abstract world of fancy moves and grace.

The lights were switched off. There rose in my spine a rigid yet light bubble of excitement, by the sheer touch of skin on my skin. I realized it was my right palm resting upon my left. Such was the silence in the auditorium and the spell of the moment where the consciousness had no control over the actions of my limbs. A huge yellow light lit up the middle of the stage and a raga was played behind. And then she entered with all her grace lighting up the stage even more.

A yellow sari, bordered in red with a red bindi burning in the middle of her forehead. Her hair tied into a bun embroidered with flowers, orange and white. Her feet and palms made even more delicate with the tinge of red alta on the tips. And she flew into the stage with all her charm posing for her composition. And then flew the music, and she with the tune. And then she stopped with her mudra for a while and then with a shy swirl, she flew again. She was an angel dropped from heaven. She was the messenger of God, sent to mesmerize the mortals on the planet with her charm. Life is all we complain about always. But when life gives you all the reasons to appreciate, you suddenly realize how wrong you have been forever. When life makes you fall for the sheer existence of your being, you realize how beautiful and opportune your birth as a mortal was. Chance is all we live for. And here was my chance to live for the night.

She went on to explain the details of the Odissi dance form. How it originates from the state of Orissa and unlike Bharatnatyam, where we see stretches dominating the other moves, this form of dance has more of circular forms of movement. How some compositions are merely abstract and how the rest form a story, or depict another composition. She went further on , reciting and enacting one of Kalidasa’s compositions and another  that spoke of the first meet of Radha and Krishna, where Radha fell in love with him at his first sight. Radha’s sakhi teased Radha for the immense courage to fall in love with even the idea of Krishna.

Her depictions spoke. Her gestures connected every broken string of a lore. Her story telling was nothing but art.

She concluded with the depiction of the war of the inner self with the outer actions of a being. The music around, the call for wilderness, the call of nature inevitably makes you rise, run for braking the shackles. But the inner mind knows. The society , the expectations , the rules, entangle every bit of your being and forces you to stop being who you are. We know our capabilities, our skills. But the extravaganza of the skills remains shackled within us. The world never gets the hint of it. Until one day, when we gather the courage to break those walls and plunge into the ocean of life. And then the world knows who we are, what we hold within, what power we suppress, what energy comprises us.Grace is beauty. But grace without belief can never speak a language. She has built a language of her own, through her skill. She has spoken successfully. She has connected to the masses successfully. Mesmerized by her grace and her beauty and her skill, here runs my lore…


It is not her curves,

It is the smile she wears.

It is not her hip-long hair,

It is the way she combs it.

It is not her breasts,

It is her eyes which welcomes you to her soul

It is the caring she cares to give

The passion that she can roll.

— My tribute to all lovers of art,
                        I pay my gratitude.

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