tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-47444213897047629972024-03-11T15:00:16.455+05:30Karma and someUrmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.comBlogger319125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-45985366465313911592017-03-08T11:37:00.000+05:302017-03-08T11:37:08.287+05:30Shorn<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<i>For a Woman's Day special Open Mic poetry night at the Tuning Fork on 6th March, 2017, I chose to versify this <a href="http://www.bonobology.com/relationships/lgbt/716-what-makes-her-a-woman">article</a> of mine and well, read it.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
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It’s Woman’s Day! It’s Woman’s Day!</div>
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And as a thinking, feeling woman, </div>
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I’m expected to think and feel</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
(And maybe even dance around a little)</div>
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And proclaim my womanhood. </div>
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But today I think I’ll dance a backward dance</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
Hold a top-down stance</div>
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And start at the end of this story</div>
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<br /></div>
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Let me first undress </div>
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Wipe off that lipstick, scrub off that makeup</div>
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Maybe cut off all my hair</div>
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And the seduction tied to it.</div>
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Let me take off my jewellery</div>
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The dangle of earrings, the tinkle of bangles</div>
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And everything that chains me</div>
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To your ideas of beauty. </div>
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Here comes off my saree - pallu, choli and all</div>
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And with it the curves, they so famously adorn</div>
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I unclasp my bra, and throw it on the floor</div>
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And with it these breasts</div>
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That hands of men hunger for</div>
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Now I take off my panties, and with it my vagina</div>
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Shutting shop for all manner</div>
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Of pleasure and pain</div>
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And finally, watch me</div>
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As I rip off that uterus and the expectation</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
That it will one day produce heirs. </div>
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<br /></div>
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Naked and shorn of every notion</div>
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That makes me a woman, </div>
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I am now ready to celebrate</div>
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With just my heart in place. </div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-61619978627375400072017-02-15T11:09:00.000+05:302017-02-15T11:10:31.819+05:30Distances - a poem in two parts <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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{part 1}</div>
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{part 2}</div>
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Distance is a difficult tongue</div>
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hard to learn, like most things after 30</div>
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Despite the mispronounced and misunderstood words</div>
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I find myself persevering</div>
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<br /></div>
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I take careful notes</div>
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of things that convey distance</div>
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of things that may lessen them</div>
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I find myself measuring the spaces</div>
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<br /></div>
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Between the faithful's forehead</div>
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and a prayer mat</div>
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Between a teacher's anxiety</div>
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and a student's success</div>
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Between the change in a schoolboy's pocket</div>
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and the samosawalah outside the gates</div>
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Between one casual insult</div>
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and a well-thought out spite </div>
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Between the mother's breast</div>
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and her wailing infant's mouth</div>
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Between promises made in good faith</div>
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and realities that rendered them false</div>
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<br /></div>
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I learn how to wait</div>
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and find ways to ford the distance</div>
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between the day we decided it wouldn't work</div>
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and today, when we know that nothing else will</div>
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<br /></div>
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<br /></div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-32108630375517858912017-02-03T12:06:00.000+05:302017-02-03T12:13:53.496+05:30Jump<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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Ten floors down is a bed of flowers</div>
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You know they don't seem too far</div>
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I can almost smell them up here on the ledge</div>
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So sweet, they're almost pungent.</div>
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Like love. Everything's like love.</div>
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<br /></div>
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The wind brings crazy things with it</div>
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along with the smell of roses..</div>
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that teen next door's angry music, </div>
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a hawk with a half-eaten rat,</div>
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the noise of neighbours who have loud sex.</div>
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<br /></div>
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Today I'm hoping it'll bring me more</div>
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than just its bag of cheap tricks</div>
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a little quietude? Perhaps some sleep?</div>
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I haven't really slept since you left.</div>
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All I do is dangle my feet in this nothingness</div>
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<br /></div>
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Ten floors down is a bed of flowers</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
I remember you loved looking at them</div>
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And that's all I have left of you - a view of the roses</div>
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That's all I think I'll keep of you</div>
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What's that I hear you say? Jump?</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-55472507779252875542016-12-30T03:50:00.000+05:302016-12-30T10:16:21.898+05:30(Far) across the table<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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Have you ever measured a table in miles?<br />
Or minutes, in uncomfortable silences?<br />
They say a lot of things can happen over coffee<br />
- they don't tell you a lot of things unhappen too.<br />
In the incessant shaking of your leg<br />
Or my excessive attention to the decor<br />
In the checking of our phones<br />
(which had no new notifications)<br />
There was certainly a new story<br />
but this time, of a dismantling<br />
Was it the flavour of love, that was amiss in my cup,<br />
Or did an infusion of blame make your tea bitter?<br />
Were you really critiquing the cafe's bad service,<br />
Or was it a roster of plaints of your heart?<br />
For last evening I saw us measuring<br />
a table in miles<br />
and minutes in uncomfortable silences.</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-20230107505213379122016-07-19T13:52:00.000+05:302016-07-19T13:52:04.206+05:30Sleeping beauty heart<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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Come boy, you need some straddling,</div>
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some kissing, some fondling</div>
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oh, that sleeping beauty of a heart</div>
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come boy, it needs some waking</div>
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<br /></div>
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Allow my words into your arms</div>
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I bring gifts of chains and whips</div>
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If you will let me bind you right</div>
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I promise you phantasmagorical trips</div>
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Come boy, look me in the eye</div>
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you need to be reminded of love</div>
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not the sweet and gentle kind</div>
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but one that is unsparingly rough</div>
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<br /></div>
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For gentleness is your bane, boy</div>
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the opium to your brain, boy</div>
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come, let me remind you</div>
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of the taste of turmoil, boy</div>
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<br /></div>
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Come boy, let me strip you,</div>
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break you, rip you apart </div>
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until all you are left with</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
are dancing shoes and a naked heart</div>
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<br /></div>
</div>
Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-71510740127348147592016-07-01T12:03:00.000+05:302016-07-01T12:03:02.282+05:30Book review: Ramayana - Stolen Hope (Part III) by Shubha Vilas<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
Two things have changed since I read the first two installments of Shubha Vilas' Ramayana series. Firstly, I've realised that the author in question is a man - his name being Shubh(a) and not ShubhA as I'd previously thought; and secondly, my interest in the epic has peaked. The Ramayana has, for some reason, assumed an important place in my life and therefore, the author's request for a review was more than welcome. However, because my <a href="http://karma-and-some.blogspot.in/2015/02/book-review-ramayana-game-of-life-part.html">last review</a> wasn't exactly kind, I was surprised when the author asked me for a second. As an author-in-the-making, one understands that it cannot be an easy task to place one's hard work at the altar of someone's opinion. But it is rather flattering as a critic because you know that your words are being taken seriously and objectively. </div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
That said, my opinions haven't much changed since the last time. While I still admire the author's crisp manner of writing, I also still find his 'moral footnotes' unnecessary, and sometimes even mildly hilarious. I mean, how does one react to a line like this?</div>
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"<i>Instead of tea, if one drinks a cup of responsibili-tea, the struggle to remain awake would be a happy one."</i></div>
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<i><br /></i></div>
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With an #smh, right? A little condescending laughter, maybe? Or just plain wonder at how Jaico's editors let these things pass? </div>
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<br /></div>
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But then that's the author's USP. Perhaps there will be some readers who will appreciate this 'humour' (if that's what it is supposed to be), and his tendency to preach. Sometimes, there are pages where he explains the significance of certain actions of certain characters. Some of the reasons cited seem plausible; while some others seem quite preposterous. Then again, there's no contesting interpretations in mythology/religion and it is best left to the discretion of his readers. </div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
I, for one, ignore these explanatory sections and footnotes and read the book as one would a simple rendition of the Ramayana in prose. For those who are familiar with the epic, it helps jog one's memory pertaining to its various myths and sub-plots; and for those who are reading the Ramayana for the first time, it is a great 'starter pack'. It is a true version of the epic with no fictionalisation, as many current authors are wont to do. Don't let that strange cover illustration of what looks like Rama attacking for Jatayu mislead you.</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-39560916634686468082016-06-19T06:22:00.000+05:302016-06-20T10:45:57.798+05:30Book Review: Being Hindu<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<span style="color: blue;">Title: Being Hindu: Old Faith, New World and You</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Author: Hindol Sengupta</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Publisher: Penguin India</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Genre: Non fiction/ Religion</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">ISBN: 978-0-143-42532-8</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Pages: 192</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Date of release: December, 2015</span><br />
<span style="color: blue;">Binding: Paperback</span><br />
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
Let me be honest. I started this book a little warily. In the perilous ride that is religion in India right now, I prefer to sit at the centre, leaning a little towards the Left. I watch with trepidation the loud voices coming from the Right side of things and fear that 'Hinduism' is turning into a dirty word. Therefore, I approach anything with 'Hindu' written on it with suspicion. In the strictly academic pursuit of subjects like ancient Indian History, Culture, Mythology and Mysticism, my skepticism is only heightened.</div>
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<br /></div>
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Yet like many of my generation, I'm drawn like moth to flame to anything with 'Hindu' written on it – even titles that sound like fashion labels of unscrupulous film stars. It comes from a deep, even perverted need to understand; to understand my roots, my place in the ever-changing world, and the volatile interplay between social, economic, political, and religious forces.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<b>Neti, neti (not this, not this)</b></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
In his latest offering, Being Hindu, Hindol Sengupta tries to throw light on some of these issues. The apparent intent is to address some questions about identity and the relevance of religion in the life of a young Indian. But Sengupta does not do a convincing job. Let me explain why.</div>
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The author in question is not a cultural commentator, not a historian, nor a expert of religion. He is a journalist, and a good one at that, but he lacks the depth of an academic. And the result is that his book ends up reading like one long op-ed. He generalises and trivialises. His research sample seems to comprise only of his cosy elite Delhi circle. <i>“...I noticed a general ennui and hesitance about declaring themselves Hindu, especially among the general youth, as well as my colleagues and friends. I felt it too.” “It was almost like we were asking for the responsibility of spiritual choice to be taken away from us...”</i>, he says. We? Us? Speak for yourself, maybe? I know this India he's talking about – the one in high rises with glass facades, the one with the luxury of doubt and contemplation. </div>
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But he doesn't seem to take into account the other greater India, where the people practice simple faith and have very little doubt, if any, about their religious identity. When one deems to delve into the sticky territory of religion, one ought to drink deeper than that.</div>
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In a commentary about the machinations of religion and society, his personal influences show up very jarringly again and again. One of his personal set of beliefs imposed all over the book is derived from the Ramakrishna Mission. He incessantly quotes their teachings and philosophy throughout the book. As great as Ramakrishna Paramhansa and Vivekananda were, it cannot be the only lens through which Hinduism can or should be understood.</div>
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The second point I find hard to accept is his singularly Vedantic view of things. Yes, a large part of Hindu philosophy is inspired by the ideas of the Upanishads and Shankaracharya's Uttar Mimansika school, but that's not all there is to Hinduism. There are other schools of thought and other ways of spiritual understanding that he completely overlooks. In the mien of Vivekandanda, Gandhi and Ambedkar, he labels Hinduism's ritualistic aspect as regressive and repressive. But he forgets the cultural implications of these rites and rituals and the fact that they represent the living religion; not of course in the India of glass facade high rises. You cannot write a book about being a Hindu without writing about its daily manifestations.</div>
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Finally, he seems especially influenced/scarred by his American Christian schooling. Despite himself, he keeps trying to refute the Catholic idea of sinners. “None of us is a heathen. None of us is an infidel... you and me, we are not sinners. We are the divine. We just don't know it yet.” Too many negations a positive make, Mr. Sengupta. It seems like deep down he believes in the ideas of evil and sin and tries hard to persuade himself and his readers otherwise. It also makes him compulsively and excessively compare Hinduism with Christianity, reducing the scope of pure theology.</div>
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<b>Right gone wrong</b></div>
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So he swings the other way, he goes Right. He joins this new band of people who, clad in saffron, their chests excessively puffed, proclaim their pride in Hinduism. Nothing wrong with being proud of one's religion, but everyone knows where this jingoism is headed. Perhaps those who swear by the Vedic culture would do well to remind themselves that our greatest works were anonymously composed.</div>
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The quest for knowledge through different paths, the Brahman, was sought in all humility. Greatness comes from doing, not saying. And here we have some of these puffy-chested creatures decrying any and all other differing points of view. Names are called, mockery is made and ultimately there is a subscription to the very tropes they claim to be rejecting. They're so ashamed of Hindu apologists that they become apologists for apologists. Heh. Case in point. Wendy Doniger, the Indic scholar everyone loves to hate. In trashing Wendy's children*, they become Dinanath Batra's children, or Rajeev Malhotra's. Every scholar who doesn't sing the glories of Hinduism, or reads it differently, is branded ignorant. The only 'good' Indologists are the ones like Diana Eck (Sengupta's favourite), who say what is desirable to these Hindu ears, hungry for validation. Only selective references, no place or <i>tark</i> or <i>vivaad</i>. Yes, let's all scratch each others' backs over a tea party called 'How Great We Are'. </div>
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Speaking of references, Sengupta loves to use them. Most of all, himself. Why else would someone reproduce an entire article published elsewhere in a new book? He must think his essay, 'How to write about Hindus with the Left Hand' – a tribute to Binyavanga Wainaina’s essay, 'How To Write About Africa' – is particularly funny and/or brilliant. I am hard pressed to agree. In that essay he mocks foreign Indic scholars for using pictures of gods as cover images for their books among other things. Too stereotypical, he says. Wonder where he was looking when they picked the cover for his book.<br />
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At one point Sengupta laments how we don't consider our religious legacy worthy until some <i>firang</i> tells us so. So you would think that someone with this complaint would always eagerly turn to indigenous sources of knowledge. But, no. Here is a Hindu, trying to tell us how to understand Hinduism, while throwing all possible foreign sources at us. He quotes everyone from Schrodinger to Bohm to Capra to Dawkins to Jung to drive home his point, especially when using science as his fulcrum. Thankfully, he quotes a few Indian scholars too and manages to keep a semblance of balance. </div>
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<b>Being confused</b></div>
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As a reader, I find Mr. Sengupta lost. He doesn't seem to know where he belongs or wants to belong. His Anglicised, Christianised education and his station in life places him, like many of us, in that class of people with Hindu identities (or lack thereof) and Western aspirations. Having become financially comfortable, we can now indulge in some soul searching while we slave away at multinationals, eating global cuisine, tapping away at our foreign brand phones. In this time of global strife surrounding religion, finding one's place in the larger scheme of things is important.</div>
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Questions are many, and the answers are not simple. The author embarks on a personal journey of defining his Hindu identity with this book and assumes that his readers share and understand these real (and imagined) conflicts. He rambles about all sorts of issues – from the idea of the 'One True God', to 'Religion and Science' to 'Vegetarianism', never quite getting to the point. At one point he writes about Vedanta, quantum physics and the principle of singularity, and then decides to talk about homosexuality and then again, rural economy. Here he is giving us a litany of ancient Indian geniuses and their treatises before suddenly jumping to technology and loneliness and then again, the need for religious reform. By the seventh chapter, which ia on Vegetarianism, he completely loses the plot. The complexities of the subject inundate him.<br />
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<b>Saving (spiritual) grace</b></div>
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The author may not know or understand the larger cultural import of Hinduism, but he knows well his spirituality – at least the Vedantic variety. The book has its moments of clarity, and they're lovely. My favourite parts are where he talks about the unity of the self and the universe, the need for stillness and the Avatar Syndrome. Sample these:</div>
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<i>“Just by being alive, at every single moment, you are not just part of the universe, you are the </i><i>universe.”</i></div>
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<i>“...Hinduism survives because it sets people free.. The only truth that exists is inside oneself – not in a book.”</i></div>
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<i>“We are the ones we have been waiting for. This waiting for a messiah goes against the very essence</i></div>
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<i>of the philosophy of Hinduism.”</i></div>
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The book, then, is really about the author's own philosophical and spiritual inquiry of Hinduism, and not everything else that he tries to throw into the mix. It won't give you much meat (vegetables if you prefer) on Being Hindu as the title of the book claims. Sure, in his introduction the author says this view of Hinduism is based on his personal understanding of the religion, but then a more appropriate title would have been Being Hindol.</div>
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---------------------------------------------------</div>
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<span style="font-size: x-small;">*A term used to denote the school of scholars who are inspired by Doniger's writings.</span></div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-23286674006091669472016-01-27T05:55:00.001+05:302016-01-27T10:16:37.152+05:30The Seance<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5m1YbSfGDm3EXPPA6D9nIPcgCRqrwGMS_ujYTrOL0RssCjXbkNw0k1J_nOZNNeBRx8SBc5AhpKGeUy-V4tuUZuxNGf_Xcg2lS2yeSzpeBfHER3wVWsa9X-m0Ov-o4z0N5EI-MMsvC4dw/s1600/seance.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="265" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5m1YbSfGDm3EXPPA6D9nIPcgCRqrwGMS_ujYTrOL0RssCjXbkNw0k1J_nOZNNeBRx8SBc5AhpKGeUy-V4tuUZuxNGf_Xcg2lS2yeSzpeBfHER3wVWsa9X-m0Ov-o4z0N5EI-MMsvC4dw/s320/seance.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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Read that note that has just been slipped under your door</div>
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"Invitation"</div>
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it says, in a dark, cursive, Gothic font.</div>
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I'm holding a seance tonight to awaken lost loves.</div>
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Don't come alone; bring your broken heart along.</div>
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Tonight we celebrate what could have been, what never was.</div>
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I have an Ouija board with 3 questions:</div>
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"Do you still love me?"</div>
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Did you ever love me?"</div>
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"Would you love me again?"</div>
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And the answer can only be YES.</div>
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......</div>
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Ah, you've come. Nice perfume.</div>
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Sit down, hold hands, close your eyes.</div>
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Focus on this burning candle.</div>
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Yes, it's your heart. Burning, burning, burning all over again.</div>
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I race to the past to pluck your lover's spirit,</div>
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and place it upon your lap.</div>
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Ask them what you will, do what you want.</div>
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Tonight there will be no denials, betrayals or unexplained goodbyes.</div>
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Kiss them if you want</div>
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Touch and make tremble.</div>
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Let your souls lie together and make love</div>
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like you always wanted to, like you never could.</div>
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......</div>
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Hurry now, the candle is burning out</div>
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the past must return where it belongs.</div>
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Clocks must be turned back, and graves sealed shut.</div>
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I put the lights back on</div>
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and see what I need to see.<br />
This is the only payment I seek.</div>
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A hundred tears shed </div>
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and one heart healed.</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-8340274762839203972015-12-22T09:20:00.000+05:302015-12-22T09:20:08.732+05:30The Song of Desire<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh21JJc_SiujXZgEsVZW13Q6bzvyI0mkdJIAIRyRXiaFsizvC1xHAWvnb1BwXRUkRuPPXm1b_p2JSyU4iqgHWNPrqQqZzgUJtFWZcLdqOrCgmqH-HuemM-lVZcHRsmAgErC7OoofZK6OUw/s1600/O_baby.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="180" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh21JJc_SiujXZgEsVZW13Q6bzvyI0mkdJIAIRyRXiaFsizvC1xHAWvnb1BwXRUkRuPPXm1b_p2JSyU4iqgHWNPrqQqZzgUJtFWZcLdqOrCgmqH-HuemM-lVZcHRsmAgErC7OoofZK6OUw/s320/O_baby.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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Forget what the preachers say</div>
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Disregard every sermon you've heard</div>
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I, the priestess at love's altar,</div>
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Say, 'desire' is not a dirty word</div>
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What do they know about longing?</div>
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Of the drug of a lover's lips</div>
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One who has never been drunk</div>
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On the seduction of their swaying hips</div>
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They, who've never been woken</div>
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with desire banging at their door</div>
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What do they know of that eternal strain,</div>
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of wanting more, some more?</div>
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Covered in numbing robes of virtue</div>
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their hearts have never lurched</div>
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their skins have never screamed</div>
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with a dire need to be touched</div>
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In a frightful island of isolation</div>
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unheard, untouched, unloved,</div>
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where would you and I be</div>
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If desire was a dirty word?</div>
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Desire is not a dirty word</div>
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for it is proof of a living, beating heart</div>
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The first bright bold stroke in red</div>
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of love's amazing art</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-56193221213732246472015-09-27T11:13:00.000+05:302015-09-27T11:13:26.644+05:30Blood Moon<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7MLNYZYnsc5zXivhSYKh0tG75xj0pbuxpc8A120HGLdyXQU1WdDrqFA3B9XmVvEpuW20K2fWF7PTNsCazSVNwu44zPqydt15qB1TxEUmzKyakArTliQDCdVpNA4_eI3qcS3a-_MMPTAE/s1600/blood-moon-vince-pahkala-april-15-2014.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="180" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7MLNYZYnsc5zXivhSYKh0tG75xj0pbuxpc8A120HGLdyXQU1WdDrqFA3B9XmVvEpuW20K2fWF7PTNsCazSVNwu44zPqydt15qB1TxEUmzKyakArTliQDCdVpNA4_eI3qcS3a-_MMPTAE/s320/blood-moon-vince-pahkala-april-15-2014.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;">
There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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that shimmering orb of desire</div>
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No clouds to challenge its call for sin.</div>
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There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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Still echoing the howls of need</div>
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Of that werewolf of a man, who lay with me.</div>
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There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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A lesser sun scorching my skin</div>
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In places where your mouth has been.</div>
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There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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Scarlet from the blood you drew from my lips</div>
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And spat into the night not long ago.</div>
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There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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Another throbbing rust-coloured orb</div>
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A fair breast smarting from hungry hands</div>
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There's a blood moon in the sky tonight,</div>
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A stark witness in my window</div>
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Of the story of lust, writ large in red. </div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-67315637344079019632015-07-29T11:48:00.000+05:302015-07-29T11:48:54.241+05:30Star Struck <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2ZbIAOT0A_9Gxo8UE1VLdt9EQMmyaUAXqZtQ82f2WJkssYQcERUawvyS-juoVsRO0WFa-WpCYdXrzlqlnJybL7lCfM4qZpG5CBpQNiFhhG09AF-uMYBIJezrzv-ovWSp-USg0c-arUtM/s1600/stars.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2ZbIAOT0A_9Gxo8UE1VLdt9EQMmyaUAXqZtQ82f2WJkssYQcERUawvyS-juoVsRO0WFa-WpCYdXrzlqlnJybL7lCfM4qZpG5CBpQNiFhhG09AF-uMYBIJezrzv-ovWSp-USg0c-arUtM/s320/stars.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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<b>A note on Nature as a canvas for mystical experiences</b><br />
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Nature and its infinite beauty is a source of constant wonder and inspiration. It would take a heart of stone to not be moved by her many graces. Some take solace in a sunset, some are roused by the rising and falling waves, some are moved by the mountains, yet others find comfort in the company of creatures. My muse is often the moonless night sky.<br />
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My earliest memory of beautiful starlit skies is from my childhood. Summer nights in a small town in Maharashtra in the 80s and 90s were extremely hot and often with long 'load sheddings'. I remember my mother judiciously sweeping and washing the huge terrace of the two-storeyed building we lived in, in the evenings. When night fell, we would drag our mattresses, bedsheets, mosquito coils and bottles of water to the roof top. It was something of an adventure, a happy annual ritual I looked forward to. I may not remember the conversations, but my 8-year-old self has never forgotten the sight of those starry skies as she lay on the moon-cooled bedsheets on hot summer nights.<br />
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We moved house, the MSEB got better at its job, the city smoke clouded the skies and the ritual was forgotten. Years later, when I travelled to the north of India, I was struck by the stars again. We were walking back to our hotel from a temple in Rishikesh; it must have been 8pm. My parents had stopped to talk to some people in the lobby, and I lingered on outside for some time...<br />
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Leaning on a car, I looked up and there they were. Those dazzling diamonds spread carelessly on the velveteen sky. I remember how striking I found the inky blackness of the sky, how countless and bright the stars seemed. The smog-laden city horizons had made me forget what lay beyond that dirty veil. I sucked in a lungful of that cold, crisp, clean mountain air as I took in that sight. It was a moment of realising the sheer largesse of the Creator and utter gratefulness for letting me partake of the marvel that is the Universe. It was a moment of perfect unity, clarity and beauty.<br />
I still look up when I feel lost, or whip out those stars from many moons ago.<br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>"For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream." ~ Vincent Van Gogh</i><br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-73044269010256256762015-06-29T11:08:00.000+05:302015-06-29T11:08:05.683+05:30When Rama is Sita's brother, and Hanuman, a ladies' man!<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2iqhTLepWcNxpCAESFPqsGlfd0DxV3LTmjQoHZGk1B75dUpW3FxRdSnqKWb6ZnvXssCrReCEtiw07wh9XEOFFv8IfshVwqntjQwciI0EprM5vbLqvZkZCDrWMvtR01E_1bXk4cJbKWFs/s1600/collage.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="178" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2iqhTLepWcNxpCAESFPqsGlfd0DxV3LTmjQoHZGk1B75dUpW3FxRdSnqKWb6ZnvXssCrReCEtiw07wh9XEOFFv8IfshVwqntjQwciI0EprM5vbLqvZkZCDrWMvtR01E_1bXk4cJbKWFs/s400/collage.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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Don't outrage at the headline yet, for this is no attempt at sensationalism. This is merely letting you know that in a society just a little different from yours, the Ramayana exists differently. India's famous epic is not necessarily the one Valmiki composed, or the Amar Chitra Katha versions we read, or the one we watched on television in the 80s. Ramanand Sagar's televised version, which was adapted from Tulsidas' Ramacharitamanas is the one we are most familiar with. It is the story of virtuous Sita being abducted by the evil Ravana, and her valiant husband Rama rescuing her with the help of his devoted brother Lakshmana and the monkey army after an epic battle. It is the story of familiar moral stereotypes, that is deeply entrenched in mainstream society.<br />
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However, different social needs call for different kinds of heroes and the Ramayana has been adapted in varied ways through centuries. These versions were not created to be sacrilegious. While some versions challenged Brahmanical authority, most were the result of adapting a universal heroic figure to fit their social-cultural context. In his famous and sometimes contested essay, 'Three Hundred Ramayanas: Five Examples and Three Thoughts on Translation', A K Ramanujan talks about hundreds of versions of the epic that exist in folk, poetic and dramatic traditions. But here I list five versions which deviate most from the plot and characters we are familiar with.<br />
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1. Sita as Kali in the 'Adbhut Ramayana': Let's start with Sage Valmiki himself. Not satisfied with composing just one Ramayana, the great poet sage is said to have composed other versions and extensions like the Yoga Vashistha and the Adbhut Ramayana. The former is more of a philosophical treatise using the context of the epic, while the latter is an adbhut or a wondrous composition. Much shorter than the original maha kavya, the Adbhut Ramayana is especially notable for its characterisation of Sita. She is not the demure, helpless victim here waiting for her husband to rescue her. In fact, when Rama falls wounded and unconscious on the battle field, she assumes the fierce form of Kali and wreaks havoc upon earth. She is eventually pacified by the gods, Rama's consciousness is restored and the story moves on. If you find feminists who decry Sita's submissive role in the traditional Ramayana, point them in this direction.<br />
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<i>(Available in an English translation by Shantilal Nagar, BR Publications)</i><br />
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2. Rama and Sita as siblings in 'Dasaratha Jataka': The Dasaratha Jataka is one of the earliest Buddhist versions of the epic. In what might seem like a shocking twist to most, Rama and Sita are depicted as brother and sister in this version. The duo is not banished but sent away to the Himalayas by the king Dasaratha in order to protect them from their jealous stepmother. The stepmother is the only antagonist, for there is no Ravana in this story. When things have cooled down, Rama and Sita return to Benaras and not Ayodhya and get married. As much as your morals are jarred by this incestuous turn of things, bear in mind that some communities make this provision to maintain purity of caste when there are no eligible matches.<br />
<br />
<i>(Available in an English translation by V Fausboll, Kessinger Publishing)</i><br />
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3. Lakshmana as the Ravana slayer in 'Paumachariya': One Jain version of the Ramayana is called Paumachariya, which was authored by Vimalsuri. The Jain Ramayana strips all elements of fantasy from Valmiki's version and presents a very rational view of the epic. Ramanujan avers: “When we enter the world of Jain retellings, the Rama story no longer carries Hindu values. … Paumachariya knows its Valmiki and proceeds to correct its errors and Hindu extravagances. Like other Jaina puranas, this too is a prati purana, an anti or counter-purana.”<br />
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For example, it rejects the idea of a monkey army and suggests that they were actually a tribe of warrior people with the monkey as their totem/symbol. However, the most important deviation in this version is where Lakshman becomes the slayer of Ravana. That's because Rama, being a perfect Jain, is avowed to nonviolence and cannot be a killer. Here, too, Rama is a hero for he embodies the highest ethic of the Jain religion. His valiance is reflected in his non killing. Makes perfect sense, doesn't it?<br />
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<i>While an English translation of the Paumachariya does not seem to be available, it might be worth checking out some rare Hindi translations.</i><br />
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4. Lakshmana's agni pareeksha in the 'Gond Ramayani': The Gond Ramayani is a series of seven tales told in the folk tradition of the Gond tribe. Folklorist Molly Kaushal, in an interview with a leading journal, says: “The Gond Ramayani is embedded in the socio-cultural context of the Gondi community, its lifestyle and its kinship. Here women, whether they are brides or otherwise are related to the central character, play a definitive role in the movement of the plot and its culmination, which is different from the classical versions.”<br />
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This tale really begins where the traditional Ramayana ends, i.e. after Sita is rescued, and Lakshmana and not Rama is the protagonist. In the first tale, Indra's daughter Indrakamani is so besotted by Lakshmana, she flies to earth as an eagle to see him. However, she is unable to wake up or woo a sleeping Lakshmana and in frustration tears off her clothes and jewellery. When Sita sees these remnants, she tells Rama about her suspicion on Lakshmana's licentious behaviour. It is then that Lakshmana has to go through the fire ordeal to prove his chastity. Who says there is no gender equality?<br />
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<i>(Not available in English translation, but can be experienced through folk dance performances and paintings such as the ones made under the Ramkatha project of the Indira Gandhi National Centre of Arts.)</i><br />
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5. Hanumana as the ladies' man in 'Ramakirti and Ramakien': In the Thai versions of the Ramayana, Hanumana's character takes on quite a central role. He is not the monkey-faced celibate but quite the ladies' man with amorous interests. When he visits Lanka, he has no qualms peeping into people's bedrooms. Even Ravana is conceived very differently in the Thai version of the Ramayana; he is seen as an erudite scholar and a powerful king worthy of respect. His quest for Sita is seen as true romantic love, albeit fatalistic. The 'Ramakirti' and 'Ramakien' are considered great entertainers by the Thai people and not so much as guides to social and moral conduct as Ramayana in India.<br />
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<i>(Ramakien is available in an English translation by J M Cadet, Kodansha America Inc.)</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
This <a href="http://scroll.in/article/725361/five-other-ramayanas-when-rama-is-sitas-brother-and-hanuman-a-ladies-man">article</a> originally appeared on scroll.in on May 06, 2015<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-69602634851794061952015-06-29T10:59:00.000+05:302015-06-29T10:59:28.826+05:30Book review: Scion of Ikshvaku<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<b>Author:</b> Amish Tripathi<br />
<b>Publisher</b>: Westland Limited<br />
<b>ISBN-10</b>: 9385152149<br />
<b>Number of Pages</b>:376 Pages<br />
<b>Publication Year</b>: 2015 June<br />
<b>Language</b>: English<br />
<b>ISBN-13</b>: 9789385152146<br />
<b>Binding</b>: Paperback<br />
<b>RATING</b>: 3/5<br />
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Picture this. A large royal court with an assembly of the best kings and princes. The mission: to complete an archery challenge, and the prize, the hand of a beautiful princess in marriage. The challenge would be to shoot the eye of the fish on a turntable mounted on the ceiling, while looking at its reflection in a vessel of rippling water on the ground. This would be the svayamvara scene from the Mahabharata when Arjuna competes to win Draupadi's hand, right? Wrong! This would be the Prince Ram Chandra of Ayodhya trying to win the hand of the princess of Mithila, Sita. At least that's how it is in Amish Tripathi's first book of the Ram Chandra series, 'The Scion of Ikshvaku'.<br />
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After months of advertising, in what seems to be the biggest and most expensive promotional drive for a book, Amish Tripathi's 'Scion of Ikshvaku' released on the 22nd of June, 2015. A record signing amount, full page newspaper ads, exclusive Kindle offers and even Youtube trailers (never mind the nail polish-wearing Sita) had readers waiting with bated breaths for the next offering from the extremely popular author of the Shiva trilogy. And why not? After all, he promised to re-tell India's favourite story of all, the Ramayana. Or did he?<br />
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For anyone who knows the Ramayana and expects Amish's story to be similar, 'The Scion of Ikshvaku' can come as something of a shock. But for anyone who is familiar with the author's previous works, the book meets all expectations, for Amish bends it better than Beckham. While not a great fan of his literary style, I cannot help but admire Amish for the way he manages to create completely new stories from old ones. He has an almost magical ability of retaining the essence of familiar mythological tales while spinning wildly deviating plots.<br />
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As a student of mythology, I was shocked and awed in turn by the liberties the author has taken in writing the story of Ram. But there's no pointing a finger at him for these deflections because not once does he use the word 'Ramayana'. Our literary pop star friend ingeniously calls it the Ramchandra series. And one can only smile indulgently because this is not really a deviation but tradition. Ram and Ramayana both belong to the people of India. The sage Valmiki may have been the first one to record it, but over centuries, poets and playwrights have taken creative liberties in creating their own Ramayanas. From Kamba's Tamil Ramavataram of the 12th century to Ashok Banker's Ramayana series in 2003; from Tulsidas' 16th century Ramcharitamanas to Devdutt Pattanaik's Sita in 2013, and hundreds in between, the Ramayana has served as the fountainhead of inspiration for storytellers.<br />
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Amish builds upon the Rama epic too, albeit in a very Un-Ramayana like manner. The differences are apparent right in the first page where he lists the major characters. Some deflections are surprising, some shocking and some, even amusing. Amish's Ram is very much a human hero just like his Shiva and the story is stripped of all magical elements. Neither is Ram born through divine means nor is he portrayed as the apple of everyone's eye. In fact, the first and greatest point of difference between the traditional Ramayana and The Scion of Ikshvaku is Ram's projection as an unloved prince. His father, king Dasaratha considers Ram's birth inauspicious and blames him for all his misfortunes. So the fabulously powerful and wealthy king of Ayodhya, Dasaratha is shown to be a defeated old man ruling over a crumbling kingdom. The very foundations of the epic are laid differently in this story.<br />
<br />
Further, Manthara has been depicted as the wealthiest businesswoman of Ayodhya instead of the poor handmaiden we know her to be. She even has a noble daughter who is a, err, rakhi sister to the four Ayodhan princes. We all know Sita is a strong character, but Amish pushes the envelope by appointing her the prime minister of Mithila. My favourite is his development of the usually ignored character of Shatrughan. The poor youngest prince of Ayodhya has little or no role to play in most versions of the Ramayana. Bharat too gets a makeover as something of a ladies man, who serves as a foil to the stoic Ram. Ravana loses nine of his heads in Amish's version and gets a horned helmet instead. The intrigue deepens as the author hints at some kind of revolution being planned by Ram's guru, Vashishta. Apart from the plot, Amish also fiddles with mythological templates. Instead of the standard Brahma-Vishnu-Mahesh trinity, he designates the lords Brahma, Parshu Ram and Rudra as the holy triumvirate. But the icing on the cake is in Ram reforming and joining hands with the rakshasi Tadaka instead of killing her!<br />
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Full marks for ingenuity, but when the inevitable comparisons arise, these inventions get a little hard to stomach. But Amish is unapologetic about his inventiveness, and that is his USP. The book is full of such fruits of Amish's imagination, but it is for the reader to find them, taste them and judge them. The author has played his best stroke – one he knows works with the junta. It's like a Salman Khan movie, with all the necessary drama-action-comedy masala, a devoted audience and consequently assured box office success. Let's be honest. The book does not have any great literary merit, although it is a vast improvement from the shockingly pedestrian language of the Shiva trilogy. Amish's easy-to-read language and page-turning style is designed to be accessible and enjoyable. Will it ever be in the league of Amitav Ghosh or Salman Rushdie? No. But will it sell? Yes. From the looks of it, Amish is poised to set another best-selling record.<br />
<i><br /></i>
<i>The reviewer is a psychologist by training, a journalist by profession and an Indologist in the making. She can be reached on Twitter @URM1</i><br />
<br />
This <a href="http://www.scroll.in/article/737251/the-scion-of-ikshvaku-is-quite-the-un-ramayana">review</a> originally appeared on scroll.in on June 28, 2015.<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-52532290344745969042015-06-04T20:19:00.000+05:302015-06-04T20:59:29.073+05:305 Fitness Fixes: Getting the most out of your workout<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">So
you've enrolled at the local gym for the third time in five years,
having wasted the last two memberships and forgotten those infamous
New Year's resolutions. This time you will surely follow through, you
say. But by the fourth day, those aching muscles have caused you to
oversleep and by the weekend, the hangover has made it impossible for
you to go to the gym. The guilt of a new membership and new gym gear
gnaws at your conscience for a while, but you shut up that stupid
alarm and go back to bed because there's always tomorrow, right? We
know how tomorrows are and tend to not come, and before you know it,
membership number three has also gone down the drain.
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<span style="font-family: inherit; font-size: small;"><b>Finding
motivation</b></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Getting
charged up and starting out is one thing – an important thing for
sure; but keeping at it THE thing. Getting up and going to the gym
day after day after day is hard work and requires some serious
motivation. I've been gymming regularly for nearly three years and
fitness is now a part of my lifestyle. But even for the most
disciplined among us, there are hard days...</span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHvtF9dZhcUQKc2_zn1Pf2eFZAWtWYTVX1evlumhyphenhyphenZTfqV-sjM6JyGTYFQgO6Qtu21e69lE3HGdUzIXR5zfIrmGaLQ7ZMa7e5NNIJrkv_8mLzqyrRrU9A_nh0Mxdk7DRS16RvplFEU8dg/s1600/fitness.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgHvtF9dZhcUQKc2_zn1Pf2eFZAWtWYTVX1evlumhyphenhyphenZTfqV-sjM6JyGTYFQgO6Qtu21e69lE3HGdUzIXR5zfIrmGaLQ7ZMa7e5NNIJrkv_8mLzqyrRrU9A_nh0Mxdk7DRS16RvplFEU8dg/s320/fitness.jpg" width="240" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Some
days I turn to Dana Linn Bailey, some days to Frank Medrano, and some
days to King Julien! Fitness motivation can come from anywhere. If
those super-athletic people with impossibly perfect bodies seem too
distant as role models, there's no harm in turning to Dreamworks'
'Lord of the Lemurs' for inspiration. The dance-loving, fruit-eating,
self-absorbed primate is just the guy who can make you want to move
fast, eat right and love yourself. The important thing is to keep
moving. Because a fit body isn't going to make itself.
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Here
are five things that make me look forward to my workout and get the
most out of it.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit; font-size: small;"><i>NUTTY
AFFAIR</i></span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjc79J7X3-YaGUWpza7sSWrOXknoWsgXVU2ioiW_Bhyphenhyphenh8Kv1iUtuqKDAxRpEvTpt4DDfsZns-ABH4QuKsbqyuZ6Hy8B35Q6BlxoOL73tSWcRIvVZ0-3IYpmURudPI8qWLv6dUkuOCDTAv0/s1600/PeanutButter.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjc79J7X3-YaGUWpza7sSWrOXknoWsgXVU2ioiW_Bhyphenhyphenh8Kv1iUtuqKDAxRpEvTpt4DDfsZns-ABH4QuKsbqyuZ6Hy8B35Q6BlxoOL73tSWcRIvVZ0-3IYpmURudPI8qWLv6dUkuOCDTAv0/s200/PeanutButter.jpg" width="158" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Not
enough is said about the importance of a pre-workout routine,
especially nutrition. If you're not going to tank up
before you roll, how can you expect to go any distance? But I don't
mean stuffing your face when I say tank up. One fruit, a cup of
coffee, or a scoop of pre-workout supplement, take whatever works for
you. I've tried several things like MRI's Black Powder and while it
is effective, it is also expensive. I now depend on a spoonful of
peanut butter which is my personal supercharger. Just one spoon gives
me enough energy to go through an hour of workout and it doesn't make
you feel too full. Peanut butter is not just my pre-workout fuel but
also my favourite between-meals snack. Delicious, nutritious and
economical, my nutty affair is here to stay.
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<span style="font-family: inherit; font-size: small;"><i>PLEASE
DON'T STOP THE MUSIC!</i></span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNtJsES4RUqPZAEiFPfYt5y4NTztkjMeehXqOGlZIYtyjxclhqUpDCnzZ6d6MumXa-vkAugf8VzJXIUtuXMj5KpC7d2QHGVFgAqHnGjdI6JCI8az2hEQ8JB8SP8S3EFgw_qgpMna88O38/s1600/rob+bailey.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgNtJsES4RUqPZAEiFPfYt5y4NTztkjMeehXqOGlZIYtyjxclhqUpDCnzZ6d6MumXa-vkAugf8VzJXIUtuXMj5KpC7d2QHGVFgAqHnGjdI6JCI8az2hEQ8JB8SP8S3EFgw_qgpMna88O38/s200/rob+bailey.jpg" width="200" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">The
receptionist at my gym will tell you how much I bugger him if the
music goes off for even one minute. To be honest, I hate cardio
routines. I cannot bear to run on the treadmill for even five minutes
during a warm up if there's no music. As long as there's beat, I'm
happy. From EDM to pop to Bollywood music, I can use just about
anything to groove my dumbbell. There are hundreds of workout
playlists on the Internet. Pick what works for you. But if you're
like me and like to pump serious iron, you have to check out workout
music by Rob Bailey and The Hustle Standard. Their track 'Hungry'
from the album 'Battle Tested' is my absolute anthem.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">FITNESS
PARTNER</span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCdCFXk2h3nc9hTTxjWmqI8YR8I8Ds6GNejYT1naVjHEtqBv8JdPZAWzG9YjhcE5vXHRygk5TypvjpoMw820-zAuPe_OKWxq6RA1QvAYDdlDNr0zPSefy0R_9qnBgc2zxwyEfwGoUQBg4/s1600/Us.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCdCFXk2h3nc9hTTxjWmqI8YR8I8Ds6GNejYT1naVjHEtqBv8JdPZAWzG9YjhcE5vXHRygk5TypvjpoMw820-zAuPe_OKWxq6RA1QvAYDdlDNr0zPSefy0R_9qnBgc2zxwyEfwGoUQBg4/s200/Us.jpg" width="121" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit; text-align: left;">While
many prefer to fly solo, many work better with a partner. The gym is
one place where I prefer the latter. It goes without saying that your
gym partner should share your level of enthusiasm and commitment,
otherwise they'll just be dragging you down. Of my last 2.5 years of
regular gymming, I've had a fitness partner and it has worked
fabulously well for both of us. </span><span style="font-family: inherit; text-align: left;">Not only does your partner aid while
lifting the heavier sets, but also helps you get up and get going on
days you feel lazy. Someone who knows your strengths and weaknesses,
someone who shouts “Come on, last five reps!”, someone who you
can fool around with when the music gets boring, is useful indeed.
The best part is sharing an occasional burger on a cheat day!</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">VARIETY
OF ROUTINES</span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhE5i5npII-UlvsVnQTeldxGOoVXTfYvqQvt_mztTTA9G-RA8YVUN6gs4KLkh6MiKkAt0yjqHiHRDWctWbNCTWll15a5d8wwRlDjE-WhHR7OfU6MAFg5B5ibXcMV_o1naKnezWoHvoICBk/s1600/me.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhE5i5npII-UlvsVnQTeldxGOoVXTfYvqQvt_mztTTA9G-RA8YVUN6gs4KLkh6MiKkAt0yjqHiHRDWctWbNCTWll15a5d8wwRlDjE-WhHR7OfU6MAFg5B5ibXcMV_o1naKnezWoHvoICBk/s200/me.jpg" width="111" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit; text-align: left;">Boredom
is another reason why so many people cannot sustain a regular workout
regime. Honestly, how interesting can it be if you choose to pound
away at that treadmill for an hour everyday or cycle away on a
stationary bike till the end of time? Run outdoors if you must run or
at least do some circuit training, yaar! Lift light to start with.
Promise I won't laugh at you when I see you huffing and puffing with
that 10 lbs dumbbell. I started with those too. Weight training is
definitely more absorbing than basic cardio routines at the gym but
they can get monotonous too. I, for one, get bored very easily. But I
persist because I keep changing my workout plan. A body part a day
sometimes, sometimes circuit, and on some other days, a mix of weight
training and cardio. Get a personal trainer or use the vast Internet
resources to mix and match a workout plan. Keep it varied, keep it
interesting.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
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<br /></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">DIET
& SUPPLEMENTS</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLfkUlXk7Lgz5fOB6iLP-nZ0d6K3XYPMdC__BXKi-B2EoxTkuAJCkubc0KJOxD5avpTso7KQoKGraGpDmhNy2X2CyokKXKdPRn84M9O60PeL_iyZ1dEtSJITHmzRXygXECY9xElsFLUys/s1600/supplement.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="150" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLfkUlXk7Lgz5fOB6iLP-nZ0d6K3XYPMdC__BXKi-B2EoxTkuAJCkubc0KJOxD5avpTso7KQoKGraGpDmhNy2X2CyokKXKdPRn84M9O60PeL_iyZ1dEtSJITHmzRXygXECY9xElsFLUys/s200/supplement.jpg" width="200" /></span></a></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">I don't care much for
either – diets or supplements because I have this passionate
relationship with food. Not that it's a good thing. A healthy diet is
an absolutely indispensable corollary to living a fit life. And if
you can maintain one, nothing like it. But I realised early on that
diets make me unhappy. If I completely give up on my rice, rotis or
chocolates, I can't think straight. And salads downright make me sad.
So the next best thing to do is eat in moderation and exercise like a
beast. I used to take wheys and protein blends for a while, but my
current student status doesn't allow me that budget. So I eat lots of eggs
and dal and tofu to maintain my muscle tone.
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">But for those who can
afford it, there is a world of choices in supplements. From
pre-workout shakes to proteins, from performance enhancers to fat
burners, the range of products is vast. Apart from the usual big
names, a number of new brands like <a href="http://www.etbfit.com/">ETB Fit</a> are making their way
into the market. While I haven't tried their products, they seem
affordable and effective. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">Whether you stick to your old brand or new, whether you workout alone or with a partner, whether you love your treadmill or your dumbbells, never lose sight of that final goal: FITNESS!</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri, sans-serif;"><br /></span></div>
</div>
Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-9244998867627662092015-05-25T16:54:00.000+05:302015-06-05T16:50:19.072+05:30Book review: Finding the Demon's Fiddle by Patrick Jered<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWWA_cN6X805_gz9A7mh2y5gTpRo8H0Knamqs7Izes60GPmiGI4GpzfiPRqbDM9BV3qyRhrUVjw3U9PyPnIe2TvtshgaUO02I0EMsme8u2Oqe6IV8upO_ENDnjSOePZOR5OBA1UrOdjrw/s1600/demon.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWWA_cN6X805_gz9A7mh2y5gTpRo8H0Knamqs7Izes60GPmiGI4GpzfiPRqbDM9BV3qyRhrUVjw3U9PyPnIe2TvtshgaUO02I0EMsme8u2Oqe6IV8upO_ENDnjSOePZOR5OBA1UrOdjrw/s400/demon.jpg" width="265" /></span></a></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span>
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<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Title
of book: </b>Finding the Demon's
Fiddle – On the Trail of the Ravanhattha</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Author:
</b>Patrick Jered</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Publisher:
</b>Tranquebar
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Pages:
</b>606</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Genre:
</b>Travel</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>ISBN:
</b>978-93-85152-02-3</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Binding:
</b>Hardbound
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><b>Rating: </b>3/5</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">In one of our communications, author
Patrick Jered had expressed his concerns about how his book would be
received in the market, considering it didn't quite fit in any neat
genre. It is not an academic work, nor is it a novel, neither is it
entirely a travelogue. But then, when has the call of passion been
bound by convention? Jered also worried about the volume of his work
and wondered if its six hundred plus pages would turn off a reader.
Having just finished his book, I can tell him that his fears are
quite unfounded.</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Jered's
fascination for this instrument developed during one of his trips to
Rajasthan in India. One night, when he heard the soulful strain of
the Ravanhattha streaming in from his hotel window, he simply had to
find out what this instrument was and how it came to be. <i>Finding
the Demon's Fiddle: On the Trail of the Ravanhattha</i>
is the account of Patrick Jered's travels across India and Sri Lanka
trying to find the origins of the ancient string instrument called
the Ravanhattha.
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">Ravanhattha
literally means 'Ravana's arm' and there's a popular mythological
story about its origin. The demon king, Dasagriva, once decided that
the Mount Kailasa had to be moved and lifted it with his mighty arms.
The shaking mountain disturbed the sweet slumber of Shiva and
Parvati. Enraged, Shiva pressed down upon the mountain with his big
toe trapping Dasagriva underneath. The demon king howled in pain and
was thereby given the name, Ravana – the one who screams. On
Brahma's advice, Ravana started praying to Shiva seeking respite. He
sang praises of the god for thousands of years, in accompaniment with
an instrument. This instrument, he fashioned out of his own arm,
having wrenched it out and using the veins as strings. Finally, Shiva
was pleased and he let off Ravana with blessings and a token. The
token was a powerful <i>lingam</i>
infused with Shiva's very essence. This myth that occurs in the
Uttara Kanda of the Ramayana, forms the starting point of the
author's many adventures.
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">Because
the Ravanhattha is primarily found in use in Rajasthan, Jered bases
most of his research in that state, beginning with the clan of Bhopa
priests. These priests belong to the cult that venerates Pabuji, a
local folk hero. These priests worship the ascetic warrior god in the
form of sacred paintings called <i>pars,
</i>before which <i>The
Epic of Pabuji </i>is sung
in night-long sessions. This long epic, which takes up to 36 hours to
recite fully, has been passed down to generations through the oral
tradition. To his great surprise, the author finds a Ravana
connection in the epic, although it is a much later composition than
the Ramayana. Another fact that intrigues him is that an instrument
supposedly invented by the demon king should be used to sing the
praises of his nemesis and hero, Pabuji. He sets out to find answers
to these glaring oddities in tradition and the journey takes him from
heritage hotels to remote villages, from tourist tracks to shrines in
the wilderness, from academic bookstores to homes of the Bhopa
priests. He starts by going to geographical locations mentioned in
the epic and local tales to establish the historicity of Pabuji and
possibly even Ravana. He learns about the rituals and traditions of
the Bhopas in some detail, as also of some other the parallel cults
in the area, like the cult of Rupnath. His research trail leads him
from Bisrakh - the birthplace of Ravana to an obscure village called
Ravan in MP where the demon king is worshiped as the guardian deity;
from the graves of academics like Tessitori in Bikaner, all the way
to the war-torn area of Trincomalee in Sri Lanka.</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">But more than the historic and
cultural gleanings, it is Jered's takeaways from the people of India
that make this book such an endearing read. Unpretentious and
accepting, the author makes friends easily along the way. A
rickshaw-pulling street kid, an expat yogi, a famous Bhopa priest, a
mystical seer, a driver, an academic and some others form quite the
melee in his narrative. He forms special bonds with each of these
people who appear serendipitously, helping him in his quest. People
and places fall in line as if guided by a higher power. The author's
portrayal of these people is honest and intimate. He is meticulous,
even obsessive, in recording the details of not just his research
findings but also human behaviour. There are incisive and humorous
observations about people and stereotypes. He does not even spare
himself and often resorts to self-depreciating humour. His
frustrations and exultations are very real and one cannot help but
nod in agreement ever so often. Despite the length of the book, Jered
manages to hold the attention of the reader with his lucid style. His
research is in-depth, but he never tries to emulate the scholars he
references. His voice is fresh and casual.
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">But the reading experience is often
marred by some phrases that the author uses over and over again. It
seems like he kept running out of vocabulary when describing certain
characters or felt strangely compelled to use a stock phrase each
time the character was mentioned. For example, each time Surpanakha's
character in mentioned, Jered compulsively precedes the noun with
'Ravana's shockingly ugly sister'. From a publisher like
Tranquebar/Westland, one would expect a little tighter editing.
</span></div>
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br />
</span></div>
<br />
<div align="JUSTIFY" style="margin-bottom: 0in;">
<span style="font-family: inherit;">However, one can ignore some
stylistic fallacies because the book is highly informative. It throws
in many surprising facts pertaining to Ravana mythology. Apart from
the Pabuji angle, of great interest is the Buddhist view of Ravana
as Jered discovers in Sri Lanka. Further, he educates the reader on
the interesting connecting between the demon king, Zen and the
Shaolin monks! And not to forget his vivid and beautiful descriptions
of the desert landscape and the Indian life. In his maiden book,
Jered thus blends beautifully several travel anecdotes, historical
findings, cultural insights and human connections. The book is not
just about finding an instrument but following the music of one's
heart.
</span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span>
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><i>This <a href="http://swarajyamag.com/culture/ravanhattha-demons-fiddle-divine-sound/">review</a> appeared in <a href="http://swarajyamag.com/">Swarajya magazine</a> on 5th June, 2015. </i></span><br />
<span style="font-family: inherit;"><i><br /></i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: Calibri, sans-serif;"><br /></span></div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-28306180765778824712015-05-06T11:40:00.000+05:302015-05-06T11:40:32.599+05:30Code Name God by Mani Bhaumik: Impressions<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6UotZI5nrXHwvq0Dr-bHFQpZhiDqj2icXCXdO3CRjcfbbEaj65giRTYf5ppVNrJ8WXb5qsNCQYftdsgdYFJoZ-VbDndr92OoiJSgfZjVf4bBns_Y2rJ7tv7HRl35o9c6LEXCg476sm1k/s1600/code_name_god.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg6UotZI5nrXHwvq0Dr-bHFQpZhiDqj2icXCXdO3CRjcfbbEaj65giRTYf5ppVNrJ8WXb5qsNCQYftdsgdYFJoZ-VbDndr92OoiJSgfZjVf4bBns_Y2rJ7tv7HRl35o9c6LEXCg476sm1k/s1600/code_name_god.jpg" height="400" width="266" /></a></div>
<br />
The older I get, the lesser I believe in coincidences. The more I still myself, the more I am able to see the plan of the Universe. Everything happens at just the right time for just the right reasons. Some things may seem cruel and unjust, but the grand design is revealed to those who wait with humble hearts. Books, in particular, always come to me as signs. Some books may sit unread on my shelves for months, even years; but I feel compelled to read them at such times that their message resonates with that time of my life completely. I often find that friendly nudge I need to take a step forward in life in the pages of a book. And no friend is as convincing.<br />
<br />
Mani Bhaumik's Code Name God is one such book. I don't remember when or where I bought it. A second-hand copy with the most annoying pencil scribbles all over it. If it weren't for the sublime content, my stream of expletives for the vandal owner may have never ceased. Thankfully, they gave up half way and the book found its way into my heart and home with half dirty-half clean pages. I smile as I see myself in no hurry to start the real review. I am taking my moment to appraise the body of this favourite new friend with whom a spent a few illuminating days. Sidney Sheldon testifies on the cover of the book: “This book may change your life.” I think it has mine.<br />
<br />
Mani Bhaumik, the author of 'Code Name God' is an acclaimed Indian scientist, who did pioneering work in the field of laser technology. It was his path-breaking work that gave us the technique of corrective laser eye surgery. Associated with IIT in India and the UCLA in the US, Bhaumik is out and out, a man of science. He is also a man of great fame and fortune. But most importantly, he is a man of the spirit and the book weaves these three strands together. In this autobiographical account, Bhaumik traces his meteoric rise from a mud-plastered hut in rural Bengal to a palatial mansion in Bel Air. But it is not just a rags to riches story. It is also a tale of the author's scientific & spiritual quest.<br />
<br />
Bhaumik starts the book with a most poignant recollection of his early years in India, beset by the struggle for Independence and the great Bengal famine. Amidst extreme hardships, Bhaumik found solace and strength in his grandmother, personalities like his father and Matangini Hazra and the great Mahatma Gandhi. Combining his gift of intelligence with hard work, he acquired one scholarship after another, until he was working with the best minds in the American scientific community. His scientific innovations brought him fast fame and soon he was hobnobbing with the American elite. Dating divas, driving luxurious wheels, owning bungalows, and throwing lavish parties became a way of life for this poor lad from India.<br />
<br />
But soon, Bhaumik's long-ignored spiritual centre called out for nourishment. He sought answers within through meditation and without, through the history of science. Bhaumik's greatest merit is in presenting the most complex scientific theories and findings of science in the simplest manner possible. Thanks to his lucid writing, even a science idiot like me can claim to have understood at least the basics of quantum mechanics and particle physics. Bhaumik explains how the realm of science – especially physics – has paid special attention to space technology in the last century. The idea is to understand the makeup of space, time and ultimately, consciousness. These discoveries are increasingly bridging the divide between physics and metaphysics. Citing the findings of great physicists and mathematicians like Newton, Schrodinger, Penrose, Hawking and many others, he beautifully points us in the direction science is headed.<br />
<br />
Bhaumik offers conclusive proofs about the unity of the Universe and those who reside in it. To someone like me, who follows the Indian spiritual tradition, it sounded eerily similar to the concept of Brahman. The resonance was complete and I think that's what Bhaumik had set out to do when he wrote this book. The unity of science and spirituality, matter and mind is achieved in this beautiful book. Bhaumik also adds his own spiritual insights to the findings of science to drive home the point of One Source, which we call by its code name, God.<br />
<br />
'Code Name God' has not just changed my world view but encouraged me to follow on the path of meditation I have just embarked upon. For the skeptic, this book will provide hard facts; for the faithful, it will act as an assurance in knowing that there is something greater than ourselves and that we are related to it and to each other. It recommend this book to everyone.<br />
<br /></div>
Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-31164307607994930952015-05-02T07:16:00.001+05:302015-05-02T13:40:28.479+05:30What is Culture Express?<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWapia8O7Nfrj119yedQl6L3uX_SMHCd-U4LXdfprxmdB7ao_UVWa2ehfy-DK6QOnDlniqdlYad5hVelFGMle2eAMuFNPUEPfK8mZ4VTFZsysHoR4TQTyJZn2zy-31zixeUxM7NqEkYlA/s1600/CE+2.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWapia8O7Nfrj119yedQl6L3uX_SMHCd-U4LXdfprxmdB7ao_UVWa2ehfy-DK6QOnDlniqdlYad5hVelFGMle2eAMuFNPUEPfK8mZ4VTFZsysHoR4TQTyJZn2zy-31zixeUxM7NqEkYlA/s1600/CE+2.png" /></a></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">
You know the thing with epiphanies? They have a strange habit of presenting themselves at the least opportune moments. Mine struck me in the middle of my second semester MA examinations. There I was trying to cram up tenets of Buddhism and ancient Indian history when the idea of <b>Culture Express</b> came to me. Where I should have been studying earnestly, my head was swimming with ideas and possibilities in cultural education.</div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
Can't say it was altogether unprecedented, though. My husband, Viren, had just started offering workshops of his own and it was inspiring to see his long-time passion for woodwork come alive like this. It was also amazing to see how people with similar passions reach out when there is a call for learning. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
So many people want to learn; they just don't know who to ask. It is especially true for working or homemaking adults, who have long stopped formal education and let the rut of daily life take over. There is little time or opportunity to learn even if one wants to. There is no real choice between popular and often unreliable media, and the ivory tower of academia. <b>Culture Express </b>was born from the need to bridge this gap. But before I delve into my vision for Culture Express, allow me to go back a little in time and tell you where it all started.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<b>Early love</b></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
I can easily attribute my obsession with culture studies to my mother. She is this lovely woman who lives in a little bubble made of all things beautiful. Whatever minor talents I have in terms of singing or dancing or painting, I owe them to her. I inherited her artistic temperament, and oh, the love of reading! She would read a lot and since I was her only child and companion for the greater part of the day, she would tell me what she was reading. I was greatly influenced by her love for literature, especially the Mahabharata. Even today, we can spend hours discussing her favourite epic. </div>
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Growing up, I learnt many little arty things. I went to painting class, I learnt some Rabindra Sangeet, I studied English literature and quit them all eventually. I went on to do a masters in Clinical Psychology and worked as a journalist for almost six years. I owe it to my parents, especially my father, to allow me to find my path. I meandered a lot but I was soon to come face to face with my true love. </div>
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<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<b>True love</b></div>
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<b><br /></b></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
All this while, my love for all things culture kept bubbling just below the surface. Two years ago I was working for a trade magazine of the salon and spa industry as its assistant editor. It was an easy, cushy job with the added incentive of trips to the most luxurious spas of the country, but I was beginning to get disillusioned. The superficiality of the beauty and fashion industry was starting to gnaw at my spirit. That was when I chanced upon a post graduate diploma course in Comparative Mythology offered by the Dept. of Sanskrit, University of Mumbai. Since it was a weekend course, I took it up. That was the first sign from the Universe.</div>
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<br /></div>
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<b>All guns blazing</b></div>
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I completed the first course while I continued to work. I re-discovered my love of academics and how much I enjoyed it. It was like tasting blood. By the time the year was over, I wanted more of it - all of it. I decided this was what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. With a LOT of encouragement from my husband I took the big leap of faith. Trust me, starting over and changing one's career at 30 and giving up on one's financial independence takes a lot of courage. So I enrolled in not one but three courses simultaneously, determined to make the most of the two year study break I had given myself. I took up an advanced PG Diploma course in Comparative Mythology, a PG Diploma in Mysticism and decided to do my second master's degree in Ancient Indian Culture. The assignments and the exams nearly killed me but I couldn't be happier.</div>
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<b>The birth of an idea</b></div>
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And in the thick of things, the idea of <b>Culture Express </b>was born. I was my best case study in this course of action. I looked at the Urmi from two years ago and the Urmi after two years of culture studies; the difference in the way I understood my cultural context was phenomenal. I realised how most Indian children have a very superficial understanding of what their culture is all about. We grow up hearing stories from our elders, participate in rituals and festivals, and turn to the television, the Internet or popular fiction building our abstract notion of culture. We rarely stop to think, we rarely question our sources. We assume what is being told to us is true. As adults, we use the term 'culture' excessively and often unconsciously, seldom realising what we mean by it. In these times of political debate surrounding a party with Hindu leanings, 'Indian Culture' is being used and abused as a tool for propaganda and most of us nod our heads not knowing what it is we are agreeing with.</div>
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When I started to understand this cultural ground we stand upon, I wanted others to understand too. This is why I have started <b>Culture Express</b>. I want to make available to people the knowledge of their culture through short workshops, presentations and talks. These short workshops will offer authentic content and help fill a lot of gaps in perception and understanding of one's cultural milieu. What I want to do with it is foster a rational approach towards culture, backed by academic sources. I want people to know their roots the way I'm coming to understand mine. I want to show how wonderfully the forces of history, economics, politics, religion and mythology all come together to create this flux we call culture. But I want to make this easy for the rest. I understand not everyone has the luxury of time to delve into the depths of culture in search of their roots, just as I understand that knowing one's roots is important. Come join me on this journey, won't you?</div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-23837969684362607512015-02-05T06:15:00.000+05:302016-07-01T08:08:19.154+05:30Book review: Ramayana - The Game of Life (Part I & II) by Shubha Vilas<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<b>Name of book: </b>Ramayana - The Game of Life (6-part series)<br />
<b>Part I: </b>Rise of the Sun Prince<br />
<b>Part II: </b>Shattered Dreams<br />
<b>ISBN-13:</b> (Part I) 978-81-8495-530-9<br />
(Part II) 978-81-8495-531-6<br />
<b>Author: </b>Shubha Vilas<br />
<b>Genre: </b>Mythology<br />
<b>Publisher: </b>Jaico Books<br />
<b>Format: </b>Paperback<br />
<b>Rating:</b> 2/5<br />
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Because I am a bibliophile, book-review blogger, and mythologist, I had to agree when debutante author, Shubha Vilas, asked me to read and review her Ramayana retellings. Also, I admit I don’t know my Ramayana as well as my Mahabharata. The first time I tried reading the epic, I chose Ashok Banker’s 8-part series. Not quite agreeing with his style of writing, I gave up mid-way. I got my second chance on the Ramayana with this book-review request, but looks like Lord Rama doesn't quite want me to know the whole story of his life. That’s because Ramayana - The Game of Life hasn't been able to make me stick around either.<br />
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Shubha Vilas’ all-too-simplistic rendition of the grand epic is a downer. I think I’m going to name it the Amish Syndrome - this dumbing down of mythology in juvenile literary style - that this current crop of mythology writers seem to be suffering from. Agreed, this pop mythology genre has regenerated a huge wave of interest in the subject among the youth, but the purist in me cannot help but smirk. Where’s the sweeping eloquence of epic literature? What about the larger-than-life characterisation of kings and heroes? Why must my Rama or my Shiva talk like ordinary mortals? What’s wrong in expecting a little grandiosity from the grandest Indian epics, even if they are re-tellings in the 21st century? What I find missing sorely from works such as these is the poetic essence. Everything but the basic plot seems to be lost in translation.<br />
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What Shubha Vilas tries to do differently is offering, what I like to call, ‘moral footnotes’. In a format I’ve never seen before, the author goes on commenting upon situations in the plot - sometimes taking up almost half the page! Here are a couple of smaller examples:<br />
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<b>BOOK 1, page 72, line 9: </b>Such effusive praise words from Dasaratha placated and appeased Vishwamitra.<br />
<b>Footnote: </b><i>Sweet, genuine words of gratitude are the best welcome drinks!</i><br />
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<b>BOOK 2, page 142, last line: </b>The citizens wept, looking at each other, trying to solve the puzzle - the sight of a sobbing Sumantra, a despondent Lakshmana and a composed Rama was confusing them.<br />
<b>Footnote: </b><i>Puzzles are fun to solve on paper but when life itself becomes a puzzle, then fun fizzles out.</i><br />
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Not exactly pearls of wisdom, don’t you think? He tries to fuse the formats of retelling and commentary, but doesn't quite measure up. Both the language and content of these footnotes come across as unnecessary, silly even. To be fair, he does offer some sensible insights in places and the background to certain situations in others. But I stopped reading the footnotes by page 5, and I hope the author will stop writing them by book three. The intent may be good, but the format doesn’t work. Scholastic references are what footnotes are for and that’s perhaps how the author should use them.<br />
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Another unique feature of these books are these text boxes where Vilas deems to offer more moral ‘discourse’ or sometimes even management mantras! So whether you want it or not, you have an author, commentator, moral compass, annotation enthusiast, spiritual adviser and a management guru all rolled into one.<br />
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The saving grace of this book is the author’s fairly crisp narrative style (barring the footnote business, of course!). If the reader is looking for a simple retelling for the sake of the story and the myths, this is an option to consider. But for a reader with finer literary tastes, may I suggest a wide berth?<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-23887628712721661292015-01-19T13:47:00.002+05:302015-01-19T13:47:47.350+05:30A Mirrored Life: The Rumi Novel by Rabisankar Bal - A review<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<b>Book</b>: A Mirrored Life - The Rumi Novel<br />
<b>Author: </b>Rabisankar Bal<br />
<b>Translator: </b>Arunava Sinha<br />
<b>Publisher: </b>Random House India<br />
<b>ISBN: </b>978-8-184-00615-5<br />
<b>Pages: </b>215<br />
<b>Rating: </b>4/5<br />
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There are at least a few books every avid reader deems life-changing. Dozakhnama by Rabisankar Bal was one such book for me. For months after I’d read it, I walked around enveloped in its magical haze. It became an impossibly high yardstick that few books have been able to match up to. Naturally, when I heard about A Mirrored Life by the same author, I wanted to read it. I wanted to pit Bal against himself. Knowing it was a novel based on the life of the celebrated Sufi saint, Jalaluddin Rumi made the wait harder. I wanted to savour it, drown in it.<br />
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When the review copy finally came into my eager hands, I read it cover to cover in one<br />
breathless sitting. Bal has this way with words… they stick to your skin and then to your soul. Tell me how one can stay unaffected with lines such as these?<br />
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<i>'I am complete in you. This skin, blood, bones, marrow, mind, soul... all, all of it is you. This</i><br />
<i>existence is your existence.'</i><br />
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<i>'You cannot count the number of creatures lurking inside a man. There's a rat, there's a bird too.</i><br />
<i>Don't be the rat. Try to be the bird.'</i><br />
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<i>'Do you know why the flute weeps?</i><br />
<i>- It wants to return to the wood of reeds from which it was taken.'</i><br />
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Reading Bal is an immersive experience. The author becomes the subject becomes the reader and back. In his quintessential style, the author often tells a story within a story within a story. The rich oriental tradition of qissas comes alive in his work. Parables over moral discourse, metaphors over reality. Lines are artistically blurred and sometimes you’re not quite sure whose voice you’re hearing. But it doesn't matter because the beauty of these words is so sublime.<br />
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It’s no less than a mystical journey that one undertakes with Ibn Battuta, the narrator into the life and times of Maulana Jalaluddin Rumi. The book is populated with several other characters, historical and otherwise, who drift in and out of the plot enriching the narrative. Prime among them are Shamsuddin Tabrizi or Shams - the mad ascetic and Sultan Walad - Rumi’s favourite son and disciple. The book explores the Sufi saint’s relationship with each of these characters and the journey that takes him from being a Maulana (a religious scholar) to a whirling dervish.<br />
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But it is when he portrays the relationship between Shams and Rumi that the author is at his most profound. Rumi calls Shams ‘The Sun of Tabriz’, an expression of the deep love and reverence he feels for his spiritual mentor, friend and lover. The nature of Shams and Rumi’s alliance is historical fact, but it is the other-worldly flavour of their relationship that the author succeeds in bringing out. Nothing is profane in their consummate love for it is no different from a seeker’s love for God. The pain of separation and the ecstasy of union are penultimate in this equation. When Rumi whirls in divine rapture, the reader is drawn right in.<br />
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Peppered with Rumi’s own poetry, the book is a rich tapestry of human emotion, divine experience and artful storytelling. I wouldn’t go as far as to say that Bal outdoes himself when compared to his last book, but A Mirrored Life - The Rumi Novel is a powerful work unto itself. One must also doff their hat to translator Arunava Sinha who doesn’t miss a trick. I haven’t read the original Bengali version of the book, but I cannot imagine having missed any flavour. It occurs to me as the most faithful translation there can be. And am I walking around with a magical haze around me all over again? Ah, yes.<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-68504934662380762302015-01-16T09:53:00.000+05:302015-01-16T09:53:04.169+05:30Why I exercise: 5 fitness motivation mantras<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<i><span style="background-color: white; color: blue;">I never never never thought I'd write a 'motivational' blog post. I've derided the self help genre for as long as I can remember and I still catch myself scowling at people reading books like 'Who moved my Cheese?'. I used to think losers need motivation, but then I grew up. I met people and their demons. My demons made friends with their demons and I realised we're all the same. We all need love and acceptance from ourselves and others. We all need a hand when we are low. When a few women reached out to me after my last <a href="http://karma-and-some.blogspot.in/2015/01/this-that-and-other.html">post</a>, asking me how I do what I do, especially in the realm of fitness, I felt the need to write an elaborate answer. Hence this.</span></i><br />
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Because the rewards of fitness are intangible and come slowly, it lies at the bottom of most people's priority lists. It's the Achilles heel of the even the most focussed among us. It takes huge amounts of motivation to start walking down this path and huger amounts of discipline to keep walking. While different reasons finally set people on this course, the following five keep me going.<br />
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<b>Turning 30: </b>The twenties is the most amazing decade of one's life. You have youth on your side and a body that will put up with just about anything. Thanks to those high levels of energy and metabolism, you think you can take on the world. I thought so too. But turning 30 flipped a switch somewhere. Age started manifesting in the most insidious ways. A hangover that would last suspiciously longer; an innocuous crease under my eye as I woke up; and oh, let's not even discuss the holiday weight that never seemed to go away.<br />
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And then there was childbirth and the stretch marks and flabby bits that come with it. I now had a body that was irreversibly altered by pregnancy. I knew that my bone and hormone health were only going to go downhill from this point. I needed to do something. I needed to take charge of my body, I needed to fix and beautify this place I live in.<br />
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<b>Being strong</b>: Women are strong beyond belief, but most don't know it. We've been led to believe in the myth of the 'weaker sex' and in that trap we languish. Worse still is the 'fairer sex' stereotype, which makes us think we ought to be thin and light and waif-like. Don't you realise that the arrogance of man comes from being physically stronger? Why should you not be able to punch a guy right back in his face if you need to?<br />
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No, this isn't about self defence. This isn't about building muscle either. This is about having the confidence that comes from strength. Weight training has added strength and confidence to my curves. I am finally free of the image of that pudgy Bengali child who would never participate in sports because she knew she would never win.<br />
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<b>The high of lifting: </b>I started gymming the way most women do - pounding away at the treadmill for hours, or cycling or being on the elliptical occasionally. And I was B-O-R-E-D. While cardio routines work for some - and are important too - repetitive exercises just didn't work for me. Fortunately, I had a good trainer in the beginning who encouraged me to take up lifting. Actually, everyone is taken to the weigh training section and shown the ropes, but most women tend to give up because of the pain. The day after the training, when the DOMS (Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness) set in, you are in pain. For beginners, persisting through this phase is particularly tough. Why subject yourself to aching body parts when you can put off the alarm and sleep some more?<br />
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Whip your own ass, get up and go because this ache can be delicious. The endorphin high notwithstanding, sore muscles are a wonderful reminder of your hard work. Sure you walk with a limp for a day and can't laugh because your pecs are paining so much, but hey, you've done it! You've picked up the heavier dumbbell, you've conquered yourself!<br />
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<b>Narcissism Inc.: </b>It also helps to have oodles of self love. You'll invest in yourself only if you think you are worthy. So many women seem to give up on themselves after marriage and childbirth. The focus of their lives shift and they forget how to be good to be themselves. I am grateful I am surrounded by people who reiterate my self-belief. It helps me stay motivated to be beautiful inside out.<br />
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It also helps to have a good front camera on your phone and be unabashed about taking (and posting) those selfies! Ask my social media friends and they'll tell you how I post selfies to the point of irritation. But I think seeking a little validation never hurt anyone. I could clothe it in a fancy phrase and call it 'maintaining a photo diary to chart my progress', but the truth is I like to look at the mirror and care what I see in it. I love my bodycon dresses and I love the attention.<br />
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<b>Live to eat: </b>The last and most important reason why I work out so religiously is food. I LOVE food in all caps. You'll rarely hear me offer diet advice because that's something I can't do myself. I will work out twice a day if I have to, but I will eat that occasional burger. I will walk that extra mile, I will take those stairs but I will have my fried fish & rice and my chocolate mousse and I will have them without guilt.<br />
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I never had great metabolism to begin with and it grows only slower with age. So I exercise - exercise like a maniac so I do not have to give up on the joy of food. That said, do not undermine the importance of a healthy diet and moderate eating. Eating mindlessly while working out is, as a fitness-conscious friend once put it, "like pouring water into a glass with a hole."<br />
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In mean, consider your body type, your daily routine, your food habits and tailor a routine that works best for you. Lift weights if you like to lift weights, run if that's what makes you happy, dance or swim if that's your thing. But get up and get going. This is for you. You deserve to look and feel good but you must work towards it. Make small goals. Sleep 30 minutes less, resist one pastry, walk to the grocery store. The only one formula is that of determination and discipline. Make it happen.<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-74128275873152386892015-01-12T12:46:00.000+05:302015-01-16T06:02:22.372+05:30This, that, AND the other<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Not taking away anything from the men, but if you ask the other half of the world with breasts and uteruses, they'll tell you that being a woman is hard work. Juggling roles and hormones is tough game and I've had my share. To be fair, I've had a fairly easy life with a lot of freedom of choice. I thought I could do anything but then the baby came along. Any mother will tell you this. A child turns your world around. A child challenges every notion of the self, pushes every limit you may have created in your head. It's all about finding one's balance and sanity after the first few months of childbirth.You have to take charge of your body, your career, and your brand new role of a mother.You have to realign all your social relationships with respect to this little creature who you are now responsible for. When a woman gives birth, she has to be reborn too.<br />
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I admit I had it easy when it came to finding my feet in my career again. I had (and still have) an incredible support system in my husband and in-laws and going back to work was easy. What wasn't easy was getting back my body. I grew up with a lot of body image issues, and pregnancy was the <i>baap </i>of them all. I found no solace in calling - as some mothers do - my stretch marks my battle scars. I constantly thought of myself as one big cow. But I waited and bade my time. The day my son started sleeping through the night, I started hitting the gym. Though never quite fond of physical activities, I took up gymming with religious zeal. I was going to get my body and love for myself back. I started weight training and surprised myself by loving it so much. Over two years, I trained hard and was almost competing with the boys. I had the 'beauty' bit sorted. Now it was time to work that brain.<br />
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Here lay the next important challenge. I decided to take my first step towards that long dreamt-of PhD. Keeping aside my earlier masters degree in psychology, I enrolled for a masters program in Ancient Indian History, Culture and Archaeology to be able to do a doctorate in culture studies. I also decided to do two post-graduate diplomas - one in mythology and one in mysticism along with it - from the University. This entailed giving up on every known comfort - the comfort of a career, the comfort of a pay packet, the comfort of a known domain, the comfort of independence. It meant going through the rigmarole of academic discipline, examinations, assignments all over again and to top it all, endure the poverty of student life.<br />
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But I couldn't settle for one love, could I? I used my AND and became a mother and a professional and a fitness enthusiast and an academician. And I am finally me.<br />
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<i style="background-color: white;"><b><span style="color: #cc0000;"> </span><span style="color: magenta;">“This post is a part of #UseYourAnd activity at BlogAdda in association with Gillette Venus".</span></b></i><br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-2542999311025457892015-01-03T11:00:00.002+05:302015-01-03T11:00:42.264+05:30Gorakhnath and the Kanphata Yogis by George Weston Briggs<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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I’ve always been fascinated by the Left-hand path or Vamacara (who isn’t?), and now Indic studies give me the opportunity/excuse to peer closely at that which is forbidden. The Left-hand path refers to unorthodox religious and occult practices, often misrepresented and misunderstood by society at large. In the course of my readings on Tantrism, I had often encountered the Natha cult and it is in this context that I picked up George Weston Briggs’ book <i>Gorakhnath and the Kanphata Yogis</i>.<br />
Briggs belongs to that generation of British Orientalists of a colonized India, who first studied and recorded Indian culture systematically. The White Man’s prejudice notwithstanding, these Orientalists helped the cause of Indic studies with their inscrutable scientific method and <i>Gorakhnath and the Kanphata Yogis </i>is one such example.<br />
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Written way back in 1938, the book offers exhaustive insights on the legendary figure of Gorakhnath and his followers known as the Kanphata Yogis. Kanphata literally means split or torn ears, which refers to a religious rite of passage in this sect whereby the initiate’s ears are split at the concha and a thick ring inserted through it. These earrings are the hallmark of the sect of the Gorakhnathis. Briggs sheds light upon many such rites and rituals of the sect with all their variations.<br />
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The book is divided into three sections viz. The Cult, Historical and The System. The first section elaborates upon the order, their divisions, vows, sacred places, religion & superstition and their pantheon. The next section has chapters on the legend, the forerunners of Gorakhnath, Gorakhnath, their literature and the tenets of Yoga and Tantra. The last section puts down the Gorakshashataka, important physiological concepts, chief aims & methods and finally, the conclusion.<br />
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Because Briggs is so thorough with his research, the first section gets especially difficult to get through. It is full of dry facts pertaining to the divisions, where they are located, and how their organizational & hierarchical systems are. The author’s bland style of writing doesn’t help. It is meant to be an academic work, but there are readable styles and there are soldier-through styles. Briggs certainly belongs to the second category.<br />
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However, things get interesting in the second section where he talks about the legend – rather legends – of Gorakhnath. The great yogi’s historical background is rather cloudy but the author pegs his existence around the 12th century AD. Myths and legends of Gorakhnath and his guru, Matsyendranath abound in the regions of Punjab and Rajasthan but also extend as far as Bengal and Assam. Like his mixed geographical trail, Gorakhnath’s character also seems to belong to several religious factions. There are references to him in Buddhist Tantric literature, Jaina literature, Islamic Sufi texts and of course in the (Hindu) Shaiva, Tantric and Yoga traditions. This mysterious, eclectic figure forms the basis of the entire Natha cult and their multifarious divisions and traditions.<br />
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The third section serves as a valuable resource as it gives the reader the entire Gorakshashataka along with its translation. This authoritative text of the Gorakhnathis prescribes all Yogic practices for the spiritual progress of a Natha ‘aspirant’. Further, he elaborates upon the tenets of Yoga & Tantra with detailed descriptions of the chakra-nadi system, followed by important physiological concepts of the Nathas. <br />
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As information rich as the book is, Briggs’ conclusion is disappointing. One sees the restraint and neutrality of the researcher fall away to be replaced by the snub-nosed Englishman. He is derisive in his tone and cannot desist from judging the ‘heathens’. But let’s remind ourselves that this book was written in 1938 when political correctness from a gora was hardly expected. The book was and continues to be an invaluable resource for the student of Indic studies, and especially Tantra. <br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-6543185295055233612014-12-28T17:22:00.000+05:302014-12-28T17:22:54.610+05:30Indian mythological fiction: what to read, what to ditch<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<i>Everyone’s writing a mythological novel. Most of them are being published. Readers are confused. Here’s some help.</i></div>
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In the wake of the misguided ghar wapsi frenzy, one is reminded of many other right wing activities that have done this country no favours. Back in 2012, a ban was demanded on AK Ramanujan’s scholarly essay, ‘Three Hundred Ramayanas: Five examples and three thoughts on translations’ from DU’s English literature syllabus. The reason, as always, was the ‘hurting of religious sentiments’. As with all focus groups, they seemed to be missing the larger picture.</div>
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What are they curtailing and why? Mythology is collective intellectual property and there’s little they can do to stop retellings. Epics, in particular, are creative fodder for generations of writers and artists. They have inspired thousands of versions – from Tulsidas’ Ramcharitmanas to Ekta Kapoor’s Kahaani Hamare Mahabharat ki, from Kamba’s Ramavataram to Shashi Tharoor’s The Great Indian Novel, from Krittivas’ Sri Ram Panchali to Devdutt Pattanaik’s Hanuman’s Ramayan. And thanks to the current wave of mythological fiction in India, the Hindutva faction will have to deal with 300 more Ramayanas.</div>
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Gen Y seems deeply interested at the moment in knowing about its culture and a new generation of writers is riding the wave churning out one book of mythological fiction after another. The fire was there are now many others who’ve joined the bandwagon. That said, not everything that is written is worth reading. Based on a very short survey and stoked by popular writers like Ashok Banker, Devdutt Pattanaik, Amish Tripathi and Ashwin Sanghi and my own impressions, here is my list of five must-reads and five avoidable books in this genre.</div>
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1.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>Mrityunjaya by Shivaji Sawant</b>: Possibly among the first in this genre, Shivaji Savant’s Mrityunjaya was authored in Marathi and published in 1989. Its translations are now available in English and a few other languages, so mythology enthusiasts can enjoy this acclaimed work of fiction. This retelling of the Mahabharata, narrated from Karna’s point of view, weaves a veritably rich psychological tapestry and delicately handles the matter of Karna’s identity crisis.</div>
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2.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>The Pregnant King by Devdutt Pattanaik</b>: I am partial to this book because this was among the first I read of this genre. But ask any mythology fiction fan and they are most likely to agree that The Pregnant King by Devdutt Pattanaik is among his better work. The prolific writer has given us many more books since, but none with such an intriguing title and plot. The book tells us stories of many LGBTQ mythological characters – especially king Yuvanashva – highlighting the resulting dissonance and the need for acceptance.</div>
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3.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>The Shiva Trilogy by Amish Tripathi: </b>While this set doesn’t offer much literary value, Amish Tripathi’s Shiva Trilogy merits a place in this list for its sheer popularity. What Chetan Bhagat is to Indian fiction, Amish is to Indian mythological fiction. The Immortals of Meluha, The Secret of the Nagas and The Oath of the Vayuputras constitute the trilogy and may have been largely responsible for turning many book lovers into mythology buffs. The books offer a retelling of Shaiva mythology, in a fresh new plot and easy-to-understand language. However, most of Amish’s fans will concur that the last book was the most disappointing. It’s a must read for mythology rookies.</div>
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4.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>The Palace of Illusions by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni: </b>This book seems to have drawn equal amounts of flak and admiration for its retelling of the Mahabharata from Draupadi’s point of view. The author has maintained the original plot of the epic and the only change is that of perspective. Some love it for its feminism; some hate it for exactly the same reason. But there is no taking away from the fact that Divakaruni is a masterful storyteller in The Palace of Illusions and represents the voice of one of the epic’s most complex characters. Draupadi’s relationship with Krishna and Karna are the highlights of this work.</div>
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5.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>Ajaya – Roll of the Dice by Anand Neelakantan: </b>The first of the Mahabharata trilogy, Ajaya: Roll of the Dice is author Anand Neelakantan’s attempt of retelling the epic from the Kauravas’ standpoint. It comes after his hugely successful Asura, which was a Ramayana retelling from Ravana’s POV. The author is essentially a champion of the so-called villains and deserves an A for effort to turn these stories on their heads. Be warned of the lackadaisical language and classic victimization, though.</div>
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<b>Other notable reads: Adi Parva – Churning of the Ocean by Amruta Patil, Parva by SL Bhyrappa, Yagnaseni by Pratibha Ray, Karna’s Wife by Kavita Kane, Jaya – An illustrated retelling of the Mahabharata by Devdutt Pattanaik, The Aryavarta Chronicles by Krishna Udayshankar, The Simoqin Prophecies by Samit Basu</b></div>
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1.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>The Krishna Key by Ashwin Sanghi: </b>The problem with Ashwin Sanghi’s Krishna Key is its unabashed similarity with Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code. It’s as if the international bestseller was repackaged for Indian readers, having thrown in some mythological characters (which seem to be the key to book sales these days). Chanakya’s Chant by the same author was a little readable, but with this one and the subsequent The Rozabal Line, Sanghi really seems to have lost the plot.</div>
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2.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>The Ramayana series by Ashok Banker: </b>Ashok Banker was among the first modern writers to retell the Ramayana, in his eight-part series titled Prince of Ayodhya (2003), Siege of Mithila (2003), Demons of Chitrakut (2004), Armies of Hanuman (2005), Bridge of Rama (2005), King of Ayodhya (2006), Vengeance of Ravana (2011), Sons of Sita (2012). While attention to detail is a good thing, Banker’s verbosity is tiring. I’ve also found his style a tad to filmesque. The author’s love of l-e-n-g-t-h-y writing is seen in The Krishna Coreolis series too, which is again a nine (!) part series including Slayer of Kamsa (2010), Dance of Govinda (2011), Flute of Vrindavan (2011), Lord of Mathura (2011), Rage of Jarasandha (2011), Fortress of Dwarka (2012), Rider of Garuda (2013), Lord of Vaikunta (2014), and Consort of Sri (2014). Unless you have immense patience for average writing and / or immense love for the author, skip both series, I say.</div>
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3.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>Thundergod – The Ascendance of Indra by Rajiv Menon: </b>As the title suggests, the book traces the course of the Vedic god, Indra’s ‘career’ from being a mortal to a divinity. The author throws in references from other mythologies too, in trying to create fantasy fiction for adults, but doesn’t do justice to all elements. This book is not without its fans, but most of all, Rajiv Menon’s Thundergod has been panned by critics for its lack of literary quality.</div>
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4.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>Arjuna – Saga of a Pandava Warrior Prince by Anuja Chandramouli: </b>Another disappointment in the realm of Indian mythological fiction comes in the form of Anuja Chandramouli’s Arjuna. In yet another retelling of the Mahabharata, the author writes the story from the prime Pandava’s perspective. With so many character-specific retellings in the market and subpar language, there’s nothing new this book has to offer. Her latest book, Kamadeva – The God of Desire chooses an unusual character and one hopes there are more takeaways.</div>
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5.<span class="Apple-tab-span" style="white-space: pre;"> </span><b>Asura by Anand Neelakantan: </b>This book sure made it to some bestseller lists, but it has as many detractors as admirers. As I’ve mentioned above, the author likes to turn antagonists into protagonists and Asura is a retelling of the Ramayana, which explores the layered character of Ravana. His Achilles heel, however, is his not-so-great language. The book gets simplistic and even boring in places. </div>
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(This article appeared in<a href="http://scroll.in/"> scroll.in</a> on 28th December, 2014. It can be read <a href="http://scroll.in/article/697485/Indian-mythological-fiction:-what-to-read,-what-to-ditch">here</a>.)</div>
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<i>Urmi Chanda-Vaz is a psychologist by training, a journalist by profession and an Indologist by passion. She can be reached on urmi.chanda@gmail.com</i></div>
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-7187974942086290502014-11-28T13:00:00.000+05:302014-11-28T13:00:08.669+05:30The Hindus - An Alternative History by Wendy Doniger: Impressions<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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In the age of short attention spans, finishing 700 page strong book feels like a victory of sorts. More so when the book is not a racy thriller. I’ve just finished Wendy Doniger’s (in)famous ‘The Hindus: An Alternative History’ after three, maybe four months, punctuating it with life. However, Wendy Doniger can’t be accused of NOT being racy - in both senses of the word. She may be writing history, but her ideas and her presentation are certainly page-turners. It’s just the small print and the mammoth scope of this book that make you want to stop and ruminate ever so often.<br />
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For the few who may not know, ‘The Hindus: An Alternative History’ recently became Doniger’s most talked-about book because an organisation called SBAS (Shiksha Bachao Andolan Samiti) objected to it. It’s founder, Dinanath Batra, dragged the book to court on account of controversial content that would hurt Hindu sentiments (yawn) and asked for it to be banned in India. Penguin and Aleph upheld these bans and withdrew all existing copies. And true to human nature, we all made a beeline for it just because they said NO. Thanks to the Internet, imported editions of the book can very much be bought online and e-books are readily available. <br />
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I gleefully dived headfirst into the book with starry eyes, a fan as I am of Doniger’s work like every aspiring Indologist. The book is divided into 25 chapters, each chronicling a definitive period in Indian history beginning from the prehistoric (50 million BCE) right down to the present. Doniger starts out with the man/rabbit in the moon metaphor, knowing well that nothing about Hinduism is what it seems. But it is plain to see throughout the book that her scholarship is tremendous; Wendy Doniger doesn’t miss a trick. However, what is most admirable is her erudition laced with wit. I don’t think I’ll ever forget her use of “maithuna you” and many such Doniger tropes.<br />
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Doniger is a humourous writer - sometimes to the point of irreverence - and this is probably what didn’t go down well with the Dinanath Batras of the world. Frankly, I don’t see anything in the book that may be called truly objectionable/ controversial, but here is a <a href="http://hinduism.about.com/od/books/fl/10-Controversial-Quotes-from-Wendy-Donigerrsquos-lsquoThe-Hindusrsquo.htm">list</a> of statements that were deemed so. Critics have panned it for inaccuracy, but I think they’re missing out of the idea that this is meant to be an ‘alternative history’. While most of Doniger’s claims are backed with scriptural/literary evidence, a lot of the book is also about her unique perspective. She writes Hindu history from the point of view of the suppressed lower classes and women. She tries to represent their anonymous voices, especially in all non-Aryan literature, that shaped the more recent body of scriptures (like the Puranas) and consequently the society. She makes these subdued voices loud and clear, without becoming cloyingly feminist or activist. She remains an objective scholar throughout the book, much to the chagrin of purists.<br />
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But the book is not without its weak spots and one thing I found annoying was the author’s preoccupation with animal motifs. Doniger obsessively harps upon horses and dogs, what these animals represent, the matter of sacrifice, vegetarianism and so forth. These are important and legitimate points but excessive all the same. That said, Doniger knows her India and its history better than most of us born here. Banned or not, ‘The Hindus: An Alternative History’ deserves to be read for eye-opening insights about this country, taken of course, with the tiniest pinch of salt.<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4744421389704762997.post-19679083203598675532014-08-18T14:48:00.000+05:302014-08-19T10:22:49.030+05:30The Journey After Life by Cyndi Dale: Impressions<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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For as long as I can remember, I've been incredibly drawn to that realm beyond 'reality'. What begins after science ends? What are the things our senses cannot perceive? Where does one draw the line between matter and spirit? If you look at my book shelf, you'll see at least a dozen titles on energy 'sciences', religion, mythology, philosophy, and allied subjects. I read endlessly about what lies 'beyond', but do I believe what I read? I can't tell. I don't know. Years of formal Western style education, combined with a deep interest in Eastern esoteric-ism, have turned me into this half-baked creature. A skeptical believer, a believing skeptic. I want to believe but I find myself compelled to question. A fine example of my personal paradox is that I have now simultaneously become a student of both – evidence-led history and archaeology, and intuition-led mysticism and mythology.<br />
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However, in my quest for answers, I lap up books like 'The Journey After Life' when they come my way. 'The Journey After Life' is written by Cyndi Dale, an American healer, speaker and author. She has written several books on Chakras and other energy paradigms, has intuitively healed hundreds of people and continues to do such work, thanks to her psychic abilities. In this book she deals with the subjects of death, the soul, and afterlife. She also talks extensively about spirit beings, angels, dark souls, faeries and so on, and their role in our lives. She elaborates upon the nature of the soul, drawing from religious sources as well as quantum physics! Dale's book not only shows the extent of her 'research', but also her intuitive understanding of human nature and compassion. It was the latter that quite affected me as I was reading this book.<br />
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Just a few pages into the book, and I felt connected with her. I felt her spiritual presence in the room, as I sat holding the book, like I would hold her hand. Ever so often, I would find myself crying as I read her kind words. I was reminded of my spiritual mentor, Shilpa Inamdar – also an energy practitioner and healer – in whose kind presence I always felt so purged and refreshed. In her wonderful manner of communicating, Dale introduces the concept of death as a part of life in the introductory chapters, which form the first part of the book. She says how all life is light, as everything emanates from the great White Light. I found this idea very similar to the Hindu idea of Brahman, from which all creation and life emanates and into which everything culminates.<br />
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However, Dale's idea of the great source of light is not all that simple, as she speaks about several Planes of Light through which a spirit travels before it reaches 'Ultimate Consciousness'. The second part of the book describes these planes in great details, with a chapter dedicated to each of the 13 planes of light. She associates every plane with a chakra, explains what it means, what a soul's purpose on that plane is, who the guiding beings on that plane are, how to 'visit' and benefit from that plane even when one is alive and what their corresponding metals, colours and mediation techniques are. It is greatly practical book from this perspective, but the key is belief.<br />
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Despite my initial 'connection' with the book, there were times when there was a complete lapse of faith and what I read appeared to me as gibberish, or fantasy at best. I might as well have been reading a book on nuclear physics, because I had no clue what was going on. Because with my limited knowledge and ordinary perceptions, there is no way of ever corroborating the contents of this book, and I was always teetering on the edge of (dis)belief. Spirits, guardian angels, tunnels of white light, NDEs, curses, ghosts and other such ideas are hard to stomach but there are great takeaways from this book in terms of love, humanity, kindness and compassion. Choose what you will.<br />
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Urmi Chanda Vazhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01012682924522858317noreply@blogger.com0