Despite his constant reminder that God ain’t a Mangalorean, his
mother always insisted on praying in Tulu. Regardless, she continued
doing her thing. He thought, perhaps, language isn’t a barrier when it
comes to talking to oneself. It was only late in life he realized
God created mothers so she can instill the belief in kids that God
do exist.
[This short story is in the company of some really better ones here.]
Thanks for visiting this page but i don't write here anymore. I've moved to Medium (medium.com/shaktianspace) and i am quite regular there. Only the platform has changed. Nothing else. Thanks for your not-so-precious time :)
Friday, May 18, 2012
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
It's never too late to post crap
It's never too late to facepalm. It's never too late to be kind. It's never too late to get our priorities wrong. It's never too late to catch up with who we really are. It's never too late to commit a mistake or two. It's never too late to wake up and feel hapless. It's never too late to give a damn. It's never too late to create a fool out of yourself. It's never too late to die. On the clouded side, it's never too early to rain.
Labels:
aphorism,
crap,
Shakti Shetty,
Thoughts,
Tweets
Monday, May 14, 2012
Confessions of a pathological liar
I’ve got an authentic shit to share today. Na,
not poem, property or food. Just some semi-random thoughts on a consistent
behavior. The thing is I lie a lot. It’s something I’m not very proud of; nor
is it one of things I can erase with a delete button. Excuse me for being
poetic here: Every morning, when the mirror peeks into me, self-pity engulfs my
throat for stammering while I’m shamelessly hiding behind the phalanx of a fake
vocabulary. On one hand, I die during such reckless instances. On the other
hand, I can live with it. Nobody expects truth anyway, specifically when you’re
being cheeky with words. No one’s interested in knowing who you really are or
where you come from or where you want to go or what you want. All they wish for
is laughter and entertainment. They don’t know anything unless you thoroughly
care to share. And when you do so, you give a piece of you away. As if your
existence had a price to pay to time. But if you’re smart enough and understand
the preciousness of a word, you’ll ensure a better bargain. In simpler terms,
you’ll lie. Lying is an art form, they say. Well, trust me, they are lying. In
reality, it’s far from that. Lies are cute but the problem is they don’t
survive long. That’s how it is. They are blessed with a very low life
expectancy and a very high infant mortality. Having stated that, they do make
you feel powerful. At least for some fleeting moments. For example, imagine
yourself spouting garbage out of your mouth and your tongue wagging like a
dog’s tail—producing infinite sound and thus, music of its own—and people
grasping stuff which amounts to cipher. But who can help them? Or you?
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
The Great Wall of Money
I’m a poor man's poor man. That’s how broke I am. And going
by the recent Zoroastrian ramifications in the city, I'm too poor to be a poor
Parsi, either. It’s also one of the reasons I don’t have superrich friends. I’d love to call
myself a poor writer as well but that would be farcical due to my commitments
towards amphigory. But to your credit, there is no such thing called a poor
man's Chetan Bhagat. He’s just another former rotund banker who is molesting his
thin luck. To that measure, even in the world of literature, the ugly gap
between rich and poor is not only widening but also dividening.
Ask yourself: Isn’t it a remarkable coincidence that almost all the famous writers come from an affluent background? And all these moneyed snobs carry the divine right to comment on our miserable underbelly?
Ask yourself: Isn’t it a remarkable coincidence that almost all the famous writers come from an affluent background? And all these moneyed snobs carry the divine right to comment on our miserable underbelly?
Having trolled them, I can assure myself we are only as wretched
as our hindsight. But that doesn’t make the world balanced. Everything depends
on how we choose to look at things. In that sense, not all beggars are poor nor
all poor, beggars. Giving is something and asking is something else. For example,
the underprivilged ones keep dreaming of orchestrating a real revolution while the
rich are quite content with trending topics on Twitter.
Anyway, there's something terribly wrong with a world where
the rich insure their butt while the poor get theirs kicked. But in the middle
lies the middle class (MC)—the poor who can afford to spend. And this class
tends to believe that those battling poverty and geezerhood are having a lot of
time on their hand (and finger) as they queue out there under the scorning sun just
to cast their vote. To sum it up, their life is a lame political trick gone
funny.
Politics makes its presence felt when a grimy nation like India
test-fires missiles and related phallic inanities hoping she wouldn’t be as
poor as she already is. A similar trend is visible during those time of the
year when budget is announced. The media automatically drifts towards MC. What the
clowns in Parliament fail to understand is the fact that the poor don't need a
budget. For that, all they've got to do is insert their hands into their
pockets. They need clothes with pockets, in most cases, to be blunt.
Similarly, health is wealth when it comes to those who never
heard anybody share the secret of an apple’s ability to scare away doctors. These
lot die in huge numbers. Every single day. Without a sound. While doing so, they
prove the rich man's disease a myth. After all, it’s just that the poor couldn’t
afford to diagnose what they actually died from.
There’s nothing wrong with being poor. But if you aren’t
rich, at least try to be happy. Also, those who are poor thanks to their rich
principles are indeed rich.
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