The Shopkeeper’s Fury

In Calcutta, there is a powerful local stereotype about Bengali shopkeepers. Going against the very grain of their trade, most Bengali shopkeepers are believed to be possessive of their wares, and deeply antagonistic towards customers. When they’re not overtly aggressive towards people trying to do business with them, they’re lazy and/or condescending, which, in the long run, yields the same results: an empty shop. Such a shop is the Bengali shopkeeper’s paradise, for he can then drink his tea and read his newspaper and discuss politics in peace, without being tainted with such lowly things as money and trade.

Day before, I encountered a rather fine specimens of the kind. Here’s the story.

So yesterday, my buddy and I are walking down College Street (M. G. Road, to the lamentably uninitiated) discussing the paucity of coloured handmade paper in that heartland of stationary, when I spot a stack of bright orange on a shelf. I skip to the shop, and ask very nicely if they might have coloured handmade or art paper. Two of the five shopkeepers look up, but busy with tea, look away with marked irritation. A third shopkeeper was absorbed in catering to a customer (while another waited), and two remaining chatted amongst themselves at the cash-box. I waited for a few seconds. ‘Dada, shunchhen,’, I said again slightly louder, beaming friendly smile pasted on my face. ‘Apnader kachhe ki coloured handmade paper paoa jaaye?’ This time, three of the shopkeeps looked up, looked at each other, then looked away.
This is not, you’ll admit, conducive to an even temper, especially on a humid, sweltering, dazzling summer afternoon.
I cleared my throat. ‘Apnara ki kala, na oshobhyo?’ (Are you deaf, or merely uncivilised?) I enquired sweetly. This time, magically, all five shopkeepers found their voice? ‘What?’ said the one closest to us, advancing a step. ‘WHAT?’ growled the gossip from the cash-box, swivelling his head towards us. ‘What was that?’ ‘What did she say?’ twittered the rest of the lot. I repeated my question politely, adding that I had been led to this conclusion by the ungracious and unnecessarily boorish response my earlier questions had elicited. After a moment of silent consideration, the best-dressed ‘keeper at the cash nodded to the one closest to us and said, ‘Ber kore de’ (‘Throw them out’). At this point, we were standing on the public footpath, so I was astounded to hear that a simple shopkeeper on College Street had the power to evict a tax-paying citizen from unrestricted public property.
I expressed this amazement.
And all hell broke loose. For the next two minutes, a shouting match to match shouting matches at slum tubewells erupted, and much to my surprise, I’m not at all sorry to report I matched the shopkeepers decibel for decibel and doubtful phrase for doubtful phrase. My buddy, who possesses a deeper tenor than I do, contributed – at intervals – what in old Aryan battlefields would gloriously have been termed a ‘shingonaad’ (the roar of a battling lion). Three minutes later, exhausted and deeply satisfied, we left a cowering shopkeeper bristling with futile rage at the step of his shop, and sauntered off, zen smiles on our faces.

Citywalk (Calcutta): Lampshade after Dusk

Unedited. Because frankly, I’m no great shakes at editing.

Citywalk (Calcutta): Lampshade after Dusk

Citywalk (Calcutta): The Long Summer Drink

This is part of my new series of street photographs, taken one suffocatingly hot and humid evening at the busy Gariahat crossing in south Kolkata.

DSC_0012

Sleepless in Hegemony

Last night, I slept for twelve straight hours. This morning, I feel like a new person. And amazingly, the world feels like a better place.

Probably the best tool of dominance the current labour (and market) system has devised for its choiceless participants is systematic sleep deprivation. We have to work too hard — hard work is a virtue, after all, unless it was done by the Soviets (in which case it was near-slavery) — and have too many errands to run (we must be independent to the point of being socially disconnected stand-alone humans, musn’t we?) to ever sleep to our bodies’ content. To sleep so sufficiently that we wake up on our own accord in the mornings is a dream so distant that waking up sleepy has become the default human resting pattern.

And such wondrous zombies this makes of us, that we seldom have time to stand a while and take stock of why our lives have changed so drastically over the last few decades. And thus do the masters of our destiny thrive, lording over a populace too desperate for mere surival to ask the big questions.

We have our gods right here on earth, we just don’t recognise them*.

[This is a privileged middle-class rant, although working conditions have worsened across the social strata]

*Probably in part because they make sure the religious right in every culture is whipped up into a frenzy to keep us distracted.

The Food Planner

I don’t believe I’ve yet shown off the planner we made for ourselves at home this year. We started with absolutely no experience about this sort of thing, decided mid-way to make it a food-themed planner (because we’re as greedy as starved pigs, every last one of us). I picked twelve of the many (many many) food photographs I incessesantly take, debated and defended my choice, regretted and nearly discarded them, and finally, with 2013 looming right at the edge of the horizon, designed the superfluous stuff around the pictures. You know, like the dates and holidays and writing-spaces and stuff. Then we hunted down a printer — thank gods for the internet — who made us re-scale the entire thing for maximum expense-efficiency, twiddled our thumbs while it got off the press, sat up all night cutting the sheets, and finally, as the first dayof January drew to a close, put the finishing touches on the cover.

Yes. It was a lot of work. So make bloody sure you’re properly awed when you witness the fruit of our creative genius… or I shall come after you with the super-sticky glue and golden glitters that now adorn my planner-leftover shelf.

Here is the January sequence, in the designed template: the month’s calendar, a dated notepad for each day, a generic note-sheet, and the month’s food pic (yay!). And here’s the January dish, perfect for those bland, biting cold months.

RPAM

Roast pork with sweet apples in mustard sauce, served with crispy fingerchips/fries.

With the frankly surprising success of this endeavour, I’m now determined to turn the Priyanka Planner into an annual event, adding bells and whistles to the basic outlay as I go along. I could make another food-themed planner next year — gods know I have enough leftover foody-pics — but I rather think I’d prefer a travel-themed one, given how much I travel to little-visited places on work. Or, I could make people custom planners, with all their favourite photos.

Call in your advance orders, folks ;-)

How to be Cool?

Oblivious as I frequently am to pop measures of coolth, I didn’t realise that ‘meeting people online’ — which is often a euphemism for dating and for casual encounters of the carnal kind, apart from more vanilla friendships — was the epitome of drab, dreary, left-in-the-ditch geekiness.

Oh deary, deary me. I can rustle up maybe one friend I first met in ‘weal life’ (though intimacy brewed mostly on chat applications, late at night and from the comfort of pyjamas and our own beds). The prettier flowers of my affection, likewise, were plucked from the sides of the information superhighway.

Siiigh. Whatever shall I do? Will madly fangirling Twilight, Justin Bieber and ‘organic’ cosmetic brands on FB lift me back up to ‘normalcy’?

Fruitcake Season

UPDATE: Now with picture!

I’ve waxed eloquent often enough lately about the wonder that was my undergrad. department. What I didn’t mention yet was that the place was an absolute magnet for eclectic, esoteric nuttiness. For instance, in our time, we used to have the Barkestra — a group of undergrads who could bark tunes in harmony. Then there was The Blab, which started as a wall-mag and became an online forum, hosting all-night cartoonised-conversation marathons before exams — a wildly successful community procrastination project.

It is on a campus such as this that my friend D saw a superhero this evening. A real, honest-to-goodness, straight-out-of-Hollywood superhero.

Just about when it seemed that I’ve seen it all, I saw Batman.
 
This is not a joke, nor a metaphor.
 
We were just chilling in front of the Worldview building. Then we saw Him, standing arms akimbo, in his dark costume, cape flying, on the terrace of the UG pharma building.
 
There for a good three seconds, then he disappeared.
You can’t make this up. I can provide third party witnesses.
 
I love Calcutta.

Some places, eh? They never change. New people come in, perfectly normal people, and soak up the free, mischevious, inventive spirit of the place. And thus the delicious, ‘aberrant’ nuttiness continues.

Thank goodness.

UPDATE: And here’s a picture of the superhero, taken by Hindol Majumdar — UG 1, Pharma — with his mobile phone camera:

Batman appeared on the Jadavpur University Pharmaceuticals building rooftop. Oooh.

The Whispering Death (of Cricket)

This picture and caption is from my Facebook notifications this afternoon.

[This is] Michael Holding. Actually, Brian Close’s chest, after a Michael Holding delivery crashed into it at Old Trafford, 1976. Holding was called ‘[The] Whispering Death’ as the umpires kept looking over their shoulders to see if he was coming – they couldn’t hear him, he was so fast, so liquid. Fast bowling is on the decline, thanks to TV and betting – the mob would rather see (and bet on) a six from a tailender than a fast bowler running through a team. And quickies need 5 days to display the depth of their powers, not 20 overs. RIP.

There are two things about this picture that I must say.

One, Brian Close was in his forties when he faced the terrifying Holding and the rest of the 70′s Windies pace-attack. ‘Forbidding’ doesn’t begin to describe them. Holding his own against them despite a steady battering, is both brave and remarkable, especially for a batsman of Close’s limited capability.

Second, images and videos from that era, till about the end of the last decade, appear to me to be subtextual eulogies to the game of cricket, as it was. Those happy days of skill and glory, I am fairly certain, will never be here again, despite higher delivery speeds in a few contemporary fast bowlers. Never, that is, unless one holds the BCCI down by the scruff of its neck, and forces a structure that demands transparency, descipline, technique and talent back into both international and national formats of the game.

In other words, and to repeat myself, happy days will never be here again.

Sour-grapes Grinchiness?

It’s not that I love the hit-and-miss days of inadequate protective gear and killing pitches without reservation. I’ve never been one for the thrill of the killing fields. Neither am I the mealy-mouthed grinch who wants young cricketers to be deprived of obscenely high remunerations (although I do have a few sharp things to say when public funds are redirected to congratulatory gifts for them). But as someone that money is eventually being made off, I would like to get some bang for my buck. You know? Some actual cricket in my matches. If that isn’t too much to ask for. Tests, I may literally no longer have time for, but I certainly miss the pleasure of watching clever field placements, well-thought-out bowling attacks, and shrewdly-amassed innings that even a decent fifty-overs’ match offers.

Twenty20s, on the other hand, are primarily a great deal of flash and jump at the fringes of the actual game. It is also the most obscene spectacle of blatant flesh-trading I’ve ever seen, and I speak as one who has watched post-election MP-trading in India for years.

Had this hobson-jobsoning amounted to something worthwhile for the audience, I’d have kept shut. Hell, more power to players who can make teams run after them with bundles of cash and incentives, by sheer dint of performance (and a great agent). But the prime function of the Twenty20s, sportswise, appears to be squishing talent and skill out of the young pool, by de-incentivising actual performance over mere inclusion or on-field appearance. And that’s to speak nothing of the betting and fixing.

The Popularity Myth

Supporters of the format, however, keep telling me not to be such a stick in the mud, because Twenty20 has done the near-impossible. It has brought popularity back to the game. It has made cricket fashionable again.

Which is a lovely warm plate of dee-licious tripe.

First, as I’ve verbosely underlined above, I’m actively discouraged from considering this form of the game ‘real’ cricket at all, by virtue of its practice of rewarding parody-like playing skills. But one might dismiss this as a subjective opinion. Very well then. Second, despite the IPL being one of the most valuable sporting franchise in the world, I haven’t noticed global interest in the game spike noticeably since it kicked off. Have you? Weren’t Japan, Spain, Uzbekistan, and China pitching teams for a World Championship event last April? No? Oh ahh, I must be thinking of figure skating. [In the ICC World Cup last April, 14 teams qualified. In the 2011 World Figure Skating Championships last April, disrupted by the Tokyo quakes and shifted to Moscow at the last minute, 44 countries competed. And this is a game whose spread is limited by the availability of ice.]

I rest my case. Or no, hang on, I don’t.

Esprit de Corps [or, the Cricket-Zombie]

The whole thing about cricket being a gentleman’s game has taken quite a beating since postcol. times, since the conflation of ‘gentleman’ with ‘white man of birth and means’ (or simply ‘white man’ in the settle colonies like Australia and New Zealand) was challenged by teams from the subcontinent and the West Indies. But there was still a certain code to the game, overt racism and Bodylines notwithstanding. The definition of masculinity was somewhat different. There also wasn’t this degree of access to disposable income and the power of celebrity — and yes, I do keep in mind the feminine personal effects thrown at the 70′s and 80′s stars sometimes, possibly by women (and some men) who hadn’t watched a full day’s match in their lives.

Lately, however, manipulating media and the commodities market to let popularity for the game be centred completely on personas and not their cricketing abilities has, to my mind, given rise to rather a dangerous culture of entitled little boys with their own clean-up crews, eager to piss on hoi-polloi who give them so much and demand so little in return. Largely because they can. Although I’m told it’s a rigorous game in it’s own way, the reason I can’t bring myself to like American football, for instance, is because to someone standing outside the culture, it looks exactly like contemporary T20 cricket will look like in half a decade’s time: a bullies coterie of spoilt little boys, hiding behind masses of padding just to play rough rugby on field, and swanning about like frat boys with a party-pass to the whole world beyond it.

Quite apart from the ridiculous immaturity and insecurity it radiates, the layers of physical and legal protection, coupled with artificially-pumped adrenalin and testosterone levels around this new culture of games, take the sporstman spirit right out of it, and makes it a diminished-responsibility chest-thumping arena for mentally lazy shows of arrogance and shallow aggression.

It isn’t a pretty picture. And it’s got claws.

In Glowing Health

In order to better understand the secwet reason behind my discontent with the world* — which certain men of my acquaintance bemusedly term ‘surprising’ and ‘inexplicable’, and which many women find discomfitingly forthright — I’ve finally hit upon this causal truism:

To be comfortable in the fractured, violent, superficially sympathetic and economically vampiric societies we live in is to be addicted to illusions and rotting within from a festering malaise.

By that paradigm, I’m delighted to discover I’m vigorously healthy.

Now if only that health brought the blessing of blissful happiness in its wake. But that, I suppose, is the customary sacrifice one must make in exchange for an approximation of freedom? Well, all right then.

[*It cannot, obviously be the world, because aren't 'well-adjusted' people doing just fine in it?]

Chercher la Blague

What IS the Danny Tosh rape joke?

My social media and blog feeds are bristling with righteous support and disgusted condemnation, and I’m finding it most inappropriately comical, because I’ve no idea what the damned joke was.

Dear North America(n residents), as part of your successful cultural colonisation of most of the world, could you please do us the kindness of airing a brief summary of causes when you flood us with the teacup-storms of your Z-list glitterati? Slavish global consumers of your social-justice tabloidism would be ever so obliged.

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