Monday, September 15, 2008

The Technicolor Man : Chapter 2

Fake. Made. Fake. Fade. Made. Fade. Made. Are made. Gems are made. Here gems are made. In this perimeter, below the monotonous rays of the sun.

 

Must have reached school. I hope Master Ji won’t beat him todaySpoke Geeta to herself.

 

Satis was quietly washing his face by the door at the back of the house. Annoyed. He had forgotten to wake his son. How could I forget? How? What will he think of me? Will I be forgiven by god? I am a good father! So I am! And..my..son..you..shall..

 

Listen you are late and late you aremoaned Geeta over the stove. I don’t want you to be returning late, so you eat and be gone, and come back early. And we shall manage from tomorrow, without the two of you being late. 

 

Husband is the burden of religion. A gift of the schizophrenic hallucinations of unpredictable ghosts. Husband. Keep him happy. He is like a god; Demi-god. To go against the husband is sin. Go against whom? Will! To man’s dominance!: Ill! Oo’ ans’ Ominance!

 

— The garden of fools sowed with saffron seeds.

 

Two minutes. Mumbled Satis. We over-slept. Poor boy. Oh! God make a miracle.

 

Oedipus here is your contradiction. Will Sigmund believe me? Or will he roll over and die again. Aa aa Chim. I will ignore him. When I meet him.

 

Come, you have yo’re food. Said Geeta.

 

No reply. He knows. Don’t remind him.

 

Do you think we will have a good harvest this year? Questions Geeta in a brown voice. Satis was about to seat himself next to her. Breakfast. Break your, break fast, and leave. Geeta: gentle soul, not submitting; just curious with her love. She recognizes her duty, like a child recognizes a toy. This comes from love. The other. Are you going to have a good harvestforced to love. Questions change. Perspectives change. Frustration: Changes even the mountain: I guess.

 

She handed him a copper plate with upward bent edged to hold the gravy in them. Aaloo ki sabjee and nine rotis. A chilly. Green reflection on the tanned gold of copper. Shimmering brightness. The oddest; look most beautiful.

 

Satis sat with his legs criss-crossed on the mud floor. Put the plate. Started to swallow. All the walls saw him eat. All of them sympathized. They were aware he did not need it. He did not deserve it. The sympathy. But it was the dash that comes of respect. They knew he had kept them well. Fed them with new mud every season. They knew he wouldn’t let them crumble unless he crumble himself. Crumble. Fumble. Something of the sort. Himself. But poverty has four feet: two tiedtwo paralyzed.

 

o’ Fortune

Sing your tune

Sing. Me. Your. lull-a-bye

O’ fortune. Make me fly.

 

Geeta was noticing him from the corner of her eye. She adored her husband despicably. Not the most appropriate word to use. But how else do you define real love, love beyond worship? She wanted to mutter her thoughts. Wanted him to answer her according to her wishes. 

  

Will we be able to give him something this time on his birthday?—She asked politely. Calm the mother propagates her desire of the love of her child.   

 

He nodded. Yes. No. God knows. The fact that it’s always he, who knows, makes it pathetic. How sad that there is nothing that he can wish to know. How boring, in his wisdom. No wonder I never had a feeling for him. I don’t want to get bored by knowledge.

 

Buddha never understood the system: nor his followers. They had knowledge of things beyond. The final conclusions, the final solutions. Hence, they taught never to fight. Where is Tibet today? Peace? This world is a mythical beast of power. Dragons that fight not for food, but power. That might be its food, but its dangerous, for that is its fire. And it can burn cities, and countries. The dragon of mythical ages; survives. Men that crave for power. Ugly dragons, of the guile. Its funny, how people die for land. True. False. Old. Gold. What happened? To the heart. We have misunderstood ourselves as higher beings. We LoWeR BeingS.       

 

Chomp. Chomp. Chomp. Slurp. Chomp. Slurp. Slurp. He finished the last of his food.

 

Gudak. Gudak. Gudak. Gudak. “Cling” says the brass pot as Satis puts it back on the floor. Copper returned to earth. Copper, waterembrace: harmony.

 

He slowly moves to get up but is held in Geeta’s eyes. Looks at the curious things that spring of those curious eyes. They are loud and questioning.

 

Answer this question o’ husband of mine

Answer, answer, answer o’ husband divine

 

Yes, I was thinking of the same thing. Says he under his breath. I think I will take him to the city with me. And if he would like something therelet’s see.

 

Elation, that driver of evil. Happiness thy wings are sinned. Happiness leads to hope, to optimismthere is no scope for a person with optimism in heaven. You can’t repent when you are optimistic. Things start to fall into place, you begin to love humans. And that. Is the ultimate sin. 

 

She loves him in this moment. She loves him. Could have just stood up and jumped in his arms. But. There are rules. You can not show your elation, your happiness. No. Not even to your husband. Does that make sense at all?

 

Her eyes jump and dance. The dance of Dionysus. She sits still. Her emotions reckon the surrounding particles of energy to stop in their places. They want to revel in their own beat.

 

Satis leaves her eyes and slowly walks towards the rear entrance to wash his hands by the well. Completely ecstatic with the expression he just saw in his wife’s eyes, he carries with him a vast smile on his face.

 

Oh’ those eyes.

My prize. My prize.

 

Even the stony well welcomes him with especial wetness. The trees that surround the back of his house swing gaily. There is a huge plantation of nature behind the house. Dense to look at, but not frightening. They started singing and dancing in a poetic trace. Twice right and one left. Forward backward. Casually. Don’t break your backs.   

 

Sing they do;

Swing, swing, swinging.

 

He shifts the bucket to the edge of the well and pours some water on his hands. The well whispers a soft hiss as he bends close to the edge. Thanks for the promise! 

 

Revert to your duty now. He hums a glad tune as he turns around and leaves. The sun shining brightly, unharsh. Looks over him and his son and his wife and is glad that there are still some at least that nature loves.

 

Satis was a decent farmer. He didn’t have much land, consequently; had difficulty in meeting ends. Ever wondered why farmers starve and packaging companies thrive? You can wonder now. He worked hard. And managed decently. The village respected him, though he was not a person who spoke much. There was not a person who had seen him angry. He was forever calm, part of the reason people came for his advice. The pundits envied him, because he gave good advice—for free. Incomprehensible. Advice is directly proportional to expensive. Really expensive. And more often then not there had been gossip. Satis was the incarnation of some evil. Oh! These idiots. Why can’t they mind their own business?

 

Every saint, priest, pundit had his temple of worship. They had their stone statues to keep them occupied, but no! They wanted Ayodhya as well. So what if it’s a birth place for a man who turned out to be god? He’s long gone now? This is where we forge what the Hindu religion teaches us. Crib not people. Isn’t that what it says? Anyways, isn’t there a shrine even now? Of a god. Can’t they be happy? Of some god!

 

Why can’t they build orphanages instead of mute shrines of dumb stupidity?

 

—Suppose.

 

—If one has only two temples, and the other, three. Who will earn more rewards?

 

—It’s a race for the softest cusion in the castle of boredom.

(Before the instance of death)

—Father give me a two B.H.K. I got more disciples.

 

—No father. I got more.

(Truth answers the dying. Nirvana is attained. Clap. Clap)

—Son. I don’t have a say.

 

—Who does? (Simultaneously)

 

—Silence shrouds the dead. The world ends when you die. That’s it!

 

Satis walked out of the front door that creaked and crowed in muscular pain. A reminder. Fix me soon, or I will swoon. I should fix it soon. All hearts wither if uncared for. How weird is everything. As if everything is living and breathing and withering. Even the crops. Should I run? I am really late. The crops need to be respected. Will I earn enough this season? I should make a better deal with him.

 

The sparkling sun lights the way through the branches and leaves of the trees. Sparkling lamps on the dusty floor. His shadow runs wild. Appearing disappearing, mingling with the shadows of the trees. Scattered minute eyes watch him go. Quietly walking, pressed in his thought. They crawl to the edges of the branches, sometimes making soft sounds. Gentle weavings of breaths. Music of the four limbed and two winged.

 

On some trees birds sit in varied amusement. Wondering whether they are bored or not. Strange. If a bird begins to think at any moment in time and starts to evaluate whether in that instant it is bored or not, then in that very instant by that act of rationalizing could it be considered bored or not? Strange. Tweeeet. It means bored in bird language.

 

He crossed a hut, much like his own. The same size and texture. But a little worse kept. His neighbors. The door was shut. Ramaram must have reached his field. Or? Is. He late as well. No.

 

The burnt hut passed behind him. Ramaram could not find the time to fix it. And his wife was over occupied with the children to put a new layer of mud on the walls. The cracks were visible in his hut as well. Development and infrastructure. Parliament speeches. They talk about it before they go to eat their lunch; for an hour. And then return and talk again. Sometimes fight as well, about dreams of becoming the Prime Minister. Do they think of what they would do if they became the Prime Minister? Except of course earn shit loads of money. Democracy this is called. I don’t really know if this is what it meant. If this is what they call it.

 

He turned to take another look. There was a small window at the side. Hidden under the shadow of a tree. Quietly sat Lila by it. She waved as he turned around to look. Ever excited. She would have jumped out in all innocence, if there would have been no grill.

 

Lila was a three year old pretty and naughty girl. She could twist her face in all manners possible and was treated by the other children as the cutest child ever begot by a mammal. The most pampered girl the village had ever seen, or was ever going to see. Wait until she grows up. Whirlwind with no feet. She will turn their heads and hearts.

 

A lot of priests had come to Ramayram with advice that she should be married off. But Ramaram was a well thought out piece of flesh. He wanted her to become an educated woman. Not a toy in the hands of men. Something the priests could not digest again. They should take some digestive pills. I can suggest a doctor if they want some advice. Dr. Dang, D-1, Hauz khas, Delhi. They should see him sometime. Doesn’t charge much I heard.

 

Satis was quite fond of Lila. An arm raised itself and swum in the air, left, right, left, right.

 

Lila, O’ playful Lila

Theatre of childhood

Shake not your dreams

Shake not your moods.

 

He walked past a couple of more similar houses to reach at length where the fields started. His was a little farther off. First was the field of Ramayram, then came patch eyed Sikha’s field, then was Jabal’s, then I forgot whose and then his, He stood there and looked at his possession with great pride.

 

No wonder men die for land.

What is it that it holds?

Promises of a sure grave.

 

Calm and tensed. Sensed, just replace the T with an S and see what it becomes. He moves towards his food, his life, his only means to live. To evade the clutches of death. Moves toward it in a pace. Thinking of his wife, his son, and how it was mixed with the future of this piece of land. Thinking how growing food for others gave him clothes for himself. Ramayram is struggling with his field. Waves at him from another end, and gets back to work. The others are as busy while he crosses them.

 

Why you late? Roared Jabal.

 

Satis made a gesture saying it was nothing. The hand shaking like a fit, rising and falling. Such a tense action for the arm, and signifies nothingness. We have strange ways, stranger is our understanding.

 

Who created money? The Will of Man!: Arguable. You can are-gu-able yourself. I think it was money that created man, not the other way around. Before that; we were animals. We still are. Just that we deny it. Despicable creatures. Bombing in Delhi, for land in Kashmir. Yes, they sure do want a land. To urinate on.

 

He touched the first layer of his growth. His sweat and effort. The swaying bales of hay. All his emotions turn gay. Not eureka, but ecstasy, ecstasy, ecstasy. And elation. And something else. Something more important. More rare. Love. That’s it, that’s what he felt. Love and all its gladness. He felt love for his crops, he felt love for himself.

 

Love. Isn’t violence a form of love? The strangest form. Answer me, is it?         

The Technicolor Man : Chapter 1

—In the grooves and between the trees of a village there are families. Through the goat paths, the straws, and the leaves there are houses — intertwined.

 

—They meet. They cheer. They greet. In the morning they meet, cheer, and greet. Through the day they work, eat, sing, and produce. They do it so that the minds of the intricate world can survive with their intricacies. Their sweat is sowed and reaped through the mingling seasons. This is the village. Cold, warm and green. Here is the houseseasoned by the lack of richesof the family.

 

The sun came up early today, a little too early. Chintu could have used a couple of hours more of sleep. His 4 feet small fragile body could use it. Only if the fear of ‘Master Ji’ would not have been singing its songs in his drowsy heart. Did Eklavya ever fear Drona? So beautiful and complicated in mythology: heartless beasts glorified as gods.

 

His eyes were bulging with fatigue when he opened them to the strange intensity of the morning sun. It shouldn’t have been that bright, not at that hour or may be the anticipated hour was wrong. The shadow of the tree outside was growing smaller and moving away from the house. The voluptuous tree called to its shadowstop o dear one: but who can stop the sun?

 

Chintu was late.

 

—A young bullet shot in the house and bounced clinging and clanging.

 

Geeta opened her shocked; brown and mild eyes, arose, and rushed outside. All in one movement, all in one instant. The day had dawned, and loitered ahead, leaving the walls without shadows in the wrinkles that crept from one side of the room to another. There were dark lines though. Dark lines: cracks. There was not even a reminiscence of a shadow.

 

Chintu was definitely late.

 

It hurt Geeta every time she thought of Chintu being late. It would have been all right if it was only about missing a subject or two. But today, Chintu would come back at least an inch swollen throughout. An inch.

 

—It is through fear that the children of the deprived are bred. They are powerless; their fathers helplessly father them. Crying father of dead children. The rich can dispose off the teacher himself; throw him out, like a used condom that solves its purpose. But the poor? They pay the price of being what they are—poor. Forgive the wrong, for there will be a time when you shall have your moment. So says the almighty. So says the herd. Are you sure that there is a kingdom? Another kingdom? Will we have to tolerate god again?

 

—The master went through the procedure in his youth, and repeats the actions he had once thoroughly despised. :. We become the image we most hate.

 

Tanned brown, wearing blue shorts and a starched yellow shirt that used to be white when it had been bought, Chintu rushes through the door thinking of food. He resembles a storm. Fast, ragged and furious. His legs race the ground with uncertain confidence: of course that’s a form of confidence, but it is uncertain. Two short poles evenly divided in the middle. His upper torso is a little longer then it should be. But that decisively adds to the beauty of his fragile body. His face is brown and warm. A homely nose, not too short, but pointed. A smooth face. It reminds of a Greek sea if one was to think too hard. Otherwise; its just a face. Blah Blah Blah.

 

He has missed his breakfast again. Somehow he never got his head around the idea of missing his meals. He loves to eat, just anything. But food is a scarcity for the village, and a liability for the rich. What you sow and reap is not what you eat!

 

Where grains grow in the fertile land

And tilled by those fruitful hands,

There lavishes famine,

And there lie graves,

Of our submitting prey.

 

His feet ride him along the path, cow dung cakes and the salty smell of urine rise to greet his steps. His rushing feet and his desultory breath bathe in the senses of the village. Pure nature—welcome unhurt. The trees awaken to his heaving, as he storms through the path. The breeze comes from behind him, gently helping him to carry on, putting in some effort to help him rush. Just a gentle effort, a lulled push by nature’s arm.

 

—Let me carry you

Oh child!

Let me help your feet

To rush through your innocence

Towards the world

And worldly men

 

A broken creaking gate holds the school premises to its heart. Swinging gaily, lazily, beside a stooping clock of wood. Naughty girl with her hurried smile. She does not understand what she calls for. 30 years back when Master Ji had been a freshly appointed teacher to this school it had been conjoined to the wall under his and his student’s guidance. There had been a ceremony; a marigold garland had been put on the gate for months. It had been a subject of great pride for all concerned directly or indirectly with the school.

 

But both Master Ji and the gate had withered with time. Both had learned to creak and crow, both sulked with age and made profane gestures in sound. Master Ji had lost his temper; he had lost his life; he had lost his dream; to the unnerving antics of the village. Sometimes giving up is considered virtuous. Patrons of boredom—heralds of death. If you let your dreams die, what dream can you nurture in minds that truly deserve a dream. Compromise, animals, compromise.   

 

Chintu entered the cold building that had its walls coming off. Its paint had rotten. It rolled out an aura of a dead corpse, with a distinct source of energy. It struck with shock. But the shock was of that which leaves us unnerved. Can the house of knowledgethe house of wisdomresemble the house of doom? Show me the kingdom! And I will show you a lie.

 

We create images of our wisdom: not in our wisdom: with conviction. The house of knowledge resides in a word, in a mind, not in a wall.

 

Break down the castle of the foretold

We are the children of a new breeze

Forget us if we don’t except what you preach

We shall learn from the naked trees

 

Panting and rushing he reached the door of his nightmare, and stood silently. He did not know how to react. All eyes turned to him, a gesture of sympathy, with the knowledge of the future.

 

Calm and cruel Master Ji threw the chalk from his hand and raised his voice as if to mock the idea of future itselfSo here is you, my lad. Good. Very good!

 

Trembling emotions take siege. Chintu moaned a muteYes, Master Ji. The words came out like puberty. Fresh and unheard. You could not squeeze the untold from lime; they configure only juice.

 

Achaaa! Come late and no reply, Excuse you can give at least. But no! I thinks you need a lesson, but a different lesson, Smiled Master Ji. Red rotten teeth.

 

He rushes to his prey. His vengeance restored. Frightened eyes catch the million shadows on the ceiling. All sorts of spiders and webs. Instructors of Biology. Tangled and prostratebeaten blue, we live as long as a sparkling dew. Sudden change of scene, his eyes see the room. There are shocking changes. Rapid changes in shape, fast moving objects, from one corner of the eye to the other. Nothing is constant. Light. Dark. Pain. There is a pleasure in pain. A very subtle pleasure, only for those who understand.

 

That will teach you not to come late nowsays a bulging voice from a bulging stomach. Give it horns. Greet the lord of darkness. But: he is innocent. He knows not what he does. The devil was not wrong in what he did. The problem was he was too right. And that’s always wrong.

 

—Let’s play a subtle game

One where you, and I can blame

One where I, and you can blame

Let’s play a subtle game

 

Chintu went over to his desk. And smoothened himself on a seat. Yet again wood calls. Soft and motherly. Scroooaap. Is he going to teach history today? What book do I bring out? Or do I just shut my bag again? Who wrote history? They say we all have a hand?

 

Sit yourself dear friend

Nature will guide you till the end.

 

History swims like waves, crashes upon rocks. Here gems are made. Gems are made. Are made. Made. Fade. Made. Fade. Fake. Made. Fake.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Mind My Mind


My fingers

My fingers

They want to write

They want to scream

Alright


My fingers they want to scream

Alright

I want to scream,

There is a cloud 

A cloud of thunder 

In my mind

Mind my mind

Screaming mind

It want's to write

Alright

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Goddess Of Delight

There she hides her light,
Her gentle feathers of surprise,
There within her calm eyes,
This radiant Goddess of Delight 
 

*Acrylic Painting (Approx. 4"x9") 





*Scanned and Reworked on Photoshop

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Phantom From Dometoo


From where we could see. There was a thick mist. A fist, of clouds. It was hungry and was moving toward us. Fast as the night, came crawling silently. White, wet, damp-smelling. Gifted with furry white paws, it embraced and engulfed everything into its silvery bosom. The hungry cloud monster, what satisfies your hunger? Ask the general. Land! 

Question: What does one get when the war is over?

Answer: Lights off! 

The moon lit up somewhere in the amphitheatre. Mythical blue light of the sky. The throat of Shiva. Is this why we associate night with horror? Coz it’s filled with venom? Churn the tortoise for an answer. And call a seductive angel. The libido element to gladden your senses. Nothing survives without the____. Makes the wolves weep. Not sex; the blue creeping night. 

Weeping howling wolves of the night

Moaning screaming their un-virgined cry 

Yes. Yes. You guessed it (for those who did). This is about phantom. The purple attired black underweared muscleman shitforbrain super hero of sorts. But this is different. I swear. I saw it. People claim to have seen god, and I don’t really get my head around them; so I forgive you if you don’t believe me. But. We were standing at the edge of a path. One of those narrow goat paths that seem to lead to somewhere, and like any religious ceremony, end in absolute rubbish. And start to make you feel, why-the-hell all-that-pain. And we were just wondering how all this could be as beautiful as it was. I will not go and explain the beauty of it. It was night and cool, and I swear, the rest you can imagine on your own. Or else please refer to the romantics; they have quite an account of natural beauty. 

And it was unquite, because the wolves had started to howl, and moan. What do they actually do? Just sit there and weep! Jobless. Reminds me of the pundits and their chanting. Jobless is the word. 

Ohk! Nowishallgettothepoint. 

Me and my friend had run on a vacation to Nepal, and we were at this place near, cat-man-doo, its called dometoo. So we decided that we need to go witness the beauty of things firsthand, and here we were. In the dark of the night, witnessing the copulating mountain. Ok that’s exaggeration. The mountain was not copulating. In fact the mist was so dense and was enveloping at such rapid speed, and with such a smooth touch, that it looked like someone was puling over a sheet before going to sleep. And now that I think about it, I think those mountains could actually have been knees of someone long dead. May be a monster. Did his breath stink? Did Ram have bad breath? 

And well it was quite unsafe, if you ask me. Coz, first, it was unfamiliar land. And second, it was cold and creepy and night. And the mist was pretty near. And shit-the-fuck. From nowhere there came a hissing sound, like a very faint vacuum-cleaner. My mind went haywire. Seriously, I mean, like, at that time of night. In that place, the sound of a vacuum-cleaner, could be the most horrible horrible horriblest thing one could imagine. And to top it up, it was getting louder. Nearing. 

And then something exploded from the mist. The burst of a bubble, vapor dispersing: a prick in air. Soft traces of a white breath. And I closed my eyes, and would have sealed all my holes if I could have. But Shit. And Fuck. That thing grabbed us. And I fainted. 

** 

“Sir, your bill will be Rs 76,456,” said a small voice. Small and ‘cute’, I must add. 

That’s the medical bill. That shit for a superhero, trying to save us, had forgot his horse, and had come on his magic carpet instead. And had rescued us, from shit knows what. And well rammed into a bloody tree. A tree? I mean; how clichéd can you get. A tree. I just can’t believe it, even now. Well that’s alright though. Coz the nurse was nice and that black underweared shitforbrains is dead. Died on the spot. Nearly killed us as well. 

** 

I am going to sue the Airport Authority of Nepal. 

**

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

The Forgotten Dream




You are the star o' Midnight


Bathing in your mid-dream


You are the cool tide


And the fast breeze


O' Midnight


You are the nights sneeze


Soft and sudden


Escalating from beneath


You are mine, dark and quite


Full of noise and light


Whiskey and flight


You are the high-tide


The vehicle of the purple hour


Within you lie dreams


Soaked in moans and screams


You are Midnight


The dark hour with


Violet fangs and claws



O' Midnight?


Where lie your creamy dreams?


The forgotten strange dreams?


We lack a dream!