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Recent Posts
 15:12 | 18/Jun/2008 | 13 Comment(s)
for old times' sake

Visiting my page after months ... have had little time to indulge in leisurely stuff like blogs. Been working hard and partying harder ... ahhh, back to life! Working, Mothering, Travelling, Loving, Facebooking, Orkuting, FlickRing, Housekeeping, Waxing (now waning), Binge-ing (now fasting), Socializing, Drinking, Saving, Spending ....   all but blogging. Guess it's a dispensible pastime in face of an active life.

 

 

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 12:45 | 5/Aug/2007 | 23 Comment(s)

;-)

a friend with weed is a friend indeed

.... and a friend in need is a pest ... LOL ....

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=305vRNoofr8

 

 

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 00:50 | 3/Aug/2007 | 28 Comment(s)
Mom, what does sexy mean?

I’m pissed.

And here’s my rant.

 

My daughter stands in front of the mirror and sucks in her stomach to make it look flatter. She then breaks into a dance move involving some serious pouting and hip shaking.

 

She’s just five.

 

Out shopping, she picks shiny sequinned high heels while I scout for anti-skid sturdy strap on shoes.

 

She wants a midriff baring lycra halter neck, while I shortlist sensible cotton T shirts.

 

She wants a Barbie, while I ask for a Jigsaw puzzle.

 

My husband & I don’t watch TV.

MTV and FTV are restricted to late night way past my kid’s bed time.

 

We don’t discuss or glorify body images.

Fat vs. thin conversations are avoided.

Bollywood movies are seldom watched.

 

We have never bought her a Barbie doll.

[And now I vow to throw out the ones she owns thanks to her doting aunts, who think Barbie Dolls make perfect gifts]

 

It baffles me how my daughter manages to absorb such influences from her peers and Pogo.

 

What pisses me further is the way the market is loaded with stuff which sexualises children.

 

Why Barbie? Why not simple rag dolls? Why not flat-chested, normally proportioned baby dolls?

 

Why mid riff baring backless halter necked tops with ‘sexy’ emblazoned across the chest?

 

Why two piece swimsuits for under 10s?

 

Why advertisements with a boy of eight gazing lovingly at his curvaceous teacher?

 

This can actually feed paedophillia.

Delhi has seen over half a dozen shameful cases in just two months, where victims have been under five.

 

As for being too body conscious, it doesn't end their own reflections in the mirror.

 

I was disturbed to hear a 10 year old boy asking his mother to forgo the extra chapatti in her plate. He was seriously concerned that his mother would put on weight. He also regularly monitors her wardrobe, weeding out the suits and sarees. And this, while the lady in question is an attractive, active career woman in late 30s.

 

While another kid, a 12 year old daughter of a friend calls her mother a ‘baby elephant’ each time she wears jeans because she happens to have a typically Indian generous frame. Trust me, she’s NOT obscenely heavy hipped! But her daughter probably has the 'TV moms' in mind...

 

So where are we headed?

 

How do explain what ‘sexy’ means to a five year old?

 

Is it okay for a little girl to wear a tee that resembles a bikini top?

 

Why can’t there be a Barbie with brown skin, black hair and generous hips?

 

Can't Pogo/Cartoon Network do without airing programmes that feature boy meets girl plots?

 

 

 

 

 

Phew

 

Ok, I’m done hyperventilating …

 

Still cheesed but feeling better,

 

Dee

 

 

 

 

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 23:17 | 24/Jul/2007 | 26 Comment(s)
...


I had written this on a piece of paper and given it to my husband … way back … some seven years ago, when we decided to start a family…

Quite methodically, we gave up smoking, alcohol, birth control [in that order] and tried to detox or purge ourselves in preparation…
[However, I ended up conceiving on the night when we were supposedly having last of our wild substance-abuse parties at a friend’s house!
But that’s another story …]
I was still not in the motherhood gear and was quite apprehensive about this massive milestone we had decided to cross … 
Here’s what flowed back then …

Anxiety
Panic
Ok, so lets make babies
If we have our way
I will soon have
My breasts sagging
My stomach stretch-marked
My hands full
My time short
My hips wider
My paunch in place
My clothes smelling of milk
My room full of soiled diapers
My heart full of guilt
My ankles swollen
My nails chipped
My eyes sleepy
My sex drive lost
My baby crying

My life on hold


 
Will you still love me?
Will you patiently give? 
Your 20 best years
To this person we make
And then suddenly
Let go
And start our lives again?

 

 

 



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 18:40 | 19/Jun/2007 | 54 Comment(s)
Look what I found...

Because woman's work is never done
and is underpaid or unpaid or boring or
repetitious and we're the first to get fired
and what we look like is more important
than what we do and if we get raped it's
our fault and if we get beaten we must have
provoked it and if we raise our voices we're
nagging bitches and if we enjoy sex we're
nymphos and if we don't we're frigid and if
we love women it's because we can't get a
"real" man and if we ask our doctor too many
questions we're neurotic and/or pushy and
if we expect childcare we're selfish and if we
stand up for our rights we're aggressive and
"unfeminine" and if we don't we're typical
weak females and if we want to get married
we're out to trap a man and if we don't we're
unnatural and because we still can't get an
adequate safe contraceptive but men can walk
on the moon and if we can't cope or don't
want a pregnancy we're made to feel
guilty about abortion and...for lots and lots
of other reasons we are part of the
women's liberation movement.

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 20:19 | 22/May/2007 | 39 Comment(s)
Great Indian Downloads

Indians are an intrusive lot.

We dare to tread where most ‘polite’ Westerners dread.

 

In this Sunday’s Brunch [a supplement with the HT] I came upon an article. The author whacks us eloquent on the issue of getting embarrassingly personal when we converse. Even when we are dealing with people we’ve just met.

 

It’s an Asian sub continent trait.

[ As is staring. But that’s another story. ]

 

Yes, we can ask an unmarried lady why she isn’t ‘settled’ yet.

We can ask a man his basic salary & what he makes on his trips abroad.

We ask the childless why they haven’t ‘conceived’ yet.

We can ask a senior citizen how he plans to divide his property.

 

We prod our neighbours about their son’s board exam marks, their sister in law’s divorce or their grand dad’s bowel movements with such aplomb, that a ‘civilised’ gora would just self-combust with indignation!

 

Ok, we have all been on both sides - the tormented and the tormentor.

 

Why is it such a bad thing, I ask?

Before the junta just lynches me, let me hurriedly explain why I wonder.

 

Talking purges.

Talking exorcises.

Sharing our woes, joys or dilemmas is therapeutic.

 

This is perhaps why we as a lot, don’t have the shrink-couch-therapy culture of the west. Because we always download! We don’t care if it’s a stranger on a train who empathises with our painful piles problem! We just yak. We let it all hang out. Which I believe is very good! In a country like ours where number of problems are greater than number of people, it is like the Great Indian Unburdening that goes on relentlessly just as our culture does.

 

I see a huge virtue in sharing. It keeps us sane. It keeps us mentally balanced. It teaches us how we’re not alone in any of our situations.

It’s an Invisible Mass Bonding at work all the time.

Any Indian can recall hundreds of anecdotes, experiences, maladies, situations, home remedies and what not as a fall out of this art of ‘intrusive’ conversation.

 

It’s amazing how we draw strength, wisdom, support and sense of belonging from all the massive sharing we keep doing.

 

Yeah the negative fall out is that people gossip and get too judgemental, but hey… every bloody thing is a two way street ain’t it? I choose to see the greater good. Maybe us ‘city wallahs’ value our thoughts, privacy and egos way too much. Granted, that a city slicker can get bugged by stupid questions like, “Beta, why do you let your maid have 4 cups of tea daily? You are spoiling her…”

 

But to crores of our brethren, this is the sole source of counselling, advice seeking, unburdening and learning. It’s like a million counsellors / spiritual guides / shrinks floating around. So at a macro level, it is a fantastic device to keep sanity in a country where living conditions are as adverse as they get.

 

Now let me hear it from you…

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 20:17 | 22/May/2007 | 35 Comment(s)
Timepass Staring

There’s another one I’m yet to figure.

We stare.

It seems like a national past time. And we’re not alone. This is an Asian characteristic. Shameless and unabashed, we stare to our heart’s content be it in trains, in malls, in buses, on beaches, in temples, at parties or wherever. Oh, and its not the gender based staring where men ogle at women. This is generic, more democratic staring. We do it regardless of age, gender, class, position.


Do react.

Eager to hear all of you.

 

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 15:43 | 23/Apr/2007 | 37 Comment(s)
Cultural Shift?

''Our youth now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority. They show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. They contadict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up their food and tyrranise teachers''


Socrates, 5th Century B.C.
.......................................................................................................................................

''The script remains the same, only the actors change.''

Dee


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 10:07 | 29/Mar/2007 | 40 Comment(s)
A Woman Should Have

MAYA ANGELOU'S BEST

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
enough money within her control to move out

and rent a place of her own even if she never wants to or needs to...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
something perfect to wear if the employer
or date of her dreams wants to see her in an hour...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ...
a youth she's content to leave behind....

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
a past juicy enough that she's looking forward to retelling it in her old age....

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE .....
a set of screwdrivers, a cordless drill, and a black lace bra...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
one friend who always makes her laugh... and one who lets her cry...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
a good piece of furniture not previously owned by anyone else in her family...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
eight matching plates, wine glasses with stems, and
a recipe for a meal that will make her guests feel honored...

A WOMAN SHOULD HAVE ....
a feeling of control over her destiny...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
how to fall in love without losing herself..

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
how to quit a job,
break up with a lover,
and confront a friend without ruining the friendship...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
when to try harder... and WHEN TO WALK AWAY...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
that she can't change the length of her calves,
the width of her hips, or the nature of her parents..

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
that her childhood may not have been perfect...but its over...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
what she would and wouldn't do for love or more...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
how to live alone... even if she doesn't like it...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
whom she can trust,
whom she can't,
and why she shouldn't
take it personally...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
where to go...
be it to her best friend's kitchen table...
or a charming inn in the woods...
when her soul needs soothing...

EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW...
what she can and can't accomplish in a day... a month...and a year...





 

I think many parts should be changed to a person’ coz they apply to everyone. Except the black lacy bra maybe… or then maybe not! HA! What the heck!!

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 14:40 | 12/Mar/2007 | 41 Comment(s)
Two Wicked Ones

Wicked Dee is back!
These two I had written for Sandy's last contest.

The brief was - ''true life incident where you deliberately planned, strategised and carried out an entire gimmick to simply scare/con someone. You were a child then, under sixteen and you thought you absolutely had to do it...it could be serious, funny, rude, whatever..."

.............................................................................................................................

number one
.............................................................................................................................


Mrs. B

She was a demonic, Luciferous teacher.

We were the inmates of an all girls' convent school.

 

She taught Moral Science and had managed to convince us that even one dirty thought about a boy, would send us to Hell. She frowned upon inter school events with the co-eds. She even got the Principal to ban all boys over 12 from our annual school fete.

 

Mrs. B was the Terror who ripped open the hemlines of our skirts if they rose above the knee. She took mean pleasure in seeing us squirm as she announced surprise checks for our bags. Her thin-lipped witchy smile was in place each time she enforced a new tyrannical rule like No Long Nails, No High Ponytails – Two Oiled Plaits Only, No Big Earrings, No Waxed Arms Till class XI, No Loud Singing, No Talking, No Running, No Breathing!!!

 

Mrs. B was Terror squared for me as she also lived near my house. There was a gargoyle outside her house ugly enough to scare off the postman, let alone an evil eye.

 

She was a devout woman who made daily trips to the local temple. There were elaborate pujas at her place almost every month. Her husband was never caught without a red tilak on his frowning forehead.

 

My grandmother attributed their sullen faces to their being childless. Maybe Mrs. B just needed to have her own. Meanwhile, I panicked at the thought of being caught buying V Day cards in the local market!

 

But, Mrs. B's efforts to purge our minds were proving to be useless. In class IX, at the age of 14 my classmates & I were fantasising about George Michael of Wham. [Don’t look at me like that! He was cute and still very much in the closet then! ] Our hearts bled for him when he sang 'Last Christmas I gave you my heart'. We thought non-stop about cute boys and their bikes and riding pillion on them.

 

As my misfortune would have it, I got caught with worse than just a V Day card. Horrors of horror, Mrs. B during her routine Surprise-Checks, found an MB in my bag. [For those who missed out growing up normally, an MB is a Mills & Boon novel with romantic covers depicting a couple in a passionate embrace. It has torrid affairs and hopeless mush as content.]

 

Her face red with anger, Mrs. B hollered at me. Stopping just short of calling me a you-know-what, she hauled me to the Principal's office, called my mother and announced my characterless-ness in the assembly too.

 

The Princi made me kneel outside her office for a whole day.

The assembly sniggered at my misery.

My mother laughed off the whole thing and gave me a hug.

[She also taught me how to smuggle them more cautiously.]

 

But I smarted from the treatment meted.

I seethed and swore, till I schemed a killer get-back in my head.

 

Some ten days down, there was chaos at Mrs. B's house. There were relatives and friends streaming in all week. Temple priests were fed elaborate meals. Mrs. B flitted about with nervous eyes. She wore red sarees and a morose face. Her house resounded with non-stop chants. Conch shells were blown and yagnas performed.

 

The girls at school had a week of peace.

The neighbourhood was lost in a melee.

My parents wondered aloud and hoped all was well.

My grandmother, in a manner unique to senior citizens, simply walked up and asked what was wrong.

 

It seemed Mrs. B had received a mysterious letter.

 

The envelope was tied with mauli, the sacred red thread of the Hindus. It also had an ominous red tilak smeared on it. Inside there was a square piece of red cloth with a stick figure pierced with a pin. There were dried petals of marigold flower, some grains of rice, tumeric powder, a lock of hair and a few pigeon feathers. There was also a picture of Goddess Kali smeared with what looked like dried blood.

 

There was a massive discussion at our home about tantrics.

Debates ensued.

People split in two groups.

My grandmother put black kajal spots on all my cousins' faces.

My dad got serious about writing a letter to the school. Such a pagan teacher was just not suited for his daughters or any one else's.

My mom wondered how could the postal department let through such a thing.

I just kept out of way.
 

 

P.S. Camlin does an excellent shade called Vandyke Brown in poster colours. It appears like dried blood if you mix it in transparent glue and smear it cleverly.


.............................................................................................................................

number two
.............................................................................................................................

We were 15 going on 16. My best friend from school turned magical sixteen a few months ahead of us. Three of us decided to perk up things a bit. And so a picnic was planned with three boys.

Boy, were we excited.

 

I invited a neighbour of mine. He was 18, had a car and a licence so he qualified.

 

Other two boys were classmates of the birthday girl's brother. They were two years senior and very with-it. Our friend swore them to secrecy. She dreaded her brother 's ire if he ever caught a whiff of this plan.

 

Permissions were sought. Alibis were bought. And we were finally off to Suraj Kund Lake on Delhi border. Basking in the January sun, we played Dumb Charades, Antakshari and Hide & Seek. With baskets full of food and a portable stereo we were a happy bunch.

 

Trouble showed up, as it does whenever things are too smooth.

One of the boys [Lets just call him The Idiot, shall we?] pulled out three beer cans. Everyone else refused; so he went on to guzzle all the beer all by himself.

 

Good food, warmth and running around rendered us useless. Lazing on the grass we took a snooze under the sun. Sweet dreams were not to be for soon I was shaken awake.

 

I opened an eye and saw the girls in a panic mode. The Idiot, high on beer had managed to kiss the birthday girl on her mouth. She made all the right noises and protests. But he played the sleaze ball. Managed to keep her quiet, by just mentioning her brother's infamous temper.

 

Oh the bloody nerve, we bristled. Furious but helpless we huddled and put our heads together. I glared at The Idiot, lying face down at some distance, sleeping off the beer, his jacket thrown carelessly on the grass.

 

And then the sun shone brighter. My friends looked horrified & excited at the same time. But how, when, where? They twittered. Just smuggle me his jacket I begged and they did.

 

This episode was to become The Story of Our Lifetime because The Idiot and the birthday girl are now married. And to date, he doesn't know the truth. He appears baffled each time he narrates this one to his buddies even years later. No one believes he is innocent and they backslap him about being an early starter.

 

Incidentally, a few days after the picnic, his mother came upon a bra stashed away in his jackets' inside pocket. She was checking the pockets before she sent it to the dry cleaner. At first the poor lady thought it to be a white handkerchief, but when she pulled it out she let out a scream.

 

The Idiot was slapped awake by his father. His parents were devastated. They could not imagine their school going son, just 17 to be sexually active. Between his mother's wails and his father's cane, The Idiot kept pleading his innocence. His uncle was brought in to counsel him about sexually transmitted diseases and such. The poor virgin boy never knew what hit him. He still doesn't.

 

He lives in Kuala Lumpur now with his wife and son. Before marriage, he swore to my friend that she has been the only woman in his life. He implored her not to believe anything his cousins might try to tell her. She still manages to look earnest and nods sympathetically each time he recalls that day. 

 

P.S.

Almost all women are masters of The-Art-of-Removing-the-Brassiere without removing their shirts. They can unhook and wiggle and reach and voila! It's Off! It was my wicked idea, and I had to offer mine that afternoon. In bright sunlit winter afternoon, my bulky sweater and my friends stood guard while I pulled this prank. Only our girl gang still knew of this so far, but I will have to answer my husband's raised eyebrows now.



 

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