Monday, February 23, 2015

Enjoy today, Mamma!

This was originally published at
https://youngandnewmoms.wordpress.com/2015/02/12/enjoy-today-mamma/




I have this little postcard stuck on my bathroom wall so that each time I surreptitiously sneak in to pee - darting away from the almost-4-year-old and almost-1-year-old - I emerge a better, patient version of my mommy self. Each time I recite a different phrase as I delicately dodge a toy farm animal lying here or a half chewed piece of the new helicopter lying under the chair, while glancing to check if one of the kids hasn't accidentally eaten the uncooked ball of dough lying in front of the toy dog.

Almost-4-year-old and almost-1-year-old.

Whoa.

Just how did they get to be so big? Kid 1 was a dolly handed to me- me- a blubbering mass of nerves and haywire hormones - and she clung to me (still does, falls asleep only while clutching my elbow) - fashioning me into the confident mom that I am today. Her birthdays have gone by in a blur- but her firsts - tooth/ vacation/ word/ walk are all preserved carefully in the labyrinths of my mind, aided by my able iphone.
They say one is more carefree with the second child and this couldn't be truer in my case. What she lost by virtue of arriving second, she makes up in cuteness. Her responses to my conversations with her leave me as amazed as the pride I feel when Kid1 uses long words like 'complicated' and 'fascinated' correctly. Each new milestone leaves me amazed as I wonder at this beautiful cherub I created.

And I realise it myself- I'm happy. My day may be filled with a seamless list of things to do as I flit from one chore to the next - but at the end of the day, when my creaking bones let out a long sigh of their own and I'm washed over by waves of exhaustion, I'm a happy tired. 

I'm a happy contented mum, willing to be a camera for all their lives - I only wish that my camera had more slow motion videos so I could enjoy today more! 

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Mommy, Mommy!

Published in an online blog - youngandnewmoms.com - December 2014

https://youngandnewmoms.wordpress.com/2014/12/31/mommy-mommy/

I was blessed with my second daughter in April this year, a little short of my third birthday as a Mommy. Let me recount how, creating another human being is different and yet similar to the first time.

• You know the conversion of weeks and months and don’t spend all your time anxiously poring over ‘What to expect when you’re expecting’. The unwarranted advice continues (who doesn’t love to talk in India!?) but this time around you know (as opposed to first time guessing) and can politely fob off well meaning eager-to-guess-the-gender-relatives.

• Dietary restrictions are a thing of the first pregnancy. You eat all you want (healthy, of course) – without ascribing any twinge you may feel in the abdomen to the last piece of fried fish. If I hadn’t suffered from massive heartburn in the last trimester I’m sure I would’ve beaten Adam’s record in Man vs Food for downing the spiciest Vada Pao, as my fat waddly self craved for the highest level of pungent, chillies- infused Tabasco-bathed food.

• You are more confident of the changes happening to your body:
The fleshy stretch lines, the dark pigmentation patches, the temporary freckles on your face – they will all melt away just like those extra kilos – with simply breastfeeding – a fact you revel in as you dig into that sinful chocolate mousse!

• You start tanking up on your sleep unabashedly. I remember sleeping for three hours at a stretch with my elder daughter cuddled in my arms, blissfully snoring away the afternoon. I loved digging my chin into her shoulder, letting her soft curls brush against my face- the sound of her steady breathing- the best lullaby for me in the world.
Now, with a pre-schooler and an infant – it’s my daily challenge to get them to nap together so I can catch shut eye of twenty minutes!

• Sometimes, just sometimes, people take your 2nd time pregnant self for granted. 
The first time around is tricky. You are a tad apprehensive and so are people around you. But by the second trimester of the second child, people adopt a BTDT attitude. This may cause some frustrated tears but nothing that a good, big bar of your favourite chocolate and your preferred music won’t solve.

• Epidural doesn’t seem so bad. Who wants to go through double-digit hours of labour again?
The first time labour lasted 17 hours, the second time – 7 hours (by this statistic I’m tempted to have a third baby just to see how fast he’ll arrive). With an epidural, labour was not only relatively painless, it also turned out way shorter. I remember laughing on some silly doctor joke as they wheeled me into the delivery room. So much for remembering everything about birthing- experiencing the worst pain to twist your insides out – once is enough!

• You still can’t figure out if baby has fed enough, has latched properly or is hungry even after feeding for half an hour: 
Even the most experienced moms draw blanks when confronted with this question. Figuring out a child you’ve raised yourself is easy- you know what they want sometimes even before they ask for it, but a brand new human being? That takes time- and however many babies you may have, you will still feel puzzled by them till you get used to them.

• You know the difference between diaper changing mat, receiving sheet, cot sheet… With their correct usage!
Yes, newborns have their own world populated by all things small and beautiful. From the knowledge gleaned through your firstborn you can arrange the nursery faster and better than your local kiddie shop without fumbling over different types of ‘sheets’!

• You can actually bathe your newborn yourself: even if it is in the baby support!


There are a whole host of other things too, obvious things that I may have missed- things like pregnancy brain (you’re too busy with your toddler to forget anything), aches and pains (your toddler being the best medicine) and ubiquitous doctor visits (where the focus is more on jokes than the check-up) – which are food for another post.

And when the infant and toddler meet each other for the first time, or when infant realises that the toddler is her best friend and ally for life- is yet another interesting read.

Till then, Mommies, keep your spirits high.
Cheers to 2015!

If Only

Published in Muse India, an online literary journal - February 2014

http://www.museindia.com/regularcontent.asp?issid=49&id=4209

She checked the time on her expensive mother-of-pearl, diamond-studded Rolex yet again with an outward sigh. 'Damn,' she thought to herself, 'Varun will scold me again for being late - and I thought being late was the first hallmark of a successful socialite,' as she plastered another smile at the lady behind the counter - indicating her urge for speed.

As she was ushered into the innards of the sophisticated parlour for a routine manicure, she couldn't help but noticing the beautiful beautician who had been assigned to her - her regular being caught up, on such short notice. Her skin was flawlessly white and she had dark smoky eyes, achieved with smudging kohl - an effect not unknown to her - for hadn't she done it herself on numerous occasions with the built in smudge effect of the expensive eyeliner she used? - but she saw that the beautician's eyes looked far more pretty, far more real than her oft-made up eyes. Her hands were as clean as cotton - nails trimmed and filed down, while her own stood out like sharp red talons in contrast, the years of nail polish and buffing showing in all their pinkness while hers were fresh, young and so clean. 

As the young beautician started scrubbing, she couldn't help but think how much she was putting in to save her marriage to Varun which seemed dwindling precariously by the thin thread of the production company they jointly owned. From spa rejuvenation therapies in order to make herself irresistible in front of all those nubile young women who were perennially waiting outside their office in hopes of a plum role to various Botox diets, she had done everything. And yet..., Varun seemed distant, haughty, too caught up in the heady success that their company was celebrating today. 

[She is so beautiful. Her watch alone must be worth lakhs of rupees – lakhs! If only I had a few thousands to save my home from being taken away from us! The end of the month seems near. Where will we go when he throws us out? Bharti Masi? Alok Chacha? But they stay in one-room homes too... Where will we go, oh God? What will we do? Oh no...! What have I done... that she stood up?] 

The bubbles of the scrubbing tray fell in an ominous puddle on her silk dress and she groaned inwardly. This was a gift from Varun - and she couldn't help noticing how deftly the beautician wiped away the small pool of water and brought out a hair dryer to erase the soap marks. Waving off the small group of onlookers including the worried cashier, the girl settled down again for the other hand, apologising profusely. It doesn't matter, she thought to herself. No one will notice me - or this stain. Varun will be too busy with the others, laughing, chatting... 

[Such a beautiful silk dress! It reminds me of the new dresses Amma got for us at Diwali when Baba had a job. Now even Dada is struggling to bring in regular money. They only have me and this steady income. I hope this nice lady tips me well. I can buy some sweets with it today. She has such tapered lovely fingers - like an artist. I wonder if she is one herself...!] 

Yes, an artist. Varun was an artist, a smooth talking con man, having drugged her with his salt-n-pepper hair, aquiline nose and strong muscular jaw, wooing her over buckets of roses and strings of candlelit dinners. It all had seemed so perfect then - just like the perfect half moons on her pink nails which were being gently teased back by the young beautician to reveal soft pink nails underneath. 

[I have managed to complete the maximum number of jobs today too. I have about two hundred in tips today. If she gives me fifty, I will be able to put away those two hundred towards the payment and take home some sweets for Amma. It's been so long since we have had any treat in our home. It's always money or the lack of it... Tomorrow I will leave home half-hour early so I can take on more clients. More time here means more money.] 

'Now if only Varun would spend more time with me than money'... she thought absently as the beautician rubbed some fragrant moisturiser into her soft hands to complete the manicure, thinking of the few amorous massages that had fizzled out, like their marriage, a few months earlier. She banished the thought that since the time a particularly beautiful brunette had joined their company as an accountant, Varun always had some business and finances to take care of, lasting well into early dawn!

[Her hands look like a fairy's. She's so white and her skin glows so transparent. She was my best client today - not even creating any fuss when I dropped the soapy water on her. What an angel!] 

Yes, only God and her senses could save her now, thinking of the monthly visit to the temple that she had recently started undertaking. It was a feeble attempt to stop her husband from straying, but it gave her immense inner peace. 

'Thanks so much,' she said, finishing up the manicure by folding two crisp hundred rupee notes into her hand, gratefully looking into the young beautician's eyes, and seeing nothing but emptiness there. 

[Two hundred rupees! Now I can save double my budget today. Maybe I can get a new saree for Amma - she has only two... what a nice kind lady! May God give her all she wants!] 

And she stepped out into her waiting car, flashing her best smile in readiness for Varun - the smile which reached only to her eyes because her heart was bleeding inside, praying that God would give her true happiness and attention from Varun, if only for a day! 

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Sweet Lime Soda


I know.
Even before I can visualize myself seated beside the phone, hearing the doctor confirm it, I know I am carrying Arun’s child.
Arun’s and mine.
We have known each other for twenty seven years, been married for three years, and have been wanting kids since five years now, stealing surreptitious glances with glassy eyes at couples in restaurants who have brown ringleted daughters and spit-bubbly sons, imagining ourselves in their places, catching each others’ eye and then dissolving in twin fits of comfortable smiles and the warm knowledge that only married couples can share- that the journey of the act of loving leads to the beautiful destination called babies.
Arun hopes for a daughter.
Just like me.
A daughter who will wear my hair clips- all colour coordinated according to the day of the week, which are sealed in a plastic see-through Ziploc bag so tenderly by my mother, resting in the bottom-most drawer of my clothes cupboard. A daughter who will wear the red crochet-and-lace dress that I had worn for my first birthday, cake stains and milk stains notwithstanding. A daughter who will proudly sport the blue and pink butterfly patterned sports shoes that my younger sister had worn once and relegated to the corner most recesses of her cupboard simply because she was a tad scared of those flying thingies.
A daughter, who I will name Arisia- a combination of Arun’s name and mine- interlocked in that act of creating an individual from our best, for there is nothing more meaningful to a couple’s union than validifying its worth by children.
I glance at the silver clock in the drawing room. A full three hours to the time when the doctor said he would call with the results of the second round of tests. Arun has already called me twice since he left the house barely an hour ago. Though we are chatting as usual, both of us are aware that our lives will change drastically after this one day, and that knowledge rests like a looming cloud over us, which is going to burst forth and shower pink rose petals on us.
I am happy. I seat myself down on the velvet sofa and settle my loose T-shirt over myself.
I take a sip of the sweet lime soda which is my constant craving this past week. The servants have all come and gone. Through the silence, I can hear the distant song of a sparrow- hesitating at first, and then breaking into a full throated chirpy monologue- which I am sure, is about, the birds and the bees. I am glad I gave up my job a month back, ever since Arun’s promotion came through. I listen to all his office-politics single-mindedly, there are clean sheets and towels in the linen cupboard, there is a week’s worth of fresh vegetables in the crisper and I’m more at peace with him and myself.
I close my eyes and rest my head against the softness of the sofa. The breeze wafts in a salty smell- the smell of open spaces, green fields- the field in our school, when I was a young girl, which, on Sports Days would be aflutter with activity and the colourful tents marking seating space for parents and teachers, and through which we would all enter, class-wise, in a single queue, which would, at the end of our routines, form exotic formations with different props. As a child, I often marveled at the brilliance names of those P.T. drills- Flamboyant Fans by class Five or Rivetting Ribbons by class Eight, and the best- which I still haven’t forgotten- Dancing Decks (playing cards) by class Three. After the drills and races would be over, we would sneak out from our classes, and peep through the tent joints to catch glimpses of the Boys’ school students sitting opposite, and strain to hear the name of the Cock House and the best performance- letting out invariate whoops of joy or collective groans of sadness.
The silk curtains rustle as they brush against my face in the breeze, and I think back to the pale yellow and maroon pant –ensemble that I had worn for my second social with the Boys College. Socials were the most talked about affairs in school. There would be a sprinkling of these haloed events through the year- the April welcome social, the September cockhouse one, and the November Children’s day social. We waited for the socials with a life-defining purpose, and scrambled to get our names down on the lists every time. Held on a Saturday afternoon, those four hours of dancing, boys and delectable canteen food would mesmerize and captivate us for a whole week, when we discussed the event threadbare- including the number of boys we danced with and the envious number of cold drinks (read money) a boy spent on us. Coiffuered and perfumed, we would ascend the rather large steps of the Boys college bus, sent to us faithfully each time, feeling every inch the Cinderellas driving up to an evening of entertainment and amusement, being greeted by anxious boys running their hands nervously through their hair, and lining up to receive us as we stepped inside. Rituals like the music blaring as soon as the first girl stepped inside, never refusing a boy for the first dance, and not divulging any vital information about ourselves like phone numbers or addresses were held sacrosanct till the evening ended in a blur of No Mercy’s Please Don’t go and enthusiastic ‘Last song, sir’ by the boys. How we plotted and planned to puncture the tyres of the gargantuan bus so that we could spend some more time knowing that cute guy who had finally asked us to dance in the last fifteen minutes. Of course, established veterans like the hostellers had their regular boyfriends (exotic Anglo-Indian, brown haired, blue eyed boys with cute names like Nigel and Derek) whom they would never let go for a second, while we day scholars would eye them enviously. And that one unforgettable social, where, dressed in that cream and maroon pantsuit, and smelling freshly of Lakme’s Shie, my hair a silken sheen around my shoulders, I had danced the evening away with the most popular guy in school. My rating in school with the juniors zoomed to an unbelievable high as ten of my unwavering ‘fans’ bought me ice sticks and sweet bun-cholas every day for a week after that.
I smile fondly- my daughter would be more popular than I was.
In a weird pact that three of my group members had made in a fit of undying loyalty towards the school, we had agreed that our children would also study in the same school- perhaps revive our names carved so painstakingly on the Bio lab benches, and find our names in the Prefect register, but now I felt I wanted to give my daughter the best education- and the best school- a school better than mine.
Only ten minutes have passed since my reverie, and I place the cordless phone on the low coffee table, and ease myself on the sofa, carefully arranging the cushions around me. Cushions that Arun and I had picked up at a fair held in our hometown. I look around at my flat- built carefully, brick by loving brick, bought on months of intense saving in the best suburb in Mumbai, affording a view of the boundless ocean- the hallmark of Mumbai’ s existence. How we had scrounged all the streets of Bandra to finally rest in this reclusive yet accessible block of apartments- the decision to settle in Mumbai weighing on our hearts as much as the hefty sum we would have to shell out as EMIs – for both Arun and I were small towners- a little lost in this city of bigness, this city of impersonality, this city where the only constant was people, people and more people.
I remember the small town smell of Lucknow- that perfumed waft which hit my nostrils as I walked through the tiny Arrival lounge a few months back- to my frantically waving parents. There’s something about the way a town smells, and its funny that you don’t even notice it unless you return to it. The smell of Mumbai was commercial- air heavy with moisture seeped in germs, half cut watermelons, thickly boiled elaichi tea and the collective sweat mixed with talc as people mingled with more people everywhere.
My daughter will only be loved, and caressed as soon as she enters the world.
Living with Arun has been one of the greatest gifts I’ve given myself. We have grown up together. His family is probably closer to my family than any of our blood relations. He is older to me by a good two years and I had been seeing him around my house for as long as I can remember. Yet all that familiarity did not develop into predictability and even though I knew he had a soft corner for me, I was completely taken by surprise when he had proposed marriage. He’s a true gentleman who never fails to surprise me, whether it is shopping or cooking. He’s comfortable, like a worn shirt and I know that there are no nasty surprises that he will spring on me.
Even though we have known each other for the past twenty-seven years (that’s how long I’ve existed), we keep discovering each other every day. I know we both will change after this one day, and I’m happy. I catch my reflection in the TV screen and I make a little toast to myself with my soda glass, feeling like a little incandescent soda bubble inside. My family, and Arun’s have morphed themselves into each other seamlessly- playing out the role of longtime friends into relatives. My father and she, as well as Arun’s parents had always known that this fondness between us would coalesce into a relationship. Thus this joy was doubled when we finally got married at a super-lavish ceremony three years back.
Somehow, knowing Arun had given me the freedom to march ahead in my chosen career, and despite performing well, I had begun to find that corporate life so empty and stripped of meaning. “What do you mean, empty?” exclaimed my boss when I had informed her I was quitting- she had seen me rise through the years and had pinned her hopes on me as her next Manager. But I had stuck to my decision, and suddenly I was loving not doing anything. It gave me the greatest satisfaction when I responded to fat aunties and balding uncles’ questions of ‘what are you doing these days’ as ‘nothing- I’m a housewife’ and see the look of undisguised amazement on their faces. And my daughter will be free to choose whatever she wants. Although, of course, a tiny spark inside me wants her to be a doctor- that age-old profession hammering its goodness into my soul. I’m thinking-these long flights of memories that have bled me dry and I’m glad for this unbroken silence- this peaceful rest which has stolen over me. I’m not quite sure when I doze off.
The shrill ring of the telephone breaks into my reverie. I can hear the commotion at the back of the doctor’s clinic. He wants me to come down as soon as possible. I wait for a fraction, expecting him to say those magical words. When he doesn’t, I can’t hold myself back, and I ask him. He again repeats it, saying he would want to explain something to me, and it cannot be done over the phone. I ask him again- why is he behaving so differently?
And then he says it.
Says those words that will turn our world upside down.
Says those words which will change our lives.
But there is no happiness in them.
I am sitting by the phone, and there are no smiles on the other side.
The sparrow’s song has ended.
The sweet lime soda is finished.
And the looming cloud over us has burst and deposited only sadness and tears for us.
And my daughter- whom I’ve come to love so much in the past thirty days, will be just that- a dream.
My tears that are a silent obituary to that dream that will die unrequited.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Platypus Day


Platypus Day is March 2.
This was written as part of a flash-fiction contest organised by Duckbill Publishers.
The platypus was confused. She had stared long at her reflection in the river this morning, after Duck had accused her of being an imposter.
Earlier, Otter and Beaver had washed their hands off her genealogy. Who would baptise her first born?
The platypus lived at the edge of the large river and had no other relative, except Mr Platypus, who was quite useless.
Then, she had an idea. She would ask the Shrimp family downriver. And maybe, they would stay for dinner- and she wouldn't bother foraging - it had been so long since they had had shrimp cocktail!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

'Chicken curry, rice' - My entry for the GetPublished Contest


Love doesn't ever retain the pure form of it's birth. It metamorphoses into passion, trust, vanilla concern and even indifference. This story traces the journey of love between a couple married for ten years, within the space of an hour- that deathly hour following the husband's confession to falling in love with another woman. Read entirely from the wife's viewpoint, it seeks to ponder the security of the age-old institution of marriage and the absence of the adrenaline first-love-high which quietly drains away from a long marriage. 
The wife, who wishes to salvage their marriage by cooking her husband's favourite (chicken curry,rice) thinks about the implications of his decision- even lauding him for it- with a tiny twist at the end. 
Extract from the story:
I grew up hearing the ultimate love story of Veer and Kudi and my eight-year old mind started fashioning dreams of my own Veer. How was I to know that my prince would leave me with hot insidious tears, more painful than those physical stitches that Kudi had to bear...
I'd like to be a little happy today as I prepare the chicken curry, rice for dinner tonight. Anant is going to be home early and I can smell something different. Maybe tonight will be the start of something new.
Something to redeem our wasted marriage together.
There is hope and I'd like to make it grow with the one dish that Anant loves.
I chop onions, tomatoes. Bring out the kadhai and melt butter with oil. The zeera crackles reassuringly while I grind the onions. Watch them slowly turn from white to pink to brown...
How can he just leave behind a life and walk away? Walk away from a life measured by ten years.
A life of little but heart-felt laughter and things we did together. How do I replicate those memories of the wedding, the first time his twitchy mother came visiting us, the first time I cooked his now-favourite chicken curry, the first time we made love in places other than the bed? Is my heart big enough to run those experiences again? Or do they just fade away like those shooting stars we saw on our stolen vacation to Goa?
What about his towel drying outside? Should I bring that in or let it remain?
The gas connection in his name and I don't even know the consumer number because he always re- ordered it.
His anti- acidity pills in the mug on the table.
Will you ever come back, Anant, to take what's yours? Exactly what is yours? Wasn't I yours too?
**********************************
Why do married people fall in love with someone else? It's because there is a glaring, hard-to-ignore void in their spouse which is filled perfectly by that someone else. 
I had developed more voids in me than Anant or I could ever fill.
**********************************
Suddenly, I'm seized by an indescribable panic. I'm no longer in my twenties, when I had the energy to stay awake the whole night drinking and watching movies with friends and then traipse into office bleary eyed but alert.
I'm 33.
And suddenly single.
Endnote: This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs from Yashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

The Siamese Swan


(Science fiction)
Oprah sighed.
A long drawn out gust of breath, full of self pity. There he was- Tudor. The best thing since sliced beetles on lotus. The handsomest male swan in their lake. But he'd never look at her- forget a second glance. For she was- a freak of nature- a Siamese Swan. Born with not one- but two graceful necks and heads.
Harpo sighed.
A short, crisp intake of breath. There he was- Tudor- the handsomest of the lot. Would he look at her today- she- a Siamese Swan- saddled with the other head- Oprah
?
Oprah swam a little closer to where Tudor was- maybe tonight she could tell him how she felt. She'd heard the elders whispering it was a full moon tonight. Maybe the silvery moon, the cool lake and the ample stars could add to the lovers' atmosphere. Tonight...
Harpo swam a little closer to where Tudor was- craning her neck to hear what he was saying to the others. Maybe tonight, was all she heard. What was tonight? If only she could get rid of the silly other neck- Oprah- she'd have the body to herself and Tudor would be hers. But how, was the question. Hoping Oprah had heard 'tonight'- she looked away, a devious little seed creeping into her brain.
Oprah heard tonight. Yes. Tonight it would be. She looked at her reflection in the clear blue water. What if Harpo had never been there? The elders often complimented her on her beauty and she knew none of those remarks were meant for Harpo. Harpo was the only impediment between her and Tudor. She tried to shake off the 'what if' feeling. No, she couldn't, not to her own sister. 
Harpo thought of Oprah. Silly silly silly. She'd have been much better off without this other neck craning away her chances of a full-blown romance.
Slowly dusk fell in sheets over the small lake. Tudor and his small gang of female admirers were gazing at the velvety sky with it's multitude of stars. They heard a cackle, followed by sharp grunts and then a hiss. Swimming over to the bushy clump, they found the Siamese Swan- the one of a kind rare sight- whom Tudor believed to be an incarnation of God- and worthy of secret worship- floating feet up.
It's two necks were severely twisted, as if in battle. 
The elders bemoaned the fact that tonight was the seventh night of the full moon, the night when God himself would've descended the Earth, through his prized creation of the rare Siamese Swan.