Friday, October 7, 2022

everything is terrible

 There are signs of devastation everywhere. 

My Spotify playlists (love we're made from porcelain)

My Myntra shopping history (black lace, three pairs)

My room, my plants, your imprints (the bougainvillea that blooms the least, the empty space where a "thank you for coming to xx" card used to hang, the monstera that brushes me mockingly every time I walk by)

My chat history, achilles heel of my life (the laughable number of times we said "no backsies", every sticker I thought was mine which became ours)

The devastation comes, wave after wave, when I least expect it, shattering the sanitized calm of my placid existence, leaving me breathless, arms wrapped around ribs, trying to forget, forget, forget

forget the feeling of being loved the way you loved me

forget the freedom of walking in while you worked and peppering your face with kisses, just because i could 

forget the dogs we dreamed of  

the white picket fence, the puns, the ease, the...sun

Just trying to forget the goddamn sun. 


Friday, January 8, 2021

2021

 Well, if there was ever a good year to decide not to plan and not to have hard and fast resolutions, it was definitely 2020. I wrote nothing, read an ordinary amount (the Bridgerton marathon balancing out nicely with the A Suitable Boy sprint) and bought a medium number of things. I planned nothing, and yet it was one of the more anxious years I've lived. But then, it was an anxious year for the world. 

Hopefully, 2021 will be better. Hopefully, the good (and Terrible) things I found last year will continue, hopefully a new house and new beginning will give me a new measure of peace and joy and contentment. Maybe I will finally learn the guitar and Urdu and yoga. Maybe I'll find out that I'm okay not learning anything and just floating in my current self for a while. Maybe I'll take a year off the introspection and just nap a lot. We'll find out. 


~Sam 

Friday, May 1, 2020

The Safest Space

My favourite cafe in Bombay, in the world, the safest space my soul has ever occupied, is shutting. Because pandemic, because Colaba rent, because of all the murkiness and filth that real life brings with it.

It's the most beautiful cafe. Big windows, natural light, quirky but unobtrusive decor. A display full of the best macaroons and pastries you'll now never taste. Small tables scattered all over, everything designed to be both open and cozy.

I was delighted when I discovered that it delivered to work. Delighted, and pained, because how was I going to stop myself from ordering from there every second day? But I found a way to, I set rules - I could only order if I was having a really bad day, or if it was the first day of my period and my cramps were killing me. I could only order if I'd not spent too much money on other random nonsense. I found a way to exercise restraint, and I've never regretted anything more. I wish I'd given in every time, wish I'd bankrupted myself and ruined my waistline and drowned every passing woe and daydream into that magical hot chocolate and croissant.

It became a transportable safe space, a transformational one, when I found out that it delivered to work. I could quietly recede into myself, take my hot chocolate and croissant, or pastry, or macaroon, into a corner of the pantry, put on my noise cancelling headphones and open up a book and just...be. Even if I couldn't, even if I was piled with work and chained to my desk, everything was okay if I just had a box with that beautiful logo by my side. I cut up a piece of the design on the box and pinned it up to my desk. I thought I was being foolish, given how routinely I ordered from there, but it felt wrong to just throw away such beautiful boxes. I've never been so glad to have been foolish.

I don't know if the food had healing qualities, if it was made with the love my mother always said was the ingredient that really elevates food, or if it's just that I connected it to safety and warmth and deliverance in my mind, but every sip rejuvenated me, every bite allowed me to go on a little bit more. It was therapy in a cup.

Not everyone loved it. I dragged everyone I could over there, every visitor from out of town, every friend, flatmate and friendly acquaintance. Every date was strictly kept away from it, because what if it was a bad one, and a boy tainted my safest space? Everyone liked it, but no one seemed as taken in as I was. Some recommended other, better cafes to me. And I went to them, I've been to so many of the prettiest, quirkiest, quaint-est, Sam-perfect outlets out there and...nothing else has ever matched up. Many have been indisputably nice, but they were just restaurants and cafes, just food cooked by someone else on a plate before you. Le15 was...something else.

And now it won't be.

~Sam 

Thursday, March 5, 2020

How

How?
How do you get up
And get out of bed
And take a shower
And pick out your clothes
And climb into the lift
And get into a cab
And go to work
Push around some papers
Crack incestuous jokes
Come home
Kick off your shoes
Watch the food go round the microwave
And laugh with the friends laugh track
How?

With the
With the
With the
With the wars
And the earth
And the atmosphere
And the heat and the cold and the in-between
How
With the virus
And the pain
And the starvation
And the isolation
And the death
And the death

How
With the forests burning
And the koalas without homes
And the elephants without tusks
And the cattle in cattle farms

And the conflict and the riots
And the flags on top of temples on top of mosques on top of homes
On top of dreams and hopes
All trampled underfoot
In the name of better days
“For the greater good”

How
In a world of nothing
But flashing cycles
Of bad news
On top of bad news
On top of bad news
On top of bad news
On top of - you get the point.

How?
When every atom of every cell of every crevice of your body
Should be screaming, “this is an emergency”
How do you just
How do you just live?

~ Sam 

Scratches

The scratch of pen on paper - that’s what it’s all about at the end of the day, right? That’s what it’s always been about. Sometimes it’s scratches that turn into bytes, pen and paper that becoming clacking keyboard keys. Sometimes it’s someone else’s scratched out thoughts you turn to in books and blogs and memes and stories. Sometimes it’s an essay, sometimes a hurried cube drawn on the corner of a napkin, used and discarded and never thought of again. But always, permanent or ephemeral or somewhere in the long road in the middle, always it’s the scratches you turn to, to make sense of it all. Sense of the bruises and the cuts and the muddled befuddled puddle of thoughts in your soul, sense of the clouds drifting across the roiling landscape of your mind, the butterflies blossoming in your stomach, the cracks forming and freezing over and melting in your chest, the wheezing insecurity in your lungs as your heart alternates between a beat of “not enough” and “just this”.

Just some scratches, runes, hieroglyphics. That’s all there is to us.

~ Sam 

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Yellow - Unedited

A clean yellow sheet
Spread out before me,
Laid out - waiting for me,
I’m talking about a sticky note, mind you,
Not a legal pad - ew.
What will I do with it,
With this wide yellow expanse
Of pure potential?
Will I make another paper plan,
A wisp of a smoke of a tendril of nothingness,
An idea of a thought of a dream,
Nothing more, nothing less?
All the numbers in place,
The figures and the data,
The pros and the cons,
The crows and the sparrows,
Everything ready
Except - me.

~ Sam 

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

2020

Hey blog. It's been a while.

I've been bad, even by my steadily deteriorating standards over the last few years. Not a post all year, in a year where I had resolved to write more and to reinstate the favourites' lists, and to top it all off, not even a New Year introspection post? Shame on me.

To briefly recap the last year, I failed miserably at both writing more (or at all, except a few stray emo notes here and there) and at keeping track of happy things - as a consequence of which, I have no memory whatsoever of how I felt or what I experienced in 2019.

I was better at running / working out, though, particularly in large stretches where I automatically felt the urge to go up to the gym or down to the court / pool when I woke up in the morning. I know people usually have inch / kilo related fitness goals, but honestly? That's mine. Working out without needing to talk myself into it.

I also travelled and made active attempts to socialise with people, so I basically did well at everything except The Most Important Resolution, Namely, Writing. Great priorities as always, Sam.

For the coming year - well, what do I want in the coming year?

I still want to write more, but perhaps without putting a number on it this time. Timesheets at work are bad enough, perhaps I can live without numerical targets in my personal life.

I want to read more, as always.

I want to shop less, do a repeat of no-clothes-2018 (no buying clothes, you pervert) and add to it by refraining from buying anything superfluous. This will be hard, but let's see how it goes.

I also want to, for a change, plan...less. The mental and physical health consequences of stress and being extra-Type-A was something that characterized a lot of the latter half of 2019 for me, and it's made me want to try a life where I don't anally try to sort everything into clear, categorized boxes. I considered conducting a survey of popular stress-relieving activities, downloading the right meditation apps and creating a timetable of relaxing activities for myself - and then I looked at myself and realized, maybe we should just...roll back and try to live a little. The next five steps don't always have to be planned and back-up-planned, right? (Right?!)

And, in the spirit of planning less, that's it. That's what I want to do in 2020. Read, write, not buy shit I don't need, and breathe. Do I not also want to...Learn the guitar? Lose weight? Learn a new language? Fall in love? Quit my job?

We'll see. No pressure.

Love,
~Sam 

The Albanian

This piece of TMI has been sitting in the drafts box for a while, from back in the days when Europe was at my feet and real life was a faraway haze my parents sometimes spoke of. I was on my way to someplace pretty (wasn't that all I did, those days?), but there were people in the way of my scenery and I owed my friends a life update, so I settled into my train seat and gave them the story of The Albanian. It had sass, (incessant talk of) sex, bitchiness and misogyny. Booze and drugs and tattoos. Alcoholic missteps, fumbled flirting and lame comebacks. Really, pick a cliche and it was there. 

And, for the rest of you, here it is. For context - I really didn't like men in early 2017. 

_______________________

The story starts one wintry February, when Annie-with-a-boyfriend announces that she thinks B, he of the long hair, tattooed arms and constant cigarettes, is hot, and that I, single-af-Sam, should go for it. Personally, I'm more inclined towards his good-boy-looks quiet-but-witty friend - let's call him D - but D is still in love with his ex (as am I? Maybe), and what is exchange for if not experimentation?

The Albanians in the house tease B about me in Albanian. The Indians of the house tease me about B in Hindi. The stage is set.

Then follows a series of flirtatious encounters so smooth and skilled that they will make you, dear reader, wonder why you ever thought yourself awkward. He compliments my hoodie. He compliments by pyjamas. And lest you think he is just a platonically inclined boy with exceedingly good taste in clothing, he compliments my fingers. He compliments my name, repeatedly and more than a little drunkenly. He calls me beautiful.

Given his tendency towards baggy t-shirts and baggier basketball shorts, I don't have too much to compliment in return, but I am open to listening, and he wants to talk. Boy, does he want to talk. He comes and sits with me in the kitchen we share, not eating or cooking or cleaning (even, almost especially, when it is his week to clean the kitchen), just talking at me. I am in a new country with new people for new experiences, and I am curious. He tells me about his family fleeing to Greece when there is a coup against the Albanian government of which his father is a member. He tells me about the mountains and beaches of Albania, about the women and...then some more about the women. He talks a lot about the women. Much of the time he wastes in being a man™, in that he repeatedly shares with me his authoritative opinions about myself and my life without having any knowledge, insight or foundation whatsoever for the same. He ignores my indications that I am familiar enough with my own life, and would prefer he stick to talking about his own fairly interesting narrative. 

We drink together sometimes, the two of us and the other housemates, in various permutations and combinations. The alcohol loosens lips, begets questions ("no, but how are you still a virgin?"). Weeks of awkward kitchen encounters pass. By the time that fateful night arrives, I have thought about him, told my friends about him, and talked about him when there was nothing to talk about. I have considered the possibility of liking him, or even just making out with him, of switching my measure from "why him?" to "why not"? He has left hearts on one of my facebook posts. 

Then, that night, we decide once again to drink together, me and B and D and a common friend, L. By this point, dear reader, it is clear that the more I interact with him, the less I want to keep interacting with him, and on this night, I mostly keep to myself. But while I may have all but dismissed him internally, the elephant in the room has only grown larger externally. We play a game, and I choose dare, and am asked to kiss the wall for a minute. He walks over to examine the sight closely, and declares that he doesn't want to kiss me if that's how I kiss. I tell him not to worry about it - he is unlikely to ever be allowed to kiss me. On his part, in the manliest™ of moves, he is all over L, a friend of mine and a fellow housemate he has lived with for nigh on a year and a half. It seems like our charade of mutual forced interest (which self-proclaimed player hits on a woman like that if he actually wants to get anywhere?) is finally over, and I am relieved. 

But no! In an almost impossible twist, we find ourselves walking to a club, arm in arm. Our friends take a turn around the road and suddenly, his mouth is on mine, his tongue exploring the contours of my chin, lips and nose in what has to be the worst kiss I will hopefully ever experience. I am flummoxed. I am confused. I am, by god, going to get a better kiss out of this. I push him away and blink confusedly up at him in my classic sexy way, and then reach up for a kiss worthy of the name. Alas, friends, while the tongue stays where it is supposed to this time, it still turns out to be nothing to write home about, and we proceed onwards as though nothing has happened.

But something has happened. My tongue has been loosened, by both drink and touch, and before I know, out pops from my mouth, "Wow, you're a terrible kisser."

There is a pause, and then a longer pause because I have not yet realized that the words have been spoken out loud. Another stretch of time passes while my alcohol-addled brain catches up with my mouth, and it's a few more minutes before my brain and mouth are able to co-ordinate a rescue. Finally, in a save as bad as his kiss, I attempt to assuage his inflated ego and my inflamed sense of guilt with a weak, "Hey, I didn't actually mean that. You know I was kidding, right?"

"Of course you didn't mean that," he says, in a weak imitation of his usual swagger, "how could you possibly have meant that?" 

Needless to say, the compliments stop. My taste in fashion is no longer worthy of his attention. Suddenly, I am not a very good cook; suddenly, I am defensive and not funny; suddenly, he is no longer compelled to sit with me in the kitchen for hours. Something about a rude virgin who knows how she likes her kisses has rubbed him the wrong way (swear it wasn't my tongue, though), and he is not a happy man.

Now, someone normal would have breathed a sigh of relief at being left alone and moved on to other, fun-er experiences in literally the most beautiful country in the world. But you know me better than that, reader. You know about my overactive guilt glands, and while I thought I had lost them after The Break Up, along with my kindness and other virtues, I was wrong. They were there, and they made themselves heard. Suddenly, I was the one maneuvering to catch his eye in the kitchen, seeking him out to say nice things to, complimenting his...basketball shorts.

It wasn't much, of course - I really didn't want to push it enough to make him think I wanted to kiss him again. But they were attempts, however feeble, to be nice and charitable; there was a sense of being plagued by guilt for the rest of my life, for the awful words that had slipped through my mouth.

That was, fortunately, not to be. Showing true chivalry, he bided his time, and responded with enough meanness to assuage more vestiges of guilt than even my unduly engorged guilty glands could produce. This is how it happened.

A few exams and papers after The Kiss, I found myself once again drinking in his lacklustre company, with our mutual friend once again the object of his affection. I was there because she had asked me to be; when it was clear a threesome was unlikely, he was evidently not pleased to have me there. I intended to enjoy a few drinks and take my leave, aiming for a largely uneventful evening, but my life took one look at my plans and said, "lol."

And thus began a journey of self-awareness that I had hoped would occur more organically in this exchange. For, dear friends, he called me fat. Then he called me asexual. Then he said he was joking and begged my forgiveness, but that is irrelevant to this story and to the larger scheme of life.

Now of course, there is context to this hurling of names. A boy, however chivalrous, does not simply say such a thing out of the blue. First, we talked about the meaning of the word "bitch", and he vociferously defended the rights of women to be as slutty as they pleased. Then, we talked about the use of protection - specifically, his preferred contraceptive of "pulling out" without use of either condom or birth control. The mutual friend and I were, obviously, aghast. I argued for the use of the pill - no, he said, it fucks with women's bodies. Before I could fully be amazed at his knowledge of the process and its side-effects, of his surprising sensitivity to the hormonal and physical pains the pill can inflict on women, he went on: it makes them fat.

Another pause; another few moments simply to attempt to comprehend the sheer magnitude of his ignorance and entitlement. A confession - I know what I'm talking about because I was on birth control for nearly a year. A retaliation - is that why you're fat?

I waited for more, but that was honestly the only comeback he had. I had expected something - he had hinted sufficiently earlier on at my terrible taste in "many things" to make it clear that a retaliation for my kiss comment was on its way - and, despite all evidence to the contrary, I had really expected something a little more imaginative. I mean, it had taken him three months to come up with this

Then, as is customary in such gatherings, I was interrogated about my intact hymen. My friend was genuinely curious - was I not scared that I'd never lose it? Was I worried about the pain? Why, in the course of a year-long relationship, had I not felt like having sex? I attempted to answer, but the mansplainer got in my way. "It's against human nature not to want sex," he crowed. What about asexuals, I asked? What are they, he forced out, seeming to have trouble admitting ignorance. I explained, and he dismissed them as "some bullshit". Just because you don't understand something doesn't mean it isn't valid, I said. I'm not gay but I'm okay with homosexuals, he countered. I...was lost in the face of the sheer brilliance of the argument, such a behemoth in its logical fallacies that I did not even know where to begin to take it apart. Sensing victory, he went on - so you don't want to have sex, you have no desire, you're just like every other virgin waiting for a right time that will never come, you're asexual. You aren't even being consistent, I wanted to say; please stop talking, I wanted to say; please come stand over here so I can kick you in the balls and shut you up long enough to talk some sense into you, I wanted to scream.

But I said nothing. I sipped my wine and let him blubber away into silence, which soon turned to apologies - you don't hate me, right? It was just a joke. Hey, you don't hate me right?

I did not hate him. He was not remotely important enough to be worthy of that.

But he was a man™. How was he to know?

~ Sam 

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

2019

It has been, once again, a year. Depending on who I'm talking to, how much work I have, how drunk I am and what time of the month it is, my feelings about it vary from, "holy hell, I've come far and this has been pretty great, all things considered" to, "what am I doing with my life, why am I here and will I ever be happy?"

So basically, same as always.

When I'm emo, I always forget how emo I've always been - my most immediate crisis always feels like the most important one I have ever experienced, and so I am always taken aback by the intensity of emotion when I stumble across old diaries and notebooks and word documents, as I recently did. And boy, has my internal airbrush been on fire this year. Pages and pages have been filled with me questioning every decision, wondering when I'll just pick a team (literally and figuratively), when I'll shut up and stop being such an emo fuck, when I'll learn to be content and happy, conveniently forgetting that I've been an emo dissatisfied fuck since at least 2004, long, long before any of my current life crises had ever raised their heads.

Given how much of the year I've spent combatting struggles inside my head, I seriously considered making 2019 the year in which I give up and just embrace the emo, wallow in them feels and stop even attempting to rediscover the light happy chirpy bunny I'm convinced I once used to be. I considered going emo max, but the truth is, I think we all know that I've been there, done that, and written a book on it. So no more embracing the emo for me, at least about Big Life Decisions.

Instead, I want to make 2019 about things that I know make me happy, things I know I love, even if it's something I struggle to remind myself of in the daily grind of life. And because we all know what a basic bitch I am, say hello to the most cliched resolutions of all time:

Primary Resolutions:

  1. Run: I love running when I'm running; hate it when I'm snuggled up warmly in bed. The aim for 2019 is to remember the feeling I have when I'm running, and try to feel it as often as possible. For once, I want to prioritise fitness over dessert, and see what it feels like to have the body you want. This is not something I'm very good at consistently wanting, though (cake, guys, cake), which is why the resolution isn't to get hot - just to run, to feel the blood pumping through my body, to feel the rush of endorphins to my brain and to use my body for something other than getting in and out of cabs and office chairs. 
  2. Write (Part 1): There is a story that's been festering in my mind since 2005-6, that's gone through enough iterations to be unrecognizable from its original self (thankfully, since I've grown up considerably since then), but that it's time to actually put down on paper. Something I've always meant to attempt is NaNoWriMo, a challenge where you're supposed to write 50,000 words in a month. That seems near-impossible as my life is right now, though I still hope to one day do it. In 2019, however, I want to write those 50,000 words over the course of the year. That comes to about 1,000 words every weekend, which, while ambitious, is something I should've started doing a long, long time ago. 
  3. Connect: Something that's consistently characterized my life in this city is loneliness. My closest friends and family are far away from me, and the friends around me are as isolated and absorbed in their jobs and lives as I am in mine. Making new friends has never been a forte of mine; I don't remember ever taking less than three years to truly let a person in to become a friend, and not just someone to hang out with. That kind of reticence is not something I think I can afford in adult life. I've retreated more into myself over the past year than I have at any point in the past decade, and it's time to travel outwards again. So the plan for next year, in keeping with Mission Bring Back Happy Chirpy Bunny Sam, is to connect, to make plans, meet people, and initiate conversations, with old friends and with new. Less time inside my head, in the past and the future and all the alternate universes that could have been; more time in the life I'm living, with the people I'm living it with. 
Bonus Resolutions:
  1. Write (Part 2): One of my resolutions this year was to reinstate the monthly favourites lists. While I successfully did that privately, favourites scribbled regularly in my Bombay notebook, for the next year, I want to consider bringing them back to the blog - either that, or to write one post a month anyway. In addition to thousand words of fiction I want to write every weekend, this seems very ambitious, but we live and we try, I suppose. 
  2. Travel: One of my favourite parts of this year, one of the few golden days that stand out regardless of who I'm talking to, how much work I have, how drunk I am and what time of the month it is, is the weekend I spent in Goa. It's one of the most impromptu things I've ever done, booking tickets and hotels mere hours before departure, having absolutely no itinerary in mind, no elaborate plans and accompanying frustration. Just two girls with their backpacks, staring at the ocean and taking the most fabulous pictures of all time, and that's a feeling I want to recreate this year - a vacation that feels like a vacation.
My resolutions in 2018 - to not buy clothes, reinstate the favourites lists, and not drink more than once a month - are things that seemed necessary at the time, things that I succeeded in doing, by and large, and things that led to a better year. My resolutions for 2019 are bigger, harder (no puns intended) - things that have seemed necessary all my life, but that have been pushed away for one reason or another (procrastination, laziness and inertia come to mind), things that could lead to a better life.

I hope I stick to them.

Happy new year, guys.
~Sam 

Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Who decided it was a good idea to start the new year hungover?

Hi, you. It's been a while.

There are a lot of posts I meant to write over the past year, but for the first time, I didn't have the words for anything that was truly important. 

In the beginning, I wanted to write about how tired I was, how overwhelmed, how there was too much, far too much, too fast, that I couldn't handle it. The leaving, the end of college with the best term ever, a three-month high that has ruined me for the rest of life. In a way, I'm glad I pulled a Rachel, that I didn't realize that it was actually happening until it had already happened - I have all the time in the world to miss it and mope, now. I'm glad I just focused on living it, then. 

Then I didn't want to write, because there was so much that my brain was pushed into some kind of stasis, just floating around doing what needed to be done, without really processing any of it. Pack up five years of college while cramming every memory, every experience into a few weeks? Okay. Write thousands of coherent words analysing complex legal principles on little sleep and even lesser time? Sure. Pack again to prepare for five months abroad with none of your closest friends, and weather you've never experienced before? Cool. Navigate family, friends, finances and the feeling of being pulled apart into each individual atom that makes up your whole? No problem.

Then, I was just grateful. My brain was still in shock, but it was a good kind of shock. The packing, the papers, the pulling apart, it was all over, and it was so cold that I really couldn't feel anything but wonder. I was bundled up and heading out for a bite to eat, and there was a building with a window, across the street, and through it, the glimpse of an old couple learning to dance. There had been so much bullshit, logistical and emotional, in the months leading up to Zurich, that I had forgotten what I had been fighting so hard for. That moment, standing there, in my gloves and my boots, my beanie and my scarf, watching them learn to twirl - I remembered. And I wanted to write again, but how in the world could I find the words to capture that?

And then I was in a daze, whirling about locations that had seemed unreal in books, let alone all around me. If I had a lifetime, I still don't think I'd able to absorb those four months and twenty days, and if I had written then, it would just be a list of names of places, woven with a sense of gratitude too powerful for paper.

Then it was June 20, and it was my Mali getting married, the geeky airhead who flunked Computers and then aced it, equal parts Meg Cabot and civil engineering. I had my babes on one side and beaches on the other,   and the words just got lost somewhere between the makeup and the high drama.

Things kind of dipped downhill then for a bit, like the world had stalled all awfulness for the first six months but just couldn't hold it anymore. The floodgates opened, and I was drowning. I don't do well with new situations, and this was a hell of a lot of new - a new job and a new city and a new house and new people - a new phase of life, forcing itself on me when I wasn't quite done clinging to the old one. The words I wrote then weren't blogposts, but lifelines to myself, words of survival, harsh and secret and unpoetic.

The last few months of 2017 were also spent in a daze, though if my time in Zurich was so fairytale that I couldn't wrap my head around how it was actually real, Mumbai was so real that I feared I'd forget to dream.

And then it was over.

A part of me wishes I could break 2017 up into teeny tiny pieces, and live a part of it each year for the rest of my life. It seems to be the only way to fully appreciate a year in which there was just too much, good and bad, but almost never simply unremarkable. But time, haughty bitch, listens to no emo millennials - she flows and flows and flows, and I suppose I'll just have to try to keep up.

Which leads me to one of my three resolutions for this year - to reinstate the favourites lists. If there was ever an anchor in my life, it was that monthly reflection of good things, and if there is ever a time I've needed an anchor, it is now.

The other two resolutions are more mundane, though far more ambitious - buy no clothes, and drink not more than once a month, in any quantity.

Ambitious as they are for someone like me, I hope these resolutions will cumulatively lead to a quieter, sparser, more contemplative 2018, to a year where I can absorb where I am and what I have, determine what I want and where I want to go.

At the very least, I hope they'll lead to a bigger bank balance and a healthier liver.

Have a happy new year, you guys.

~Sam

Saturday, December 9, 2017

All Tangled Up

Nothing makes sense. 

I used to be able to be calm. To set things aside for a few moments every morning, bow before the little statuettes inside my cupboard, and breathe in the name of praying. Set aside everything to be thankful, or ask for a little bit more, or, usually, both. When I took stock of my life, I found satisfaction in the inventory. I found desire for what I wanted to have, and I found gratitude for what I had. 

When I try to take stock now, I find noise. I try to set everything aside and pray, but the everything pushes back, tells me that the Converse sign on my high-tops has worn off, that the gas cylinder has lasted for a surprisingly long time, that I need to talk to a friend, not fuck up at work, save more, instruct the maid to switch off the lights before she leaves, find time to work out, do this, and this, and this, and this. When I try to think of what I want, I find a blank chit. Even “world peace” doesn’t come readily to mind. I have everything I could need, and want none of it.

I used to be able to make most things fun. When I had to study, I’d sit in a café, look at the people around and talk to my friends, pass or ace my exams and sleep well at night. When I had to pack or clean, I’d put on a playlist and chat with my roommate, find fulfilment in the simple movements putting my life together. When I had nothing to do, I’d switch off all the lights and wander around in the dark, listening to music and spinning stories in my head, of a singer and a princess, love and heartbreak, family and friendship. When I wanted to think, I’d take a walk, and the thoughts would flow readily, gently, kindly. I had grown accustomed to being kind to myself, accustomed to a mental state that allowed me to be happy with who I was and where I was.

Now, I try to listen to music while I work or shower – I don’t have to clean much anymore – and it’s a task to figure out what I want to listen to. I try to sit in a Starbucks and work, and the scent of my coffee fails to untangle my wound-up heart. I walk to work and I look at the trees and the pond and feel the breeze stirring my hair, and wonder how fat I look today. I think about talking to my friends and my family, and it feels like a chore. I switch off the lights and try to listen to music and spin stories, and I hate what I find inside my head.

In January, I considered myself an intrinsically happy person. I was the optimist of any group I was in.

In March, I was flat on my back in a mountain in Iceland, watching the Northern Lights, and filled with an ethereal light of my own.

In December, I am in an office cubicle, putting up my best friend’s doodle and wondering what I’m doing there.


It’s almost the new year, and for the first time in years, I have nothing to say about it.

~Sam 

Saturday, November 25, 2017

The day in Creil.

I woke up early this morning, to the last vestiges of dawn over the city beyond my bed, and to the unmistakeable sound of fluttering wings, that was far more effective than any alarm in getting me to spring out of bed and shut the balcony door. The balcony by the hall had already turned into a pigeon coop; I refused to allow one into my bedroom as well. 

The maid arrived; I opened the door, and we took stock of the kitchen. I told her the chicken last night was nice, that we wanted dal and beans for lunch, and that she needed to stop mixing up pattha gobi and phool gobi

I responded to some texts, and made my list for the weekend - life insurance, provident fund, savings; pick up the shoes from the cobbler, call the plumber and the carpenter; go to the bank; get a password manager because I am finally the kind of adult with too many passwords to manage internally. Maybe see if I could find the time and energy to go someplace pretty and write about my feelings. 

I was still awake, and it was still too early to start getting dressed and acknowledge that it was a work day, so I meandered onto facebook, to be confronted with a picture that kind of rang a bell, like someone else's memory, one you've heard spoken about often. 

Except this memory was mine. 

___________________

I was exhausted. I don't remember this much about exchange, but it truly could be exhausting - early mornings and overnight buses, long distances on the road because flying meant I'd only be able to afford half the places I wanted to go to; the constant question of food - what to cook, what to buy, how much to buy, how to split. Excel sheets and requisition lists became a part of my life long before due diligence did. 

We'd been traveling for about two weeks at that point, or perhaps it was three. Venice, Vienna, Budapest, Prague, Berlin, Groningen, Amsterdam and, yet to come, Bruges. I could rattle the names off the top of my head at that point, after the weeks of planning and replanning, booking and rebooking. I had had so much bread and cheese that the reality of it had finally outdone the allure, even if it was my favourite Swiss cheese, even if Brom and Eragon and every other adventurer in a fantasy novel had subsisted on bread and cheese on their great travels. I would've killed for some mess food and a night in my own room. 

I could have gone to Keukenhof, the tulip gardens, the entire reason I was in the Netherlands in April; or I could have gone to the Hague, home of international justice and just really goddamn pretty. Like everything back then, the most outlandish options were at my feet - all I needed to do, was open up my flixbus app, book a ticket, and hop on. 

All I wanted to do was sleep. 

I'd seen pretty places, eaten good food, written about my feelings, and taken pictures I'd throw back to for a lifetime. But I was tired, of traveling, of toilet paper, of the burden of knowing that these spectacular opportunities were unlikely to come my way again, that I needed to make the best of them. Of wondering if maybe I should've gone to Bratislava and Cesky, Salzburg and Poland. Of carrying my goddamn overpacked suitcase up and down subway staircases. 

___________________

I regret nothing about that day. It unfolded as if from a novel: an early, cold Dutch morning; almost missing the bus, our first of, if I remember correctly, six that day; our carefully packed picnic (ham and cheese and hummus and cucumber sandwiches, and entirely too many muffins from Albert Heijn) and, for a change in the Netherlands, the most gorgeous clear blue sky - that boring staple Windows wallpaper was so much more appealing when you could walk right into it. 

The plan was hazy at best: go see the tulip fields. After the tourist disaster that was Prague on Easter weekend (more Lajpat Nagar than Charles Bridge), I wanted to avoid mainstream tourist spots for a while, which ruled out Keukenhof; but that didn't mean I didn't want to do the touristy things. It was April in the Netherlands: of course I had to see the tulips. 

A bit of lazy research led to something called The Flower Route, a sixty-odd kilometre stretch along the tulip fields of rural Netherlands. But neither of us could drive, and I couldn't even ride a bicycle, so that seemed out of the question.  I had nearly resigned myself to simply sticking to the tulip fields I'd cross on my bus trip into and out of the Netherlands, when I stumbled across some mentions of a place called Creil. Located along The Flower Route, it was a little hamlet of about fifteen hundred people and substantially more flowers. A couple of tourists had made their way there and written about their experiences, and it sounded promising: it had tulips, and potentially some kind of tulip festival, but also seemed to be nearly untouched. It was perfect. 

We packed our sandwiches and threw on all the clothes we had, pulled out the bus route, and then we were off. I cannot for the life of me remember what we talked about on the hours on the bus or at the little McDonalds we made our way to for a mid-journey snack, but after weeks of co-existing on the same trip, I remember finally feeling the ease of old friendship, in both words and silences. For the first time since we'd missed the bus to Vienna, we had the time to just sit and talk and think and see and be, and it was wonderful

___________________

The first field we saw was from the bus window, our backs automatically straightening as we peered out at the gorgeous colours, the pleasing symmetry, the unfailing windmills. The bus dropped us off at Creil, the village a few kilometres from the fields, and, after taking a moment to absorb just how  tiny this village was and how far away from everything we were, we started walking back towards them. Nature bent to our will, put on a show for us: it gave us Australian blue skies, poetic crossroads, tree-lined avenues and, of course, the fields. We stumbled across a flower show - full of old couples from nearby villages strolling about, nodding benignly at the odd pair from far, far away - where they were happy to let me stumble about the rows and rows of tulips, making myself a bouquet of all the broken flowers strewn about. We settled in for a picnic lunch in a wooden shed overlooking the field, and every elderly couple that passed us by unfailingly smiled and wished us the Dutch version of bon apetit, with a handful catching our confused expression and kindly, albeit laughingly, switching to English. 

With a bit of well-time serendipity, we wound up at the refreshments tent, where we got talking to an angel of a woman who offered to drop us to another field nearby, one that had been set up to resemble some sort of a painting. (If it was a painting, it must have been modern art, but it was gorgeous, nonetheless.) The neatly colour-segregated sections of tulips stretched out ahead of us, in colours that words like red and pink and white and yellow didn't do justice to.  Windmills dotted the fields, reaching up to the sky, making the whole scene resemble a friendly giant's well-tended garden. The cloudy, sunny sky stretched over it all, providing the perfect relief. It was like breathing in a calendar shoot.

Having crossed hitchhiking off the list, we moved on to trespass: there was an unending field of yellow tulips, and DDLJ demanded that I go have a closer look, even if the flowers were different, even if it was, technically, private property. The tulips were gorgeous, the commission of the crime uneventful - I am reasonably certain the owner of the field offered us a friendly wave from his tractor out in the field.

Eventually, we maundered back to Creil and our buses, to Groningen and the Dutch variation of Indian food (butter chicken, with a side of sauteed spinach) at the University. From airport to airport, through trains and cabs, to our law firms and our lives, our maids and our pigeon coops. Back to reality, to the range of human emotion aside from pure contentment and peace.

But those fields, they stayed with us. And sometimes, we wake up, and we see a picture, and reality recedes a little. Lets us breathe a little. 





~Sam

Monday, November 20, 2017

Ed Sheeran, JioGarden, November 19, 2017.

I wore red lipstick and a red dress and a lotion that made my bare arms and legs shimmer in the dim-lit darkness; kajal and mascara and a band that declared me a superstar. 

I stood in line for six hours, with determination and confidence I had forgotten I could possess, and also with my three most favourite brownies from Theobroma (for the record, these are the millionaire, the red velvet, and the cookie, in that order, although I am convinced each time I have it that I like the cookie brownie more in theory than in taste). 

I joked, laughed and danced with strangers, with the college kids with lamer puns and greater fanaticism than even I; and the girl who'd come here all by herself from Delhi, who was awkward in a way that would have been very familiar to my near-friendless fourteen year old self, whose story I wanted to hear and write. 

I enjoyed the opening act, Lauv, as one enjoys all music that is not noise, and sang along to the one song I knew (I like me better). Things were fine. 

And then he came on stage, and it all changed. 

_________

I've been looking for perspective everywhere. I've talked to older people and younger people and peers and colleagues; parents and counsellors and myself; strangers on Tinder and my best friends. I've looked for it in books and in memes; in the ocean waves and in city lights. 

I did not expect to find it at a concert.

I should have, though. I went to the concert because I love Ed Sheeran; I love Ed Sheeran the way I do partly because I have the most mainstream taste on the planet, but mostly because, no matter what he sings, Ed can pull from within me the feelings I need, and banish the mental clutter I really don't need. His words are specific, his songs situational, and yet, whether I'm homesick or heartbroken or just lost deep within myself, he can pull me out - paint me that larger picture I can never quite capture by myself, make me understand, acknowledge, absorb all those comforting things I know in theory, but cannot feel in practice. 

He can make it okay for things not to be okay (which, let's face it, is how things usually are). 

_________

He sang Castle on the Hill, and Tenerife Sea, and Thinking Out Loud, and Perfect. Shape of You and Eraser and Galway Girl and A-Team. You Need Me, I Don't Need You. 

And somehow, in all the singing along and dancing and feeling and hugging and holding hands, somehow, magically, miraculously, inexplicably, he turned lead into gold. 

Somehow, standing there, squashed between the balustrade and the heaving masses, I was no longer a lost, overemotional, fucked up twenty something questioning every aspect of her life to the point of perpetual misery. I was a kid, an adult, a complete person; not a daughter or an ex or a sister or a friend, not an employee or a lawyer or intelligent or dumb, not a good writer or a bad one. Not a label or a generational stereotype; just...a person, with all the complexity and simplicity that involves. 

Yes, I was young and lost and confused and at least a little bit fucked up. Yes, I was old and had lost so many years, months, minutes to useless endeavours, time and energy and optimism I'd never get back. Yes, I had said and done awful things, and had awful things said and done to me. 

But that was okay. This was life, and we didn't get to type out a draft and review it thrice before finally deciding on a version we could look back on and regret. We had to do the drafting and the reviewing and the looking and the regretting all at the same time, and more often than not, nothing was so unbearably irreversible that we couldn't find a way to live with it. Awful things happened and would happen, but it was okay to be overwhelmingly, unreservedly, guiltlessly happy around the awfulness. 

And it was okay for things not to be okay. At least for tonight. 

~Sam 

Saturday, November 18, 2017

To: The Universe, Re: The Boy in the Lift

It was 9:30 p.m. on a Thursday night.

I'd been at work since 8:00 a.m., in a small, musty client office located about forty kilometres further from civilization than strictly necessary, surrounded by documents that seemed to have been drafted with the express intent of exasperating some poor lawyer someday. I had just returned to my own office to wrap up the work. I walked in wearily, weighed down by three heavy bags, two dark circles, and the singular certainty of another late night, and noticed, without really noticing, someone entering the lift ahead of me. I sighed deeply to myself - the lift was too far away for me to reach before he left, even if I ran, which I was in no state to attempt in any case. I took it as another bit of bad luck on a bad day, and reconciled myself to holding my bags a little longer and waiting for another one of the lifts to come down, a complex mathematical process that could take anything from mere seconds to what felt like hours. I punched the button and got ready to settle into my discomfort, because obviously, on a day like this in a week like that, the lift was going to take hours.

Except it didn't. Instead, the light on the lift the boy had gotten into lit up almost immediately, indicating its presence on my floor, and an inquisitive head popped out - was I coming in, or not? He had waited for me! I rushed in with a burst of energy I didn't realize I was still capable of, and was overwhelmed enough by this act of simple generosity to breach the fundamental rule of awkward lift encounters: maintain silence. 

"Thank you, so much!" I breathed with, perhaps, a little more effusiveness than was strictly warranted for an act that was ultimately not much more than simple courtesy. He smiled at me, somewhat bewildered by the crazy lady with the strong emotions, and gestured that it was, like seriously, no big deal. At this point, a few things happened at once: first, and most importantly, I noticed him - his plaid shirt and his awkward smile, how wonderfully unassuming and kissable he was.  Second, I realized that I had crossed the point of no return - there were no fucks left to give, he was a cute guy, and I'd already painted myself crazy, so I might as well go ahead and find out if he worked here, if I was ever going to be able to see him again.

No, he said, in a voice and accent as wonderfully attractive as the rest of his being, even as the words themselves shattered my fantasies, he'd come to visit someone, but did I work there? Yes, I replied, and gestured ruefully at my office - because my floor had arrived, and evidently Hollywood had misrepresented the amount of time available for an elevator meet-cute, so all that was left to do was wave goodbye and watch him be whisked away from me.

I never even knew his name.

They tell me, in Bollywood movies and commencement speeches and WhatsApp messages, they tell me that if you want something enough, the universe will conspire to bring it to you.

I don't know if the boy in the lift was a result of all the wanting I've been doing, the personification of everything the universe thought I needed based on my vague, overwhelming yearning; or if he's to be the object of my wanting, to be mine when I've fulfilled the quota for desire and wanted enough to warrant such intergalactic intervention.

I don't know if this should be a "thank you" or a "please" - if it's time to be grateful and count my blessings, or to be greedy and focus my desires.

I do know, however, that the most likely outcome is that I'll go to sleep, drown in some work, and forget that such an encounter ever happened, that it had magical nuances that went far beyond "a cute guy held the lift for me and now I want to marry him".

Which is why, before I forget, here I am. With a thank you. And a please?

~Sam