Musings

Mirror image

When I was nine years old, I stared into the mirror on my parents’ cupboard – the one I had adorned with stickers of fruits – and committed that moment to memory. It was an experiment.

Read More
Musings

Skies and seas

The sea stretches as far as the horizon. There are small fishing boats lined across the shore in front of Casa Meena – the blue and white Portuguese style villa whose first-floor balcony gives me the perfect spot to stalk the night sea. I think the sea pretends. Subtle and demure throughout the day, maybe even playful; and yet at around 3 A.M when I look at her, she is twisted in turmoil. With every wave, she tries to break free, to be truly unrestricted but the currents keep her fierce and unsettled.

Read More
Musings

Ones worth preserving

Glass panes and dingy metal storage boxes. Museums and lost corners of the bed. They hold priceless objects handed over centuries.

As a kid, I never understood the point of museums – large halls with old things people pretentiously pointed at and talked about. For me, history would mean tales of average people, like my grandfather, who lived on the margins and died therein.

Read More

Blog

Musings

Mirror image

When I was nine years old, I stared into the mirror on my parents’ cupboard – the one I had adorned with stickers of fruits – and committed that moment to memory. It was an experiment.

Musings

Skies and seas

The sea stretches as far as the horizon. There are small fishing boats lined across the shore in front of Casa Meena – the blue and white Portuguese style villa whose first-floor balcony gives me the perfect spot to stalk the night sea. I think the sea pretends. Subtle and demure throughout the day, maybe even playful; and yet at around 3 A.M when I look at her, she is twisted in turmoil. With every wave, she tries to break free, to be truly unrestricted but the currents keep her fierce and unsettled.

Musings

Ones worth preserving

Glass panes and dingy metal storage boxes. Museums and lost corners of the bed. They hold priceless objects handed over centuries.

As a kid, I never understood the point of museums – large halls with old things people pretentiously pointed at and talked about. For me, history would mean tales of average people, like my grandfather, who lived on the margins and died therein.

Book Reviews

The Story of Success with Thiel, Gladwell and Nooyi – Part 1

Outliers does not imply that rubbing a rabbit’s foot can make you lucky enough to succeed in the world – if that were the case yes, serial entrepreneurs would be difficult to understand (depending on how many rabbit foot rubs a person gets). Luck or circumstance, according to Gladwell, could be being born in the right family or country (like Oppenheimer or American industrial revolution billionaires), reaching youth…

Unfurling cities

A Bagful of Fish

I take chettan’s hand and turn for one last look at the impending night sky. The last of the Sun is gone; the tiny sliver had dipped in a fraction, just when we turned. Amma shakes her head at the poor timing, but I smile. The Sun wasn’t collecting stories as a bribe to set; he was holding on as much as he could to listen to our stories. And what was he to do, than retire for the day, once we stopped telling stories and started walking back? The warmth floats through me, and out of the corner of my eye, I see the tired white dog return. He walks along, drops us till our car, and looks on as we drive aw

Book Reviews

Zero to One: Review

A non-fiction book you can’t put down. And that’s saying something. Beyond the crisp and concise theories on innovation and startup ecosystem, the unique writing style incorporating Mark Twain, Tolstoy, and even Shakespeare into the tech world makes Zero to One an easy and fascinating read.

Unlike several other non-fiction books, Zero to One does not beat around the bush or repeat ideas just to fill the pages. It gives a detailed yet straightforward checklist to nurture innovation and build successful ventures. A wonderful read for anyone interested in technology, startups, and business.

Musings

An Unexpected Visitor

The red-bricked road from the library to the flag post was well lit, white light flooding the newly paved path. The flag post was almost deserted, although usually, it is not very clear in the dim light. I walked past a few guards and turned right to go to our hostel. The road was relatively dark from the thick mini jungle on either side of the narrow path. Before entering that patch, I hesitated to decide whether to be brave or walk around the longer but properly lighted path. I could not let the ghosts of the past back into my life. I took the right turn into the dark road, but before long, the fragrance caught me by the barest thread of courage I was hanging on to.

Musings

Of Sore Throats and Sweet Thoughts

Once a week, when the newspaper boy flicks his hand in grace and manifests a brittle newspaper bunch on our front yard, the little bit of magic hidden in the supplement would rejoice and try to fly away. I would hold the main paper and request the supplement to tag along. The former would wear a Bandhgala and shout from its podium – tales of war and crime; skepticism and trivia; sports and news from across the seven seas – but the latter is an old man, sitting on a red bricked verandah, shaded by wavering Peepal trees, telling stories of life – his voice rocking along its waves.

Unfurling cities

Paperweight

She saw them too, the humans who never left her or the old ways of life. The kind woman selling bangles outside Tansen ka makbara, the guard who proudly shows off whatever is left of Ustad Amjad Ali Khan’s legacy, the keepers of Scindia ki chhatri, the young man laughing at kids taking his ride at the mela, the hagglers of Rajiv Plaza, the abundance of life overwhelming her old buildings at Maharaj Bada, the giddy little humans breathing in life at what they called City Center, the shadows at Katora Tal, streets full of clay Ganeshas and her dear wanderers who bring new stories to share. As far as she could see, they claimed her land but kept her alive, filling her with the sweet aroma of kachori and jalebi.

Conscience

As the divinity fall

Despite all this, in the not so distant future, someone might paint us blue, for all we know, for the strength and hope in every unelected warrior, every soul that became more than a shoulder to cry on, maybe even the lords of crisis praised. But even then it is not ours to forget, the time when they were so caught up spinning webs over the water that they barely noticed the fireflies fall and drown. Of cour

View More