Monday, September 7, 2009
Part 2, When the going gets tough, the tough get going..
The taxi ride was fairly uneventful. There were a large number of rocks and boulders lying by the roadside, remnants of landslides from some days before. We were forewarned that July-August is landslide season in these parts, but the size of some of these boulders did get my heart rate up. The entire ride we followed the Alaknanda river, and we traced it as it cut through valleys, tracing it almost up to it's very origins. The scenery throughout was jaw-droppingly amazing. I enjoyed almost none of it though, with my head moving like a pendulum, as i drooled on one neighbouring shoulder and then the next. Occassionally I'd awake from this stupour and start clicking photos like a mad cockaroach with a bad case of the twitches before I reverted back to 'rest' mode as suddenly as I'd broken out of it. I followed this pattern for most of the entire ten hours our journey took. Even my driver was very sypathetic to my case and bore with a smile the frequent head butts he got on his shoulder as i nodded off to sleep in the front seat. The tip was definitely well spent on some jandu balm for his bruised shoulder.
I must say though, taxi drivers have the most bizarre taste in music! Mine was no different. Do they have music stores dedicated to cater to their eccentric tastes? I still remember one of the songs. The girl kept crooning about how she had lied at home about going to the temple but kept a romantic rendezvous instead while her lover reassured her she hadn't lied as she had come to the temple of love (pyar ki mandir or some such rot)! This one had us in splits and when it played again (and again, our driver's taste in music may have been eccentric but was limited to two tapes, which he played over and over) we were singing along with it too!
We were at Govindhghat by sunset and took up lodgings at the first in a long line of hotels, Kuber Guest House. Rooms were decent and bathrooms clean, so no hotel horror stories to report. We were there for just the night, as we had an early start the next day. The place was jam packed with pilgrims, Sikhs coming in from all parts of the globe to pay homage at Hemkund Sahib, the highest place of worship in the world! After visiting the local gurudwara, we had dinner at the restaurant getting the most foot traffic (Nano's, Nany's, or something like that). The food was standard Punjabi fare, with all it's desi ghee goodness. This was followed by gulab jamun and a glass of whole milk at the adjoining halwai (sweet shop). I could see my diet flying out of the window and rolling down the grassy slopes of the Garwhal mountains.
The next day we started out at 5.30am so that we could get a headstart and not get stuck in the pilgrim traffic. A good head start meant we were at the next town Pulna at 7.00 am, by which time we were ravenous. We stopped at the last in a long line of shops that lined the route and sat down for some well earned Maggi and chai almost at the foot of the Pulna waterfall. As we resumed our journey, we saw our 'restaraunteur' following us with a plastic bottle in his hand. Upon enquiry he informed us that he was out to go behind the bushes to complete his morning ablutions. Only on further enquiries was it revealed that we'd actually woken the poor bugger up from his sleep to make us our breakfasts! I was amazed! I would have been breathing fire if four city slickers woke ME up early in the morning demanding plates of Maggi and cups of tea but this man seemed remarkably well composed. Incredibly nice of the fellow I thought. If I were British, I'd probably say, 'Jolly good, old chap'.
The trek up to Gangria was long and ardous. We were breaking our backs to complete the 14km. Our backpacks felt like bags of lead dragging us down. Frequent Maggi stops not withstanding we'd have collapsed on the side of the road and been killed by a stampede of mules, who would have then probably defecated on us in contempt for blocking their path with our corpses. So imagine to my consternation when we came across a septegenarian(at least) Sardar who was slowly but surely making his way up with what seeme like no great exertion on his part. On seeing our sorry state he felt it was his duty to give us some advice. 'Akke baar guru ke darshan karne nikal padde to phir guru apki kalai pakar ke neele ghode pe baithake le jaata hai. Aap jisse bhi bagwan maane chahhe wo ram ho ya rahim bas usko apne dil me baitha lo aur aap phir rukoge nai baas chalte challe jaoge aur apne manzil tak zaroor pahunchoge', he said. He went on to say much more. Very profound stuff. Only one problem, my Punjabi, at best, is atrocious. So most of it went way over my head(except for something about a blue horse). I wish I'd paid more attention. Apparently it made the trek a lot easier for the others, but I do remember this: The intense conviction and faith that some of the old-timers seemed to have blew my mind away (even with the flying blue horses still floating around my head). With chants of "So bole sohnihal" following which the entire valley would echo with a "Sasriyakaaale...." these people were making their way up at an age when their peers may find an evening walk a challenge. It was truly inspirational. To me it really showed the power of faith and made me question my own views on God and religion.
The scenic beauty was another real show stopper for me. As we trudged along we came across innumerable spots where we just HAD to stop and stare in wonder. The river powering down the valley in full force was another aspect of the trek I found quite soothing. The only real annoyance was the packs of mules and horses taking pilgrims up and down. The more trips they made, the more money the owners could make, which meant that they were made to hurry up and down the hill side as many times as possible, even if it meant barging into the pedestrians and pulverizing them on the rocks to one side or plunging them into the river on the other.
Many a waterfall, and many a cascade of horseshit later we were finally at Gangria. We flopped into one of the first hotels we could find and settled in. We went out exploring the small town, taking in the sights, and generally limbering up for our next stop, the Valley of Flowers....
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Valley of Flowers, An Adventure in many parts
Ingenuity, thy name is sleeping in general compartment!!!
Sure enough, at around two in the morning the train came to a standstill at Sahranpur and quickly emptied and soon it was just me and the cleaners. I smelt something fishy, despite being nowhere close to the coast and decided to investigate. I reached the engine just in time to see the engine driver packing his bags and hopping off! I blocked his path and said he better take the damn train to it's intended destination as mentioned in bold black one it's bright yellow board : "DELHI RISHIKESH PASSENGER". And here I was, a passenger who was neither in Delhi nor Rishikesh. Something had to give right? Wrong. Apparently the train doesn't go beyond Sahranpur after August 7th and I had the misfortune of travelling on the 13th. After that the train's name is just a ruse to trap innocent people like myself into visiting Sahranpur. 'But I have to go to Rishikesh', I squealed, and just like in the nursery rhyme, 'Oh!', said the engine driver, 'I don't care!'.
So, very relcutantly, I got off. It was half past two in the morning, and Sahranpur station was bustling eith activity for this ungodly hour. Yet, it felt like the site of some major tragedy. Scores of bodies lay motionless end upon end, the only sign of life being the slow guttural snores emnating from them, almost in symphony. I hop, skip and tripped my way to the exit from where I got a bus to Haridwar. Around this time I get a call from my friends who managed to catch the bus. The driver was taking his own sweet time getting to Rishikesh and had just stopped for 'lunch' at Meerut (if you want to compare I crossed Meerut at 8.30pm, before they'd even started!). They didn't expect to get to Rishikesh before nine in the morning. This left me in quite a fix, because I would be in Haridwar at 4.00 am!
Dead or Alive?
On reaching Haridwar I was mobbed by touts for hotels, motels, rooms,taxis and what not. I had a few hours to kill so I proceeded to 'Hari ki Pauri' , which is where devotees take a dip in the holy waters of the Ganga. The recent rains meant the river was flowing with tremendous force, free of all her inhbitions. There were plenty taking a dip in her ice cold, silt rich waters. There were plenty of sadhus , all decked in bright orange in ash ready to perform pujas for my redemption, all for a price which was quite aggressively advertised. The place was kept remarkably clean by normal standards and there were quite a few 'govt. officials' asking for donations for it's upkeep. One caught me and tried to extract as much as he could (they must have targets to meet). Asked for Rs.501, expected Rs.101, and got Rs.11. Imagine the stink eye he must have given me, triple it and raise to the power of ten and you will only get close to the look he gave me.
Haridwar, 4.00 am
Hari Ki Pauri
Daybreak
I spent daybreak loitering about here and was wondering where to visit next when my friends called again. The driver' suddent burst of energy post-Meerut meant that they had crossed Haridwar and almost reached Rishikesh. I quickly made by way back to town, rescuing a couple of Japanese tourists from the clutches of an evil auto driver enroute before catching a shared auto to Rishikesh, where I finally, finally, FINALLY caught up with my friends whom I was supposed to meet at 8.30pm the previous night. It was 8.30am....
The trip was on!!! Save a few landslides, there was nothing that could stop us now. Stay tuned for more adevntures.............................
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
An Interesting Day
The day began well. Very well, infact. For one, the heat didn’t kill me. I had a song in my heart, and the same was emitted from my lips as completely indistinguishable cacaphony. ‘A Beautiful Day, ey ey, don’t let it get away’, my heart prompted but my karoke skills are only a shade better than Godzilla’s, and the sound that emnated went something like this : “Garble Bargeley, ey ey, garble some more dey”. No matter. It was indeed a ‘garble bargeley’ and my spirit was as light as a feather, a far cry from my actual self.
Now for those of you that don’t know, my means of transport to work and back are the ubiquitous public auto things fondly called Vikram (don’t ask me why). Autos on steroids is what I like to call them. They are also known as tempos, but they set no such thing, travelling at a snail’s pace, despite which they are more dangerous to pedestrians than a drunk Salman Khan in pursuit of a black buck. Usually they are driven by daredevils (read maniacs) in the eternal pursuit of the Guiness record for maximum number of bodies, preferably human, that they can pack into these dastardly machines. Bodies reaching their destination alive is fairly low on the list of priorities. Being that as it may, it still finds immense popularity as a mode of transport, as the only less lethal option is possibly a flying carpet, which in these recession ridden times are extremely hard to come by. Office timings are particularly bad as the drivers’ zeal for setting, breaking, and re-setting the record is the highest at this time. I usually end up hanging on to the sides, for dear life...
This day was going to be different. There was actually a seat for me! Ok, it was this stool that the driver had so graciously tied to the back of the vehicle, large enough to accommodate about half of a single Kate Moss butt cheek(the standard unit of butt cheek measurement), which roughly translates into about one-tenth of mine. As Bono kept telepathically telling me all morning, I wasn’t going to ‘let it get away’. I chased the auto down, got him to stop, hoisted my self onto the stool, taking the support of the cushioned seat in front to get my above average frame up. Only, the cushioned seat was actually the well padded shoulder of a lady with a much larger frame than me….
Dirty looks ensued and in my shock I let go of what little support I had (however unsupporting she was to my cause) but a few acrobatic moves and a near death experience later I had managed to plonk myself on the stool. The rest of the journey to work was uneventful, thankfully. I was scheduled to participate in some software orientation that day, which made me feel slightly more useful than before because upto that point my job description could at best be described as ‘professional web surfer’. So in I marched into the conference room with a single minded and dedicated purpose to master the software and prove to be a useful asset to my company. In one smooth motion I switched my screen on, swivelled myself into place and punched out my password. Staying true to form, my computer did what any self respecting machine working on any mechanism more complicated than a simple pulley would do when the user is feeling extremely productive. It crashed, gloriously, like it had been given a 'stunner' by Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Me and machines have never got on very well(Yes, I know… I am a mechanical engineer. It’s ironic. Don’t laugh). I think it all started back when I’d got a new CD player, from ‘Aunty in US’ (all of us Indians have at least one of those no?) , rendering my up to then faithful Philips Walkman redundant. A few CD buying sessions later (ok, who am I kidding, shameless downloading and burning sessions later) I figured I could try figuring out how my walkman actually worked. I ended up massacaring the poor thing. It wasn’t a pretty sight. I tried soldering the wires I cut with candle wax. I guess Electronics never forgave me.
The limit of my computer maintenance skills are switching on and off the system, which I religiously did, ten times, but to no avail. My computer screen was showing absolutely no change. In the background I heard one of the co-particpants remember his sister with some fervour. ‘Oh bahen, oh bahen’, he kept saying. ‘Must have missed her birthday’, I thought, ‘ Poor chap, she’ll give him such a tongue lashing now. No wonder he is so riled up’. It took me a while to realize that the reason for his sudden outburst was that the system I was fiddling around with was actually his.In fact I even remember the precise moment it dawned upon me. It was when he exclaimed ‘Oye bahen di fuddi, yeah kya ho gaya! Woah teri! Apne aap switch on-off ho raha hai bhai yeh….’. Silently I moved my fingers away from his sytem and spent another fifteen minutes surreptitously looking around for mine.
If that wasn’t enough to derail me, the incident in the evening was the final nail in the coffin! As many of you may know, I have been a loyal foot soldier in the Battle of the Bulge for aeons now. Loyal doesn’t imply I have never deserted the cause but I have always returned to the legions (on gaining 5kg or finding that my pants get stuck half way up my thighs, whichever comes first) in our aim to make the world a lighter place. Luckily for me, there’s a gym in the basement. After a rigorous workout, comprising of stretching , shaking hands with the trainer and making false promises to, and I quote ‘actually move my fat ass’ (in Hindi of course, which went like this : 'apni moti gaand tho hilao') the following day, I decided to weigh myself. Imagine my consternation when I got on the thing and it read ‘ERROR’ ! I know it’s wrong to be so unhealthy but who did this digital weighing scale think it was to give me health tips ?? I proceeded to get on and off it, so much so that some of the other new members at the gym thought it was a new piece of exercise equipment. The machine kept giving the same message though, until after about 50 reps it became ‘ERR’. So now it was mocking me! I persevered, and after what must have been my best wrk out in yeras the ‘ERR’ too began fading into nothingness until the screen went completely blank. Yes! Deepak 1, Evil Weighing Machine 0. And that, my friends is the end of my wonderful day. The fat lady (yes, that very same one I physically molested that morning) has sung.
It shouldn’t come as a surprise then that the following morning the song on my lips was ‘Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow’, with the ‘yesterday’s gone, yesterday’s gone’ sung with particular joy, happiness and relief. Of course, to you it would have still sounded like , ‘Garble bargling garblow’……..
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Safety Policy
'There comes a time, (ever so rarely)
When I heed a certain call,
When the world must come together as one, (and visit blissinswiss.blogspot.com)
There are people dying, ( to read my blog)
And it's time to lend a hand to life,
The greatest gift of all...'
....Ok, getting a little too conceited aren't we? It must be this 'God' status I have recently acquired. Power and fame has got to my head. As Spidey puts it, 'with great power, comes great responsibility' , so I suppose that means it's time for another blogpost... (now, now, squelching, screaming and retching not allowed)
There comes a time when the blogger likes to sing (usually in the shower). There also comes a time when the blogger likes to refer to himself in the third person, but more on that later (but don't bet on it). Anyway, most of my last few days have been spent being jobless and so, I took time off from my jam packed schedule (being jobless is hard work!) to come up with this song. Now, before you begin thinking that it's a full on major self-composition and all, like A R Rahman, let me assure you I belong, very much, to the Anu Malik school of song composition which believes in pilfering and ripping off any hit (or non-hit) western song, adding a smattering of pelvic thrusts liberally and voila, we have Filmfare Award winning material with minimum effort. Jai Ho!!!
(To be sung to the tune of Fool's Garden's Lemon Tree)
I'm sitting here in the boring room
It's just another sunny weekday afternoon
I'm wasting my timeI got nothing to do
I'm hanging aroundI'm waiting for you
But nothing ever happens and I wonder....
I'm surfing around on my comp
I'm surfing too fast
I'm surfing too far
I'd like to change my point of view
I feel so lonelyI'm waiting for you
But nothing ever happens and I wonder....
I wonder howI wonder why
Yesterday you told me 'bout the new project to fly
And all that I can see is just a stupid safety policy
I'm turning my head up and down
I'm turning turning turning turning turning around
(I have swivel chair at my desk you see)
And all that I can read is just the damn safety policy
I'm sitting here
I miss the power
I'd like to go and take a shower
But there's no water in my room
I feel so tired
Put myself into bed
Well, nothing ever happens and I wonder.......
Isolation is not good for me
Isolation I don't want to read the safety policy
I'm steppin' out into the desert outside
And maybe I'll get a sunstroke ‘nd die
And nothing will ever happen and you wonder...
I wonder howI wonder why
Yesterday you told me 'bout the new project to fly
And all that I can see is just the stupid safety policy
I'm turning my head up and down
I'm turning turning turning turning turning around
(Warning: swivelling=fun+giddines)
And all that I can read is just the damn safety policy
And I wonder, wonder
I wonder howI wonder why
Yesterday you told me 'bout the new project to fly
And all that I can see, and all that I can see, and all that I can see
Is just the damn safety policy.............
Thursday, June 4, 2009
My New Life's Philosophy
Anyway before I begin recounting the sorrowful trials and travails of my life for your enjoyment, let me, as promised thank a certain Ms.Divi Nair who implored, begged, bribed and threatened her way into getting me to 'write something'. This post would still be silently gestating (without causing much labour pain may i add) if I wasn't convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt that Divya's very existence depends totally and entirely on the words that flow out of my 0.5 Staedtler MARS777 (doesn't say much for Divya does it?). And the words aren't really flowing out, they are spluttering out in stops and starts accompanied by constant head tilting and 'hmmming' and 'haawing' much like a cross between a badly maintained Bajaj Chetak from 1975 and an aged horse on it's last legs (which funnily would be the same legs it started out with as a strapping young pony, but you get my point. I hope.). So I write this not as Descorpio86, he who shares mundane drivel from his oh-so-normal life but in essence as a life-giver, as Brahma if you will. With this newly acquired status conferred upon me by none other than myself I have decided, as the first act of my glorious existence to anoint the aforememntioned Divi Nair as my 'Fan No.1'. Which is a pity, because what I need right now is not a fan, but an air conditioner.
Since moving to Noida (Yes, my dear sympathisers and point-your-finger-and-laughers, NOIDA. If you think that's bad here's more. Noida is not some cute name for the place. It actually stands for New Okhla Industrial Development Area. Yeah, that's right, I am not staying in a city, town or even a village, but in an 'area'), it's been a long, hard and energy sapping struggle against the heat. Heat here is not just a feeling (as in 'I can feel the heat'). Here, the heat is alive! It can kill, moving silently among us, much like the 'monster' in Lost (ok...too much drama you think?). I can still clearly recall my first encounter with the NCR heat, mostly because the memory was seared onto the side of my brain, the side that stores painful memories, as I stepped out of the Jet Lite flight S232. The heat came rushing up and gave me one huge sucker punch smack in the middle of my already distorted face, blowing me off my feet and set me tumbling face first down those unbelievably rickety stairs-on-wheels thingies which are deemed safe only at airports. The wind was blowing with full gusto, but it wasn't a cool or refreshing wind. It was hot, dry and very likely to cause a sunstroke. Appropriately enough, this dastardly phenomenon is called the 'Loo', because it does make you feel absolutely 'shitty'. The shuttle ride from the plane was funny in a tragic sort of way in that the seats were too hot to sit on and the plastic from the handles was (or is it 'were'? I am confused..) slowly but surely melting and forming little yellow puddles on the floor of the bus. There was no point opening the windows and the air con wasn't working. A little part of me just died, or evaporated.
After this initial 'warming up' to the situation I basked in the lap of luxury for the next two weeks. An air conditioned car would take me from an air conditioned guest house to a centrally air conditioned office and back. Enquiries regarding my well-being and my coping of the heat were met with cheerful responses, no doubt tempered by the air, which at 24 degrees had been cooled and dehumidified for my thermal comfort. I was oblivious to the fact the Sun had declared jihad upon me, indeed as it does so annually in this region between the months of May and September, and was quite intent on boiling me into oblivion.
Then I moved into a PG. For those who use the words 'my life is a living hell' way too often, I prescribe a short stay in Noida. It will shut you up, or kill you (which should in all probability shut you up as well). Residents of Noida visit Hell to cool off ! ( Thus, saying 'go to hell' to a Noidawalla results in much mirth and merriment for the latter) . The Uttar Pradesh Electricity Board obliged in giving me the 'fultu summer effect' by outing the power for the better part of the night. A severe case of shallow water drowning might have been registered with the Sector 56 police if I hadn't woken up just in the nick of time to find myself bubbling into a puddle of my own perspiration, smelling a lot like how I felt (kindly refer to earlier passages related to 'the toilet wind'). If this indeed had become a police matter, 'foul' play would definitely have been suspected. It gets so hot here that the air you breathe out is cooler than the air you take in, and post 6.00pm breathing feels more like eucalyptus steam inhalation therapy! With a tiny tweak. The eucalyptus is replaced by oil of the transformer variety. (Edit : So hot in fact, that my blood boils by the mere mentioning of it..hehe..)
A UP summer it is not without the almost suffocating prescence of the ubiquitous 'cooler'. You can buy one, rent one or lease one but steal one seems to be the preferred mode of acquiring possession. Names such as Polar, Icy, Artic, Snow, Freezy and MahaKool (yes, with a 'k') do the rounds, all of them conjuring up pictures of polar bears gracefully doing the ballet in slow motion on the Arctic Ice Cap while penguins gently serenade them. The name belies it's true purpose as an instrument of torture, and this indeed has confused very many UP bhayyas. What this 'thing' actually does is when filled with water (which has to be done every three minutes), heats this water up and then tries to fling it at your face hoping to cause at least Level 3 burns. So, now my room is not just hot, it is also humid. That does have it's positives. You know those television ads which ask you to 'feel' the experience? Well, thats exactly happened yesterday, while I watched some mindless Chuck Norris nonsense on HBO, Braddock : Avenge of The Some Shit or the Other (Part 3, no less). As Norris, sweated bullets to find his illegetimate son and wife and save them from the Vietnamese tyrants, all the while being chased by the CIA, I felt like I was in the trenches too searching for my own ba*&^rd child as my 'cooler' recreated to perfection the hot and humid climes of 'Nam, complete with an all pervading sense of death and decay.
Given these circumstances, can you be surprised that there's been a change in the philosophy by which I live my life ? It happens to all of us at some point or the other. A moment that makes us see the light. Such events act as a catalyst for a catharsis. I've seen this sea change in many of my fellow Paying Guests (unfortunately, you'll shortly find out just how unfortunate). This new outlook on life is best described by that great American poet, Nelly :
(Background voice: uh uh uh uh uh)
I am gettin too hot, I wanna take my clothes off
[Edit : There! I hope those words randomly strung together tickled your funny bone. Don't forget to leave comments with raves or rants!! ]