Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Horoscope

Cancer
By:Jonathan Cainer

It's easy to find fault. Really and truly,
no special skill is required. It's not so easy to
find forgiveness. We can all try, but sooner or
later we will encounter something that simply
takes us a step too far. Then what are we
supposed to do? Put up walls and barriers?
Pull down psychological shutters?
Grow angry and resentful?
Or learn, somehow, to be big?
Big hearted. Open-minded. Compassionate and
caring. Amenable and understanding.
You can manifest all that now, if you truly want to.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Grave of the Fireflies



Last night was one of those moments when an unexpected
piece, like a poem, story or a movie can catch you totally
off guard and leave you dumbfounded.

Set in the midst of WWII Japan, 'Grave of the fireflies'
is an anime depicting two orphans living in a rural village.
Mother of the siblings die in the air raid, and their father
is serving the imperial Japanese army. Kicked out by
relatives out of their home, they are forced to live their lives
in the streets and in abandoned, bombed shackles. The pain
of the sister, tiny four year old Setsuko, who cannot
understand the harsh realities of full blown war, escaping
from air raids, missing her mother, battling hunger and
rashes all over her body, watching his brother beaten up
by a farmer for stealing food for her while trying to help
him in her own small ways, is just heart wrenching.
The brother, fourteen year old Seita, though being a proud
male, is just a small boy with too much pride and cannot
compromise that with the world, which is partly to blame
for the death of Setsuko. This is a story of two orphans
with no hope except the fireflies in their hands to light up
their little ravaged shelter. The movie does not try to take
advantage or leverage itself on the portrayal of war and
chronic poverty, but instead keeps those issues subdued and
builds around total anonymousness of two helpless children
surrounded by war and deprivation. Deprivation if of lost
childhood, running from bombs falling down and left to die.
That in turn succeeds in carrying out pain of the whole
nation in a numbing silence, the famine, the destruction,
the humiliation of ordinary people in a proud nation, whose
Emperor threw them into the world war.

I dunno if I will be able to watch this movie again, if I do,
it will definitely not be without my eyes going watery.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

True Friend

Trains are definitely a place to listen, whether you like it or not,
to people and their lives. I have had numerous experiences
where I could revel a life right thru my ears, just broken
couple, just broken lives, students in despair and regretting
why they came here in the first place with so many sacrifices,
grandmothers who can't have their grand children to even setup
an alarm in their mobile sets, drugged and drunk people ..
and so forth. Public trains, in spite of the open air,
are free territory where people relax, as if its their drawing
room back home, or the one they don't have so their train
seat becomes the one, its a short term sanctuary where people
actually can find their senses calmed down, breath,
think, cry, sleep and laugh; all without shame, in spite of the
train cars being totally open and in obviously, public view,
yet strangely, very private. Sometimes more private than
your own flat, office, homes and basically everything that
bothers you.

I hate trains technically, in pure technical sense I mean.
I hate to think of my everyday journey thru one of Sydney's
pack commute, crowded platforms, specially in the city,
specially in summer, and specially if the one that stops at
my platform is the old cabbies without A/C. I prefer buses
instead, despite their slower rides and stopping too many stops.
Its much more comfortable than trains, and all of them are
air conditioned, so you don't have to worry about getting your
shirt wet with your sweat when you are going to a meeting.

But, if you want to observe lives in motion, or even enjoy it in its
slightest of form, trains provide with an excellent opportunity,
all for free, well almost, except for an expensive City Rail ticket.

Today I left office an hour early, at 4. Train cars at Wynyard
were nearly half empty, probably because of the hour and
the time of the year, hardly half of people might have returned
from their new year holidays. I was carrying my laptop bag and
had a couple of heavy uni books that a friend had handed back after
she had finished with her semesters, during the afternoon.
Hot steamy day it was, I was mentally preparing myself to head
to gym after reaching home, a long due, I had not hit it for months,
even before I left for my vacation in Asia.

Slumping down, I had noticed a figure in the seat
behind me. A guy, his elbow resting in the window and his
palm holding his chin, obviously in some kind of
distress. Suddenly out of no where, came a blasting cheer to the guy
from behind, clearly one of his buddies, so loud that I had to look
back in complete surprise, as I was drooling over the pages in my
book. I thought to myself, what the heck!

The guys were talking in Hindi. One advantage of being born in a
country that is sandwitched between two of the world's largest and
most populous nations is, you learn their culture, and language.
So without much fuss I have this ominous fortune of understanding
almost all languages spoken in Sydney trains, English, Chinese,
Hindi, Nepalese, scores of other South Asian dialects and some
French and Japanese..this ability is a part of my unbound wealths.

I held back for a while and realized, I am listening to a an Indian
guy comforting his friend, in his language, in Australia.
I am sure this has happened in Chinese before, only that this
time it was really something.

I listened in silence as the new comer friend fired up
straight away addressing his distressed looking friend,
even before seating himself beside the sitting one.
I gather the sad one was somehow mired in some visa problem
for himself or his family. He also was separated from his family
for some time, his friend sounded like he was consoling him
on something serious, something that only a friend could help
with. with nothing but words, but words do move worlds,
situation where you need and want badly to listen to a friend
like this. His words were shooting down my ears like arrows,
but as the topic was interesting, it wasn't too unpleasant
to listen anyway. So I let go of my pages and my antennas were
pointed backwards intently. What the guy said was meaningful,
though it was loud, provocative, and brash, but very confident,
and convincing to the core. He was trying to pull the sad one out of
his misery. He was basically telling him to climb up the well that he
had found himself fallen into. The sad one was mentioning an issue,
that he thinks about it, and then cannot sleep at night.
Something was clearly eating him from inside, and he had no high
hopes of fixing it by himself. His disappointment,
worry and fears were so visible in his words and expression that I
shuddered for a while, I was in similar rot before, feeling desperate,
hopeless and alone. It was scary to listen to him what a mess he is in,
cause it resonates into my own psyche, that this seems a familiar
territory to me as well. Well, no matter how hard we try, sometimes
we cannot stop shedding tears in bed, feel like a lonesome battered
dog left out in street in winter. All the knowledge and philosophy,
all the TV fixations and self help books cannot come to our defense.
We act strong outside, but are crumbling inside.

But often, we forget that we all have this strength within us
and give way to worries, we lose count of how many times we have
pulled ourselves out of the negative , yet get totally smashed up
by smallest of inconvenience and problem. We neglect our own
strength and totally ignore that giant within us, that can fathom
anything, and let ourselves be trampled upon by needless worries.
Like the situation when an artist feels he has lost his ability
to paint, or like a witch who has lost her ability to fly. But
if you can find your own inspiration, of which God has enabled
you with, if you are a painter you can discover your own style
when you thought you had lost your ability or find out that
its the trust in your spirit that acted as the inspiration that enabled
you to fly, if you are a witch.

The guy had this depth of terror in his voice, it just sent chills down
my back, he did seem to be in a really bad and hopeless situation.

But listening to his friend was a complete transformation.
Ok, you have a problem and cannot sleep at night, but the
problem is magnified by yourself, there is nothing you cannot
deal with. He was going on, you have to figure up the worst case
scenario, think what is the worst possible outcome, then think of
alternatives. The need to divert your mind is the best short term
cure. His immediate solution was his offer to watch a movie
together, it could have been anything. Anything that would
take your mindaway from that self destruction zone. He was
jostling with confidence and asking why he had not called him,
they could have sat down together and talked it thru.

To my own embarrassment, I felt this was kind of a
mental bash that I needed myself. God bless, a strong and
positive friend like this is a God sent. Not all of us have such people
around, and we have to be our own best friend, our best support.
Once we have that toughness ourselves, then we become really
self confident, and will not fall back into the holes of despair and
worries, and will be able to help others in need, instead
of feeling crumbling inside ourselves.

Well, I spent half an hour at gym, and stuffed myself with
some fried rice and some chicken back home. I was feeling so
full that I had to drive to the park for a quick stroll hoping
to help digest. Life is basically like weather, isnt't it, specially
like Sydney weather? It was so hot and bright when I came back
home, now its pouring down and cool breeze is soothing Sydney.

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Bhutto : murder of hope

Assassination of Benazir Bhutto brings another major destabilizing
changein South Asia. Al Qaeda was quick to beat their chest and
declaredthat they murdered her for being a' Sweet puppet' for
Americans. Who killed her, is still an unsolved crime for me, there
are many who would have wanted her removed. Was she the target
of well known terrorist groups or was it something on the other side,
she definitely knew too much and was a headache for the government.
She was meeting the leaders from the region and was scheduled to
hold crucial discussions with Americans on the evening of her death.
Whoever did it would not care that she was a hope for hundreds
of millions in her country, a hope for democracy
( no matter how flawed it is), freedom and dignity of a
nation. Its a misfortune of poor nations, the people who should die
never die, and the onesthat shoulder the hope always die early.

I acknowledge the drawbacks of Benazir when she was in power,
twice.Although touted heavily by the west as the last hope for
Pakistan,she actually never initiated modernization of the country,
she didnot do much for the women, she did not touch the traditional
mullahs and mujahiddin who are still the cause of much trouble
and bloodshed in Pakistan. Corruption was rampant at her reign,
even her husband was embroiled. In spite of all these, she was
still better than anyone that was there in the Pakistani politics,
much better than Musharraf or Nawaj Sharif. No matter how
badly she mishandled the overall management of her government,
she was a civilian and civilized democratic leader. She was a
woman Prime Minister, in a country of hardline Islam. She did
not send troops to help Taliban, she did not send in ISI to murder
journalists and opposition leaders, or hang them with order from
puppet judiciary on false charges to enhance her own political game,
she did not try to nozzle up the press, she did not carry out a coup
against an elected government. She was truly a mother, a daughter
and a wife who was bringing Pakistan out of the dark clouds of
military rule. Her father was executed by General Zia, she lost
her election to another popular party, in a fair election.
She handed over power to the opposition as in any other normal
democratic nation without bloodshed or force of reluctance to shed,
probably the only leader to do so in Pakistan.

She provided hope to other small South Asian nations who could
not stand up to Indian hegemony and aggression in the region.
She said she will fight for even an inch with the Indians if needed.
She was the only leader in South Asia who could stand up to the West
and talk the talk, walk the walk. She was truly the only Global
statesperson to come outof the region, after her own father.

To me, the cowardice and callousness of this murder represents
and symbolizes the uncluttered view of the terrorists who carry
out their vicious 'Jihad', that they can never be a part of a civil
world, they ought to be hunted down and exterminated, since its
them or us.This is the kind of situation where you have to take
sides, where even a moderate like me is forced to make judgments
based on people's identity in relation to their faith and race.

Its not that Pakistan will stop existing because of her death, this
nation has withstood peril many times and won, but the seemingly
vacant top leadership is a worry to everyone in the region and the world.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

NYE 2007







New Year arrived with a spectacular bang in Sydney, but to be honest
the fireworks at Darling Harbour at 9 pm, which was supposed to be
the smaller compared to the one on the Harbor Bridge, looked more
cracking to me. An Indian friend came to my flat too early, at 6:30, and we had a
typical boys outing, playing a video soccer game and I having some bbq
with a beer, first time in days after my dental surgery. The crowd was
good as usual for the NYE celebration, but thinner I guess than last year.

The CBD was sealed off for traffic and for once in a year the Sydney siders
had a chance to walk in the middle of the streets. We spent couple of hours
wandering around, sittlin in the kerb before entering the Circular Quay
section where we could have view of the firework. As I mentione earlier though,
the firework this time was not as good as I expected..but the feeling of
peace and order is stronger, people are cheerful and much less rowdy.