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i'm the creepy girl who stares at your food.

Sunday 29 July 2012

DinoCabraZilla

The Americans have Big Foot, the Irish have the Loch Ness monster, the Japanese have Godzilla. Indians? We have 'sex'. Or at least that's how things were when I was growing up. Sex wasn't just the elephant in the room it was a hybrid of a Dinosaur, chupacabra and the Loch Ness monster because as kids, we weren't really sure whether it was extinct or mythical, but we at least knew that it was dangerous. Why?

Well, for one we had parents who avoided the subject all together until they caught their daughter reading a Mills and Boons instead of solving Math problems like all good Indian children were supposed to. It was almost as if I could hear their brains self-destruct at that point from the sheer exhaustion of answering self-imposed questions like, How did she know..... about sex? Was it this book? Where did she get it from? OMG, has she had it? Will she fail math? So, all these years she was sitting there with her math book, she wasn't actually doing the math? What else did she lie about? Social Studies? Science????!!!!

Here's where I'd like to give them credit. My parents had done an impressive job of sex-proofing my childhood - by that, I don't just mean me "having" sex, but they made sure I never even "heard" the word, sex. They banned Star Movies right from the start. And then that evil, evil TV show Friends. Then, they told me all boys were 'rapists waiting to happen' so I never really wanted to be friends with one. Their twisted sociological experiment is now the root of several of my problems.

However, it wasn't just my parents who were doing this, thousands of middle-class Indian parents around the world were doing the exact same thing. The result was - that Sex became a DinoCabraZilla. We picked up Western literature, listened to the Backstreet Boys and watched the flowers mate in Bollywood films instead of the actors and actresses and thought, What the fuck is going on? My head was filled with all these weird theories, "Oh sex? It's that thing people do in the US. I think they might do it in Japan and China, definitely in Europe. Not so sure about Africa. Hmmm."

In 9th grade, one of our 'forward' friends told us about her first kiss. We were blown away. Indians kissed too? It was like a newsflash. We had presumed kissing wasn't in our destiny, unless we dated someone like Nick Carter or went to prom like that Nancy Drew chick. "I could never fall in love with an Indian guy." is something we told each other for this very reason.

 Love with an Indian boy would be like my love for Shah Rukh Khan. Which was weird, because well, I loved Shah Rukh in a weird, weird way. For starters, it began with a Stockholm syndrome-like attraction. I began to seriously dig SRK between the time I watched "Darr" and "Baazigar". He was a twisted stalker-killer in both. Not a bad boy, not a rebel - a full on psycho, borderline rapist freak. By the time he became the Yash Chopra poster-lover-boy, my dreams of SRK and me involved us running around a snow capped mountain. We never, ever kissed - because that would be so, SO gross.

 I don't think our generation is cool with people kissing in Bollywood movies, and we never will be. I can sit and watch Sex And The City with my mom but never Jism. The last time I had to watch an Indian couple kissing on screen, Aishwarya and Hrithik in Dhoom 3, my brain was manically yelling, WHERE ARE THE FLOWERS, SOMEBODY BRING IN THE GODDAMN FLOWERS.
 

Wednesday 25 July 2012

You don't get to call me a ho

Can you like, for one second, stop pretending your life is a TV show?
-          A boy

I studied in an all-girls school, an all-girls college and now am, quite literally, working in an all girls workplace (damn you entertainment journalism). What I mean to say is that I do not understand the minds of men. At 24, I still adopt my black rapper alter ego when meeting a new male so they think “I am one of the dudes” (What do you mean, all men don’t say ‘yo shizzle my drizzle’?). I’m not one of the dudes. I’m a girl. A girl’s girl. A not so much, but totally girly girl. And so when a boy tells me to, “stop pretending my life’s a TV show”, my literal reaction is, “Yo (insert N-word), don’t be suppressing a ho’s dreams!”  

I have always lived my life like I was in a TV show. For eg: In a fit of depression yesterday, I spent the whole day listening to Anne Hathaway’s moving 2-minute rendition of “I dreamed a dream” on youtube – you know like background music to my misery. Sometimes, I wake and open the day with a monologue in my head like Meredith would in Grey’s Anatomy – using entertainment metaphors instead of medical. It’s what girls do. 

There is no group of girlfriends in existence who haven’t had “Which one of the Sex And The City girls are you?” discussion yet (I am Charlotte, if you really wanted to know). The minute you mention a TV show, one of the girls HAS to pipe up, “I am so Christina Yang. You’re totally like Calli.” It’s what we do, search for ourselves in TV shows and then try to follow their life patterns. I spent all my college years using Grey’s Anatomy as my relationship handbook. And now 30 Rock is supposed to help me guide me through my 20s. I, for one, love Tine Fey’s fucked up Liz Lemon. I want to BE her – which is basically me – except under better lighting and with better makeup.  

Why do we do it? I don’t know. Because we overthink? Men think about sex every seven seconds (Is it sexist, even if science says so?) –but we can’t do that... so that opens up a lot of clear spaces in our minds. We just do it to keep the voices from taking over. We do it because we need a prototype – a prettier, more hardcore version of us that we can aspire towards becoming. The women on screen live out our lives for us in fast forward – we watch them and learn from their mistakes, revel in their success (she can get a cute boy? – then so can I. She can get her life back on track? – So will I. She does Power Yoga every morning? – So will....fuck this, it’s just fiction) and when they are sad – we feel like their compatriots.

I remember a conversation with a female friend where she told me, “I need to keep thinking of my life as The Truman Show. There HAS to be someone on the other end watching otherwise... what’s the point?” She then sank into a puddle of depression right before me.

The possibility of no one watching was scarring.

We bitches be crazy y’all

Tuesday 24 July 2012

Too many people are getting married

Too many people have been getting married lately, and back-to-back viewings of The Walking Dead along with late-night readings of the World War Z,  have somehow conglomerated the two happenings in my head. The result? I am seeing the sudden wave of marriages as a total full-blown Zombie Apocalypse. I am seeing my engaged friends as



...The Living Dead.

Don't get me wrong! I am happy for you guys, but this is about 'me', okay? Me and the rest of my unmarried and no-intention-of-getting-married-any-time-soon brethren. These are dark times for us. Day after day we bravely open our Facebook accounts to see another person wiped out by this plague. Day after day we see crushes, ex-boyfriends, school friends - even chaddi buddies - becoming one of them.



It's just you and me left, dawg


One of my closest friend's roka came as a shock. The celebratory dinner saw us sitting across from her with queasy smiles on our faces, telepathically asking each other - How much time does she have left before she turns into one? The sleepover that followed was more awkward still, with each one wondering, Is this contagious? and worse still, Who's next?

When the hypothetical Zombie World War broke out in Max Brooks' book, people lost their shit, fleeing to far away places where the dead couldn't find them, stocking up on supplies, using fellow human beings as baits in their escape plans. My fascination and deep love for Zombie fiction comes from my belief that only Zombies can reveal the true human nature. Only Zombies can test our emotional, physical and mental endurance the way no other adversity can. But marriage is coming pretty close to the zombies in all three areas right now.

Losing our shit doesn't even begin to describe what is happening to us. Coping mechanisms include everything, from violent fits of depression (Oven, meet head), to manic escape plans ("But mom, this Norway university's philosophy course is THE BEST) and the most popular yet... 'CARPE DI 'EM BOYS' (Which happens to be my Spanish translation of 'Sieze the boys!'). This is coupled with general distrust of those closest to us, Have you been bitten? Sorry you can't come with us! My journey from the day my mother first brought up marriage at the dinner table, closely resembles Andrew Lincoln's from when he rose alone in Zombie-infested hospital bed, only to find out that the world had come to this -




Family- Beta, check out this boy, he's an engineer!
Me: NOOOOOOOOO









Tuesday 17 July 2012

Rambling, again

Is it too weird the movie, "Cocktail", upset me so much that I put a ban on all its songs in my car - effective immediately? Listening to "Angrezi Beat" made me feel as guilty as Diana Penty's character in the movie would have felt if she'd, God Forbid, had pre-marital sex with the douchy Saif character. I fought with my colleagues over this, reminding them of their Journalistic Responsibility - I mean, seriously, if there were to ever be a version of the "Hippocratic Oath" for entertainment journalists, feminism and defending fat people would be vital elements.

Even my MOTHER, had a WTF expression on her face when Saif went on and on about how he wanted a woman who would cook rotis for him.

More on that later.

Let's get skinny
I reconnected with an old, old friend after a long, long time - over Long Island Iced Teas, in a bar I fondly call my "Vodka Dungeon". She reminded me of a life where the only thing I aspired towards was becoming a rom-com heroine - quirky and beautiful in high heels and pencil skirts. Am I glad that phase is over? Is it bad that I was a little wistful when it came up?

We talked about that girl. You know, the girl who was "perfect" in that world and now she's somebody I only think about when listening to Bob Dylan's Like A Rolling Stone.

We said, 'Let's get skinny', like we always do. And then ordered a plate of french fries, like we always do.

We spoke about growing up, growing apart, growing into each other. It didn't even come up, yet she made me feel okay about coming home. I've felt like a failure for far too long. I failed at adapting to Bombay's rain-drenched cobbled streets, to its people (an odd mixture of smug and friendly that I just couldn't stomach), the workplace which had too many free cups of coffee but barely anyone to talk to), to my apartment (where I could bear the mice, but not the depression) - if everybody made it, survived it and grew to love it, why couldn't I?

Coming home was even harder. Everybody had moved on, and oddly so had I. I spent days of self-loathing. Minus the school friends, college friends, colony friends, Bombay friends, Chennai friends - I had nobody to hang out with but me (and my mom). And I hated me, the familiarity - now that me and I were forced to interact in that pink-and-purple room alone - bred even more contempt. I could barely tolerate myself as a teen but at 24 - I hated everything about me. Not just my ass and my muffin top, my whole personality. Coward, Selfish, Unloveable, Talentless - I berated myself.

A lot of things happened. If I were to chronicalise briefly it would go somewhat like this - work laurels, work friends, new TV shows to watch, re:falling in love, zombie obsession. I am fine now. The pink and purple room is bearable, and so am I.

But still I keep finding lost parts of me. That's what I did sitting in the Vodka Dungeon that night.

The drunk me is less apologetic and more sharing when it comes to french fries. The drunk me giggles more, regrets less. The drunk me looks less at the watch, hardly worries about getting home, sleeping on time. The drunk me loves more, buries the hatchets in glasses of LITs.

I could grow to love me, after all.