Thursday, April 10, 2014

SportsVilla - Notes from the Diary

The initiative I am a part of envisions a healthier society where Sports are a part of life for every individual and family. My motivation for participation in InterSeliger are the Forum’s objectives – Empowerment/Engagement of global youth, Cooperation in social/political/economic aspects, Networking with domain speclialists/experts, Understanding global business/scientific/cultural/media/organizational trends, Providing comprehensive support and channelization for idea-materialization – which resonate perfectly towards catalyzing our growth for making this vision of ours become a reality.
In India, where Sports Industry is one of the most disorganized sectors, Sports as a part of everyday life for a common Indian is a romantic fantasy, let alone be a permanent career choice. With such huge potential and limitless talent in the people of my country, it is but unfortunate that even after 65 years of Independence, we have just produced a handful of legendary Sportsmen. Meanwhile the ordinary man still struggles for survival without the basic-most of needs, while living an unhealthy stressful lifestyle. This is a major contributor in lowering down life expectancy, hindering our fight against number of ailments – physical and mental, and decreasing the happiness-cum-satisfaction quotient of people in general.

Here, I see an opportunity for change. With initial efforts towards increasing availability of Sports facilities to one and all, our long term aim is to cause a shift in mindset – a Sportsolution (Revolution in Sports) not just for the people of my nation, but for every human who seeks a healthier lifestyle. My expectations from InterSeliger in terms of knowledge and expertise are directed towards making this transformation a reality. Broadly, Growth and Sustainable development, along and Innovation and Enterprise, would be the foundation stones of our initiative. With bidirectional experience sharing, I do wish to get inspired, and maybe inspire some others on the way.

Globalized world of Tomorrow - InterSeliger

The world of today is technologically borderless. We live in a well-connected civilization where physical territorial boundaries are incapable of binding information, knowledge and learning. This enables us to efficiently communicate to a vastly more diverse, rich and global community. InterSeliger does go one step ahead and catalyzes this connectedness of a global society but giving us an opportunity to network with some of the most exceptional young people on the planet, about to transform the way we live life. Any agent of change would want positive transformation to touch as many lives as possible, and the multiculturalism of InterSeliger brings us all closer to that goal. Not only by helping us share our ideas, vision and passion, but also by giving us a glimpse in the wonderful work other young passionate people are involved with all around the world.
Issues like high economic poverty, hunger, high mortality rates, unsafe water supplies, poor education systems, corrupt governments, war and poor sanitation, among many others, can be fought only with collaborative ideation followed by action. Unless the youth of today holds hands and comes together in collective action, escaping such ‘poverty traps’ will not be sustainably possible. This makes me see immense potential in the platform that InterSeliger provides, where together under one roof, we share our vision for a better future, brainstorm, indulge in rapid prototyping, critically evaluate, accept, and become contributors to others’ visions, while enrolling many others in ours.
Globalization is the revolution of today. And the tomorrow I see, is a better future built on top of collaborative action. While technology assists communication, platforms like InterSeliger will actually ‘connect’ us together to be a part of the same odyssey.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Forbidden Mysteries of Matheran


Looking down at the valley hundreds of feet below, feeling the echo of absolute silence brush past my ears, I heard my voice whisper to me – “How would it be to take a step ahead.  To fly down effortlessly to the deep vastness of this silence that lay below me; till it swallows me and makes me one with itself.” Just then, like a sting of infinite intensity, I felt my conscience flood back into me. I turned back and walked on.

It all started a day before Diwali ‘13 – when I realized the away-from-family, friends-leaving-for-their-homes, celebration-devoid disaster my Diwali holidays were going to be. As the last of my friends bade me goodbye, I still gaped at skyrocketing flight charges and overloaded trains wishing something could magically teleport me to-and-fro Delhi. Practicality struck me hard, and so I considered visiting this hill station close to Mumbai, called Matheran, as an alternative to celebrating Diwali a little ‘differently’.


I had heard a lot about Matheran from local friends. Google images made me ogle at the beautiful painting-like scenery, and so the plan was fixed. I packed my bag before I slept that day, and next morning I left early to catch an early local train toward Matheran. Taking a bite off the Samosa-pao I got from the Malad station canteen, I dived into the hell-packed Dadar-side local like a Spartan! Next was the lightly packed local towards Neral. Standing at the door of the train, feeling the soft morning breeze embrace me, with rhythmic music from my headphones, I felt the beginning of this journey couldn’t have been better. Little did I know what lay ahead!


Neral station reminded me of the classic movie Sholay - Red soil, scorching heat, and dust flowing past mysterious grumpy looking faces. I boarded a shared van-taxi to Aman-lodge railway station for 70 bucks, and all throughout the way up the hilly range, I was simply awed to see the beauty of those underestimated lower plains I was coming from. Up at the entrance to Matheran, a ticket for Rs. 50 was to be obtained to enter the station from where a toy train takes you up to the Matheran market. An alternative is a horse ride, or to simply walk up-hill for 20 mins. The toy-train looked fascinating, so I got the Rs. 40 ticket and boarded it, eager to see what the real ‘untouched’ Matheran was like. The journey was short, and as I exited the station, I was surprised to see a fully established organized bazaar – restaurants, resorts, hotels, parks, shops, and it didn’t look much different from the less-crowded version any Mumbai market. With the difference that the only modes of transport were horses, and your two strong legs! That’s why Matheran was untouched by pollution. No vehicles – no emissions.


But alas, this is where my fairy tale gets sorely interrupted. Reminding me of extremely incredibly annoying houseflies, all sorts of brokers got around me – with all sorts of prices for all sorts of places to stay. I’d stay No, thinking I’ll find a place to stay somehow. But they’d still linger on for minimum 100 meters more, asking on average 5-6 questions – “Kaisa hotel chahiye?”, “Resort chalega?”, “Privacy wala room chahiye?”, “Arey budget to batao kitna hai?”, “Valley view room loge saste mein?”, and the questions just got weirder. But the only question EVERYONE on the way had been asking me was – “Who’s traveling with you?” I felt really strange because when I’d answer “No one”, they’d suddenly stop walking and with eyes wide open, they’d just gape blankly at me as if I’d chanted an unforgivable curse. I anyways took the opportunity to boast “I travel alone” with a wink. Still wondering what the deep surprise on their faces meant.

I walked on though. I knew barely anything about Matheran as of then. And so it became really exciting. What was strange was that every time I’d ask somebody “Kya hai yahaan pe?” they’d give a “What-the-fuck!” expression, and so I concluded that just following the crowd was the easy way out. This way, I came across Echo point, Honeymoon point, and Sunset point. I also saw an artificial lake, and had a shitty tea at one of the nearby stalls for 15 rupees. The view at the points was amazing beyond any poetic vocabulary I’ve come across, and it was more than a dozen times I felt like what I saw was the most beautiful painting ever – an majestic creation of mother nature that no colour, no artist, no sketch, no photograph, no words can replicate. The temperature was uncomfortably pleasant, and a slight playful confusion of whether it was fast breeze or slow wind that whirlpooled itself in the valleys of your ears.


An insatiable curiosity made me walk on. For minutes altogether, it would be just me walking through the forest-covered hill roads. Greenery in all levels and genres of time – freshly sprouted shrubs like newly born toddlers, to ancient tress bent by the weight of their own years, hugged close that hard rocky crude road on which I walked on. It was easy to get lost. And that’s where footsteps of horses on the road, and their dung helped me. If there was fresh dung and prominent horse steps, I would confidently walk on. If the steps were scare, and the dung was dry, it was a less preferable road to take (because of some mysterious reason!) And the worst case - No dung. No horse steps. Fuck.


I thought of life in the woods. Far far away from the gaping brutality of city madness; from the place where a thousand emotionless faces swim by in dead stringent silence every morning, every night. Here – the birds, the tress, the horses, the wild dogs, the insects, the ants and their gigantic anthills, music of the leaves brushing against a humble breeze. The harmony was bewitchingly captivating!  The naturally unconditional resonance was pure fascination for me.

Lost in these thoughts and more, I stopped and looked down at my legs which were numb by now due to constantly walking on the ruthlessly hard rocky way. And suddenly that moment - to pure spine-chilling astonishment I noticed there were no horse-steps, no dung. I’d been walking for hours now. If I’d turn back, I might not reach to the main road before dark. And who knew how long was the road ahead (if there was a road ahead!). I suddenly noticed how alone I was there - alone as a modern human being, as effectively an alien to that ecosystem. As minutes ticked by, I heard occasional mysterious roars coming from the woods. I guessed it would be wild dogs, best case scenario. But in the back of my mind, I realized that as the dusk approached, the sounds seemed to crawl nearer every minute.


And just then, like a ray of hope in absolute darkness, I saw the tip of an old ragged hut meters ahead. It was my oasis in the desert of negative solace. I remember running towards it like a flash, absolutely forgetting about the pain in my legs. An old lady came to my rescue – giving me some water to drink, she showed me the way to the market. I still carried my backpack and was clueless about where to spend the night. But anything was better than a night being lost in a jungle with unknown wild animals. God! I shall never forget that horror!

On returning to the market, the brokers’ swarm surrounded me again. One of them showed me three places – unbelievably highly priced and unbelievably shitty condition. I thought this was illogical!  There were people from all strata who visited the place. There MUST be someplace affordable. The reason, I got to know much later, was because I was alone. Once I got rid of the broker, I searched on myself. Worst case, I thought, would be to sleep on the railway station. But it would be too cold at night, with new species of mosquitoes, and it was not wise to be beaten up by police in the middle of the night. Another stroke of luck, and I met an owner of a shoe shop, who happened to have a guest house. After an array of questions, he calls up my mother and asks another set of questions – “Is Karan your son?”, “What does he do?”, “Do you know where he was come?”, “Is he suffering with any mental depression?”, “Has he done anything to harm himself recently?”, etc. Although my mother was quite disturbed, she answered him plainly. A conversation later, I was surprised to know the reason behind this endless mystery – it was not allowed in Matheran for a person to stay single there. Why? Suicide! He told me that people who visited Matheran alone committed suicide. And the hotel where that person stayed would be investigated and hotel owner badly grilled. As no owner wanted to take worthless risk, even after asking me a billion questions, they’d offer me high prices for shitty rooms. This guy fortunately gave me sensible prices, and so without thinking much I agreed.

The next set of events was funny. I was given a room for 2 nights for 1.2k, and was asked to pay advance. After all this was done, I was ready to shift to the room, when a man in late 20s came our nervously from the adjoining room and started whispering something to the Guest-house owner. I intervened, asking if there was any problem. He just stood with an interestingly weird expression on his face, and that’s when I saw a girl peeping from behind the door of his room. The owner requested me to shift to a different room, as the man has supposedly complained that I might disturb them at night. I didn’t know whether to laugh or blow a punch in that bloke’s face. My legs were too numb to keep up that rage, and so I quietly shifted to the other room. To my surprise, the room was really decent. The bed felt heavenly, and as I removed my Woodland shoes, my feet came out numb and badly red. That night I slept like I’d been awake for ages.


An adventure had come to an end. Another, more mysterious one was supposed to start the next morning.


Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Together with YA

13.12.2013

C-67, Second floor, Lajpat Nagar 2
Shefali, Pranshu, Ashita, Anuj bhai, Shashank
With Anushree.

Life in Mumbai. Subtle amazing things. Memories coming back for Shefali. Amazed at her ability of noticing details in smaller things.
Juggling work and other aspects. How to deal with organizations, staying in touch with YA participants, working out through donation model. A little innovation. Suggestions.
Talk about politics, of AAP emergence, of responsibilities of polity and a hope of making right where we went wrong. Nai talim. Evolution of systems being a part of the system. Our understanding and discretion on media govt conspiracy theories. About education systems, need for revolution in primary levels, is it a simple or complicated question - uniformity of education standards. How it is a central answer to many questions.
Difference of perspectives. How to bridge the gap and who wil do that? Suggestions for YA. Wierd instances of public behaviour and belief. Working through it.
Lunch. Sitting around on the floor. Sharing. A feeling of togetherness with people in the same frequency.
Fruits, serving. Shefali told about finding a course in UK.
Humble. Bright. Sharp. Mature and kiddish simultaneously. Unsparing. Clear. Radical. Principled.
Wrote on card for Kishan bhaiya. Drew a peacock feather for him. Remembered humility, a constant smile and empathy over raw intelligence.
Pranshu accompanying us to metro station. Me saying what's changed for him. A fulfillment, feeling of completeness - doing what one loves.
Medicines for Anushree's boss. In auto with her. Digestive tablets. Mishti doi in greenpark. Metro to Huda city. Return to Vaishali hours late than planned.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Shane Koyczan: Remember How We Forgot



Remember how we forgot?
Remember how no one ever really died in the wars we fought?
Because each gunshot came from our finger tips
And we never really kept them loaded just in case
Because each enemy was a friend and none of it was about oil, religion, or land
It was all just pretend
Remember how we used to bend reality 
Like we were circus strong men
Like our imaginations were in shape then
Like we were all ninjas trained in the deadly art of "did not". 
Like "I totally got you"
"Did not"
Remember how we forgot?
Remember how our parents told us never to look directly into the sun
And how we were their suns [pun on "sons"]
And so we never looked directly into the mirror, in fear that we would go blind
Remember how we used to find any old reason just to call someone we were crushing on
Like we would just pawn off our sense of embarrassment
Buy a chunk of courage that would last just long enough to have us asking them about math and stuff
And how stuff was just stuff
Like I heard you were getting braces, and how braces somehow were and still are kinda hot
Remember how we forgot?
Remember how we all caught mono and out folks would go, "oh the kissing disease"
And our first steps into gangstahood had us saying “mother please.”
Even though we’ve never really kissed anyone
Even though we never did half the things we said we’d done
We just spun yarn like Rumpelstiltskin spun gold.
We told ghost stories never realizing we would one day ourselves become ghosts
Haunting the hallways of schools
Poltergeist, breaking all the rules of silence in the library
But we had no chains to rattle
No voice to battle the fact that we had no vocal chords 
We had only finger nails on chalk boards
We had to scream, shout, and yell trying to tell ourselves what experience can teach is what no teacher taught
Remember how we forgot?
Once upon a time, we were young.
Our dreams hung like apples 
Waiting to be picked and peeled
And hope was something that needed to be reeled-in
So we can fill the always empty big fish bin with the one that got away
And proudly say that "this time, impossible is not an option"
Because success is so akin to effort and opportunity that it could be related
So we took chances 
We figureskated on thin ice
Belief that each slice of live was served with something sweet on the side
And failure was never nearly as important as the fact that we tried
That in the war against frailty and limitation 
We supplied the determination it takes to make ideas and goals the parents of possibility
And we believe ourselves to be members of this family
Not just one branch on one tree 
But a forest whose roots make up a dynasty
So when I call you sis or bro
It’s not lightly
And when I ask you to remember
It’s because the future isn't what it used to be.
So remember now 
Pay tribute to every sacrifice laid upon the altar of somehow
For all the times
Somehow we overcame
Somehow we pushed on
Somehow we’ve gone the distance
And in going there we’ve possessed the freedom to map the uncharted lands of any and everywhere
We are unbound
Six feet above the underground where we will all one day rest
So until then 
Test the limits 
Test the boundaries and borders 
Of the headquarters of potential lay just beyond the world's edge
Let the belief that hope belongs to us all 
Be the pledge you take to make the unachievable as inconceivable as the false fact that we were never here
We were here
And our memories are as dear to us as every slow motion moment or held breath
So remember every instance before death
Every first kiss, first dance, near miss, last chance, yes, no, maybe so 
Let us go the distance once more
Let us remember all the moments that were and were not
Like the point is something we can get and what we can get is what we got
Because all we have is the time between the moments we connect each dot so
Live and remember
Burn like an ember capable of starting fires
Like each moment inspires the next 
Like memories are the context we put ourselves in
So that life becomes the next of kin we need to notify in case of a big bang or extinction level event
Let now be our advent
Let us live like we meant it
Let us burn like we mean it
Because this world doesn't give a shit if we end in a train wreck or a car crash
If our story ends with a dot or dash 
If we were dust or ash
Because all we were is all we’ll be
And all we are is the in-between of so far, so good
So forget every would, could, or should not
Forget remembering how we forgot
Live like a plot twist exist now and in memory
Because we burn bright
Our lights leave scars on the sun
Let no one say we'll be undone by time's passing
The memories we are amassing will stand as testament
That somehow we bend minds around the concept
that we see others within ourselves. 
That self-knowledge can be found on bookshelves
So who we are has no bearing on how we appear
Look directly into every mirror 
Realize our reflection is the first sentence to a story
And our story starts:
"We were here."

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Excerpts from the Romantique's diary

Like an artist who dreamt one day
Of nature's miraculous creations to say
And as he dipped his fingers in paint virgin and pure
Carved the secret ecstasy of his dream inherent in it's lure
And he thus opened his eyes when the painting was done
His love was brilliant as nascent rays of innocent morning sun...

Wish I were the artist who'll be
The one whose eyes are closed to see
A smile, those lips, eyes which look at me
Shall I trace her lips, embrace her cheek
Which end is this love that I so humbly seek
An embrace, a hug, a kiss shall I keep
And closing my eyes, now I fall in love softly and deep...

How do you take care of her, when you know your touch could disrupt the softness of her skin, the purity of her existence. Yet a powerful desire makes every muscle in your body force you intensely towards enveloping her inside your warmth, in the entirety of her completeness.

A look at you, and he shall feel that way. A gentle touch in the softness of those lips, ecstasy in those eyes, a smile which he shall carve, hair which flow down as waves on endless skies, and as your scent conquers an existence which was his once upon a time, he'd hold your hand and pull you close, gently embracing the soft skin by your neck, a little too close, the muscles of his arms strong in unison around your waist and you'd close your eyes in magical ecstasy as he would now flow through you, and be but one...

With darkness around, under the majestic moon we stand. An intimacy so intense, we bathe in the softness of it's moonlight, and as I look at you, I see that beautiful curve by your face shine, a curve that travels down by your neck to those beautiful slim fingers entwined between mine. In the silent darkness of death, this mesmerizing love does stand glowing alive...

It's something to love her catastrophically - as a man hopelessly loves the wind as he drowns deep into the ocean. An inevitable oblivion of simple pleasure, a day to return to dust, when sun shall swallow all beauty of this earth, this rhyme and it's love shall stay alive forever and even more...

Watch the garden flowers as you walk by a sunset's sun to die. You might see me with my sketchbook, smiling at you, as I hold you and to the skies shall we fly...

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Een Inspiratie - Namesh Killemsetty

Namesh looks like a normal 'cool' guy when you first meet him. He would walk towards you and greet with his special big smile. Post that, the usual 'Where are you from?' etc.

It takes maximum 5 minutes after you're done with introduction (etc.), and Namesh would suddenly have begun your odyssey into his stories - stories lived and experienced. Ups and downs not in books, but felt and lived through in the real raw reality of itself.

So he would talk about a day when after depressing work at a job (for which he's extremely overqualified btw), he travels 3.5 hours in a local to his house, and discovers that there's been a robbery. Laptop gone, along with his branded jeans. He still keep kicking and surviving though. Amidst losing 12 kgs on shifting to a new city, being cheated by the company which employed him, and spending most of the time travelling and working stuff he would do in his sleep, he keeps faith. It's as tough as easy it sounds. And you can see that in his eyes.

And so randomly he would mention being selected for a conference by United Nations (one of the three people globally), featured on his University's website, on a newspaper, his experience working on his project, how lucky he would be at times and how proud he is about all of it now. It's impossible to not get awed by extreme levels of down-to-earth humility and compassion to keep living in the real sense of it.

A beer afterwards, you realize a throat sore of talking so much. You realize finding someone who shares that adventurous crazy part of you, and who, unlike you, has really lived it. You start realizing how important THIS time is, and how THOSE are the stories you are going to remember 30, 40, 50 years from now. Not how well that random project you worked on which got x billion dollars to the company (if ever!).

Namesh is a star to be. A star for himself. A star for all of us who are luck to know him personally. A true Inspiratie.

Namesh - The one NOT in Woodland shoes

-K