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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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So Some Insomniac Blathering



What happens when you finally stow about the two laggardly-arriving boxes of books in a 9ft x 9 ft garret of a room[1] that already has four other boxes of books, stacked double high, along with a bed and a dresser/table?

You run out of free floor space, and and soon begin to master the flying-squirrely art of leaping into bed right from the door, and crash landing, of course head first, into a pile of books bought in the last two weeks[2] sitting on the bed. Then in the process of displacing them, you pick one of these new arrivals to read (Michael Ondaatje's memoir "Running In The Family"), and end up in this state of insomnia. And you do know that you have a 12 hour work day awaiting you tomorrow.

[1] You miserly wretch, you figured why get a bigger room when you will be spending 60% of your life in hotel rooms and airplanes, and so you didn't consider the times you may be spending at home base - you figured you were strange enough for anyone to dare pay you a visit anyway - or the fact that you have a severe mental disorder whose symptoms require both wall and floor space?!

[2] O! what itchy disease is this that makes you buy books even though you know that if you don't resist, very soon your room will resemble an igloo of pulp?




My Daily Notes

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Ah! Come Sweet Nostalgie



My blog forays today took me to Kalleda Village (h/t within/without ) in the Warangal District of AP: the state in India in which I was born, and grew up in. These photos taken by kids bring back to me many sweet memories from those childhood days spent romping in the villages of my farming grandparents.

On a related note, in the first chapter of "In Spite of the Gods" (I am planning to look this book up next time I visit a bookstore, never mind the weird title), Edward Luce, the longtime Indian correspondent of Financial Times, describes such juxtapositions of the hi-tech and the low-tech thusly:

"But it is at the side of the expressways in the glaring billboards advertising cell phones, iPods, and holiday villas and the shiny gas stations with their air-conditioned mini-supermarkets that India's schizophrenic economy reveals itself. Behind them, around them, and beyond them is the unending vista of rural India, of yoked bullocks plowing the fields in the same manner they have for three thousand years and the primitive brick kilns that dot the endless patchwork of fields of rice, wheat, pulse, and oilseed. There are growing pockets of rural India that are mechanizing and becoming more prosperous. But they are still islands. It is in this almost continuous contrast that you observe the two most striking features of India's early twenty-first century economy: its modern and booming service sector in a sea of indifferent farmland. It would be tempting, as you cruise happily toward your destination with a reasonable chance of being on time, to believe these features are from different worlds."

I, for my own selfish reasons, am glad that this other "indifferent farmland" India of toddy tappers, roadside vegetable hawkers, hand-powered water pumps, ox driving plough-men etc has not yet been swallowed whole by the silicon chip!




My Daily Notes

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Lunch Notes



A bit of breathing space during lunch today finds me listening to Schubert's "Trout", reading essays on Saul Bellow's excellent middle period novels and on the uses of reading poetry (h/t Swami), and then reading sections from the latest volume of Galway Kinnell's poems that I had bought this past weekend called "When One Has Lived A Long Time Alone" (very appropriately titled I think given my states of being have been slowly shifting from solitude to socializing). Here is an excerpt from the eponymous sequence of poems:

"When one has lived a long time alone, one falls to poring upon a creature, contrasting its eternity's-face to one's own full of hours, taking note of each difference, exaggerating it, making it everything, until the other is utterly other, and then, with hard effort, possibly with tongue sticking out, going back over each difference once again and canceling it, seeing nothing now but likeness, until . . . half an hour later one starts awake, taken aback at how eagerly one drops off into the happiness of kinship, when one has lived a long time alone."



My Daily Notes

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