We won

The only purpose of this post is to make you envious enough to rush over to Shruti’s  and participate in the contests she hosts. Last month we
crafted some ice creams and won the challenge and look what we got. The prizes were sponsored by Preethi from  Indya Kaleidoscope
 and we received all of that along with a very sweet Thank You card. Thank you both of you. Love the gifts. I wish I’d clicked the kids’ pics when we opened the parcel. I wouldn’t have needed to write this post then… their pictures would have been enough.
 
 

I always knew ice creams were cool.

Summer of the seventies

I picked up the kids from the bus stop this afternoon and hurried away from the hot sun. N lagged behind stopping to count the Hibiscus that had bloomed in the society garden while H sat, actually sat, in the blazing sun, to stare at the cat that had sheltered under a car. How can they not feel the sun, I wondered exasperated.

But then kids are like that. We were like that .. my sister and I. Some three decades back. I think of other hot afternoons when the sun blazed just as strong. Each year during the summer vacations, for a month, we would go to our mum’s village. The summer would be at it’s peak with sun out in all its glory. Not a leaf would stir. Electricity hadn’t reached the village then nor a pukka road but we didn’t really notice. We whiled away long afternoons playing cards (which we’d made on our own as cardgames were a forbidden pastime) or antakshari. An old transistor was the only other entertainment.

It couldn’t have been an easy journey – first in a State Transport Bus and then in an addha (an open bullock cart) – but for us it was simply an adventure. For our mum, it was perhaps, a way of staying connected to her roots while introducing us to her childhood. Though the only living relative mum had was her uncle, our nana, the entire village seemed to be related to us. Mamas, mamis, nanis, nanas, masis came in all shapes, sizes and even ages. We had two-year old nanis and same age masis.

To say that we had celebrity status in the village would be an understatement… we were, after all, the bitiya ki bitiyas. Besides we could speak English. My earliest memories are of being put on display asked to name body parts in English.. “Eye, Ear, Nose,” we’d go as they were pointed out to us, to the immense amusement and amazement of the crowd that gathered to welcome us.

The sights…
couldn’t have been more different from the city. Green and blue are the colours that come to mind. A few metres from our house the fields stretched out endlessly topped by open skies.
— We’d watch the men early in the morning with hals (ploughs, incidentally girls were forbidden from touching the ploughs, don’t ask me why) slung over their shoulders, guiding a pair of bullocks to the fields in a bid to get an early start over the sun.
— We’d watch as nana would churn milk with a huge churner attached to the pole that held up the roof. However we’d turn up our city noses at the smell of that milk, our stomachs rebelling, unused to its purity as against the watered down version back home.
— We’d watch in fascination as he’d help mum get out grains from the over six feet tall granaries called dehris.
— We’d watch the girls grinding atta in pairs on a hand chakki.. chatting and singing along.
— We’d giggle at the toddlers running around wearing nothing but a black thread at their waist.

The sounds…
are difficult to forget. The summer silence seemed to magnify every creak, every murmur — the tip tip dripping water on the shivling in the temple to keep hotheaded Shiva cool, the constant puk puk puk of the flour mill, the ku u uuu of the solitary koel, the gentle clink of the cowbells,  or the rhythmic sound of the fodder cutting machine. Late at night as we’d be lying ensconced in mosquito nets listening to stories, the dogs would suddenly start barking. “Dacoits are passing by keep still,” we’d be told and we’d freeze on our cots. The lilt of that Awadhi, eons away from the accented English of the Irish nuns at our school, warms me even today.

The huge courtyard was where we’d spend most of our time. One corner was covered with a thatched roof and cordoned off as the kitchen, another one stored firewood and a third one, that had the handpump, was the bathroom.

Did I say bathroom? Well I meant bathing area. Exotic concepts like bathrooms were pretty remote. It was only correct that nature’s call be addressed in the lap of nature, right? However, a temporary bathroom was set up for us city girls in the cowshed, or the hata as it was called, that housed the cows, bullocks and buffaloes.

The hata was our favourite haunt. We loved to pet the calves whenever there was one or feed them left over chapatis. Surprisingly, the smell of cowdung never disgusted us, not even today, rather it spells cleanliness. Cowdung paste was applied to the floors to keep the dust down, it was even put on the kitchen floors and walls. We’d watch the girls make cowdung cakes, dry them then pile them up into huge mountains and seal them off.

It was there that I got my very first lessons in cookery… on a chulha. Mum would put on the milk to boil and make me sit sentry. “Pull out the firewood when the milk starts to rise,” she’d tell me, only to to come back to the smell of overflowing burning milk. Never ever did I get the hang of it. Somedays she’d let me make the bhog (prasad) for the Thakurdwara, our ancestral temple. That simple suji halwa was to me the ultimate cooking challenge.

Mum was terribly protective so we weren’t allowed to run free in the fields or orchards. However, one place we were allowed to go to was the Thakurdwara. It was built in a huge compound full of neem and peepal trees that kept it cool during the hottest summers, the neem littering the ground with bright green fruit. At the entrance was a well with a bucket and a rope ready to draw water. Because we were prohibited from looking into the well we never missed a quick peep to see our reflections staring back at us from deep below. Behind the temple was a huge orchard of red-tipped Sindhuriya mangoes. We’d watch trees laden with mangoes, the tangible smell filling us and making our mouths water.

Somedays we would be allowed to go out with the other girls as they collected bathua leaves that grew wild along the fields, to make sag. We’d watch as they deftly spotted the deep greens from among the weeds and tied them up in their dupattas. Hot and tired from their picking chores the girls would dive in the canal full of swirling waters and come out dripping wet only to dry up again in the sun. In the evening they would teach us folk songs and bhajans which we’d sing at the top of our voices while one of them brought out a dhol. Sometimes we’d be joined by one of our myriad nanas who would sing along with gusto puffing on his chillum.

The days would pass by only too soon. There we were with no TV, no summer camps, no evening classes, no toys too and yet we had a great time.

As the kids’ summer vacations come close and I find myself desperately looking out for ways to keep them occupied I wonder if I should just let them be — let them count the Hibiscus and stare at cats, let them discover things to do rather than give them things to do, let them forge bonds with each other the way my sister and I did, bonds that have only become stronger over the years.

Gimme Red

Thursday Challenge: RED (Fruit, Vegetables, Flowers, Clothing, Hair, Makeup, Wine, Toys,…)

Hey not fair.. Now the theme turns red after I put up enough reds already.. those strawberries, beetroots and flowers at Mahabaleshwar.

Anyway here are some more …

Flowers in a shop in Amsterdam: Pic courtesy the sister

Wine for two, Florence : Pic courtesy the sister

Those two would make for a great memory if The Husband had the sense to organise them (Are you reading this dear Husband???)… and this third one is already a great memory when the kids set up a choir on Christmas last year.

A red and white Christmas

Dressed all fancy

I’m not really a competitive person at all. Yet of late I’ve enjoyed participating in a number of contests. There have been some writing competitions which I enjoy because they make me write about things I might not take up instinctively. Besides, they take my mind off the kids for a change. Some have taken me down memory lane back to my own childhood which is a great feeling.

And so now I take on another one. Shruti’s Artsy Craftsy Challenge .

This is my second time at Shruti’s. I enjoy her challenges most because I know I can never win these ones since I’m not really a ‘crafty’ person, so there’s no pressure. This one is about Kids’ Fancy Dress Costumes.

Here’s their first one. Hrit as Sher Khan and Naisha as Mowgli. The kids were in the Jungle Book phase and loved dressing up. I found these really easy to do.

For Sher Khan I got a yellow Tee and Tracks and painted on the stripes. The tail is made by twisting a clothes’-hanger in shape, wrapping newspaper to give it body, then putting on yellow paper and painted the stripes. I made a loop at the end and inserted a regular belt through it so Hrit could just tie it on. The headgear was a bonus.. I borrowed it from the local toy-library. Hrit refused to let me paint his face so this had to be it.

He just doesn’t look menacing.. a happy Sher Khan

Mowgli was a cakewalk. I simply used an old asymmetrical animal print skirt and tied it on. One can use any animal print cloth. It works just great.

No animosity here: Sher Khan and Mowgli cuddle up

Last year they had a theme.. insects. Hrit had these black overalls so I got satin ribbons stitched on and got black stockings on his hands to hide that bit of white. Some wire was twisted into wings. Dustbin bags went over the wires and I painted on yellow stripes. A readymade hairband completed the look.

The Bee
.. and the ladybird

Naisha was a Ladybird. She had a red dress on which I got black rounds stitched on, black stockings, red band and wings similar to Hrit’s with spots instead of stripes. That’s it.

Reclaiming life

This post won the ‘Life Changing Device’ contest on Blogadda. Got a Philips MP 3 Player for this one. Yay! The contest was judged by Kunal Sheth. You can read the other award winning entries here.

Since I started working I’ve changed cities pretty regularly. Each time I’ve looked forward to the move with great excitement. Setting up a brand new house while we stayed at the hotel was always fun. I would take a short break then start job hunting – new job, new friends, new beginnings.

However this time when the husband announced our time at Mumbai was up I had a sinking feeling. Setting up the house would be a nightmare with two four-year-olds getting underfoot. There was to be no job since I’d turned a stay-at-home-mom. We’d been in Mumbai since the kids were born and now I was to going to lose my entire support system – my friends who’d seen me through the toughest times and my trustee maid. I was leaving behind my whole world.

Just as I’d feared, the move was traumatic. The first month went by in a whirl of carpenters and plumbers. I struggled with a house that refused to run smoothly, maids who didn’t cooperate and kids who were … well.. busy being kids. And, I had no friends. The city was not new to me.. yet all my old friends were working. My mommy world didn’t connect with their media world.

Writing used to be my way to unwind and I’d started blogging right after the twins were born. The blog was for me.. just me. However, in this new house our study was at one end of the house and I couldn’t leave the kids and disappear for some ‘me’ time. The one pleasure of my life became inaccessible. It couldn’t get worse, I thought.

Alone, depressed and overworked I was nearing break point.

Some time back we had subscribed to a holiday package (which BTW we’ve never used thanks to the workaholic husband). Along with that package we got a complimentary laptop. My husband suggested I make use of it. I’m really not a technology freak. I figure out just about enough to keep myself going. The comp was an old friend but a laptop…? Desperation drew me to that dust-ridden carton in the loft. The laptop was out. I struggled to work without a mouse and surprisingly within days I was comfortable. Soon I found myself reveling in the freedom of the laptop and a wifi connection. They accompanied me to the kids’ room, the balcony, the dining table, the living room… wherever the kids chose to play. I was writing…. furiously.

Picture courtesy Google Images

That was the first step. Then I began to connect with other mothers. I found Parul who had a book to her credit despite a four-year-old and a baby (now she has two, books, I mean), Mad Momma and Rohini, also moms with two kids each who held full time jobs and surprise surprise there was momofrs who had twins just like me. They were in their terrible twos and she was a working mom. There was Y who has a young daughter followed by twins.. gasp. Could it get any tougher?

They all generously opened the doors of their hearts and their homes to me through their blogs. It felt like family. I could talk about my son’s tantrums and my daughter’s homework issues without fear of being judged. Oh I know they weren’t reading my blog but I was reading their’s and when I wrote I felt I was talking to them all… like I had ‘friends’ out there. They had the same issues, unruly kids and absconding maids included. And they talked about much more.. book reviews, films, family functions, issues, impressions. They were out there doing it all. Maybe I could too.

And then I discovered blog directories. For the first time I entered a contest and found myself attempting to write something NOT to do with my kids in a long time – a first since I quit my job. That was the icing on the cake. Then I actually won the contest .. talk about the cherry on the icing.

Coincidentally around the same time a few of my articles/stories were selected for various publications and I was actually paid for them.. hah. I was on a roll.. damn I AM on a roll. I have more virtual friends than real ones. I’m not sure that’s healthy but at least they’ve kept me sane.

My laptop and the wifi, that’s where it all started, that’s how I reclaimed my life.

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