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29 Jun 2013

Middle-Classin' it in the Himalayas

Countless years ago, on a fairly mundane but ominous-in-retrospect Thursday evening on the eve of my seventh birthday, my father had The Conversation that all Mallu Dads must at some point, usually on the eve of their son’s seventh birthday, have with their male progeny. “Son,” he told me, “I know you have friends from all over the country in your school, and they’re all lovely children. But… you’re different. You’re notbad-different, just… Special.” The  Mothership’s meticulously indexed library of family photographs (Ref: Aug-Oct, 1991;, pre-measles, post C- in Fingerpainting) will show I arched my eyebrows like the best in the business, suitably impressed by the enormity of the occasion. “Son,” my Dad continued, looking away from the thunder and lightning and the late Monsoons that dutifully lashed against our living room window, “you’re a middle-class Mallu man.”

He told me how, as a Mallu man, I was blessed with superior qualities other races just weren’t privy to, how life had been handed to me on a silver banana leaf by virtue of my lineage alone. I would have to deal with the good looks, the charm, the terrible terrible popularity with the ladies, he said. I’d also have to put my superior Mallu brains to good use, he said. I would grow up to become a computer engineer in the Silicon Valley, he said, or a dentist in some posh English county like all the nieghbours’ kids. “It’s part of our culture,” he explained. Some of those predictions were proven wrong over time. Some, like “not too long before you start sporting a thick moustache like mine!”, over a little less time. But I’ll always remember what he told me while tucking me into bed that night: “There’s always a choice, son. You can either spend your life under-achieving to compensate for your natural awesomeness, or you can light up the world with it. Just don’t, ever, be Evil.”

Nearly twenty two years later, staring right through the eyes and into the soul of a little Pahadi man in the foothills of the Himalayas, those words came back to haunt me.  Girlfriend and I had come across the native  while struggling up the deathtrap that is the trek from Barsheni, a tiny little town in Himachal Pradesh, to Kalga which would be our basecamp for our trek to Kheer  Ganga. We were tired, we were starving, and we were cold. We had been walking almost twenty minutes in the wintry chill of June. It was either him or us. To his credit, the native showed no signs of fear, the little tyke. I told Girlfriend, gently: “darling, we have no choice. It’s the human thing to do. You’re struggling, too.” “I wouldn’t be if you’d just carry your own damn suitcase,” she muttered, “who brings a suitcase to a trek, Boyfriend, who?” The poor thing was losing it. I had called dibs on being Navigator days ago.

But even as she borrowed desperately from the last of her moral reserves, even as she stumbled over the last few centimeters she would spend as a righteous woman, I knew: the madness had to end. The natural order would prevail. But we weren’t like that, Girlfriend and I. Girlfriend had read Roots six times, and retweeted Toni Morrison Quotes religiously. I had only watched Django Unchained a few days ago. Far be it from either one of us to take advantage of a historically and economically disadvantaged community for personal gain.

I looked up one more time through my polarized Ray Bans at our destination- Kheer Ganga, home to the holy. This mission was the culmination of the work of a lifetime, and it would involve collateral. We would have to make a judgment call, and we would have to live with it the rest of our lives. It was Time. We’d have to middle-class it, or run the risk of never making the climb. “Native,” I said purposefully, as I looked him in the eye, “five hundred bucks to carry our stuff all the way up and lead the way. An extra hundred if you don’t crumple my casual-yet-elegant cardigan. We cool?”        

22 Jun 2013

OM SHANTI OM

Chris Gayle discovers marijuana, denounces hair care.  
When Girlfriend and I set off on a trek around Kasol a day after my book launch, the rules were clear: personal hygiene would be a personal choice. No judgments would be made, no snide comments would be passed and we would spend our days in sun-soaked, rain-drenched Himalayan hermitage in blissful quest for the muse. We were damned if we couldn’t squeeze some literary juice out of a month in the hills, what with Girlfriend having quit gainful employment and yours truly never really joining the ranks of the big boys in the taxman’s scheme of things. We were, therefore we’d write.

For those who don’t know (I say that grandly, but I hadn’t heard of the place till Girlfriend drew out the itinerary and circled our stops in idiot-proof red on Google Maps on her tab), Kasol is apparently where half the Israelis in their early 20s come to let their hair down and generally bum around after two (for women, four for men) compulsory years of military service.  Seriously, I’ve learnt more Hebrew from shop signs here than I did in twelve traumatic years of catechism classes. 

Generally marijuana-friendly and devoted to the thaandav-doing, chillum-toting Hindu stoner deity Shiva, the town is a pint-sized cross section of little gullies and one winding main road by the banks of the River Parvati, whose valleys produce some of the best hashish in India. Once the stronghold of Hindu pilgrims and babas, Kasol now boats of a vibrant multi-cultural hippie populace, from suitably unarmed Israeli forces to backpackers from Europe and America, dreadloacks and tie-dye everywhere.  

The baba is the collective- if curious- patron saint of the movement. Armed with nothing but chillums and a Beatles-worthy catalogue of variants of the same song, they stomp up and down these mountains in valiant search of the self, pausing only at the Hot Springs atop Kheer Ganga for some TLC. Our own plan was a little less Deepak Chopra, but the destination was the same. We’ve been here a few days now and we haven’t made the 4-hour trek to Kheer Ganga yet, but encouragingly, the babas don’t appear to be in any great hurry either. You can find them holding court in several of Kasol’s cafes, surrounded by awe-struck millennials and spouting platitudes to Shiva while smoking (and graciously passing around) the holy herb. We haven’t gotten much writing done, but all is, as the Israelis would say, sababa.    

                                       Icy Highs's Music Recco: Kula Shaker- Govinda  




5 Jun 2013

'Cough Syrup Surrealism' Book Launch & Party

So I've been threatening to publish my novel, Cough Syrup Surrealism, for a while now. I'm glad to tell you my baby's finally got a face, and a release date. And a Facebook page, because nothing screams AUTHENTIC more than a Facebook page, right? The cover's below, and here's the link to the page:

The book is already available for pre-order on Flipkart and uRead, but the official launch (Translation: PARTY!) is on 10 June, Monday night at 7:30pm at The Den, Bandra in Bombay. It's a Nineties-themed night, with plenty of booze, books and banter, and of course a kickass 90s playlist. If you're in Bombay at the time, please drop in, say hello, help yourself to a few happy-making beverages and pick up a copy of the book.

Please check out the Facebook page and like/share/tweet/comment/mailmeyourpanties and show me some love, you guys! Launch party, and other details are all up on the page (because noone takes anything seriously unless Facebook tells them to), as well as some incredible artwork by resident aesthetician Igirit

I'm on @icyhighs if you'd like to drop me a line on Twitter. Thanks in advance, and fare thee well ye merry lot. Your support's meant the world to me, and will always do. I'll be back to blogging (and hopefully lose the writerly airs- yes, I KNOW how I sound!) in a couple of weeks. Hope to see you all at the launch!