Nov 8, 2008

I'm going to leave work late today
that's what my boss had to say
and I smile
My son is in bed with fever high
I try hard to hide a sigh
and I smile
My man ran away
and left me with bills to pay
and I smile
It seems I don't get tears anymore
the ends of my cheeks are sore
and I smile
I cut my hand doing the dishes today
and I come up to you and say
"Can I take your order now?"
and I smile
Dedicated to all the ever smiling waitresses of the world, and to the one who wants to be one.

Nov 3, 2008

Jaane Bi Do Yaaron?

Saw Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron again last night. Curiously, even though I was in splits watching Satish Shah as a dead body, Om Puri's drunk antics, and last but not the least that genius of a Draupadi scene, what hit me the most was the angst. I was surprised that this aspect had completely escaped me on previous viewings. The feeling of desperation that the youth feel when up against the powers that be was epitomized by one of the scenes in which Naseeruddin Shah and Ravi Baswani are at the railway station, their cash being snatched off by a hawaldar, are left without any money to go home. The look that Naseeruddin Shah gives as he asks, " Without ticket?", captures it all.

That got me thinking. We are currently one of the youngest countries in the world. Similar demographic points in the history of nations have coincided with major civil unrests. France had May '68, USA had its whole 1960s counterculture thing going, China had Tianamen. These civil unrests have more often than not led to laws being formed in favour of civil liberty, women and youth empowerment, and not to mention have been times of unparalleled artistic achievements.

For a nation which has more than 600 million citizens under the age of 30 and an equal number under the poverty line, we sure are a quiet lot.