Thursday, October 14, 2010

Postal Service

Letters and postcards that I received recently and a post card project for my students enticed me to write this. I have not been much of a writer all my life. Hence buying stamps, sealing envelopes and posting letters has hardly been part of my memory.
However the recent turn of events has made me realise how beautiful this means of communication is. The letters I feel are like wine, they only get precious the longer they are kept. And the taste can be savoured by re-reading.

Unfortunately in todays times the only interesting fact I know about the Indian Postal Service is that the post offices were the oldest banks in India. More unfortunately they are still trying to maintain record in that style!
Graham Bell ensured that we are connected at the speed of light, Dhirubhai Ambani ensured that we are not just connected to everyone but it is the cheapest means possible. When he was unable to further reduce the price of the call he made the government increase the price of a postcard. Technology is just killing this art form.

I want to support it though. Difficult to find its place in mainstream communication but it is such a pleasing way of communication. I am sure that I am going to make myself happy (while writing) and someone else happy by sending them postcards and letters.

And the irony is that I am writing this on an electronic blog but would now hit post!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Happiness sans gratification

The month of May gone by was wonderful for me to say the least. Unlike most May's of my life that I have spent getting baked in the sweltering Delhi heat, this one was spent in the middle of mountains in a tiny village in Himachal Pradesh.

I was left with enough time and energy to think about life, more so because I was getting acquainted with Buddhist philosophy, meeting great people, learning meditation. First time in my life I was able to understand the real meaning of happiness. Until then for me happiness was merely gratification. Either material or sense but for me the supposed state of happiness was achieved only by gratification. The experience of true happiness of or rather just glimpses of it made it clear that how shallow happiness though gratification is.
I buy a pair of shows, I am happy and as soon as I have worn them for the first time the happiness vanishes!

Whereas the state of happiness is so easier to achieve and so much more blissful. I can close my eyes, concentrate on my breath and I am happy! I am now able to be more happy in adversity than earlier I would be in tranquility.

I love this line from Dan Gilbert's TED talk "..our longings and our worries are both to some degree overblown, because we have within us the capacity to manufacture the very commodity we are constantly chasing when we choose experience."

And I am not having second thoughts about my choice :)

Sunday, October 3, 2010

In a few days it would be 17 months since I have shifted base to Mumbai. I came with a whimsical liking to the city. Here are some things of the city that I just love

1. Local trains - when empty or I am against the traffic!

2. Street Food

3. Roads of South Mumbai

4. Old houses

5. Sound of bhajans from a train crossing by.

6. Weekend getaways

7. People - Modest, easy going, passionate

8. No power cuts

9. Safety

10. No invasion of privacy

More to come..