Archive for India

License to drive

Its funny how I miss my little red Zen. The one I took for granted all these years. They say you don’t know the value of something till its gone. So true. I have to admit I’ve never really been a car person. I guess that was because I lived in a city like Mumbai, where the last thing you needed was a car. Any Mumbai person knows that the frustration of trying to find a parking spot is lesser than the frustration of a bumpy auto ride to your destination. Either way, I still had the car in my garage, just incase I needed it. Having moved to Austria (Yes, I’ve started accepting that I moved to Austria and not the UK), I have managed to find myself in situations, where life without car seems very similar to prison life.

Situation 1 – Missed the bus to the city and got drenched walking from the bus station to my hotel, depressed over the fact that I couldn’t make it to Capoeira

Situation 2 – Missed the bus back to the village from the city, making me hitchhike till the motorway and walk 2 hours

Permanent Situation – Being stuck. No explanation required. The feeling of being stuck in the middle of nowhere.

Well, the issue here is not about the car. I guess I could get one or borrow one or rent one if I wanted. I don’t have a license to drive in Europe. I’ve been told that you can drive for the first 6 months with your Indian license, but honestly I don’t know if Austrians know that. I didn’t take an International license in India due to the bureaucracy. I haven’t applied for a driving license in the UK because I have to go back to driving school and write tests et all. I guess its the same story for Europe. Call me lazy or whatever, I just think I should be allowed to drive here.

What do you think I should do?

Should I try this story with a car rental and see if they will let me hit the road in Europe with my Indian license. After all, If I can drive in India amidst all the traffic and the occasional elephant, shouldn’t driving in Europe be a piece of cake?

Or, should I just accept the fact that from cars to bikes to scooters to bicycles, I’ve finally reached a situation where it will be me, my two legs and miles to go?

…… any other thoughts?

Anthropomorphic image of Mumbai – Figure this one out!

I’m reading this book by John Malathronas. – Brazil – Life, Blood & Soul. No guesses why I would buy a book with Brazil on the title. Anyway, within the first chapter itself, I find myself closing the book and getting into a very deep thinking exercise. John says ‘every city has an anthropomorphic image’. Firstly, I had to go and look up anthropomorphic. Wikipedia – Thank you! Anthropomorphism is a term coined in the mid 1700s to refer to any attribution of human characteristics (or characteristics assumed to belong only to humans) to non-human animals or non-living things, phenomena, material states and objects or abstract concepts, such as god(s). I guess the definition really doesn’t matter. The author has written statements about 4 cities – London, New York, Paris and Rio. Here they are –

London is a City gent in a striped double-breasted suit, holding his chin up as he rushes by without an umbrella in spitting rain.

New York is a loudmouthed, overweight baseball fan, cap and all, who pushes you away from the salt beef deli queue as you fumble for your change.

Paris is a chic grand-dame, ex-model, ex-actress, her make-up dextrously applied, who walks her Pekinese in the Jardin de Luxembourg.

And Rio is a calliphygian (refers to shapely buttocks) copper-coloured beauty, as naked as Eve, dancing in stiletto shoes to the blast of beating drums.

All this got me thinking. Just got me thinking about what is Mumbai’s line. And, I wrote this on the tube ride back home. And, I’m not very happy with it.

To me, Mumbai is the Rickshaw driver who tells you his life story and is certain that he is going to make it big. Mumbai is also the Taxi driver who refuses to take you a short distance. Mumbai is the lady who worries about whether her son would complain about the cauliflower she plans to cook that night, the one that she chops as she is riding the local train back home, after a long day at work. Mumbai is also the bunch of rich women, who spend more time on manicures and designer shopping than with their kids. Mumbai is the dancer who doesn’t want to give up her dreams of Bollywood. Mumbai is also a group of 19 year olds who sneak into a club, drink and smoke and spend more money than what a Bollywood extra dancer would make the entire month. Mumbai is the serious business graduate in a pin-striped shirt, burning the midnight oil trying to make his variable pay. Mumbai is also the lucky son, who inherited his dad’s business, without knowing much about it. Mumbai is the young college graduate, who is working on his American accent to answer customer service calls from God knows where. Mumbai is also the lost artist, who blends into galleries even better than the champagne glasses. Mumbai is the girl who runs away from home, because her parents want her to marry someone she can’t imagine even spending 5 minutes with. Mumbai is the crazy lover, who would marry the guy and then find a boyfriend. Mumbai is the helpful uncle, who gives you directions, when you are completely lost in a new city. Mumbai is the painful shopkeeper who refuses to budge from his original price, when you pride yourself on bargaining. Mumbai is the kid who never gets tired, rain or sunshine, selling books in the traffic signal and making just enough money to afford one meal. Mumbai is everything and nothing.

If you can think of what could be Mumbai’s line, let me know. If you have a picture for Mumbai, send it to me. I’ll just keep adding it here and hopefully, I’ll get back to finishing that book.

First thing my grandma would dislike about London

I remember as a child how my grandmother (and not just mine… any South Indian grandmother) would scream at the guy who delivers milk home, if the consistency was not good. (Yes, we got fresh milk at home everyday) Basically, if it was weak, he has adulterated the milk with water and charged us for it.  Newspapers covered this regularly and spoke about how consumers are getting cheated. I used to wonder. What’s the big deal? It’s just milk.

25 years from then. I’m in London. I walk into a supermarket. For that matter, I just open the fridge in office. I see different varieties of milk. Whole milk. Semi skimmed milk. Skimmed milk. (My sister loves all this by the way). I’m not such a health freak when it comes to eating right. I eat and drink what I want and then try to do Capoeira end of the day. Anyway, the least fat one is almost like drinking water. And, its the most expensive. All I’m thinking about is what my Grandma would say – ‘Pal la thanni kalandhutu ivalavu velaiya’. Translated from Tamil, ‘milk with so much of water costs so much?’.

And, then I realise, it is a big deal. It’s not milk.

Mumbai or London – Some thing’s don’t change

The efficiency with which the women in Mumbai local trains cut vegetables and pack them is equally proportionate to the precision with which women in London tubes apply their morning make-up.

Don’t you just love it when you notice such cultural nuances that make experiences seem so different, yet to similar.

I really felt at home this morning.

Bollywood addiction can get you to Europe!

Think about the two things that would unite Indians anywhere in the world – Bollywood & Cricket. Not kidding. Having seen a whole bunch of Indians, painted face et all, cheering during the World Cup finals in an Australian Pub in London, I realised that it doesn’t matter which corner of the world you are as long as you have cricket in your blood. Same goes for Bollywood. Sitting 3 seats away from any Indian in a Tube, you’ll still be able to hear the latest Bollywood number on their Ipod. Rather heavy on the volume. I tapped my foot all the way to Gatwick last week.

So, you can take an Indian away from Bollywood, but you can’t take the Bollywood away from an Indian. On that note, I’m throwing away a fabulous opportunity and giving my readers a chance to enter this contest on indiancompass.com - a cool website which gives ultimate Europe tips to Indian travelers.

What’s the contest?

Write a post about Bollywood & Europe and win a tour around Europe with Contiki Tours - one of Europe’s largest tour operators catering to 18 to 35-year-olds.

What is the prize?

The first prize is a 9-day tour to seven European cities, starting in London priced at about Rs 66,000. For more details, read here. The deadline for sending your entry for this prize is April 30. (You could choose a starting date for the tour anytime this summer.)

The second prize is a 12-day camping tour to six European cities, starting in Rome priced at about Rs 43,000. For more details, read here. The deadline for sending your entry for this prize is May 31. (Again, you could choose a tour in this category starting anytime this summer).

So what do you have to do?

Connect Bollywood & Europe and send in your story to prizes@indiancompass.com. If you get an automated receipt message, it means they have received your story and you are in the running.

For more details on this, check out the contest details here.

Why do I think YOU have a great chance to win this?

I am not entering this contest. Haha. Writing about Simran and Raj and their journey around Switzerland is not my cup of tea.  Having said that, I think writing about Bollywood and Europe is a piece of cake for anyone in Mumbai, imprisoned in a cubicle and wanting to run away to Europe (that’s most of my blog readers). Go ahead and give it a shot!

Leaving you with a photo, that I think represents Bollywood today – Truly global.  Shah Rukh Khan fan in a small town in Peru.

Good luck!