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Yesterday, I was speaking to a close friend of mine, who was my roomie before we both got married and then she shifted to Mumbai. While we were discussing something else, I happened to mention that P had reached home yesterday at 7pm. A totally shocking event for her and me! Reason: He normally never gets home before 9pm.

She asked me if it was a special day, was it our anniversary that she had forgotten about? Then she quickly corrected herself, “oh no! how can I forget your anniversary? You got married just a couple of days after M tried to commit suicide”. I was aghast that she had such wonderful (pun intended) associations with my wedding day.

That’s what got me thinking actually. I clearly remember that day even today. That was the day I was leaving the flat we shared with a couple of other girls, M and G. It was an amazing apartment, spacious, with all amenities, good and friendly neighbors and an amazing landlord (ahem… lord?). I thoroughly enjoyed my one year in that flat. S, my friend and I bonded pretty well. We had our share of spats, but then who doesn’t? Even if you are siblings, you don’t get along all the time.

Anyways, so I was getting married 4 days from that date, and had packed all my stuff and sent it to P’s house before hand. I just had the bags which I needed to carry for the wedding with me, and P had come to pick me up and drop me at the station for the train to Chennai where I was getting married to… P… who else?

M had decided not to go to work that day, and I found it funny, considering she is always the one who is up first and ready before all of us even think of waking up. She was a jolly one, always smiling and generally carefree. Or so we thought! Anyways, we said our goodbyes at the door cheerfully with promises of keeping in touch and then P and I set out for the station where my parents and a couple of family friends had reached from Goa and were waiting for me.

We had reached half way, when I received a call from M’s boyfriend. I forget his name so we shall call him U (as in unknown). He was in Mumbai for a visa interview and sounded very distraught. He told me that M had tried to commit suicide and had slit her wrists, and she called him after she had done the deed to inform him about it. He was crying and asked me whether I could go back and take her to the hospital. I was so shocked at that moment, I wasn’t able to open my mouth. My heart started palpitating, my hands were perspiring and tears were freely flowing down my cheeks. For a moment, I didn’t know what to do, what to say! I composed myself after a few seconds and asked P to turn the car around and take me back. He tried to calm me down and I explained the situation to him. He then tried to drill some sense into me, told me that my train was an hour away and there were people waiting for me and if I went back, the entire plan and schedule would go awry. I then calmed down and called S and told her about the situation. Her office was just 5 minutes away and she said that she would leave for home immediately. I also called our neighbor, SM, and asked her to break open the door and check on M. I then waited for half an hour, when SM called me and told me that M was on her way to the hospital, that she hadn’t lost too much blood and that the wound was superficial. I didn’t know whether to be relieved or angry.

Do you know why M had done all this? It was because she didn’t want U to go abroad. It was a 3 month long assignment and she thought it was too long a separation period for her. That for her was such a big issue that she tried to take her own life. That was how much she valued her life. She didn’t stop to think for a moment, about the grief, her parents who had brought her up, her siblings who loved her and her friends, boyfriend and others who considered her to be part of their lives would go through. There was no thought given to her life ahead which she dreamed about and discussed with U, her budding career, her happiness and that of her parents and other family members. All because she was going to be away from U for 3 months?

Even if she hadn’t meant to “seriously” commit suicide, what about the myriad other people who were affected by it? The emotional trauma that I had to go through before my wedding.  S, who had to be by her side till she was in the hospital, who had to take her to the airport, get her a ticket and put her on the flight to her parents place, the neighbor SM, who was shell shocked that something like this can happen. The landlord, who had to face the many questions that neighbors posed to him about why he was allowing such people to live in his house. S, G and the new roommates who were now branded as “the girls whose friend tried to commit suicide”. And last by not the least, U, who was the “cause” for this attempted suicide.

I am sure if this was an accident or murder, no one would think about inconveniences or labels because that would be a genuine tragedy. But this, this was an attention seeking tactic. And what a tactic it was! Enough to cause a break up between her and U. Enough to ruin the wonderful relationship we shared with our neighbors and enough to have our landlord not trust these girls anymore and have someone keep an eye on them all the time.

One action was enough to ruin so many things! Was it really worth it?

Last week, we decided that enough was enough and that it was time we moved our lazy selves to a movie hall to catch up with at least one of the many movies that were getting released. There was a time, before we were married, when every Saturday meant movie time and we would make it to PVR by hook or by crook and watch whatever movie was on screen at that time. It was perhaps the only time we spent more than a couple of hours together in a day, and it was one of our best ways to recover from the week’s hectic pace. Watching movies is also something I am passionate about, and is a big source of entertainment for P, so it all worked well for us.

But then, things changed, we got married and probably didn’t feel the need to go out for movies so much. Plus, we got ourselves a DVD player, a big screen TV and we were all set to catch up with all the movies at home. PVR at Forum, the movie theatre closest to home also started getting very crowded and suffocating, which put us off movie going altogether. Now, we vowed that we would go for movies at the theatre only during the week and never step into Forum over the weekend.  That wasn’t possible all the time due to weekly work schedules and other tasks that piled up. Anyways, sorry for the major digression.

So, this weekend we made up our minds and booked tickets for Dasavatharam despite having read all the reviews- both positive and negative. When I mentioned it to a couple of colleagues at work, they said that I was a brave one to actually go and watch it after all that I had read about it. Nevertheless, the tickets were booked and there was no turning back.

So we trooped off to the 10pm show on Friday last.  Though we both are Tamilians, we aren’t well versed with the pure form of Tamil given the fact that we were brought up in Goa and didn’t really learn Tamil at school. So the initial few minutes into the movie saw us gaping at the screen and at each other blankly since we didn’t understand a word of the monologue that Kamalahasan was carrying out in the background.

We eventually got a grasp of the storyline by watching the scene unfold and catching a few words here and there that we could understand. Shameful, I know, but what to do? Ofcourse, after the intial storyline the language reverted to “Chennai” Tamil and we happily settled into our seats, glad that we were able to understand what was going on.

Anyways, I thought that the film moved at a very slow pace and a lot of the scenes could have been done away with. When the film took a break at intermission, we were literally shocked that there was still so much of the movie left, we thought it was almost time to get up and go. The movie then stretched on for another hour and a half after interval, and I was ready to jump up and run away from the theatre. Everything about the movie seemed made up and artificial, I couldn’t gauge any real emotions and it didn’t move me a bit. And believe me when i say that, because I cry easy when it comes to emotional scenes. Even a Kuch kuch hota hain moved me, so you can guess how much I cry when I watch a movie… sometimes I watch movies only so I can cry… well… ahem ahem… lets move on. 

Except for Kamalahasan, the other actors did a pretty bad job in terms of playing their roles. It all seemed very over the top and superficial. Asin was okay, but overacted in the second half.  I just couldn’t understand why the japanese girl had to speak in Tamil with that horrible accent!

The make up was good for certain roles- like Fletcher, Naidu, Poovaraagan. The role of the old lady was badly played, and she(he) was badly made up as well. The make up for the other roles was quite bad as well. 

Although I understood that the movie revolved around the chaos theory and butterfly effect, and I truly admire Kamalahasan for creating such a plot, I was not able to appreciate it very much. Was it because of the long winding plot and the choas that resulted subsequently? Was it the innumerable number of characters, some of whom weren’t very relevant according to me? I really don’t know. 

I haven’t been able to appreciate Tamil cinema and Tamil humour all that much over the years, but I do know that Kamal was an exception and that most of his movies were realistic, moving and very enjoyable. I loved his Mahanadi, Nayagan, Apporva Sahodarangal, Michael Madan Kamarajan, and even Chachi420 (cant recall what the Tamil version was called).  However, I was disappointed this time. Very disappointed!

Made me wish, I had waited for another day and booked Jaane Tu… Jaane Na instead. Will definitely go for it though, I am looking forward to it!

Since my mind is preoccupied with too many things and most of them cant be mentioned on this blog, I think I shall resort to completing the tags that 3 fabulous women have sent my way. I’ll begin with the simplest one, the love-link tag sent across by Swati.

Here’s the info about the tag:The love-link tag. The Love-link Tag is another of those Linky Love game where you only have to tag 10 person in one post but still there is no actual limit (you can tag more if you want!). Once tagged, you have to copy paste the link in this post, and make them grow! Do not delete any of the links and be honest to yourself! Copy paste the link in this post, and make them grow!
BennyLiew, RamblingMoo, Mum & Kids In Wonderland, Judelittle, Our mini blogsphere, Rooms in My Heart, http://janiceng.blogspot.com/, ChinNee, Jo-N, LadyJava’s Lounge, Strange but True, Mariuca’s Perfume Gallery, Meet Uncle J-Uncle J, Farah, aNgRiAniWoRLd, How’s Life Bout, The Three Heroes, Ceedy, Veena, Vandita, Cuckoo,~nm,swati, Compulsive Dreamer,

So, I tag some of the bloggers that I know in real life

Floyd Girl

Poo

akamonica

and some others whom I would love to meet…

Tharini

Maggie

Read this, this, this and this to know what we all were upto on Friday. Which was a blast, by the way! and I was maha thrilled to be part of this blog meet! My first one for sure, and so soon since I started blogging only a couple of months ago.

I am high up there in seventh heaven, folks, with all that you had to say about me. Actually Poppin’s mom got me right when she said I was the quiet one. I usually don’t talk much, and am the “listener” in any group that I am a part of. In fact, I wanted to bear the moniker “the silent one” for my blog URL before I realised that this already existed…  It also takes me a pretty long time to warm up to somebody and speak my mind.

However, the ladies made me feel very comfortable, despite the fact that they were meeting me for the first time and most had never read my blog either.  Although I was the only non- mommy in the group, I didn’t feel out of place at all, since despite what these ladies have written in their posts, there weren’t too many conversations around babies.  I have also been very comfortable among babies and baby talk so even if there was any talk around babies, I didn’t really notice it much.We talked about everything under the sun, laughed a lot, and generally had a lot of fun.  I was also quite enamored by kiddo (Aargee’s son), he is such a friendly kid!

We had some wonderful lunch and some heavenly cake brought by Swati. And when I left, it was with a heavy heart and with the hope that we would all meet again and have the same carefree fun that we had for those 3 odd hours.

Weekend was hectic as well, what with my parents here, and our need to visit my in-laws every weekend. We had a huge family get-together where we went out to this restaurant on Mysore Road, near Ramanagaram, called “Lokruchi”. Coming from a Tam-brahm family, we needed to go to some place which was pure vegetarian and traditional as well, since we had some oldies coming with us.

The drive was the most painful part of it and while the food was decent and the ambiance nice, everyone left with the feeling that it was not really worth the effort we made to drive all the way there in peak traffic.  In fact one of the cars got stuck in a major jam and could get out of it only after an hour of being stranded in the same place.

I had taken a couple of days off work, and my parents and I went to Mysore on Monday. P couldn’t make it since his “brands” needed him and so it was just the three of us. We did have a good time, although I wouldn’t recommend this hotel to anyone who wants to find a decent place to stay in Mysore. The rooms were decent but overpriced and the service sucked big time. We had a harrowing time ordering room service as well as when we went to eat in the restaurant.

We hired a taxi and went visiting the various historical and typical “tourist” hangouts in Mysore. The palace as usual was awesome. I love the stained glass paintings as well as the wood carvings on the doors. The only painful part was making us walk barefoot on the roads (from the palace to the museum) especially when it was blazing hot.  We were literally hopping and skipping so that our feet wouldn’t get burnt.  The authorities really need to do something about that.

The next day we visited Srirangapatna. I loved the summer palace which was built by Tipu Sultan. The paintings and carvings there were really beautiful. I am always amazed at the beautiful architecture and workmanship of these monuments in the age when machines weren’t really available. I cant imagine the creativity people had, and the time and effort that they took to create these awesome structures. The daft that I am, I forgot to take my camera along, so no pictures :-(

We got back home yesterday evening and here I am, in office, feeling most depressed and unwilling to do any form of work. I want to be back there amongst all the bloggers, laughing and chatting away  and/or with my parents, chatting about this and that. But like they say, good things have to come to an end, and I have to get back to work, if I want to earn a living.

So ta folks, see you when I see you! 

So, yesterday I was coming back from work in the company cab along with a few other colleagues. As usual, it was during the peak Bangalore traffic and I was going mad with worry since my parents are here and I wanted to be back with them as soon as I could. I was already feeling very guilty about leaving them at home whilst I went off to work for the whole day.

Anyways, whilst we were stuck in the traffic jam, we heard the faint sound of an ambulance trying to weave its way through the traffic. The sound got louder and louder and then I turned behind to see the ambulance two or three vehicles behind ours. We were crawling through the traffic and had no place to pull over to let the ambulance pass by. I was getting uneasy, and praying for the traffic to clear so that the ambulance could pass by us and get to the hospital quickly. There were all kinds of thoughts in my head… about who would be in the ambulance right now, what state would that person be in and the tension that his family would be going through and adding to it was this slow moving traffic.

Then we stopped at a traffic light. The sound of the ambulance was deafening… and I was getting more and more impatient and worried. My colleagues and I were discussing about how to get the cab to pull over to the side so that the ambulance could pass our cab and a few other vehicles and atleast move ahead.

But then we noticed that even after 5 minutes the traffic wasn’t moving. We looked ahead to see that the junction was being manned by a traffic volunteer and we were even more puzzled as to why he wasn’t letting the vehicles pass by given that everyone within a one mile radius could hear the ambulance. Our driver honked a couple of times and then the other vehicles also realised and honked as well. Even then, the volunteer wasnt letting the vehicles in our path move ahead.

I couldn’t hold on anymore and a colleague and I ran out of the cab towards the volunteer to yell some sense into him. Only to see that the poor guy was stuck in the middle of a circular jam with a bunch of vehicles surrounding him and rushing to move ahead before the others could.

We were appalled at this lack of a conscience on the part of these car owners. Did they not hear the ambulance? Did they not feel even a twinge of concern at the plight of the person inside the ambulance? Don’t they even stop to think that one day they could be in the same ambulance trying to get to a hospital? Is there no sense of humanity left in this world at all?

I understand that we are an overpopulated country and probably do not value life as much as the people in developed countries do? But isn’t that the irony? On one hand we talk about how friendly our people are and how we care about our neighbours, how we do not want to get influenced by the so called “western culture” where people apparently are self centered and do not think about others around them. And then, on the other hand, we cant even stop to appreciate the thought that a suffering person needs to be reached to the hospital immediately? All we are concerned about is reaching to our destination as fast as possible without a thought of what we are leaving behind in our trail? Have we now become so ruthless? Is this the path to development and prosperity?

If it is so, then I am afraid, I do not want to be a part of it. I would rather live in a village where people still care for each other, still stop to ask about your well being. They may not be as prosperous as the city inhabitants and maybe a lot more superstitious and narrow minded. But atleast their heart is in the right place.

So anyways, along with a few other people who stepped out of their cars, we managed to clear the traffic and let the ambulance pass by. I only hope that it reached the hospital in time, the patient managed to get the right medical treatment and is on the path to recovery.

Asha tagged me to do this post. Sounds like an easy one, so am going to attempt it rightaway.

Here goes…

Last Movie Seen In A Theatre?
Bucket List (Starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman)

What Book Are You Reading?
Trying to finish Liar’s Poker by Michael Lewis

Favourite Board Game?
Scrabble anyday

Favourite Magazine?
Readers Digest, Businessworld, Any filmy magazine

Favourite Smells?
Smell of wet earth after first rains, fresh paint, Niveo fresh Deodorant, Smell of Brut Musk Deodorant

Favourite Sound?
Gush of a waterfall, hearing P’s voice when he is home from office

Worst Feeling In The World?
Nothing going the way I wished it to, and me not being able to do anything about it

What Is The First Thing You Think Of When You Wake?
Is it morning already?

Favourite Fast Food Place?
Subway, McDonalds

Future Child’s Name?
Hmm… not there yet!

Finish This Statement: If I Had A Lot of Money
I would buy a lovely house with a garden, a big car and would go for a holiday on a cruise (yeah! am a very materialistic person)

Do You Drive Fast?
No. I dont drive at all

Do You Sleep With A Stuffed Animal?
Hmm… hee hee… not with an animal for sure!

Storms – cool or scary?
Cool

Do You Eat The Stems on Broccoli?
Yes

If You Could Dye Your Hair Any Colour, What Would Be Your Choice?
Would stick with dark brown or burgundy

Name All The Different Cities/Towns You’ve Lived In:
Panaji (Goa), Mumbai and Bangalore 

Favourite Sports To Watch:
Cricket, Tennis, F1

One Nice Thing About The Person Who Sent This To You
A sweet mommy blogger I am just getting to know who has an adorable son!

What’s Under Your Bed?
Cushions for which i have been trying to find covers for ages

Would You Like To Be Born As Yourself Again?
Nah! that would be boring

Morning Person or Night Owl?
Neither- cant stay up at night and am grouchy in the morning. A day person is more like it

Over Easy or Sunny Side Up?
Dont eat eggs :-(

Favourite Place To Relax?
Home - with a book or simply sleeping it off

Favourite Pie?
Dont like pies. Prefer cakes

Favourite Ice-Cream Flavour?
Rum punch, chocolate chips

You Pass This Tag To
Hmm… Ditty, Good Day Sunshine, Boo

Of All The People You Tagged, Who’s Most Likely To Respond First?

Ditty … hopefully!

 

Greetings wonderful MTBs!!!

and good work to all of you!

For having solved the riddle before

I give you all this clue.

 

This time its not a letter

nor is it a number clue

This time its just a good old blank

which means no clue for you!

 

Booooo! you say with spirit..

Yaaay! we say in throng!

For it is part of the thrill of the chase

which leads to the next little song!

 

“Recently an aunt; while thrilled, she

Also says pragmatically, “What will be, will be.”

Keeping her company is Kyra the Kat

Now you know just who I’m getting at.”

 

Solve it and you get your lead

Misguess, and you lose your speed

Solve it slow but solve it now

And before you go, take a little bow

 

Go to ‘Comments’ and leave me a clue

Tell me which blog you are off to.

Good luck! Good luck! Be on your way.

You have your work, cut out for the day!

Today is one of the most favorite days of mine. Its Vishu, the day we celebrate our new year! Being a Kerala Iyer, I have had the best of both worlds, i.e. we celebrate both Malayalee and Tamil festivals. Out of all of them, I love the day we celebrate Vishu.

I love the very concept of Vishu, the day when you open your eyes to see all the good things that nature brings to us, the day you open your eyes to an auspicious start.

A very beautiful description of the day and its significance has been written by Gauri of http://tiny-tidbits.blogspot.com/. This post however, is about my personal experiences around Vishu.

My earliest memories were of when I was around 7 or 8 years old. I remember being woken up in the morning by my mother and her asking me not to open my eyes but to hold her hand and go along-with her. I remember the feeling of being a little skeptical, wondering if I would hit myself somewhere with my eyes closed and wondering what this was all about. Then opening my eyes to the portrait of God, a mirror, vegetables and fruits, rice and pulses and some coins- gold, silver and normal currency; the entire area being adorned with yellow flowers or the konnapoo. I was asked to take in the beautiful sights and then bow down to nature and God and thank them for providing us with all these wonderful things in order to lead a good life. I remember a sense of calm and peace that settled in on me (the realisation probably came in during the later years) and lasted throughout the day.

We then bathed and wore new clothes which were bought for this ocassion and lined up to take our vishukaineetam (a token amount given to symbolise distribution of wealth) from our father. I remember the amount of joy that a Re.1/- (later became Rs.10/- and then progressed to Rs.100/- as we grew older) would give us. We were asked to preserve that coin carefully and not spend it for as long as we could. And I remember resolving to spend it as soon as I could get out of home that day.

Given I was brought up in Goa and I had no mallu neighbors or friends to share the day with, that was the end of the festivities for us. But this day stayed with me throughout my life and wherever I went after that, for my studies, work in Mumbai and then Bangalore, and later in my married life, I ensured that this was one festival I would celebrate religiously every year. Even if it meant coming home early from work the previous day to buy all the required vegetables, fruits and flowers, staying up late to arrange all the things near the puja area and waking up early in the morning to see the Vishu kanni.

And people around me have appreciated my need to celebrate it in the traditional way and have even been a part of it in many ways. Be it my roommates in Mumbai and Bangalore or P, who even though it isn’t his festival, wakes up in the morning and walks towards the puja room with his eyes closed to view the Kanni. Very sweet of him, I say!

Of-course, the day also makes me feel enormously homesick with me wishing that I was with my mother who would lead me by holding my hands and eyes closed to the puja area, ask me to open my eyes and sit with me while I pray. I miss her very much and I wish I didn’t have to stay so far away from her. Oof! what is it about mothers and the bond they share with their daughters?

So, here’s wishing everyone a very happy Vishu and happy new year. May this year bring you lots of happiness and prosperity!

Leaving you with a picture of Vishu Kanni from last year (was busy hurrying up for office to click this years snaps)  

 

So we finally moved to another rented house after staying in the old one for 2 full years. The old one was a huge house, built around 10 years ago and was built in an old fashioned way. It had a store room inside the kitchen (who gives that much space for the kitchen in these days of “open kitchen” type houses?) and huge bedrooms which could fit our king sized bed and yet not require us to walk sideways to navigate across the room to the wardrobes.

There were a couple of issues with the house though; the key one being that it was on the ground floor and did not receive enough ventilation. This was a sore point with all the elderly folk in our family including my mother. The last time she visited, she kept complaining about the house not receiving enough sunlight through the day. One day, I decided to get home early from office to spend some time with her. When I opened the gate to the home, she was there, standing outside the house, in the sun… muttering to herself. I panicked a little, thinking something was wrong inside the house and rushed towards her to check what had happened.  “I am sunning myself”, she tells me, “Your house doesn’t receive enough sunlight and I feel as if I have been living in a cave”. Yeah right! So now we were living in a cave! But she was right in a sense that the house looked a little dingy and needed all the lights on throughout the day.

 But the location of the house was terrific. It was midway between P’s and my office, all the shopping areas were with 500 mtrs to 1km radius, so were all the restaurants. In the last 2 years, we hardly went out to eat, more out of laziness and also because all the restaurants around had home delivery and we had tons of different cuisines to choose from. This was heaven for P, who refuses to budge from his bean bag once he gets home from office.

All that will change now. Although the new house is just 3 kms from the old one, its in a different layout altogether and doesn’t have as many amenities as the previous one.  There are shops around the 1km radius, but things aren’t going to be as easy as the previous house. And the worst part is there aren’t very good restaurants close by. So P will have to get off his fat a*** and we will get to go out more often (hopefully)!

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To get onto other things, P has decided to stay back in his current company. He had a new job offer which was more in tune with his career ambitions. But now his current company has given him a rol similar to the one he was getting and he has taken it up. Yay to that!

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Oh and my sister in law has given birth to a baby boy and come down to Bangalore from Delhi to live with our in laws. The baby (touch-wood!) isn’t cranky at all, and she doesn’t really believe in carrying him around too much or holding him for long. She just holds him for the time that she feeds him, which is just twice a day since she expresses milk and wants to get him used to the bottle. I don’t know too much about parenting, but is this a good approach to follow? I know everything has its pros and cons, but what do people feel about hands off (in the literal sense) parenting? And the child is just over 2 months old now.

My in laws are sweet people and they don’t mind taking care of the baby at all. In fact, they were dying to live with the baby. They also don’t interfere with her parenting style too much. Which is what I really appreciate about them. But on Sunday, one of our relatives had come over to see the baby and she spoke to my sister in law about how the baby needs to feel the comfort of the mother’s arms- maybe not all the time, but at-least during feed times.  I don’t know whether I should comment on this, since I don’t have any experience myself, but what do you folks think?

 

Yesterday, Ditty very politely reminded me that I haven’t done the tag she sent my way long long ago. And it’s my very first tag!

So, here goes!

First, the rules:
- Post the rules on your blog.
- Share six non-important things/habits/quirks about yourself.
- Tag six random people at the end of your post by linking to their blogs.
- Let each random person know they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their website.

1. I love watching Hindi movies. I can watch re-runs after re-runs of movies like Golmaal (the old one starring Amol Palekar), Rang-Birangi, Khatta-Meetha, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jaayenge, QSQT, Jo Jeeta Wahi Sikandar etc. I used to be able to and still am to some extent able to identify the name of any movie by watching just one scene- and it doesnt even have to involve the main protagonists!

2. I am obsessed with making lists. Shopping lists, expense lists, places to see while on vacation lists, lists after lists after lists…..

3. I am a water lover. The mere sight of a water body is enough to make me want to jump into it immediately. As I had mentioned in one of my earlier posts, I can do anything which concerns water… swimming, white water rafting, parasailing, kayaking… anything just to be in water.

4. I cannot get out of the house without having a bath. Come what may, whether I am unwell or it is too cold, I just dont feel clean enough even to go to the nearby bakery to buy bread without taking a bath first. This habit was tweaked a little bit when we went to Auli and it was freezing… so I just had to wait until afternoon to have one.

5. I am a self confessed Foodie! I love to eat, and experiment will all kinds of food. Anything veggie, containing fish or chicken - I am all game for! Check with Ditty. We have often been out for some blissful eating binges on weekends during the days when I wasn’t married.

6. I love observing people (in a non- intrusive way ofcourse)! I used to spend all my time in trains when I was in Mumbai observing what people do, the way they speak, interact and make my own assumptions out of it. It really helped me during my qualitative market research days!

Phew! Finally done!

I think everyone else is done with this tag by now. Still, I tag,  Little Tortoise  and  Bangaloremom. Do feel free to take this up only if you think this is fun!