Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Five Ounces of Beauty, Please


Once upon a time –when I was in college – we had beauty parlours. Now – never mind what institute I’m in – we have beauty salons. In my addled understanding of the world, the term ‘beauty parlour’ had a more honest ring to it. It immediately brought to mind the Spider going ‘Will you walk into my parlour?’ to the optimistic Fly. With the context that clearly laid out, those of us who chose to walk into the parlours, knew what we were in for – if we didn’t, too bad. We should have paid more attention to the rhymes they taught us in school.

We knew that the benign expression on the proprietor’s face would last only till the door shut behind you. We knew it would be replaced by a brooding sorrow as she surveyed your topography and began to enumerate the myriad shortcomings of each body part till you were literally screaming for help – Her help; if the lady was too busy, or had more important clients to be beautified, then you were willing to settle for help from the lesser angels who would work their own lesser magic upon your self-esteem, till it rose – hopefully - like the proverbial phoenix. And in this alchemical experiment, you were willing to brave a little discomfort: facial hair screaming in agony at being plucked out unceremoniously; head reeling inside a heat-spewing contraption that had you wondering whether they were sending you to the moon to get some help with your hair. All this and Hell too, for the value-add at the end of it all – hair arranged in jaunty curls, skin that didn’t look as though somebody had scribbled over it (I understand that with the dawn of the Tattoo Age, this is no longer a concern), and eyebrows that arched at just the angle that was considered fashionable that week.

Basically, you walked into a parlour where they put you through some pretty horrible stuff, and at the end of it, you hoped that the version of you that walked out would be a minor upgrade of the version that had walked in. You weren’t certain that this would indeed be the case, but then there was always hope that all that torture inside had cancelled out some bad Karma and that the reward would be about five ounces of what was generally accepted as ‘beauty’. 

The term ‘salon’ suggests a more genteel world – a world of gracious hostesses, good food, enchanting music and scintillating conversation – where dainty ‘Salonistas’ make your warts disappear painlessly, eventually turning you into a work of art, all ready for public display.

With all these possibilities swirling around in my optimism-soaked mind, I stepped into a beauty salon the other evening. The lady at the reception gave me a dazzling smile and gestured toward a voluminous chair. The optimism meter inched up. I looked around. Corridors of steel and chrome stretched out in all directions, most with yet more corridors branching off from them. Like an intricately woven web. The Spider beckoning? The optimism meter began to fluctuate.

A booklet appeared magically in my lap. It had two parts: The Body and The Mind. The Body had these sections: Facial Engineering, Nail Modelling, Hair Management, Skin Centre and Posture Specialists. The Mind had these: Beauty Meditation, Practicing Wakefulness, Breathing for Beauty, and Thinking Your Way to Beauty. Each section had several sub-sections; the sub-sections had tertiary sections and each sub-heading and sub-sub heading was followed by nuggets of wisdom that my feeble brain found hard to digest.

I walked over to the receptionist and asked her if I could just get a simple hair-cut.

She gave me another brilliant smile, this time, somewhat tinged with pity, and told me that their in-house beauty expert would like to offer me some free advice. Before I could turn down this generous offer, a firm hand was guiding me into the glass-walled cubicle of the beauty expert.   

Half an hour later when I crawled out of her office, I knew what an enormous task the salon had on its hands – my skin, my face, my hair, my posture, my breathing, even my attitude to life, had to be treated if I wanted to lay claim to anything remotely close to what is now accepted as ‘beauty’. A simple hair-cut would do me no good. They would have to correct all that was wrong inside, before they could begin tinkering with the outside. As the wise in-house expert told me “We don’t do patch-work jobs. We give you a holistic beauty treatment.” In other words, they wouldn’t sell beauty in ounces. You had to get at least a gallon - maybe ten, if you were me.

My optimism meter had exploded and I needed some fresh air to clear the pieces from my mind. I walked out of the salon and headed towards a side street, where I located one of those old-world beauty parlours. I walked in and, in a voice emptied of all optimism, murmured, “Hair-cut.” A dour-looking girl pushed me into a high-backed chair and launched into the familiar litany about how thin my hair was, how damaged, how dry, as the scissors went snip, snip, snip. But I didn’t care. Here was a place that still sold beauty in ounces. And five ounces was all I needed.

Just five ounces of ‘beauty’. Just a teeny-weeny upgrade of the old hardware, thank you. Not a completely new eco-system fashioned by the Beauty Merchants. 

Friday, September 7, 2012

Primey in Parliament


Primey in Parliament,
Reading out his notes;
“Boo,” went the Bungee Jumpers,
“Let’s go get some votes.”

“Ah,” said the Primey,
“That’s not fair.”
“Bah,” said the Bungee Jumpers,
“We don’t care.”

Monday, September 3, 2012

Upty Downty


Upty Downty stole some coal,
Upty Downty hid it in a hole;
The Auditor freaked,
The Opposers shrieked,
And the coal it stayed forever in the hole.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Oh God, That Particle


Leon M Lederman, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist, says in his book, The God Particle: If the Universe Is the Answer, What Is the Question? that he gave the Higgs boson the nickname "The God Particle" because "the publisher wouldn't let us call it the Goddamn Particle, though that might be a more appropriate title, given its villainous nature and the expense it is causing."


At Sensation TV, the TV News anchor was in a fine frenzy. They had found the Grand Old Man’s particle. What a great television moment this was. He had even managed to get Mr Particle Physicist to talk to him before the other channels hijacked him.
TV News Anchor: All these years, a lot of us on this planet believed God created the world, and you guys now say you’ve tracked down the actual culprit...the little fellow that started this whole mess... that God can be absolved of all responsibility?

Mr Particle Physicist: Er...apart from the fact that this little guy has been a vital missing link in our understanding of nature, and has also been maddeningly elusive, I’m not sure it has anything else in common with your ‘God’. In fact, if Lederman’s publisher had been less pernickety, we’d be popping the bubbly for the ‘Goddamn’ particle right now. And a damn good thing that would have been, too. At least it would have saved us the embarrassment of explaining away the ‘God’ in this particle.
As for your question about whether it started the whole mess, I really couldn’t tell you much about that at this point. All I can say is that this extremely short-lived little fellow most probably  started most of the ‘mass’ thingy...at least, that’s what many of us believe. 

TV News Anchor:  Can you explain that for our viewers, Mr Particle Physicist?

Mr Particle Physicist: Oh well...let me see... we believe that after the Big Bang, these chappies formed the sticky Higgs field, which by impeding the movement of the other particles, gave them mass. Basically these guys kept the other fellas from flying off in all directions...you know, sort of nudged them to stick together, eventually leading to the formation of stars and galaxies...and Rajnikant.

TV News Anchor: Some of our viewers want to ask you some questions. The first is one Mr Weight-Watcher.

Mr Weight-Watcher: If this is the particle that gives matter its mass, then can we fix our Body Mass Index by fixing the surrounding Higgs Field?

Mr Particle Physicist: Considering that these particles are extremely elusive and that we’ve spent trillions of dollars just to get a few signals from them, I’d suggest that you wait till we uncover anti-matter. You could perhaps use that as an antidote to the excess ‘matter’ you obviously suffer from.

TV News Anchor: The next one to call in is Ms Stock Exchanger. Come in, Ma’am.

Ms Stock Exchanger: Now that you guys think you’ve found your ‘goddamn’ particle, why don’t you put some time and money into tracking the elusive factor that helps people to make money on stock exchanges?

Mr Particle Physicist: Like I said before, we are only trained to track particles named after ‘God’, not the Big Guy himself.

TV News Anchor: And the last question comes to you from Dr Manmohan Singh, the Prime Minister of India. Go ahead, Dr Singh.

Dr Manmohan Singh: Will CERN consider a bilateral agreement to supply equipment that could create a Higgs Field for politicians in India? We can definitely do with additional ‘mass’ support after all those ‘massive’ frauds.

Mr Particle Physicist: But Sir, you’ll probably need to put yourself through the Big Bang first and create yourselves anew before the Higgs field could do its job.

Dr Manmohan Singh: I will take up this ‘matter’ with the GoM.

TV News Anchor: With that we wrap up this special edition on the sighting of the ‘God particle’.

A voice booms across the heavens: That Goddamn particle has given me no peace in the past two days. Now everybody thinks they’ve tracked me down. I feel as though I’m already in the FBI’s custody. Hey you, Sound Angel, turn off that eavesdropping device that keeps me posted about what those earthlings are saying about me. 

Sunday, June 24, 2012

If You Can’t Beat ‘Em, Manage ‘Em


In our troubled times, the sum total of all corporate wisdom sits on the wide ok, more often, not-so-wide — shoulders of those who have a management degree. At least, so it seems to non-management cretins like me. The MBA grads — the ones with the keys to the secret chambers of modern business, the keepers of the Faith of Mammon — come armed with a bewildering array of ‘degrees’ – ranging from the innocuous-sounding ‘Marketing Management’ to the bizarre, ‘Change Management’, and the completely sinister, ‘Human Resource Management’.

As the range of degrees suggests, these worthies are entrusted with the onerous task of managing a goodish part of the affairs of the modern world.  It is their job to manage just about everything there is to manage in the very serious business of making money; and since a sizeable part of our lives is spent taking and giving — yes, yes, I know, the giving bit takes up way more of our lives — this hazardous substance, for all I know, the managers are probably managing a large part of our lives as well.

So what does it mean — to manage? The Oxford dictionary is less than helpful here. It has two sets of meanings for the word — one where the word ‘manage’ flies solo (no, no, please don’t think of frivolous stuff like Rani Mukherjee’s one-liners in No One Killed Jessica), without an object. Here it means “succeed in surviving or in achieving something despite difficult circumstances”.  As in, “Poor Queen Elizabeth managed on just £34 million last year.” But when paired with an object, ‘manage’ could mean ‘supervise’, ‘maintain control of’, ‘use sensibly’, or a host of other things, which basically translate into ‘screw the object – the thing or person that is being managed’.

And then the redoubtable Oxford Dictionary goes on to give you this nugget of wisdom about the origin of the word ‘manage’, if you’re hoping to be more deeply enlightened about its many splendours — “(originated in the) mid-16th century (in the sense 'put (a horse) through the paces of the manège'): from Italian maneggiare, based on Latin manus, 'hand'.” So there you have it! That is the manager’s job then. To bring an object under one’s control and then use it to one’s own gain through the dexterous use of one’s hands. Which kind of brings us triumphantly back to our last definition of the word ‘manage’ when it is paired with an object – ‘screw the object – the thing or person that is being managed’.

So now you know what the Human Resource Manager does, or the Customer Relationship Manager. And what about the General Managers? Guess they’re the ones who’ve done their time ‘screwing’ all the individual ‘objects’ they can possibly screw and have now attained such mastery that they’re vested with the powers to ‘screw’ the general multitudes.

But there is yet another aspect of the word ‘manage’ that the Oxford Dictionary is mum about. This aspect is completely home-grown and springs from our own desi wisdom, which after all, has a formidable amount of ‘tradition and culture’ backing it.

The ‘Pliss manaze’ aspect - ‘manage’ without an object, metamorphosed into ‘manaze’. 

You’re squeezed between four other people on a seat meant for three in a Mumbai local, when an aspiring ‘sitter’ materializes under your nose and gestures that you should make some space for him as well – “Legs paining madam, pliss manaze.”

You have just two more hours to get dressed for your niece’s wedding and your tailor says: “I will be able to give you the blouse, but I can finish the embroidery only on one sleeve – thoda manaze karo.”

The water supply to your house has stopped and the Water Department official doles out this piece of advice: “The pipe has burst madam...our people are working on it, but it will take at least one more week to start supply....pliss manaze.”

I have often wondered what exactly people want you to do when they ask you to ‘manaze’. The answer kind of came to me out of the dark confines of a malfunctioning elevator in a thirty-storey building. I was stuck between the 13th and 14th floors; in panic, I picked up the phone and desperately told the voice at the other end:

The lift has stopped. I’m stuck.”

The voice that replied had the stoic calm of a Himalayan Master: “I have called the lift company, madam. They will reach in 30 minutes.

Thirty minutes. You expect me to stay here for thirty minutes! I’ll suffocate to death.

They will be here in half an hour madam. Pliss manaze.

And when I did ‘manaze’ to survive till the lift repair guys arrived, I began to realize what the word meant. ‘Manaze’, born of the holy union of ‘man’ and ‘haze’, is about recognising that man’s life is enveloped in a ‘haze’ – that this is all ‘maya’ and not to be taken too seriously.  That if things go wrong in this life, there are umpteen other lives in which they can be set right. And in the meantime, we can always grit our teeth, stifle our screams, and put all our faith in our power to ‘manaze’.

And now I can see you smart impatient readers shaking your heads and wondering why you spent time reading this piece at all. All I can say is:

I’ll think of something better next time. For now, pliss manaze.