Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Momentary lapses of reason.


I was fifteen and we were eleven people living in a seven hundred something sq. ft. house. My grandfather, grandmother, me and my brother slept in the front room where we kept our black and white TV. We didn't have cable TV. But thanks to the KGB-esque technology, our Uptron TV, with just a simple aluminium antenna, caught signals of our neighbor's cable TV and we enjoyed Zee TV and MTV and such other channels sometimes, depending on the wind direction and the direction in which our antenna was pointing. At one point, me and my brother were almost living magnetic compasses giving medieval Portuguese explorers a run for their money as we could tell which direction meant which channel clear on TV. We also had a three-person black-ops team in place which included my sister who would tell if the image was clear or not, based on the direction I used to turn the antenna on our terrace and my brother played the middleman coordinating between me and my sister. After one such strenuous field operation on a holiday, we managed to get the best signal for MTV. I remember spending the whole day watching English music videos which I had only heard about, or heard at some friends' place. I slept late that night and remember my late grandfather turning off the TV after I slept - I remember because when you switched our Uptron KGB TV off, it went off with a thud from its speaker. 

The next morning, as I woke up to the commotion around me, the first thing I did was to switch on the TV. I heard weird haunting bell sounds. I was half-awake until my eyes witnessed one of the greatest and the most creative footage I had ever seen. The next five minutes were so mesmerizing I didn't even blink. Capes behind men that flew all the way up into the sky, large balloons bouncing off into endless emptiness, men walking mysteriously on stilts, a man with a bicycle wheel the size of a ferris wheel, larger than life statues, endless corridors, meadows, men carrying bells on their backs and other such mesmerizing visuals. I remember each moment as I saw it that day. That was my introduction to Pink Floyd. The video obviously, was 'High Hopes' from The Division Bell. 

That was my introduction to the phenomenon called rock music. Years progressed as rock music began to grow on me, A while later, me and my brother were both deeply involved in rock music. I limited myself to the mysterious philosophies of rockstars and their lifestyles and the lyrics. My brother took a step ahead and learned guitar, which he has mastered now. I tried to play drums for a while, but couldn't get past a point - guess I was never made for it. Or I didn't try hard enough. I will, however, make another attempt at it, as soon as the time is right. By this time, I had begun to explore other bands as well, while Pink Floyd always remained my favorite. I still feel, it is impossible to perform a song better than Echoes - that's what this blog is named after. Nirvana became a big favorite. Metallica too. But what I understood very late, was that Led Zeppelin is a genre in itself. While I remain biased toward Pink Floyd, I must admit that Led Zeppelin is the definition of mind blowing. They were the first to make you want to headbang. And then, I got addicted to The Doors. The Doors is why I decided to write this post. 

***
During the aforementioned years, I was so deeply involved with rock music that I had black t-shirts of all the bands I mentioned above. Anyone who has known me for a while knows that I only wore those black rockband t-shirts. I had one particular favorite with Kurt Cobain's face on it - which I wore as a lucky t-shirt, to eleven of the quizzes I won in Hyderabad while in college. But that's not what this is about. I have no shame in admitting that I had numerous arguments with people who denied that Pink Floyd is not the greatest band. I went to the extent of almost breaking my relationship with a very special friend who was on the Led Zeppelin side of things, a side, to which, my eyes opened much later. Yo, if your're reading this, I concede. You were right in some way, but I will forever remain a Floydian. 

The whole point of telling you this story was to tell you that it was my first ever argument over something I loved dearly. Before this, only thing I came close to defending was Sourav Ganguly, but I never really confronted a worthy opponent. Why do we love people we never met so dearly? Do we love them or their work? I have only seen Roger Waters once, from over fifty meters away - but even today I see him playing bass guitar shirtless in the remnants of that Colosseum at  Pompeii, I get goosebumps. David Gilmour, Pink Floyd's lead guitarist was so dear to me that I chose to name the URL of this blog over him. What is it that draws us to them? 

It is futile to talk about rock bands without using the world 'influence'. Influence is a very strong word in the rock music culture. Every band has influences. Each rock fan has influences. A friend who I don't speak to anymore, once played a stupid fucking song on high volume and expected me to head bang. I said the band is a bunch of assholes just like him and he had no taste. He avenged that comment by trying to ruin my reputation and left my life - why did he had to get so worked up over a band that's so stupid, is what I thought then. 

But now older, and presumably wiser, I think that's not the right question. The right question to ask is, does it give me a right to take him down? The answer is no. But it's too late now. If you look back at your life, you will too, find moments where you should have just kept your mouth shut and let people have their way. Jim Morrison, was a fantastic poet, brilliant singer but a giant asshole who had no control over his life. The fanatics will argue that he never wanted to have control over his life  and that's what made him special. But in my book, overdosing doesn't count as losing control - it's plain stupid. Same with Kurt Cobain. Brilliant singers, brilliant performers, but couldn't extend their careers. Or may be their careers didn't matter to them. All genius comes with inexplicable eccentricities, but eccentricities that are a threat to the very life that gives you the opportunity to be that genius are as pointless as Linkin Park.  

Now, there was a time when eccentricities like these, served as a subject of supreme excitement. Not that ever thought of doing drugs, but I liked the adventurous thoughts of having the life of a rockstar, being with several women, becoming world famous, etc. As time progressed, or as we, the middle-class call it maturing, I realized that most of the things I liked about rock bands in 2001, I do not today. I do not have the urge to argue and prove that Pink Floyd is the greatest band. It is the greatest, but I don't want to convince you. Or anyone. There comes a time in everybody's life - where the only thing that matters is what actually matters. Shoving opinions down others' throats doesn't make any sense. You'll come to a point where you'll strongly believe in yours though, but you will not counter others. That point of being mentally stoic and unreactive nobility is a severely crucial threshold we all must reach. 

I have no shame in confessing that I have lost three friends till date because of my inability to keep my mouth shut. In those momentary lapses of reason, my urge to prove my point superseded the necessity to weigh in the consequences of your absence from my life. Fanaticism breeds aggression. Aggression leads to incompatibility. Incompatibility leads to a decision point where someone will remain in your life only if they love you way too much or they need you in some way or the other. Or it's a combination of both in varying proportions. I have experienced all the three types. A heartfelt thanks to those who haven't left my side. 

Sorry to make this post so long, but it was necessary to establish the premise before I could get to the point. Every night when you go back to sleep, you invariably remember that moment when you should have stayed calm and not spoken. And it hurts. Strategic silence is a rare skill - one must strive to gain it. 

In the legendary words of Ari Gold, "Silence, is fucking golden". 

- Deepak Karamungikar
 Twitter: @poetrification

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Unknown


Beyond the mountains the sun rose
Through the slits the light flows
Awakens she again, smiling at the dawn
Hoping she'd live a life, she'd always longed

She smells the morning hoping for a day of her own,
Someone with a story knocks on her door,
She speaks not a word, till the end she hears
Quietly inside her, his shoes she wears

Inside his shoes she walks, as his stories haunt her
Of her own life she forgets, surrenders to his
She walks miles as his life engulfs her
Of her own smile she forgets, begins to wear his

She lives his life until she masks her with his
She begins to feel his pain, unmindful of her own
And when she smiles she often forgets, the joys are not her own 
In his life she had found, a joy of her own

At the turn by the curb, she stumbles and wakes up
Her mind opens, of her own life, she remembers
She vows not to give in, into another's shoes again
She walks home with dreams, of a tomorrow of her own

She slips into the night, thinking of a life she'd always longed
Dreams she again, of the hopeful morrow
Dawns it again, barely like it was foretold
There's a knock on her door again, yet, she's bold

Another story awaits her heed
Another pair awaits her heel
Lives again she unfairly, another person's life
Thwarted her soul recluses, gives up her smile

There came a time when she forgot who she was
It was the world she was in herself, the mirror too gave up
She lived many a life, but not once her own
Every time they knocked, she slid into unknown   

- Deepak Karamungikar

Monday, January 12, 2015

Opinion Overdose


Cliche is the foundation of society, and opinion its soul. 'Opinions are like...', goes a very cliched saying that doesn't end pleasantly. Let's be uninterested in that cliche for a while. Let's just consider the aspect of opinions. Opinions are shaped by multiple factors like upbringing, economic and social class, independent thinking and judgement, tastes, likes, perceptions and many other such factors. Opinions are often not honest. At least on social media. One may have a secret life with a different set of opinions running inside him but often finds himself playing to the galleries because that's what is considered acceptable or posh or hipster or just because everyone thinks it is good. 

I remember my friend and I visited Providence Bakery in Neredmet X Roads, Hyderabad when was in seventh standard when someone asked me, 'What's your favorite drink?' I replied, 'Maaza', without hesitation. The man asked the same question to my friend and he said, 'Thums Up'. After a brief chat, the guy left. I knew my friend had lied because he and I loved Maaza and detested any drink that caused difficulty in swallowing because of the gas. I asked my friend, 'Why did you lie about your favorite drink?'. My friend nonchalantly replied, 'Maaza is a sissy drink. What will he think of me if I tell him him my favorite drink is Maaza?'. Then I asked him, 'But you had Maaza in your hand when you said Thums Up? What about this hypocrisy?'. My friend had no answer. He just looked at me and said, 'Oops' as he stuck his tongue out. 

What I see today  in adulthood is no different. Quickly adjusting an opinion to match up to that of whom one is jealous of, is the oldest trick in the holy book of hypocrisy. One of the other things people do is to state opinions that will or are most likely to offend other folk who you don't like. Now this one too, finds its origin in the same book. Third is the standard, non-existent high-standard claim-emphasizing opinion that undermines the others and their opinions. Now this is the deadly lot. This is the bunch that markets and circularizes sadness in the society.

With social media emerging numero uno as a communication tool, opinions are being shoved down our throats with or without our consent. The sad part is not the shoving that happens without consent - if you're unwilling, you can always log off. The sad part is the opinion consumption that is happening with our consent. There are so many layers of opinions and thoughts that are masking the original thinking capability that I sometimes wonder what my opinion on a subject really is! 

The other day I expressed my major disappointment with a very popular film because I seriously found it shadily hammy and insanely moronic. I got pounced upon by people. There was a time when I would simply join the bandwagon and just mute my inner voice. Then there was a time I would fight and defend my case. Not anymore. I would still like to have my own opinion. But this time, I will not express it. And that is where I have found the sweet spot. Opinions stress you out. They make you tired. I don't want to get tired because of something that is not fun. In the master George Carlin's style, I have realized, peace lies in the commandment, 'Keep thy opinion to thyself'.


- Deepak Karamungikar