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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Jingoism vs patriotism

I refused to come down for a flag hoisting this 15th with everyone else simply for 2 reasons and I was branded unpatriotic and heretic straightaway. Except the flag hoisting all that happened there was a leaf out of the party book type events. You have sweets, a few 'patriotic' filmy songs and few ads and lots of chit chatter. the whole atmosphere was nothing to remind you of the day. The second reason being whatever feeling I have there, i don't believe in exhibiting only to a superficial event. If not being jingoistic is unpatriotic, I prefer to lie low.

I stay far away from home in land of the populist culture and home country associations are a major source of motivation and company. But, somewhere down the lane a lot of things that need to be remembered are forgotten and a lot of waste is uploaded to replace them. I will never know the value of being a slave and getting freedom for the simple reason I was born free, for which I am grateful and happy. I empathize with all my ancestors who had been through it but will never be able to feel it. So what does it mean to be patriotic then ?

As our generation woke up to the independence that was constructed from an earlier one, our respect or our pledge should not be to just manually repeat these ritualistic procedures of worshiping the flag but to add more color to it. As I am free, I have to free those who still aren't and those who are grasping for it-kids. Kids as those who are working while their wealthier and luckier same age counterparts are at school flag hoisting while they all work 2 square meals, or those who are so impoverished that they cant go to school even though they want to learn, or those who are begging for food, or those parent-less orphans who need some light in their lives
Adopt a kid, help child laborers break their thralldom, teach under privileged kids to make them literate. These are the things that can define our patriotism, not flag hoisting or singing songs.

Dingo dolfeee

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Accent as in imitation cheese and real cheese

One fine 2008 Summer morning in when I was reading to my 4 year old niece the story of Bambi, I pronounced the character Faline as Fah-Lyne, trying to put my new found perfumed accent to work.She giggled at me and said, "Mama, its not Fah-Lyne its Fa-Leeen". I was taken aback further when she phonetically explained how she pronounced it. The point is not whether she deserved to be in Gifted and Talented class( which she is in fact enrolled to now). The issue was with accent.

I have had this discussion from time immemorial. Several hundred moons wiser, I finally thought of putting this in words and make sure the progeny knows who exactly coined this phrase as in the heading. When I stepped in the shores of the United States, I could see Indians all putting up an accent totally alien to me and my english. As cliche as it might sound to be, I was dead jingoist in the beginning and promised myself never to follow suit, until it got to a point where I had to explain how I wanted my footlong to be meat free and vegetarian to the guy at Subway and he gave me a "what? come again" expression. I was agitated and so I joined the wolf the pack behind in trying to get an accent. Oh oh?

Things were peaceful until one evening, I go around with a friend who has been around there for a while and was observing him explain his coffee to the waitress at Starbucks ( who by the way makes awesome coffee and had a great smile :) ). I was admiring how he rolled his Rs and used the common gestures and then the girl dropped the same expression to him that i got used to get for my Indian accent and asked him to repeat it again. I was utterly confused. If that wasn't the closest to the American accent I had heard about, I had no clue about it and was utterly flabbergasted (until my 4 year old niece showed it to me hows its done).Here is where I came to metaphorically link American accent like the real American/Swiss cheese in comparison to all false imitations we put up as imitation cheeses. Better to have no cheese at all rather than have imitation cheese :P

We have to admit that as natives of India and having been brought up there for the first 10 years atleast, its hard for us to get that native accent, and we shouldn't be trying to do it. But how do we communicate to the other side if our english is not recognizable? Indians have amazing diction capabilities and I am proud of what we are. There is nothing wrong with our English. After all , American and Australian English is spurn off from the original British English accent. So is ours. But the phonetics dynamics is different for each country and we can appreciate this fact from the dialects we have for any language. All I learnt from that 4 year old kid was to stress on the right syllable. Americans stress on the first syllable a lot and we Indians stress on the second and there lies the majority of the difference. Just add the distinction in saying the Vs and Ws properly , I think 90 percent of the communication would be simpler.

If pronouncing phonetically right words is called accent, then maybe I might have a tinge. But most of the times, I can safely pass for a desi and at the same time communicate comfortably with colleagues who have graciously accepted me in whatever format of English I have experimented with.

I had identified the 3 kinds of people and their tryst with accents as above-

1)The desi ghee ( made in India)

2)American cheese, (made in America )

3)Imitation cheese,( LOL, proudly assembled in america, made by India or China).....

And then there is the fourth kind...


..TO BE CONTINUED...





Monday, June 14, 2010

Even Iphone has Multi-tasking now, but not me yet !!!!

Finally, bringing myself out of that slumber and laziness just took 10 minutes of looking at a 37 year old home maker's musings in her blog. Marriage, 3 kids and an interior design hobby and a good blog mind. I was bowled over. Talk about multi-tasking! Though very trivial and subjective, it did what i wanted it to do- to give me a shock and wake me up.While the whole geek world is going gaga over the multi-tasking of the IOS iPhone 4, I took that momentary pause to examine whether multi-tasking was more important in a phone or in our lives.

A very bad habit of engineers in general and me in particular, is the penchant nature to defy all odds and bear the tiniest detail in our scrutiny. The thing that goes for a toss is the ability to look out beyond the window and juggle with many tasks. Alas! I always wanted to be a writer, engineer, debater and a good social activist. To my credit, I have individually made my earnest attempts in being a good student of each field over the years. But the occasional news of people achieving that omnipresence in the same lifetime as mine , puts me in deep introspection.Time is so little and there are a zillion things I want to do and hence a zillion equations exist. But,I still cannot find a nice equilibrium where all the variables meet.And here I was more worried about the ability to do be able to browse the internet and also play a game on my iPhone!!

Whether Andriod and Iphone trigger the multitasking blitzkreig in mobile world or not, my eyes are opened! From a pre-occupied Recent College Graduate, I am going to be a Self Occupied College Graduate :P. Speaking of which, its volleyball time and here I comeeeeeee