Friday, 30 November 2007

Tumble of Joy ~

Crowd waited for what it seemed like their favorite skit coming next. Majority of them were starry eyed children of all shapes and sizes. Some sitting on the edge of their plastic seats with their grins tucked-in-milk-teeth while some stayed motionless in air, somewhere in-between sitting & standing.

In the center of the animated crowd, stood a spot lit circus ring and a spot lit the ringmaster with painted cheeks and lips. “… and here comes your little tumble of joy, my frieeeeennnnn” And a tiny colorful cloth ball rolled it’s way between his stocking-legs from behind, stealing the ringmaster of his balance. The tent wobbled with instant uproar of laughs. Children clapped and cackled while they watched the cloth ball unfolding itself into their loved elfin clown.

Tim, the tumble of joy!

Tim bowed to his little audience making a funny gaseous sound while bending. The ringmaster faded away twitching his pointy nose. A gigantic guffaw responded. Tim winked at the crowd and his comic snorts made his red-round-nose look bigger with every snort. Then suddenly dropping on his back and shaking his tiny feet in air; he enacted his signature mime-laugh. Children anxiously watched his moves for a moment and cracked up in the very next.

For nearly four decades, Tim had savored the special place in hearts & laughs of people of Townsville, a small town where he had lived & performed as a clown since he was a boy. He had dexterously mastered his comic style into a continuous play of clowning and audience-applauses that it was difficult to really trace out who really motivated whom.

Tonight was his last night of performance. ‘Or was it the beginning’, he smiled at the thought of having a hearty laugh with his circus-manager on the same lines that morning. His eyes had the radiance of a child and so had his heart. While juggling he scanned his audiences like always. Yet again two kids mimicking him tumbled their way across the seats causing commotion in a corner & invited some independent laughs. “My tumbles of joy”, he said to himself.

It was hours past mid night as he walked his way from the circus tent towards his caravan. Jovial sounds of the circus fading behind him were replaced by some inaudible beats that continued playing in his feet, finger tips and the jiggling head.

Tim had recorded it all. The circus tune, the sounds of drums, the bells and the rings, the commentary and the anxious pauses, the squeaky sounds of wheels with weight, the sounds of feet dropping hard on strong shoulders, the sounds of rope, the breath, the sighs and the phew-s, the beautiful girls and their smells, the makeup, the dresses, the feathers in the hats, the chuckles, the giggles, the cries, the colour drapes and changing colour lights, the whips and the roars, the bears and the snakes, the boos and the coos, the children and their parents who sat there when children once, smells of the gunpowder, the popcorns and the gas balloons, those rare sneezes and the coughs from the smitten silent audience with bulging eyes and open mouths, the never ending crying of the new-born-s from audience, the glitters in air same as that on the cheeks, the big teethe smiles, the stretched wide arms, the long legs with pointy toes in air, the sounds of horse shoes hitting the dusty-ground, the everything and the every essence from his forty years for passion, love and life in the circus.
And while the tune played in his heart, the tall-dark-handsome-shadow moving along (as he liked calling it) tap-danced once-in-a-beat, in the bright moonlit night.

That night was his last for performance but surely not his last in the circus. The circus never departed from their little ‘Tumble of Joy’. He lived with them rest of his joyous life as the care taker & laugh maker.

~

Saturday, 17 November 2007

Mango Mousse















She decides to make him something from mango. ‘He would love it!’ she said to herself. He had always liked her cooking. He never said so but she knew it.

Thinking of the elation when he tastes her special recipe keeps her busy while she meticulously prepares the dish with all the best ingredients in stock. Excitement twinkling in her eyes in intervals.

Mango Mousse
Ripe mangoes, weighing about 4 pounds
1/2 cup lime juice
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 envelope (tablespoon) unflavored gelatin
2 egg whites
Pinch of salt
1/2 cup heavy cream

Peel the mangoes, cut the flesh off the seeds, and puree in an electric blender with the lime juice, being careful not to over -blend. There will be 5 cups of puree. Stir in the sugar. Dissolve the gelatin in 1/4 cup hot water, cool, and stir into the mango puree. Beat the egg whites with the salt until they stand in peaks. Whip the cram until it is stiff. Fold the cream into the egg whites, then fold this mixture gently into the mango puree. Pour into a large serving dish, or into individual dishes, and refrigerate for 2 to 3 hours, or until set.

They sit next to each other and the candle-light flickers thousands of those similar-yet-untold-stories in their eyes. She looks at him taking a scoop of the 'mango mousse' and anticipates almost like a child who awaits even the most routine with a new hope, every time.

He smiles back.

“Hmmm. That is it or you have something more for me, inside?” saying so, he finishes his mango mousse along with the last of the chocolate flakes that she had earlier sprinkled ‘for that extra bit’ and thoughtfully smiled at. He looks up at her from above the empty plate wondering for her reply.

Her tender profile struggles for some more light from the candle to feel defined once again. She stays stock-still in front of the empty plate for a moment in time.

Then, stands up and walks away.... towards light.

--

''Contentment (santosha) is a state of mind by which one lives happily and satisfied in congenial or uncongenial atmosphere.'' - anonymous yogi

--

Wednesday, 14 November 2007

ENIGMA! Return to innocence:

Sharing this 'ever-awesome-energizing-enriching' music piece > here >
Enjoy!
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .















Don't be afraid to be weak

Don't be too proud to be strong
Just look into your heart my friend
That will be the return to yourself
The return to innocence
If you want, then start to laugh
If you must, then start to cry
Be yourself don't hide
Just believe in destiny
Don't care what people say
Just follow your own way
Don't give up and use the chance
To return to innocence
That's not the beginning of the end
That's the return to yourself
The return to innocence
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :)

Individualistic Perception Meter: IPM!

I recently had a brief experience being allied with ‘a group’ and as usual found myself analyzing observations & distinguishing my impressions from therein on the ever-loved-subject & one of my deep concerns ~ ‘Individualism vs Groupism’.
(Wow, to my delight! Groupism is not a word in my Microsoft Word dictionary! )

Let’s see. We have two kinds of individuals in general.
One- Individual himself/herself, of course & two- groupies who collectively define one approach which could be an outcome of a naturally-refined-generalized common interest or could be an outcome of one-person-interest for the group or even both.

Out there, I did like focus on the ‘groupie approach’ rather than the ‘individual’s approach’ since former needs our analytical eye & understanding while the later being self-conscious/aware/motivated/driven with information-experience-learning, can surely take good care of itself.

So what do groupies look for, wanting-to-be or being part of a group? Yes, like any other dealings it’s pure give & take!

Give: They render their presence in numbers & recognition to (or ‘have-faith-in’ as said so in) the Guru – their shared icon.
Take: And what they get back is a united base of belonging to a mass. A secure feeling of being associated to a set of already worked-out, existing, popularized-branded & accepted principles, which otherwise being an individual they would have to prove with time/s and action/s. Their one-person inaction can easily be eclipsed by the automated group-action in any case.

It is symbiosis and it is simple. This would reason it being an attractive deal for the takers (followers) and the whole trend of mushrooming Gurus-groups/Guru-brands around the world.

Now most of these groups are non-profit. NPGs (non-profit-groups).

“Being non-profit is neither necessary nor sufficient for an enterprise to be good and useful. I suppose you are for-profit entity and yet I would guess that the work you do adds value to society, just as the work of the corner shopkeeper or the baker who are also in it for profit. Hence it is not necessary to be non-profit to help improve welfare.
Many entities who are non-profit are distinctly harmful to society. For instance, most terrorist organizations are non-profit. Clearly being non-profit is not sufficient for human welfare.” ~ Atanu Dey on
India’s development.

This takes us to our next question. How do these NPGs get the ‘fuel’ to fulfill the (spiritual-materialistic-physiological-etc-etc) needs of their benefactors?

Charity!

Surprisingly, yet again we see two kinds inhere. ‘Given charity’ & ‘taken charity’. Former surfaces while the later is recessive and often spelt as ‘goodwill service’ or ‘Seva’.

Most of such NPGs fuel on both kinds. Although the percentage varies depending on the kind of people-gurus in charge & codes/principles they follow. In fact the very ratio can help us with some needful insight on the functioning, purpose/s & reliability of any of these NPGs.

‘Given charity’ comes from the richer lot of the society. While ‘taken charity’ is physical & cerebral services expected from the remaining lot. These include volunteers-usually students & those chosen ones with professions beneficial for the group’s good, followers & their families, their friends, everyone remotely associated with the group & even the curious outsiders who get pulled in right away along with their vulnerabilities.
“We welcome all with open arms & love all as our own! Jai Guru”

To promote the guru-brand, these NPGs efficiently ‘take charity’ in any form possible. Be it manual labor, arranging mass support with being physically present in gatherings, printing thousands of t-shirts, documentary-photography, video-production, post-production, designing campaigns, shooting, editing and studio facilities so on so forth.

“Nothing is impossible! Jai Guru” And everything (everyone) is for free.