It’s all in the stars

Me : Ringing up the after world : “Ring Ring”

Me: “Hello is this Mom?”

Mater : “Rituuuuuuu!!!! I don’t believe this. You’ve rung me up at 2 a.m.?”

Me : “I am sorry, but aren’t people who have left the earth not supposed to follow circadian rhythms?”

Mater : Irritated : “Humph, Just because I sent you to good schools does not mean you confuse me when I am enjoying my after-world peace.”

Me, getting straight to the point, “Ma, I rang you up to complain”

Mater : Sarcastically : “Why am I not surprised?”

Me : “Could you not have held back, and waited a few more days to give me birth?”

Mater : Screaming now : “Wh a a a a a a t”

Deep sigh as I hear the mater breathe evenly trying to muster up patience.

Mater : In a calmer tone : “My dear girl, the time of birth is determined by you, not by me. You decided it was time, and you decided to get born.”

Me : At my whiny best : “But I was a baby! You knew better! I am a Piscean, I am so not an Aquarius! I am proud to be a Piscean, that is me! I nearly got a Pisces tattoo done on my back!”

Mater : Screeching the heavens down : “You what???”

Me : “Cool it Mom, I wanted to, but then did not think I could handle the pain.”

Mater : “Did you ring up to just argue about some stupid jyotish vyotish?”

Me : Whining more : “Seriously Ma, you could have had me ten days later. Now they say I am Aquarius, with this new planet thing.”

Click as she disconnects the phone …..

Damn Ophiuchus! Its come and upset all my neatly filed theories about myself

The New Dates:

Capricorn: Jan. 20 – Feb. 16
Aquarius: Feb. 16 – March 11
Pisces: March 11- April 18
Aries: April 18 – May 13
Taurus: May 13 – June 21
Gemini: June 21 – July 20
Cancer: July 20 – Aug. 10
Leo: Aug. 10 – Sept. 16
Virgo: Sept. 16 – Oct. 30
Libra: Oct. 30 – Nov. 23
Scorpio: Nov. 23 – Nov. 29
Ophiuchus: Nov. 29 – Dec. 17
Sagittarius: Dec. 17 – Jan. 20

Moments of Madness

This post has won the Blogadda Moments of Madness Contest

The game of life, all creatures play
Some are solemn, others to God pray
Some live for others, some on others prey
Some sigh and weep, others are gay
Some stick to the path, others stray
For moments of madness, at life I play

I am the typical student that looks out of the window in class, and since, for eight whole years,  my class looked out at the cemetry, you can imagine ……

In the west, they would have put me into therapy,  but this is India.  All I got was an everlasting fascination for occult and witchcraft, more than passing knowledge of bhoots and churails.  I always thought I was the regular normal type, even though friends and wellwishers have groaned and asked “Define NORMAL, Ritz ……”  Its easier for me to define moments of madness …

1. We lived in Meghalaya when I was about 9 years old, this is a place where sun rise is at 4 a.m. and sunset at 4 p.m.  Long nights meant that we had hardly any outdoor play time.  Most of our play time was sitting with the local chowkidaars and domestics listening to ghost stories.  Once Upendra, our cook and baby-sitter was telling us a particularly gruesome ghost story in the kitchen, while cooking dinner.  I was petrified and had to go to the loo asap.  I insisted that they (my brother, the chowkidaar Sher Bahadur and the maid Nelly) escort me to the loo.   They marched me to the loo and then slunk away while I did my business.  I opened the door to see no one.  I made my way back to the kitchen, creeping softly to not attract any ghost’s attention.  Just as I reached the kitchen, I rushed in relieved.  Upender jumped up screaming in terror, spilling the dhal he was cooking, Nellie wept and Sher Bahadur dragged my brother by his arm and ran to the guard room.  I burst into tears, clueless of what happened.  It took us a good 20 minutes to get our jittery selves in control.

2. We were in Delhi one summer, and our parents were having a beer party in our grandparents’ barsaati.  The landing of the barsaati was huge and there were about a dozen watermelons kept there.  We kids were on ice and chilled beer duty.  Once during the countless trips up and down, I heard a strange groan coming from a watermelon.  I was convinced it was a tarbuz bhoot, and ran up screaming to my parents.  I was scolded for being a ninny and sent back to get the ice.  Soon another cousin ran up complaining of the same groaning watermelons.  My father and uncle accompanied us to investigate.  By this time the watermelon had had enough, it burst and splattered us with red gooey mess.  Apparently a watermelon had fermented and accumulated enough gas to rip it apart.  My uncle quipped “By God Ki Kasam, a farting watermelon!”

3. I love teasing children.  Once a two year old cousin of mine who was just learning to speak got confused.  He was playing with a candy tin and said “Gabba” and then realized that he had got it wrong.  So he slapped one chubby hand on his head and said “Gabba nahin Dabba”.  Always ripe for mischief, I said in a superior know-it-all tone, “Na rey, dabba nahin, gabba.”  He nodded and then said “Gabba” but it did not sound right to him.  He looked at me and surprised an evil grin on my face.  He threw the damn dabba at me and said “Dabba!  Didi gandi hai”.  Sigh!!!!

4.  One of my nephews quite seriously told me, with a whole lot of pride “I was born in Sydney”.  I was, as usual in my typical mad hatter mode.  I replied equally seriously “But you are so little, and Sydney is such a big place, I don’t think so”.  His four year old being was totally confused.  He rallied “So where do you think I was born?”  I pointed at the small pan in which I was boiling tea and said “In this chai pateela”.  He shut up but I could literally see his grey cells working.  Then he looked at rotund me and said seriously “In that case Maami, you were born in the karahi (frying wok) they use to make puri in the hotel we went to yesterday”.  Hmmmm smart kid!

5. We had a bet when I was in college.  The fresher who would climb a donkey and ride it around the hostel for 5 whole minutes would be exempt from ragging.  I accepted the challenge.  A donkey was brought, I climbed on its poor bare back.  The seniors tried their utmost to scare the donkey so that I fell.  I hung on to the neck.  The donkey even tried to bite me, scared as it was.  I hung on for dear life ….. for seven whole minutes.  Then it threw me off.   Was totally worth it – even though I had a sore backside for a couple of days, and  even though I was called the donkey girl for three whole years.

These confessions are put on my blog in response to the Blogadda contest called moments of madness.  Follow the link to learn more

http://www.pringoo.com/flashwidget/imagePlayer.swf

My wedding drama

I am picking up Monika’s tag with a lot of mixed feelings. Its not because I feel embarassed or ashamed about my wedding, but its more like “Do I want to revisit the scene of the crime in which I got caught?”. I mean if you have made an ass of yourself, and got caught at it, you’d rather not go back and view the entire episode once more would you? But then – the quotation “Fools rush in where angels fear to tread” was coined by wise people when they met and analyzed someone like me I guess.

Ex is part Bengali and part Punjabi (Khatri+Arya Samaaji). The appelation Khatri+Arya Samaaaji has been keyed in because it has a significant role to play in the entire story.

I come from a stock of part Punjabi Jain and part Punjabi (Khatri+Arya Samaaji).

When Mom was opposed to the wedding, she yelled at me : He’s Bengali and you’re Punjabi, what will your kids be?

“Mongrels!” I yelled right back

I never thought of not having kids, idiot that I am! I would have been a very wealthy bitch if I did not have such bad tastes, but possibly snotty, unhappy and bitter. Ah well!

My parents decided to get me married to a suitable boy.

I decided otherwise. So wedding no. 1 happened.

Ex and I eloped in the inauspicious month of shraddh, a pandit was abducted and forced to perform the ceremony in someone’s disused factory. A person was introduced to me with “Hey Ritz this is your parent who’s gonna do the kanyadaan” and I said “Hi howdyodu!”. I was freaking out, breaking into cold sweat every single second, but was adamant that I had to marry this guy and this guy only. Ex was part grateful and part streamrollered by my determination. Photographs were duly taken as proof (the court required them). We partied, and then I went back to the hostel and Ex went back to his place.

Wedding no. 2 or the wedding that did not happen

A friend who was studying law escorted us to get our marriage registered by the court. The court required the banns to be published plus there was this little, minor, teensy weensy issue of the bride’s age. I had a melt down, screamed at the love of my life, quarreled with said friend and generally behaved like a diva. I could see ex having serious second thoughts about our future life. His fault right? He should have known better that to fall in love with me.

Wedding no. 3

My father smartly decided that me and my mother, both of who could be depended upon for even disagreeing about the colour of milk (white/yellowish white) could settle the issue of my wedding. It was simple. My mother refused to recognize it, and I refused to come back home from the hostel unless she did. Ex could pay the hostel fees, big effin deal! We had rounds and rounds of verbal bouts. I decided that I would never laugh at a B grade romantic Hindi movie again. My life seemed to be running true to that format. Things came to head one day when we met at a neutral place (a coffee shop) and I refused to take pocket money from them on grounds that I was married and did not need it. Told ya, I have the makings of a snotty bitch! My kids nip such developments at the bud and keep me humble.

My father, hitherto a quiet and concerned spectator, interjected before Mom threw her coffee at me and I walked out. He said “Okay she is married, so lets just leave it at that. We can acknowledge ex as son-in-law, and we can start life and rebuild relationships”.

I burst into grateful tears and said “Papa I love you.”

Mom was horrified “Log kya kahenge?”. But oh well, at least he had some Punjabi Khatri blood in him. Oh she also had fears that a marriage done in shraddh could never be good. So she insisted I have proper feras. So dear readers, the roka happened 14 days after I got married! Told ya, my life is frickin insane. The kundalis were matched by a pandit who (man gotta give him 100% for accuracy!) said “They’ve already got married!” in front of my Tayaji. Mom had a melt down. Then we had the ring ceremony and the wedding.

Phew!

My friend B…. once observed when the marriage was in doldrums

“Ritz you got married thrice … (Actually two and a half, but who’s counting?)

“Yeah I know”

“To the same dude!”

Me with a deep sigh “Yeah I know, dont rub it in!

Yeah I know …. I know …… I am frickin insane!

I tag the following

Tikuli

Shail

Indiyeah She recently got engaged so may have interesting stories

Soli

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