Friday, May 11, 2012

Why grow up??


Good memory you have ya, I hardly remember anything I did as a kid.

Was kind of a late reply.

Mine was a little quicker; I said

The trick is to never grow up. That way you don’t have to remember the things you did as a kid cuz you’d still be doing or atleast thinking the same things.

I thought more after she said:

Ah! How I wish to be a kid again.

Children’s day is not far; remember to let yourself loose this children’s day… Right now I gotta get some sleep... so bye good night! 

Little did I know then that I would be thinking about this chat while at bed playing catch till sleep was offered. It wasn’t long before I realized that I had just said something that I had never really believed. Suddenly I had told someone that I didn’t like growing up. Shocking. I really wanted to be a grown up. I was always treated like a kid. Something less than grown up - insignificant. I don’t know if it was my goofy way of talking and staying funny in an immature way or just my appearance, but I was always looked upon as an insignificant kid. I was always irritated when people called me or said that they thought of me as a kid, especially girls! Huh! Wait till I take my pants off, you won’t call me a kid then! 

Thinking about the insignificance of kids, it reminded me of an episode of Two and a Half Men; where Charley tells Jake “you’re a kid, it doesn’t matter what you think”

Well, I did laugh at it.


Staying over the thought of television I remembered a popular Hindi movie where Ranbir Kapoor gets yelled at for being too immature by a girl who later becomes his lover. Ranbir doesn’t retaliate in denial. He comes out and yells back at her admitting that he is a kid, and if trying to prove yourself right  or worrying about future is all that grownups do then he never wants to grow up. 

I appreciated that scene, but always thought responsibility made me happy.

Another such episode was from DraganBallGT. A scene where Goku, Pan and Trunks were looking for a DragonBall under water. Guku just takes off all his cloths and jumps into the pond. Pan gets grossed up looking at her nude grandpa. She yells at him and tells him that he is an adult and should behave like one. To which, Goku says:

If being an adult means swimming with your clothes on, then I never wanna grow up.

It’s just marvelous how almost nothing bothers a kid. Children surely are the little lamps that spread joy and love everywhere they go. An old story that’s still shared among people of Vasantapura is the story of Raaghu Bhattar and Shiva Swamy of Vasantapura. Shiva swamy and Raaghu Bhattar were big men of the village, one a devout shiva worshiper and the other a strict vishnavaite. They never saw each other and never entered each other’s temples. They were the modern day version of vasista and vishwamitra.

It was the days of the yearly village fest in vasantapura. The whole village was on the streets and there were just as many visitors from other villages; some were city dwellers from the nearby Bangalore. The scene was just lovely. Bouquets of Music and Dance performances in the village’s center square, vendors of a hundred kind occupying every inch of the road and women wearing cloths of every imaginable color, all saree clad; each like a traditional Indian woman.

 Raaghu Bhattar and Shiva swamy were very busy, talking, meeting, smiling and bowing at every visitor. They had to keep their contacts with the rich devotees. Though they were both happy and occasionally spoke to the same person, they never once looked at each other.

 It was after the dust had settled and evening prayers offered that everyone took to the center square again. A kid tugged on shiva swamy’s dhoti. He was crying. A three year old lost kid was lifted on to the shoulders by Shiva swamy who went about the square trying to make the kid from crying. He knew very well the kid was Raaghu Bhattar’s grandson. Yet he held the kid in his arms and walked over half the village. 

 To this day, the dwellers of Vasantapura speak of this tale of how an insignificant three year old melted the heart of a high priest who detested the other pillar of the village. 

Maybe that’s why being a kid is so nice. Being insignificant and not bothered by it, not bothered by position and status, and the least bothered about what others think of us.  Maybe it is the urge of proving our significance that makes us old; the conscious struggle to make a place for ourselves makes us lose the meaning of belonging.

 People generally see the dawning of responsibility or being able to take decisions or simple earning and feeding as coming of age. But is it really worth it? Is money and pride really worth the innocence and carefree childhood? 

Everyone grows up into an adult at some time. But that doesn’t mean the child in you has to die.

After all, Child is Father of Man. 

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Rich and The Responsible - I


This post comes out as a reaction to the recent downgrading of Indian Outlook by S&P and Moody. These two are organizations that do the Risk rating operations and analysis on investments, credits and everything they feel like. Like India for example. 

To throw light on what I’m talking about, just last week the S&P downgraded the Indian outlook to negative from being stable. In simpler terms, it’s branding India to be a Risky place for investments. This might not come as a surprise to some and they might even agree to this as the Indian markets haven’t showed a lot of stiffness, some of the big bosses have drawn graphs crossing the red line. To add, there’s the rupee losing ground on the US dollar. From this point, it sure seems like Indian economy is risky. 

To add to this one flamboyant “rating” the Moody has come out and done more act of downgrading India. Well, this time they’ve taken on 3 private banks; HDFC, ICICI and Axis Bank have been given bad ratings by moody and there is a speculation over LIC; India’s biggest PSU insurance provider. 

Why!!! Why are you throwing stones at me??


Let’s take a deep breath and do what a glass house dwelling stone pelter deserves.

Looking back into very recent history, wasn’t it the S&P and Moody who gave a triple A rating for the Housing Credit Securities? They said that the money lent on houses was insured as they had the house in possession which could be sold to a new customer if the loan was defaulted.  Seems sensible, and so thought the countries who bought these sensible “securities” what happened later?? The housing prices started falling, people couldn’t sell houses, they had to take fresh loans to pay out to their housing loans. This debt after debt burst the housing bubble and everything was ruined. Billions of dollars were lost, people came to the streets and no one had money. All this was in the USA, what about the countries who bought these “insured securities”?? The rest of the world laughed at them and they lost all their money, and more than half the world had to apply for loans from the world bank. That was the beginning of the recession era.

What brought all this? The AAA rating by S&P.

Economists, or in general anyone with common sense across the globe believed that the system of rating itself was corrupt. The US govt. must have been at bed with S&P and Moody and forced them to give an AAA rating so as to be able to sell their rots to the rest of the world. 


Now, just about 6 months back when the S&P gave USA a bad rating, everything went haywire, like hell had descended over earth. At that time, the head of S&P who was an Indian was sacked and the rating was reversed. After 6 months, we see that these very respectable organisations are throwing stones at the Indian economy. My take is, that after the Indian Head had been sacked from S&P and an American past VP of Citi Bank had been made the new head, they went back to sleep with the Fed govt of USA. 

It’s only fitting that the federal govt of USA and these rating organisations are playing this game of downgrading India together. With the presidential election looming close, and Obama’s failing promise of providing jobs and curbing outsourcing, this might be his last ditch effort of bringing money back to the USA. By defaming India, they are hoping to suck money and investors off India. Will this pump money back into USA? Only time can tell. But is this the right way to become rich? 

I wasn’t sure of the answer myself. Until I met a Hijada on the street this Wednesday.