Sunday, 24 March 2013

Abstract - The Theme For This Week


Am I ready to blog about the theme for this week -  “ABSTRACT”?

I don’t think so. I am not sure what abstract is. And the wonderful posts that have been put up by my friends have not made me wiser either.

Googling tells me that abstract could mean so many things: but what I chose to emphasis in this article was “Difficult to understand.”

And what more do I need to think of? Rather than the innumerable number of answer papers that I have read in my life.

Here’s a report on nuclear power stations written by a student. Can there be anything more abstract?

Nuclear power stations is important process for the power plants. This is important for the our country. This is more produced for the current. But nuclear power plant is dangerous for the people. The nuclear power station is important for all the country.

The important for the selecting site for nuclear power stations.

The nuclear power stations is dangerous power plant. This nuclear power plant is used for the atoms.

The nuclear power station is placed for not lives for people. 3 to 5 km distance for the placed for the nuclear power station.

The nuclear power station is placed for a sea. This is cooling purpose for the nuclear power plants.

The wall thickness  ... This is not laser to atom laser not outside for the atom leaser.

The works safety suits and helmet and other things used for the nuclear power station. The atoms is more power for the power plants. This is called as the nuclear power station. This is important process for the power plant.

If this is not difficult to understand, that too written by an engineering student, what is?

And do I have something really abstract?  Yes, the painting drawn by my darling niece. She is a very good artist for her age. And here is one of her paintings.


And when we asked her what was underneath the sun that looked liked a banana peel to us. Pat came the reply, “That’s sunlight,” she said, looking surprised that we could not understand.  It was modern art and abstract to me, not to her four-year-old mind. 

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

The First Time I ...


Am I ready to blog about the theme for this week? The theme is “My First Time.”

 It is similar to that of the childhood experiences which we did not like. This is a positive version of that post and this brings in a lot of memories. The theme was announced yesterday and many first-time experiences have been circling through my mind ever since, even during my sleep, I guess.

My first time writing, as a teenager, was for the Financial Express about a dance production group from the USSR about 28 years ago. I was very excited to see my first review in print, which was edited by my uncle to give it a professional touch. That period also marked the first time I spoke at a prestigious dance conference about dance and dance critics, which was very exciting.

Recalling my experience of my first-time public speaking at the age of ten during the felicitation of a celebrated music director of the Telugu and Tamil film industries made me feel so nice. I remember sitting along with my uncle on the dais when he informed the organisers that I would also say a few words during the felicitation function. Being the youngest, I was asked to talk first. I had prepared my speech and had mugged it. I vividly remember what I was wearing – a safari suit. As I was reciting it, somebody came up and garlanded me and I promptly forgot how to continue from thereon. I reached into my pocket, took out the speech I had prepared, referred to it, put it back in my pocket and continued, leaving hundreds of people in laughter.

The first time I went to teach in a classroom, I remember being nervous about facing students. My first time invigilation of correspondence education examinations where the students were bringing out bits and pieces of papers from nowhere was astounding. I collected a plastic bag full of bits in the hall and took it to the staff room, about 25 years ago. The first experiences of being a Principal were exciting and definitely had me on my toes.

I realise now that there are so many first-time experiences I cannot remember. For instance, I don’t remember when I started playing cricket though I remember watching the 1973 test match between India and New Zealand in Chepauk, Chennai along with my father. I remember distinctly getting the prize for reciting Florence Nightingale’s story in a school competition and don’t distinctly remember the occasions when I missed out on prizes in that year when we were in the Fifth standard.
And any regrets? There has never been poetry writing till now. I won’t be surprised if the administrators of the 52-Week group will make me do that shortly. But whether I can is a different matter altogether.

Thanks to when my soup came alive, recalling these first-time experiences will leave me feeling happy for a couple of days thinking about these and many more events which I have not written about.