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Tejaswee Rao Blogging Award

26 Dec
I just WON a Tejaswee Rao Blogging Award, and I didn’t even know I was nominated! Thank you, IHM and the community at IHM’s blog, for this wonderful honor. I’m also in the running for a cash prize which I intend to donate to if I win.

[Obligatory SQUEEEEEEEEEE break OMG OMG I won my first blogging award!]

Ahem.

The post for which I won the award (Biology vs. Culture: DEATHMATCH) got me thinking. I’ve quite stopped blogging about feminism here, haven’t I? It’s intentional. And it’s been hard. It’s one of the main reasons why I haven’t been blogging very much, because I so often want to and then I think … oh, don’t want to blog feminism again. 

The reason is both ugly and stupid.

Any non-anonymous feminist blogger faces loads of vocal opposition from real-life folks who think feminism is passe or unnecessary or whiny or annoying or strident. It can often get personal: people whose opinions and friendships I value have asked me, “But why are YOU complaining so much when your life is filled with almost too much equality!” And of course my life is positively bursting with privilege so it’s churlish to respond “it is NOT”, and continue blogging as if they never said anything, even if they were completely wrong on many levels to say what they said. It’s so hard to be labeled a bitch by real-life friends! How does anybody navigate that?

That’s the ugly part.

The stupid part is where I censor myself and stop blogging just because some readers responded in a less-than-totally-thrilled fashion. Boo, hiss, get blogging, Nandini, and stop worrying about the critics. Right? I should get that tattooed on the back of my hand so it’s staring at me whenever I start to type.

Oooor I could just look at the shiny new blog award I got, and the seriously awesome post which I got the award for, and use them as both bitch-shield and inspiration to blog a lot more.

In conclusion, I would like to thank the Academy…

Feed Screed

24 Jul

Leave it to my ever-awesome sister-in-law to show me the way out of my blogging block.

… Maybe that’s the wrong word for it. I’m not blocked. I’m writing a lot of posts. I have three finished posts and several one-paragraphers chilling in the edits queue. It’s just that whatever I write feels like the wrong thing to post. Since I never keep my blogging in pace with my reading, every post is old news before it’s written, so I don’t want to write it… and it becomes that much harder to find a jumping off point for every new post without having to tediously (for me) recap everything that’s gone before. I am semi-seriously considering converting this into a multiple-posts-a-day journal like Copperbadge’s. It would really work too, if only I had better discipline and also comment threading (god I need to switch to WordPress already).

But what was I saying? For the present, my dilemma is solved via ever-awesome SIL, who just wrote this very complimentary post reviewing all the blogs she reads regularly. What a fantastic idea. I want to do the same.

….*Looks at feed reader*: 51 subscriptions

Ohhhh-kay, how about I just review my favourite ones? That sounds like a very good plan to me, because I am quite sadistic that way. I will feast on the anger, outrage and cries of despair of those whose blogs I did not select.

(Please don’t kill me, I’m joking, this is just a stupid blog post, I love ALL your blogs! … It is at times like these that I begin to suspect I harbour a self-destructive streak deep within me.)

OK. In all seriousness, here are the blogs I read which are currently being updated at least semi-regularly, in the order they’re listed on my Google Reader:

  1. J. A. Konrath: A Newbie’s Guide To Publishing: This guy wrote the book (literally) on self marketing for authors. I began to read his blog three years ago because his optimism about writing is infectious. These days he’s making waves – and tons of money – as a runaway bestselling ebook author, putting him right in the center of the flux in the publishing industry.
  2. Shuchi: Allergic to Alliteration: I went to college with Shuchi for four years without ever finding out she is such a good poet. What she writes is simple rhyme suffused with emotion, wit and pith. Totally worth checking out.
  3. Copperbadge: The grand patriarch of livejournal fandom, and I mean that in a GOOD way. I started reading him for his fantastic Harry Potter fanfic. I stayed for the fascinating way he chronicles his life, making three or four posts every day: a living showcase of the extraordinary in a perfectly ordinary life. Bonus? He writes excellent original fiction these days, all of which is available as a download for free.
  4. Krish Ashok: Doing Jalsa and Showing Jilpa: This is a dude I vaguely knew back in Singapore turned big-name blogger. Check out his hilarious infographic-style posts.
  5. Fugitivus: “Harriet Jacobs”, the writer of Fugitivus, is a feminist blogger and rape survivor. While I often don’t agree with her on her more radical views and especially her recent religiosity, her long, detailed, analytical posts can be stunningly insightful. I’ve not only learned from her as a feminist, I hope to learn from her as a writer: perhaps one day I can stop being afraid to write posts as long as hers! Or more accurately, perhaps one day I will have the clarity of thought to have so much *meaningful* analysis to offer on seemingly simple stuff.
  6. Gillette’s Journal: Super-husband and dad extraordinaire, this guy is right now playing with my hair. Stop, Saurabh. I need to finish this post. No, I will not say that your blog is the blog other blogs worship at the feet of. I put you on the list, didn’t I?
  7. Hyperbole and a Half: Great find from just a few weeks ago! Allie’s posts – usually about her own adventures and experiences – combine deliberately crude stick-figure drawings and hyperbolic storytelling to great comic effect.
  8. Sarah Rees Brennan: Author of the very, very awesome YA fantasy novel, The Demon’s Lexicon, who blogs about her road to publication and her thoughts on recent books. I knew Sarah as “Mistful”, way back before she got her big publishing contract. She used to write the most awesome Harry Potter fanfiction which are sadly no longer available online (but I have an emailable copy if you’re interested), and her uproarious movie parodies are legendary.
  9. Juice: Another college friend who turned out to be totaly talented! Juice and I hung out for a bit in first year, with her trying to engage a very taciturn me in conversation and me just trying to borrow her awesome blue skirt. Sorry Jups! Younger-Nandini was quite an idiot.
  10. neoIndian: Confessions of a Newly Returned Indian: This is hands down the best blog find of the last six months. Not only is neo a master comedian and urbane writer, our politics agree almost perfectly. That NEVER happens!!
  11. Nimbupani: OK, so we’re like BFF and I may be a bit biased. But this is one impressive woman. She moved to Singapore when she was 16 to attend university. While at college, she made friends with one of the most AMAZING people in the world (ahem), graduated NTU at age 20, and quit her regular job to start her own very successful web design business a couple of years later. She blogs and tweets about web design, Africa, books and a number of miscellaneous subjects. Also, she’s a feminist. I think any more awesome squeezed into one person would cause spontaneous combustion and supernovae.
  12. Query Shark: Oh, the BITE. This literary agent will, for the purposes of your education, chew up your lovingly crafted query letter and spit out its ugly/verbose/ungrammatical/self-indulgent bare bones. Always an entertaining read even if you’re not into writing.
  13. Roger Ebert’s Journal: His talent is ginormous, his wisdom sagacious. He is witty, empathetic, fiery and inquisitive. This man is my hero and I want to be just like him. ‘Nuff said.
  14. Sayesha: Back in my first year at college, Sayesha once held my hands in hers and told me, “Kitne chote chote haath hain aapke”, before proceeding to cover my crazy tiny hands with marvellously intricate mehendi. I knew her as a multifacetedly talented girl two years my senior… and now she’s this amazing bigname blogger that everybody seems to be reading! Makes me wish I’d gotten an autograph instead of mehendi. :)
  15. The Life and Times of an Indian Homemaker: Thoughtful, passionate and articulate Indian feminist. I’ve learned so much from her. Her blog is a must-read for any Indian regardless of political views.
  16. Tilopinionated: This blog is so much fun! Just like its writer is in person. Check out Tilo’s movie reviews and nostalgic posts about bollywood songs from the 90s.
  17. Captain Molecule: Speed of Sound: Aaaaand it’s official, I went to college with a bunch of hypertalented people too idiotic to clue me in on their awesomeness while we were, you know, actually on the same campus. Why do I have to keep finding out through *blogs* that these old classmates are poets? Yeah. Here’s another one. This one also writes rhyming verse, but here the poetry is a tad less personal (I think?) – but filled with startling images.
  18. Shalaka: Bits and Bytes: My picture-perfect SIL’s blog. Now, granted, this might be a little more interesting to me than it is to you, but hey. My list, my rules! Shalaka has spent the last two years complaining that blogging is boring :P but when she does write, she shows herself for the good diarist that she is, and more important, it’s great insight into her life and her thoughts, We’re both so busy right now with our small kids (she has twins the exact same age as my kid!) and so disconnected from living on opposite ends of the country that this blog is about the only way I get to know her. She’s recently started the blog up again, which rocks. Totally rocks.

Phew. I feel like I just sang Breathless.

Do you guys have any blogs to recommend? Would you like to smack me for neglecting to mention someone on my list? The comment board is at your service.

Stories of Boston

27 Jun

The old Hancock Building on Boston harbour has a spire on top of it that incorporates a light that acts as Boston’s weather vane. Colour codes represent different states of weather… with one exception as told in this old rhyme:

Steady blue, clear view.
Flashing blue, clouds due.
Steady red, rain ahead.
Flashing red, snow instead.
(except during baseball season, when it means the Red Sox game has been called off).

That’s Boston for you. It’s a city that strikes me as endlessly charming due to the meticulous care Bostonians have taken to preserve, catalogue and celebrate their past… but just when you start to think they’re a bunch of stuffy historians, along comes a little twist that reveals their playful side, like the Red Sox worming their way onto the Hancock Building weather vane.

And then there’s that story you hear about the Harvard Bridge, built across the widest point on the winding, very sedate Charles River: apparently, the two big universities, Harvard and MIT both wanted the bridge to be named after themselves. MIT insisted it had first claim, because the bridge actually leads into their campus. The row continued for a few years, before somebody from MIT, while examining the plans for the bridge, found a flaw in the way it was designed. Well, that was that for MITians… they weren’t going to be associated with something that wasn’t perfectly engineered, so Harvard Bridge it was.

Hmm.

Wait for the twist.

When you walk along the bridge, you notice these strange markings on it: “50 Smoots”, “100 Smoots”, “250 Smoots”. It turns out that the official unit of measurement for the Harvard Bridge is Smoots, Smoot being a kid who had the bad luck of being the shortest guy in his batch in his freshman year at MIT. You can probably guess what happened.

In October 1958, Oliver R. Smoot was rolled head over heels across the Harvard Bridge by his fraternity brothers of MIT’s Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity as part of an initiation pledge. One Smoot measures 5’7″. There are markings on the bridge at every 10 Smoots, normally, though there are exceptions: the 70-Smoot mark is omitted in favor of a mark for 69; the 182.2-Smoot mark is accompanied by the words “Halfway to Hell” and an arrow pointing towards MIT. The total length of Harvard Bridge is 364.4 Smoots plus one ear.

I don’t know if that’s Smoot’s ear or someone else’s.

(Interesting asides: Wikipedia also tells me that

This was only the beginning of Smoot’s career in standards and measurement; he later became Chairman of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and President of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).

And did you know

Google Calculator also knows about Smoots. Enter 10 feet in Smoots at Google and the calculator will tell you that 10 feet is 1.79104478 Smoots.

)

Saurabh and I were in Boston for four days during New Year’s 2006 (wow that’s 4.5 yrs ago!), staying with some rather cool relatives – my sister-in-law’s brother-in-law and his wife, who will for convenience be called Renu and Neeraj. The day we reached there we went out in the evening to watch King Kong, which was a pretty good movie, considering how much it grossed me out. Anyway.

Not even in fantasies had I imagined that Boston would be so… Boston. Everything in Boston is the first or the oldest of its kind. On our first full day there, we toured Harvard, the oldest university in the country, which also has the largest library in the world with thirteen BILLION books. We saw the statue of John Harvard – infamously known as the statue of three lies, because the date that the statue gives as the founding year of Harvard is wrong, because John Harvard was not the founder of the university, and because in real life, the man had an ugly old mug utterly unlike the one on the statue.

See what I mean about the twists?

We had a lot of fun at Harvard. The buildings are beautiful and stately, and the one known as the Memorial Hall is quite something else – and they use it to house, among other things, a canteen for the students.. stained glass windows, Gothic spires and all. Renu, my sister-in-law-in-law-in-law (SILILIL, for short), is an amazing tour guide. She knows all the stories about everything, and regaled us endlessly with little anecdotes about the things we were looking at. All the stories here in this entry are what she told us as we went around the place.

We wandered out of Harvard and towards the train station for our next destination, stopping along the way to admire the buildings and in particular, a sign painted on one of the windows of an old building identifying it as a law firm: Dewey, Cheetham & Howe. (Say it out loud. Yup. It’s a prank, there’s no law firm there.) We took the train to Quincy Market, which is an old, old marketplace just by the Boston Harbour. Now there’s a huge food court there and a whole bunch of souvenir shops. Outside Quincy Market, there’s a big courtyard sort of place with strange markings on the stones that make up the floor of the square. The broken, jagged line marks out the original Boston Harbour line. Everything outside of the line is reclaimed land.

What a great place to play “in the pond, on the bank”.

After a very filling late lunch, we wandered out of Quincy Market to christmas lights blazing on the trees on all six cylinders. It was getting pretty darn cold out, as evidenced by the many little ice sculptures that were beginning to make their appearence in the walkway outside the market.

Flashing red on the Hancock Building was what we mostly caught later that night, New Year’s Eve. It’s quite something to be out in a parade that gets thoroughly snowed on… but brave the cold we did. It wasn’t anything great, as parades go, and one lesson that we’ve come away with is that there’s nothing that matches a parade seen on TV – the fewer people you annoy by elbowing ahead of them in order to see something for once, the better. But the atmosphere was charged, the company was great, and no matter what, we were always in Boston, which meant we kept passing interesting little (and big) landmarks and historical sites along the way as we folowed after the parade.

For one thing, there were some fantastic ice sculptures to feast our eyes on. At Quincy Market earlier in the day, we’d already seen a lot of these but they’re pretty and colourful no matter how many you’ve seen, so we snapped pictures again.

And here’s something that gives you a sense of how everything in Boston is old and venerable… we passed an ice sculpture in the making, one of Hansel and Gretl and the witch standing at her house which, if you remember, was made of cakes and chocolate, and another ice sculpture (call it an ice-banner) announced that today was the thirtieth anniversary of this ice sculpture being made on this spot.

Anyway, that’s where I’m going to leave us and this story – stamping our feet and doing tap dances to keep our toes from freezing up on us as we chatted about this and that, waiting for the fireworks to start. I can’t think of a better way we could have spent New Year’s eve. I can’t think of a place I’d rather visit than Boston right now. I can’t think of anything I’d rather do than listen to all its little stories all day.

30 Apr

So yesterday I saw just about the worst movie ever made – Freaky Chakra – which I refuse to dignify with even a link to the IMDB page. Karma made up for it today as I finished Pop. 1280 by Jim Thompson which is freaking brilliant. Word for word it packs probably the highest WTFness than any other book I’ve ever read. Isn’t black comedy awesome?

A word of warning: the less you read about the book before you read the book, the better.

LOL BBC

16 Apr

BBC News on the special treatment given to the Obamas’ new dog, Bo:

This sort of attention is something others, like visiting prime ministers and heads of state, can only dream about.

Oh, droll, BBC. Very droll.

(Reference)

In Praise of Brassicaceae

21 Mar

In the last two months I’ve started posts about Jodhaa Akbar,my list of Stuff That Ought To Exist,“extribulae”, the phenomenon of coining bullshit new words (hah, irony!), the octomom, good reasons other than “selling out” why influential people usually develop conventional opinions, and the use of the Oxford Comma (among other grammatical matters that have cropped up in my life).

But considering how my life has consisted of plain domesticity these days (I typed “mundane domesticity” but what the hell, I can be honest – taking care of a baby full time is a life lived in atrocious extremes: weeping with frustration one minute, tears of mad adoration the next… anything but mundane!)… Anyway. It is fitting that what finally brings me to type out and publish a finished post (oh please let me not be speaking too soon) is cabbage.

I. LOVE. CABBAGE.

Tastewise it’s never *bad* (unless boiled) and sometimes great, which means it’s reliable. It’s versatile, second only to the venerable potato – I can use it in starters, pasta, rice, chinese-style noodles, in combination with other vegetables or on its own. It’s better for health than potatoes, and not least because it doesn’t take nearly as much fat to make a great cabbage dish. Cabbages are also freaking HUGE, which encourages one to make great big amounts of whatever one is making, leading to not having to cook again the next day.

But wait, it gets even better.

What makes this vegetable go from good to great, what’s best of all about it, is that chopping cabbage is a breeze. Like onions, cabbages have layers. For chefs this means it comes pre-chopped in one dimension. Unlike onions, there are neither frustrating layers of epidermis to peel nor fumes to make you cry. No peeling, no scrubbing, no slipperiness, no need to be on muscle building steroids to slice through it, no drama! No other vegetable comes even close.

Look, I’m a vegetarian which by necessity means I love vegetables. But as much as I love taro root, there are days when I am just deeply grateful to the universe for containing something this delicious, this easy to cook.

Win

20 Jan

This cynical blogger’s heart has warmed.

Between rumours of him issuing an order to close Gitmo on his first day in office and that wonderfully pragmatic yet inspiring inaugural speech, I can’t help but think Obama may actually do well in office – and not just in comparison to W.

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