Friday, May 25, 2007

Friendship


O friend

Your friendship

Your friendship and its selflessness

Selflessness which is selective

Selflessness when there is no self interest

Self interest guides this friendship

It was not how friendship used to be

At least not for me

My interpretation guided my action

Your interests yours

Your interests guided our action

Sometimes against my interests

Oh! I was seeing them

My interests became important

Then my guide

My notion was changing

Perhaps even with other friends

Perhaps it was never strong enough

It failed first test

Perhaps it was not what I thought

Perhaps friendship is not what I thought

Perhaps we can make it what I thought

Should we make it what I thought?

Is this my self interest?

Are my interests replacing our interests?

Perhaps

Perhaps...

I should live with my notion

And you with your interpretation

Perhaps you will see things my way

And find this way beautiful

I don’t find yours

Should I tell you as a friend?

Or should I just let it be

What will be friendship?

Whom should I ask?

O friend

-Ordeenary

Friday, May 18, 2007

"They shoot and kill and destroy only for the good of people shot down. The novel feature of the modern type of imperialism is its attempt to hide its terrorism and exploitation behind pious phrases...."
- Jawaharlal Nehru commenting in 1934 on the British and French claim that the "sole aim" of their appropriation of the old Ottoman possessions of the West Asia was emancipation of its peoples.

Sunday, May 06, 2007

PC* seems to be stuck in a loop of: erroneous calculations-error messages-correction attempts-more errors. Looks like India needs an Anti virus, lest the system slows-down further and even crashes. (*India's Finance minister P Chidambram)

Friday, May 04, 2007

Some Original One Liners


Thursday, April 12, 2007

My First Attempt at Poetry

Waiting


The cracks in the lane you last walked, to go away, are still waiting;

The ears which waited for your footsteps everyday are still waiting.


The place where we sat midst the deafening silences of night,

And where we felt calm in cricket crowd uproar are still waiting.


Waiting is the mother’s affection and the banter and teasing of father;

Their dreams of seeing you walk in with your spouse are still waiting.


The magic of mountains making a smiling face feel like benediction,

Earth’s risings to heavens, making one feel alive yet again, are still waiting.


Trying to clasp on to moments, while time slips away like sand,

And while the unraveled timeless frozen truths are still waiting.


Each moment an unmade choice between direction of heart, head and soul;

Drifting through the events while thousands of doors are still waiting.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Evolution and Beauty - Is attraction to Beauty Bad?

In many a religious thoughts attraction to beauty is a sin. We also avoid it. More or less it is perhaps for helping control the carnal desires and their fallout on the society. When there as not law and order, strong enough, to curb the sexual crimes, these thoughts have helped preserve the fabric of the society.
But we and the very same institutions of our society also marvel at the beauty of the world around us. Those numerous species of animals and plants and their beauty. But why the attraction to the beauty of opposite sex, have been a tabu in medieval eras and is even now? For it is attraction to the beauty of the opposite sex, that has created such a beautiful variety of the animals around us. And the attraction of the pollinators to ceratin colours and forms has given us so beautiful flowers. Same logic can be extended to fruits as well. Let me elaborate:
Have you ever wondered - Why do we have two eyes and not four - say two at back - won't that have been better? or even better placements of the two existing eyes - one in front and one at the back. Or why is human form so beautiful that some religious scriptures go on to call it "the form of God"? Is there an evolutionary answer?
The survival of the fittest has sure been a key to the Evolution of Species and so have been other factors, like geological changes etc. But one of the other key factors, I believe, has been the inherent attraction to beauty.
Haven't you seen, atleast the picture of, a male bird dispalying its beautiful feathers and patterns to attract a female in the mating season. We sure have marvelled at the beautiful display of the feather patterns of the peacock. Can you imagine if the females of these bird sepcies have not been attracted to the beauty of these male birds. Would there have been a way where these beautiful patterns would have improved or we would have developed so wonderful aptterns. Many a times, many traits which would have been better for survival had not had a chance against more beautiful ones. Had it not been there, who knows, what the shape of the things would have been - we might have had a world of animals - much more efficient but not so beautiful.
Simialrly imagine the beautiful flowers that the plants produced to attract the pollinators. The beautiful scents and the tastes flowers and fruits had to develop to attract the animals who would disperse their seeds far and wide and ensure their suvival.
Something which has given us this wonderful world with all its hues and colours - is beautiful.
So the next time you are attracted towards a thing of beauty you may think - nah! its not bad! and I know where it comes from. And deal it with it knowing your weakness for it rather than denying it altogether! And also marvel what a simple inherent quality or rule, can lead to in the long run! Now that one quality might have been given to the living beings by God or might have been the result of something other. But just think........isn't it beautiful.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

ON UMBRELLA MORALS by Alpha of the Plough (Alfred George Gardiner)

This Essay is an all time favourite of mine. A great take on the way we fool ouselves - yes ourselves, into believing in our honesty. And like all the classics, 59 years after the death of Alfred George Gardiner, his work still fresh and contemprory. He contributed to the 'Star' under the pseudonym Alpha of the Plough, 1915 onwards, this is one of his writings published under that name. I first read this piece in 1995, it created quite an impact. I have been trying hard to find a copy of it. Recently found it on The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pebbles on the Shore by Alpha of the Plough (Alfred George Gardiner). Since it is on Project Guttenburg so I am taking the liberty of publishing the whole essay/article here on Ordeenary Thoughts - its quite in line with my purpose of starting this blog.
ON UMBRELLA MORALS
by Alpha of the Plough (Alfred George Gardiner)

A sharp shower came on as I walked along the Strand, but I did not put up my umbrella. The truth is I couldn't put up my umbrella. The frame would not work for one thing, and if it had worked, I would not have put the thing up, for I would no more be seen under such a travesty of an umbrella than Falstaff would be seen marching through Coventry with his regiment of ragamuffins. The fact is, the umbrella is not my umbrella at all. It is the umbrella of some person who I hope will read these lines. He has got my silk umbrella. I have got the cotton one he left in exchange. I imagine him flaunting along the Strand under my umbrella, and throwing a scornful glance at the fellow who was carrying his abomination and getting wet into the bargain. I dare say the rascal chuckled as he eyed the said abomination."Ah," he said gaily to himself, "I did you in that time, old boy. I know that thing. It won't open for nuts. And it folds up like a sack. Now, this umbrella...."But I leave him to his unrighteous communings. He is one of those people who have what I may call an umbrella conscience. You know the sort of person I mean. He would never put his hand in another's pocket, or forge acheque or rob a till--not even if he had the chance. But he will swop umbrellas, or forget to return a book, or take a rise out of the railway company. In fact he is a thoroughly honest man who allows his honesty the benefit of the doubt. Perhaps he takes your umbrella at random from the barber's stand. He knows he can't get a worse one than his own. He may get a better. He doesn't look at it very closely until he is well on his way.Then, "Dear me! I've taken the wrong umbrella," he says, with an air of surprise, for he likes really to feel that he has made a mistake. "Ah,well, it's no use going back now. He'd be gone. _And I've left him mine_!"It is thus that we play hide-and-seek with our own conscience. It is notenough not to be found out by others; we refuse to be found out by ourselves. Quite impeccable people, people who ordinarily seem unspotted from the world, are afflicted with umbrella morals. It was a well-known preacher who was found dead in a first-class railway carriage with a third-class ticket in his pocket. And as for books, who has any morals where they are concerned? I remember some years ago the library of a famous divine and literary critic, who had died, being sold. It was a splendid library of rare books, chiefly concerned with seventeenth-century writers, about whom he was a distinguished authority. Multitudes of the books had the marks of libraries all over the country. He had borrowed them and never found a convenient opportunity of returning them. They clung to him like precedents to law.Yet he was a holy man and preached admirable sermons, as I can bear witness. And, if you press me on the point, I shall have to own that it_is_ hard to part with a book you have come to love. Indeed, the only sound rule about books is that adopted by the man who was asked by a friend to lend him a certain volume. "I'm sorry," he said, "but I can't." "Haven't you got it?" asked the other. "Yes, I've got it," he said, "but I make it a rule never to lend books. You see, nobody ever returns them. I know it is so from my own experience. Here, come with me."And he led the way to his library. "There," said he, "four thousand volumes. Every--one--of--'em--borrowed." No, never lend books. You can't trust your dearest friend there. I know. Where is that _Gil Blas_ gone? Eh? And that _Silvio Pellico_? And.... But why continue the list.... He knows. HE KNOWS. And hats. There are people who will exchange hats. Now that is unpardonable. That goes outside that dim borderland of conscience where honesty and dishonesty dissemble. No one can put a strange hat on without being aware of the fact. Yet it is done. I once hung a silk hat up in the smoking-room of the House of Commons. When I wanted it, it was gone. And there was no silk hat left in its place. I had to go out bareheaded through Palace Yard and Whitehall to buy another. I have often wondered who was the gentleman who put my hat on and carried his own in his hand. Was he a Tory? Was he a Radical? It can't have been a Labour man, for no Labour man couldput a silk hat on in a moment of abstraction. The thing would scorch his brow. Fancy Will Crooks in a silk hat! One would as soon dare to play with the fancy of the Archbishop of Canterbury in a bowler--a thought which seems almost impious. It is possible, of course, that the gentleman who took my silk umbrella did really make a mistake. Perhaps if he knew the owner he would return it with his compliments. The thing has been done. Let me give an illustration. I have myself exchanged umbrellas--often. I hope I have done it honestly, but one can never be quite sure. Indeed, now I come to think of it, that silk umbrella itself was not mine. It was one of a long series of exchanges in which I had sometimes gained and sometimes lost. My most memorable exchange was at a rich man's house where I had been invited to dine with some politicians. It was summer-time, and the weather being dry I had not occasion for some days afterwards to carry an umbrella.Then one day a sensation reigned in our household. There had been discovered in the umbrella-stand an umbrella with a gold band and a gold tassle, and the name of a certain statesman engraved upon it. There had never been such a super-umbrella in our house before. Before its golden splendours we were at once humbled and terrified--humbled by its magnificence, terrified by its presence. I felt as though I had been caught in the act of stealing the British Empire. I wrote a hasty letter to the owner, told him I admired his politics, but had never hoped to steal his umbrella; then hailed a cab, and took the umbrella and the note to the nearest dispatch office.He was very nice about it, and in returning my own umbrella took all the blame on himself. "What," he said, "between the noble-looking gentleman who thrust a hat on my head, and the second noble-looking gentleman who handed me a coat, and the third noble-looking gentleman who put an umbrella in my hand, and the fourth noble-looking gentleman who flung me into a carriage, I hadn't the least idea what I was taking. I was too bewildered by all the noble flunkeys to refuse anything that was offered me."Be it observed, it was the name on the umbrella that saved the situation in this case. That is the way to circumvent the man with an umbrella conscience. I see him eyeing his exchange with a secret joy; then he observes the name and address and his solemn conviction that he is an honest man does the rest. After my experience to-day, I think I will engrave my name on my umbrella. But not on that baggy thing standing in the corner. I do not care who relieves me of that. It is anybody's for the taking.