Thursday, October 31, 2013
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Sketchy
I recently rediscovered my love for doodling. Like most of the things I do, I'm not really good at it, but they give me joy, much greater than my talent for them. Figured could put them up here to have them for posterity, I'm not really good with saving hard copies, since I just draw anywhere and everywhere. I also have realised that I need a pencil. One shot attempts in ink do end up in some really scary sketches. Although, a part of me likes the fact that I get just one shot. Anyway, I'm not really much of an artist, so they might just offend aesthetics mostly. Also, hope to hunt for some old drawings when I go home, might find a few.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Saturday, October 19, 2013
Took me long enough...
I was probably eleven or twelve when my entire school, both
my closest friends included started going on and on about Harry Potter. They
talked about muggles and you-know-who… scars and cloaks… about moony and prongs…
it made no sense and I felt curious. But more than that I felt this strange
detachment, this resolve that I would never read Harry Potter. I would feel
left out, yet weirdly self-righteous. That it was somehow an insult to be one
of the zillion kids reading Harry Potter.
I think in the eighth or tenth standard, one of my most
dearly loved teachers gave us an English project… we were divided into
different groups and had to illustrate our group’s theme somehow.. with charts…
skits…the works. I was in the group of
people who had either not read Harry Potter or hated it. It was a tiny group,
who were clueless about what to do. We had to talk about the villains; I spoke
about you-know-who, Lord Voldemort. Somebody wrote a page, and I read it out.
Very consciously trying to just recite the text word by word and not understand
a word of it. Some people came up to me and asked whether I had been in some sort
of a trance. There was a group of my friends, who had enacted Snape and
Lockhart’s duel.. and it had become an instant hit, re-enacted multiple times
for different teachers and students. I thought they were hilarious, but most of
it made no sense to me and I preferred it that way. I could neither understand
my detachment from these books… nor explain it.
Didn’t watch the movies either, was forced to watch one when
I was about sixteen… Harry Potter and the Goblet of fire. Again, consciously
ignored most of the movie, paid attention only to Cedric Diggory.
Over the years however, I understood my antagonism towards
the world… I realise I have this weird thing… some sort of possessiveness or
jealousy over the books that I read.. I understand now that I did not want to
read those books then because my friends spoke of them with such familiarity
that it instantly made me shut them out.
So, last year I decided out of the blue, that I would read
Harry Potter. Most of my generation, and the previous and the next had already
read them, watched the movies and moved on. Those who didn’t, show a similar
detachment as mine. I felt maybe I could now indulge my curiosity. I just finished the seventh book. Deliberately
taking breaks and reading other books, to prolong reading the final book. The
journey has been incomparable and inexplicable.
As I devoured the pages I had bits and pieces of my
school-life fall into place. Pallavi and Aanchal… Moony, Padfoot, Prongs
suddenly made sense. Zoya as Lockhart and Palak as Snape played out that very
duel in my mind.
I could not count if I tried to, the number of books I have
read; but although quite different, the best of them could not compare to the
world that I became a part of.
I cannot help but wonder whether I would have found the
world more magical as a twelve-year old, less touched by reality or do I
appreciate the magic a little more now… as the world grows more real ?
Although I might be a little late in saying this, Thank You
J.K. Rowling
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)