SPF: Nowhere

178-10-october-23rd-2016

Nowhere

Words 200

My dearest Son, it is strange writing to you. Since the telephone, I lost the habit. But when you first went abroad, I would write long letters; so would you.

When Lata got a phone connection I was happier than she. Hearing you say Mother after months gave me as much joy as it did the first time. After we got our own phone, I would sit for hours beside it, willing it to ring. And then came the Skype calls, where I could hear and see you. But the best was of course when you came home, sat beside me, relishing and demanding hot crispy parathas.

But then your workload increased. Your father left us. You (and even I) thought I would be happier here. But everything is so strange and different here. And you are always so busy. Looking out from the top floor, I feel like Trishanku – neither here nor there.

I wouldn’t have bothered you, but Lata’s nephew is going home. Maybe I could accompany him?

Waiting for your letter although it would be nice to hear your voice.

Perhaps even see you.

My room is down the corridor, last room on the right.

***

A/N: Trishanku is a character from Hindu mythology.  Trishanku has come to denote a middle ground or limbo between one’s goals or desires and one’s current state or possessions. In brief, the story goes like this – Trishanku wished to ascend the heavens in his mortal body. One sage (who was keen to show off his powers) agreed to help him and would have succeeded but for the intervention of the heavenly gods who convinced him to desist breaking laws of nature. But to keep his word, the sage created an alternate heaven where Trishanku hangs upside down so that he may not ever usurp the power of the real king of the heaven Indradev. Thus Trishanku who is suspended in his own heaven as a compromise between earth that he belonged to and the heaven that he sought. Trishanku corresponds to the constellation of Crux or the Southern Cross. For a more detailed version of the story click here.

Written for the Sunday Photo Fiction – a story in 200 words or less. For other stories on this prompt click here

I wonder if the parallel between the mother and Trishanku is clear? Do let me know. Thanks!

For readers of Moonshine, here's Chapter 95 and Calvin and Hobbes

 

CB&W: Nature Clicks

Cee’s Black and White Photo Challenge this week is All About Nature. Of course my all time favorites – trees – will feature in this post but I do hope I can surprise (if not impress) you with my other clicks 😉 😀

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Isn’t she stunningly graceful?
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I have no words for this one – just goosebumps!
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Managed to capture a dragonfly (?). Not very well for it was too high for me.
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It was way past midnight when these two locked horns. I hurriedly clicked a snap and went my way. Unfortunately I didnt get the desired click. I came back about 15 minutes later and they obligingly posed once again.

Thanks for visiting. Do let me know what you thought of the pics 🙂

For readers of Moonshine, here's Chapter 94 and Calvin and Hobbes having a deep philosophical discussion :D

 

Light and Water

The Daily Post’s Weekly Photo Challenge theme is Shine. Here’s my collection of light shining on water, mostly sunsets around the country 🙂

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Shillong, Meghalaya
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Radhanagar Beach, Havelock Island, Andaman and Nicobar Islands
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Port Blair, Andaman and Nicobar Islands
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Sunset over the Sunderbans
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The Sun gives way to the Moon

While it readies for a new beginning elsewhere

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Sunrise at Mahabalipuram, Tamil Nadu.

A very good morning to all of you 🙂

A/N Moonshine will be up a little later in the day.

A Wannabe

Written for the Friday Fictioneers – a story in 100 words or less. Thanks to Rochelle for hosting this marvelous challenge and Claire Fuller for the photo prompt. Click here for more stories on this prompt.

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(c) Claire Fuller

A Wannabe

Words 99

Brilliant, scintillating displays, thronging galleries and witty banter captivated her.

Bewitched and compelled, she fashioned a shelf and put up a messy yarn.

Few spared her bare shelves more than a cursory glance.

Hesitant and unsure, she scrabbled around for tips and tricks.

Sticks and stones found a place on her shelf, as did knick-knacks and baubles.

Pleased, she admired her fast filling shelves. Until her eye fell on the glittering galaxies.

She heaved a despondent sigh. She was a square peg, maybe she should…

Wait!

It has been just a year with the fulfillment of a lifetime.

***

Thank you for your company, support and encouragement on this super-fantastic journey. Today I complete 365 days of blogging  🙂

The Colored One

Look what I found this week – A pink tree!

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Never seen anything like it before – have you?

For Becca’s Sunday Trees -258

CFFC: Shades of Red

Cee’s fun foto challenge this week is Vibrant Colors. For some reason, I seem to have only reds! I hope you like 🙂

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“Stop waiting for Prince Charming. Get up and find him. The poor idiot may be stuck in a tree or something.” Author unknown

roses

“Good friends, good books and a sleepy conscience: this is the ideal life.” Mark Twain

garden

“I don’t know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve.” ― J.R.R. Tolkien

truck

“When traveling with someone, take large doses of patience and tolerance with your morning coffee” – Helen Hayes

train

“Adults are just outdated children.” Dr Seuss

mandap

“A party without cake is just a meeting.” Julia Child

bride

“It is such a happiness when good people get together — and they always do.”
Jane Austen

The last one is of course my favorite – which one is yours?

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SPF: Food for Thought

177-10-october-16th-2016

Food for thought

 Words 201

“Son, write an application…”

“For what?”

“There is an opening for a typist…”

“I don’t want to be a typist!”

“Son, it’s a Government post.”

“I don’t care. I want to…”

“You don’t understand! A Government job is permanent. It also means full benefits, medical insurance…”

“But there is no scope of growth.”

“That’s not true! Look at me. I joined as a peon and now I am head clerk.”

“What about job satisfaction? I will die of boredom.”

“Forget that! If you get this job, you will never have to worry about putting food on the table.”

“But I want more! I want to make a difference. I want a car, a house and a bank balance.”

“Aren’t you being overambitious?”

“No Father. With my own startup…”

“Startup! That’s a very risky proposition. What if it fails?”

“Father, didn’t you take a risk when you left the village? You had no money, skills or qualifications. You didn’t even know Hindi or English. Did Grandfather stop you from taking the risk?”

“I had no choice! We had no food to eat. It was a matter of life and death.”

“And for me, this job would be a living death.”

***

Written for the Sunday Photo Fiction – a story in 200 words or less based on the photo prompt given above. For more stories on this prompt click here

Thanks for dropping by  – how about a little note? 😀

CWW: Paths & Ways

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The Cellular Jail, also known as Kala Pani was a colonial prison in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India.

“It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.” ― Nelson Mandela

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Walkway around Sikander Lodi’s tomb

“Solitude is the path to visit yourself, it is the path to yourself!” ― Mehmet Murat ildan

runway

“You were born with wings, why prefer to crawl through life?” Rumi

woodway

“The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.” Robert Frost

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“Our separation of each other is an optical illusion of consciousness.” Albert Einstein

I know I am very late this week but I hope you enjoyed the paths -visit Cee’s page for awesome pics.

For readers of Moonshine, here's Chapter 93 and Calvin :D

 

Friday Food: Veggies

Y at Priorhouse has started a new challenge (thankfully a monthly challenge!) – Food. And this month the topic is veggies.

For this challenge, I chose something that doubles as a fruit and a vegetable. Technically it is a fruit but most people in India cook and eat it as a vegetable. Handling, cutting and dicing the raw fruit is a sticky, messy, dicey business and one must remember to lather the hands (and knife) with oil otherwise you are likely to be stuck forever and ever 😀

Okay, any idea what I am talking about? Difficult if you are not from this part of the world. This fruit is native to South and Southeast Asia and is believed to have originated in the Western Ghats of India.

Okay without any further ado – have a look:

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Can you make out anything? Okay another closer shot for you.

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Yep that’s the jack fruit

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See the white gooey stuff near the neck? That is the stuff to watch out for, when handling the raw fruit.

When ripe, it is extremely sweet and fleshy. It has a distinct all pervading odor which can be rather overpowering. Keeping the ripe fruit in the refrigerator can be risky as everything is likely to reek of jack fruit. The inside of the jack fruit is composes of pods or bulbs each of which holds a seed. The seeds are cooked and eaten as well, though they are covered with a thick inedible cover which has to be removed.

While the vegetable avatar is quite popular all over the country and is available as chips, the fruit version (at least as far as I know) is consumed only by the Bengali community in India – anyone care to correct me? There are two varieties of the fruit pods. One is small, fibrous, soft, mushy and terribly sweet. If one is not careful while eating this, it can slip down the throat and cause choking – been there done that! I prefer the other variety which is crisp and chewy and is also less sweet.

By the way, the jack fruit is the national fruit of Bangladesh.

Hope you liked my offering for this month’s food – happy eating 🙂

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