Sunday, January 25, 2015

2015 #2

The Result Of Another Neuroscience Lecture

"I can't draw very well." he shyly confessed,
As he attempted to draw a mouse, undressed.
He swiped his chalk to make a nose,
I didn't quite see it, were those ears or toes?
With hesitant fingers a mouth beneath,
Was sketched- an unwieldy bed sheet.
He stepped aside to inspect his art,
Those bulges looked like clouds from a fart.
The irony that I found rather satisfactory,
Was we were studying about the system olfactory.
Once more, that brave man balding,
Picked up his chalk to complete his drawing.
A tiny bump he went on to produce,
It resembled the loopy end of a noose.
"This is its ear", he declared,
From stifled laughter my nostrils flared.
I looked at the large structure ahead,
It resembled a coat hanger with many a bend.
I squinted and let out a defeated sigh,
Until he added a giant, round eye!
'Aha! Now I see it!' I'm sure everyone thought,
Through the urge to laugh we collectively fought.
"Now let's draw its nostrils" he went on to say,
Which is when I realized it faced the OTHER way!
It was all finally falling into place,
But I was sure his art class he hadn't aced.

Pet me, O' Traveller

She walked hastily from college, as the sweat trickled down her temples and onto her earphones. She chose fast songs to keep pace with and dodged the afternoon sun as it followed her through every turn.

It had been a frustrating day. Her alarm clock went off too early, her coffee had burned her tongue, she ran out of paper mid-lecture and the chilled ethanol she added to her eppendorff tube refused to unearth DNA. After shoveling a plate of cold paneer and rice from the canteen down her throat, she made her way to the station. She wanted to return to the unkempt bed she was made to leave so soon that morning.

She brushed shoulders with the humanity that flooded the stairs and platform to reach where the ladies' compartment would arrive. As she folded her earphones into her bag and dug for the book she was reading, she saw the crowd to her right part. Through the sea emerged a brown, four-legged, drooling canine. He headed full speed toward her and jumped up onto her. She caught him in her arms and ruffled his short fur. He was panting excitedly and his face seemed to house a giant grin. His tail was wagging in euphoria; he would take off if it swished any faster. She got down on her knees to pet her old friend- the one who wagged at her sight ever since that packet of Parle-G biscuit three years ago.

The train pulled into the station and she gave his back a farewell jiggle. She got on last and looked wearily behind her. He was trying to get on with her. With a heavy heart, she signaled back toward the platform and unwillingly, he listened.

His nose still bobbing up and down as the train left, she waved goodbye with a smile. Somehow, it's always the furry ones who manage to leave one on her lips.

Phone Photography

I never completely understood the craze of cell-phone photography; mostly because all the phones I owned had rather sad excuses for cameras and I was jealous of all those who could take pictures where the blues didn't look like yellows. Recently (owing to the mental demise of my previous phone), I purchased the MotoG-2 which has proved to have an impeccable camera. What started off as a feature-experimentation ended up becoming my obsession whenever I was out. I finally relate to those who talk about the all-encompassing convenience of a good mobile camera. Although I still wish there was a rubber-padded viewfinder I could shove my eye into, my phone has established itself as competent in the field of photography.

I present my experiments.
(And, as it has become important to clarify over all social media, no filters.)


















 

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Travel-time Limericks

There's was a girl from Bombay
Who gave her driver too much leeway.
She then hung onto her skirt
As he zoomed through the dirt
Still she missed her train with dismay.

There were three boys in a train,
Who were just the opposite of vain.
They jumped around harried,
With the bags they carried,
Imagining the dragons they'd slain.

Women around me are hoity,
With serious looks and bras pointy.
They sit upright,
In their lipsticks bright,
Refusing to cooperate flatly.

Ohh the sea of humanity,
Full of clusters of lies and vanity.
They're all potatoes,
Getting bitten by mosquitoes,
And living in a world of insanity.

There lived the King of India,
Who suffered a bout of diarrhoea.
No doctor he consulted,
Could find results that he wanted,
So he just looked it up on Wikipedia.

There was once a pink ballerina,
With bright blue in her retina.
She was perfection,
Down to that complexion,
But my, she laughed like a hyena.

There was a man called Moe,
Who tripped and stubbed his toe.
He jumped and he yelped,
But nobody helped
And he stood there with anger aglow.

There was once a boy from Bombay,
Who played cricket every Sunday.
But bat well he couldn't,
Bowl overarm he wouldn't,
And out he would get anyway.

There was a boy from Kandivali,
A coulple stations before Borivali.
His stomach expanded,
Several metres when counted,
And it was used to perform Kathakali.

There was once a tiny lady,
Who wore an orange saree.
She rushed into my compartment,
Looked around in bewilderment,
Then decided to take an Andheri.

There's no nicer station than Marine Lines,
A bald, blithering bloke opines.
For the vada pav there,
Will pull at your hair,
As the taste around your tongue entwines.

A scrawny man near Mahalaxmi,
Decided to cross tracks carelessly.
He answered a phone call,
As he jumped from platforms tall,
Headed toward death undoubtedly.

The lady sitting besides me,
Is colouring her eyebrows precisely.
As the train keeps moving,
Her lips she starts doing,
And makes no mistake amazingly.

Women carry makeup in their bags,
Probably to avoid time lags,
But when made up women,
Their lipstick endarken,
I just shudder and return to my mags.

There was a college-going bum,
Who hurt herself in ways ultra-dumb.
She hit her right knee,
At station Bandra-E,
And now hobbled crimson and glum.

There was a botanist from France,
Who decided to give India a glance.
He stood amidst the felling,
Then ran away yelling,
And never gave the country another chance.

To catch a rickshaw at Bandra,
Needs perseverance for a mantra.
For with lines this long,
Soon to heaven you'd belong,
Where you can listen to Frank Sinatra.

There was once a juice stall called Yaadgar,
Who's insides were shadier than a bar.
It pulled crowds in aplenty,
With falloda and rose jelly,
And was richer than hotels 5 star.

The sky is full of strange hues,
With no pinks, purples or blues.
Its palette now revised,
With colours improvised,
It's a painting with 7 hidden cues.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

2015 #1

Little cubes of simplicity
Is all I ask for innocently
Smooth touches of sweetness
Keeping me calm, un-restless

Find me buried under blankets
Cuddled with socks and jackets
Find me lost in my misty dreams
As I lie awaiting in crispy gleams

And as I reach out and hold you firm
Making sure from my fingers you don't slip or squirm
My neurotransmitters gush madly within
My axons and leave goosebumps on my skin

So soft and moist
I carefully hoist
You and plop you right onto my tongue

And your migrating goodness teases
My linings it gently appeases
As it trickles down- a molten morsel

Yum.