Saturday, March 15, 2008

Sorry for this belated posting. Thanx a million for noticing and plodding me to get back. The thing is I get word-weary. Have had too much of words from childhood to a career that grew on the strength of my words. That’s one of the reasons I simply upped and quit a full-time job, and don’t feel inclined to do a column. Imagine churning out 1,000 words week after week not because you have something to say but jabardasti.
Tragically though, I seem to be never able to get out of wordsmithing. Whatever I do revolves around words, words and more words. Sigh! So, I periodically lay off the blog every few days for a breather…now, I feel like new!
Last week, we had an unlikely visitor. It lay coiled like a black rubber band underneath a table in the unused bedroom. I had already turned the entire house upside down looking for him (or was it her? We’ll settle for `him’ in deference to our male-dominated world, as we don’t know) and was acting on the hubby’s advice of sprinkling phenyl (yes, phenyl) all over to get him out of hiding.
I was dousing the bedroom in this super-smelly liquid, spraying near the bedframe when I spotted him. He was tiny and thin. He had spread himself along the skirting and lay there Zen-like. He would have lain there forever, motionless, had I not summoned people for a look. Once he realized he had company, he stirred, very gently, and gave us the much-needed confirmation that it was indeed him.
All hell then broke loose as we screamed, shrieked and scrambled to the phone, and the security van arrived with three men holding a huge flashlight and hockey sticks. They tried to prise him out of his comfort zone. While they managed to coax him onto the hockey sticks, he refused to make the logical progession into a carry bag. Not even when they sprayed phenyl on him. Instead, he simply bared his fangs. The tiny fellow gave a dekko of his small but distinct hood and everybody took a co-ordinated step back.
It was indeed a baby cobra, the security guys confirmed, that had crawled through the non-existent crack in my main door and slithered purposefully to the farthest corner of our reasonably big house. We would never have known, had not our neighbours been around to witness this housebreak. An earlier inspection by the security guys had yielded nothing as he was virtually invisible to spot.
I shudder to think what would have happened the next morning when my maid swept under the table thinking it’s a long earthworm, or even a rubber band?
But then, such is life. You never know how much of it is left even as we spend every moment asking for more.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Seema ji
just wanted to check out if any of your upcoming articles take notice of Come back of regional cinema , Marathi in particular. TINGYA is the new face of MARATHI cinema, which has already won BEST FIlm and Critic's award at 10th MAMI among host of other prizes at other film festivals. Please let me know, if this is of your interest, i can help you in puting across the Producer , Director of the film if needed.TINGYA is a One More Thought Entertainment Presetation.

Warm Regaards
Nitin Srivastava
Leccors@gmail.com

Smiling Serpent said...

Reminds me of a school trip to Dajipur (or was it Ganpatipule?).

we were camped out in tents and one morning, this rhino just sticks his head in, like you'd stick your head in a colleagues cubicle to borrow a stapler.

we ran out screaming for the teachers, who ran away screaming for the authorities.

then this man walks up, cool as winter in Jammu, and shoes the big guy away like you'd shoo a cow away.

Anonymous said...

I suppose it would be fair to say that between the Congressi and the cobra you'd choose the latter every time!!

Unknown said...

Dear Seema,
Pardoning you for the delayed communication, since you had asked for that, I dont have the habit of reading long writings in the computer sincere, but what you had written has forced me to sitback and read, it has come out from the depth of your heart. It was very sincere and clear expression of what you really think.
My views:
When you criticize the govt and people at power I remember one forward sent to me by you,about the people who represent us in parliament. These criminals are elected by whom? In a civilized society when 25% of the population votes, what more you expect? The so called educated class sit and criticize the system. Are they not a part of the system? who is responsible for the creation of this system? Have you ever sincerely tried to put even a little effort to correct it. We always expect others to protect our interests. I started believing that we are not matured enough to have a democratic rule. One has to understand one's fundamental duties before asking for the rights. A strong leader who can take impartial decisions, keeping the interest of the nation is the need of the hour, he/she should be honest and fearless to impose discipline.

Manmohan or Advani or Mayavati all are the same, none of them have clear vision about the future of the nation.
We need to have some good social reformers with mass appeal.

How right was your mother "the best way to avenge someone is by not giving them place in your thoughts" by doing this, you will save a lot of trouble for yourselves.

" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------