Thursday, December 30, 2021

The Two-Hundredth


#200


Yet another pretty eventful year! 

Wondering if things would return to the 'old normal', what with the scares of the Delta and Omicron variants despite two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine. Boldly venturing out to malls multiple times in the latter half of the year, while also taking care to stay safe as much as possible with the use of N95 masks and sanitizers.

Friends getting married, lots of them. Some to new people, some to people known earlier but didn't know were dating. Trying things for the first time, such as driving down from Chennai to Bangalore in six hours and making new dishes but also coming back to old things such as re-visiting The Board Room with different groups of friends.

Teammates leaving the old team, me switching to a new team in a new location, interacting with new kinds of people, trying out different roles, lots of unlearning and re-learning in the past six to eight months. Enjoying the roller coaster ride of ups and downs at work. Decluttering the house - out with the old, in with the new - is yet another mood uplifting joyride.

Looking forward to an even more eventful and exciting 2022. May we all have a better year than 2021 and hope to achieve our goals and dreams.


Tuesday, December 28, 2021

83


#199

What a movie! Brilliant screenplay. 

Everybody played their part superbly in recreating this historic moment in Indian cricket. What I enjoyed even more is the audience clapping and cheering for well-played shots, and even clapping during the end credits when pictures of the actual match and post-match moments were shown.

Post the movie, it was interesting to scour YouTube and watch the cricketers relive the moments shown in the movie and how most of them actually happened, some of which turned out to be funny or iconic. For instance, when Kapil Dev said that he placed fielders ‘there, there and there’ and Balvinder Singh Sandhu has absolutely no idea what his captain is talking about and asks ‘where, where and where’. Or when Madan Lal urges Kapil Dev to let him bowl for just one more over when Viv Richards is batting and the captain is hesitant at first but ends up giving it to him. And the rest is history.

The past few movies I’ve watched in the theatre (83, Maanaadu, Spiderman: No Way Home, Doctor) have all turned out to be pretty good. Now I’m back to staying safe at home and catching up on the Marvel movies I haven’t yet watched, such as Ant-Man and Shang-chi.


 

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Mindless Scrolling


#198


With TikTok viewership on the rise especially during the pandemic, I feel we've resorted to watching brainless things even more. When I'm burnt out from work or just want something super lightweight to watch, I tend to aimlessly scroll through YouTube Shorts after I forced myself to uninstall Instagram due to mind-numbing reels.

Well, that didn't work out too well, now did it? Since the same content came up in Shorts too. For instance, watching multiple guys and girls reading random funny tweets, laughing and commenting, stating 'fun facts' which turn out to be not-so-fun while pouring water out of a bottle for no reason at all, and utterly useless 'fails of 2020' clips with the 'oh no, oh no, oh no no no no no' bg music that had gone viral and I suppose still is.

My phone is so smart that it doesn't even have an 'uninstall' option for YouTube and Netflix, but luckily has a 'disable' option instead. Despite all these measures, I do feel ashamed when I give in to temptation and continuously watch these clips for at least an hour. I feel annoyed at myself for not exercising self-control, but at the same time not be able to get myself out of this rut. 

Maybe it'll change, maybe it won't. I just hope I can get myself to watch at least something slightly useful and move away from toxic asininity.


Saturday, December 25, 2021

Blender Mishap


#197


Many a time, I overestimate the capacity of my small blender. Sometimes, when I'm lazy to choose the bigger blender and end up stuffing ingredients into the smaller one to supposedly 'save time', I end up making a huge mess that takes me much much longer to clean up than if I would've spent just a few seconds longer to bring out the bigger blender.

Every time I tell myself that I wouldn't repeat this catastrophe, I still remain none the wiser. Same goes for boiling milk. I use an induction stove with a timer but still end up with spilt milk and a mess I use up so much energy to clean up that if I've just stood there for a little while, despite setting a time limit.

As humans, we tend to explain our behaviours after it has happened saying 'I anyway wanted this so it's good that it happened' phenomenon. Or at least I do. Since I don't clean my kitchen counter as regularly as I'd like to, which is daily or at least every other day, every time this happens, I tend to attribute it to the fact that it needed cleaning anyway.

Maybe it's a way to look at the bright side, or simply something I cook up to bring me solace. Either way, I just hope I someday learn to avoid spillage, or at least reduce the frequency of it to once or twice a year as opposed to few times a month.


Thursday, December 23, 2021

Work, work, work!


#196


Finding work-life balance while working from home is so much more difficult than when we were going to office, or so it feels that way.

When at home all day, never-ending work just seems to manifest itself every hour. Especially the first half of the day.

No matter how fast I train myself to become wrt cooking, cleaning, hanging clothes, et al, somehow the hours just pass by like they were minutes!

And even though I'm 'chilling' so to speak in the second half, time runs by quickly then too. Is it me or has the length of a second dwindled over time? Sure feels that way.

To solve for this, on some days I try to 'eat that frog' and finish the top priority work item by 8AM and only then take up household chores - works well on those days sometimes, but doesn't seem scalable.

Maybe I'll find a panacea and when I do, I'll certainly write about it.


Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Toastmasters Story Contest: My Lockdown Story


#195


For the milestone meeting #600 of the Chennai Wordsmiths Toastmasters Club, there was a story writing contest wherein we had to submit about 600 words on 'my lockdown story.' I won the ice breaker contest (posted on April 2nd) was the first runner-up for the story contest. Here's the story I submitted:

It was a usual morning in the first week of April. I woke up, made breakfast, packed lunch for me and my husband, and started to office in the cab. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary. We’d only heard of something called the coronavirus, a new type of disease that was spreading across China and places like Vietnam and Thailand. Once I reached office, I opened my email, only to find that a company-wide notice sent regarding working from home for the next 2 months. Two months? For this so-called 'epidemic'? Seemed a little strange. Nevertheless, we had to abide by it, and I was more than thrilled about it, because at the start of April, I had just launched my very first blog.

That was the beginning of the reality slowly sinking in. What we thought might just be a passing phase and get over in a couple of months is still ongoing. Wearing masks, social distancing, not meeting people in person, sanitising and washing hands more than usual, all this is now part of this new normal, which might as well be called 'normal' behaviour now. Rather than meeting rooms, we had to find ways to deal with poor internet connections and repeating sentences during office meetings. The one hour gala office lunch was now replaced with 1 22-minute episode of The Big Bang Theory, allowing more time for a siesta.

The months of April and May went by fairly quickly, with regards to writing more than 50 blog posts in a two-month timeline while grappling with the 'new normal' of many more meetings at work. Since I had more time in hand at home, I decided to kick my amateur cooking skills up a notch and experiment with baking in a pan. Also, rather than hastily preparing untasted food which was like a lottery, I was able to fine-tune my regular set of dishes to make them better. Decent cake-baking became the new normal in my house. My husband and I also found a free one to two-hour slot that we called 'board game time', which we utilised to play Scrabble or chess.

So far so good, right? Then came June and July, the toughest months to get by this year. Work suddenly became more hectic, I grew tired of spending half my time in the kitchen, and we started ordering in food a lot more. What’s worse, I couldn’t focus on my blog either! Amidst all this, however, the silver lining was that I had borrowed over 30 books from my parents so I had ample time to catch up on my reading. That kept me going for those two months.

Then came August and September. The start of fresh, new beginnings. I regained my focus, became more organised in most aspects of my life, and indulged myself in daily meditation to make me calm and composed. Since the previous two months had me eating a lot of junk food, I had to tap into my creativity and find ways to bring back healthy eating like oats into my regime, coupled with fitness goals. My immediate goal was to fit into my 'April clothes!' The cashier at the nearby supermarket was initially puzzled at my unusual purchases like flax seeds and brown eggs. Other purchases included Muesli over idli, 'Aval nice' over rice, and ghee over cheese. These two months too, were as exciting as the previous two pairs of months, where I’d taken part actively in new, unique activities. Here too, the silver lining was my finally joining Toasmasters, after giving a pep talk to myself since a year ago! That journey has been great so far too.

Overall, if you look at different aspects, I’ve either improved or stayed reasonably on the better side. My weight alone, if plotted, would look like a normal distribution graph - low in the initial months, peaked for a while after that, and gradually come down to low once reality hit me. Despite this year being an unpredictable roller coaster, I think it went well. Rather than a 'lockdown' story, it has been a 'set free' story for me. I’ve gotten a fresh perspective from being boxed within the house. I’ve rediscovered myself in ways like never before, and become braver, more confident, and a holistic individual.

The lockdown lifestyle has also taught me to appreciate the small things in life. I’ve been ever so grateful to be able to afford the things I can, to be able to spend time with others, at least over the phone, to be able to help those in need, and to find inner peace within myself along with sparking joy in creative output sessions. I hope and pray for those whose lives have not been as enriching or even worse due to this pandemic to get back on their feet as soon as possible. 


Video:




Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Time Loop Movie


#194


For someone with very high standards for liking a movie, I rather enjoyed Maanaadu. Of course I enjoyed the audience's reaction, which was way louder and appreciative for S J Suryah's entry as compared to Simbu's entry, probably unsurprising albeit still interesting.

It was nice to see the Tamil industry deviate from the usual mass and masala movies to an intriguing, slightly intellectual portrayal of time loop. Great to see a lot of the side actors also getting enough screen time as well as fairly meaty roles containing humour. 

Pleasantly surprised and rather amused when Tenet, another time loop (inversion, to be precise) was referenced in this time loop movie. It got interesting post the interval, which brought about a good twist, which makes you wonder how the loop would end.

Overall, a good experience but a one-time watch for me because I already know the story, so the only thing holding me captivated the first time around, the suspense, will no longer be there.


Monday, December 20, 2021

Theatrical Experience!


#193


Watched the Spiderman: No way home movie last week - I liked 'far from home' better but this was more enjoyable mainly due to the fact that the entire theatre in Royapettah, Chennai was filled with Marvel fans who clapped, whistled and cheered every time a scene invoked nostalgia. 

A great trip down memory lane, all the more for those who have watched all the previous Spiderman movies and are familiar with the villains who've appeared in each movie.

As usual, Marvel movies always end with an unexpected twist which is shown post the end credits, and this time too, it did not disappoint, although I think due to the Marvel-lous (:P) audience having watched and been up-to-date with the TV series of each character as well, they kinda sorta knew what was coming.

Whether or not I like the movie has become moot ever since I came to Chennai. The audience's reaction is what makes it a masaledaar experience!