Saturday, March 16, 2013

DDLJ: Falling in Love, A Thousand Times Over



You may have first seen the movie at the age of thirty-six, like my mom was, or at five, like I was. And then you saw it again. And again. And one more time. And a time after that too. If you're one who loves some mushy romance, DDLJ is the epitome of them all. As someone who's always been in love with the idea of falling in love, I can say that DDLJ was definitely my first love, and Raj, my first crush. (If you don't know what DDLJ stands for or who Raj is, you can stop reading now..) Yes, I may have been just five the first time, but having seen the movie a thousand times after that, I can tell you my love wasn't just a stupid childhood dream.

(And yes, my mom may make all the faces she wants when I watch the movie now, but she still hasn't forgiven me for making her miss the song Zara Sa Jhoom Loon Main when we saw the movie in the theatre!)


Simran taught me that it's great to dream about your ideal love, to wish for that perfect guy....and sometimes, your wish could come true. 

Who wouldn't want this??! :P 

You're missing the train, and there'll be that one hand that will be there to help....


He'll tease you and joke around with you.....

 He'll make you dance with him...


You both will get drunk and celebrate with a song.....

When Raj says "Palat" you melt and have to listen to his heart's desire....


And no matter how many times you deny it, "Ho gaya hai tujhko toh pyaar sajna.."

After all, "....Pyar hota hai deewana sanam..."

He'll fast with you and for you...

And face your very scary, big-eyed father....because in the end....

The braveheart will take the bride! (Yes, that's the literal translation!)

Here's to many more years of singing along with the songs, reciting all the dialogues, dreaming of a Raj-like man, and of course, falling in love with love.....

"Bade bade deshon mein aisi choti choti baatein hoti rehti hain..."
-Raj Malhotra
 
Pictures Source: Google Images

 
 

Monday, March 11, 2013

Victory - Part II



“Heavy shelling by Pakistan army damages ammunition dump in Kargil,” the news channels flashed an update.  Namrata didn’t know what to feel. Should she be scared, be tense for her nation that was waging a fierce battle with its neighbour; or should she be happy – the longer the war went on, the longer her freedom would last. Freedom from all those phone calls she used to be bombarded with, freedom from the minute by minute updates her husband demanded of her. She didn’t have to worry if she misplaced something, for there was no one to shout at her for it. She wasn’t scared to talk to her friends, for there was no one she had to report her conversations to. It was this newfound freedom that gave her the strength to think about herself, about her own life, for the first time in eight years.
‘He’s not a bad person,’ she wrote in her diary, the only piece of her life she had managed to keep hidden from her husband. ‘I know he loves me…it’s his love that makes him behave like this. But I can’t stand it anymore…being stuck here. Being possessive is one thing, but controlling your wife’s life is another. He hates it when I cry, but can’t he see that he’s the sole reason for my tears? Cards, flowers, fancy dinners…yes I love all that, but a wife needs a little more than that. I need my space. I need space to live…to breathe. Really, is there such a thing as too much love? Can love really kill?
Is there such a thing as too much love?
Picture Credit: Google Images
 I’ve been dying from inside for so long…these few days with Nikhil unable to contact me have been like a blessing. I do love him…but he loves me just a little too much, and that scares me…I need to break free, I want to fly… 
_________________________________________
 “Indian Air Force loses two fighters; soldiers taken as Prisoners of War,” the news continued to flash each day, and without any sign of conclusion in sight. The longer the war went on, the longer was Namrata’s life as a free bird. She knew this, and so did her husband. 
Nikhil could not sleep at night. The bullets, the firing and the dead bodies were not responsible for his insomnia. He was used to the sound of gunshots, and was prepared for anything that came his way. But Namrata was away from him, miles away, and he had no permission or means to communicate with her. What was she doing every day? Where is she? Does she miss me? Is she scared that I may die? Not a single letter from home, no message or telegram whatsoever. He caught her crying a few nights before he left, and thought maybe that was the reason for her silence. Why was she crying, though? He knew he was not the reason. He was never the reason for her tears.
The war went on, and Major Kapoor, with determination in his bloodshot eyes, continued to take on the enemy. Far away in Delhi, Namrata was fighting her own war.
_________________________________________
She took out the previous year’s diary, and as she turned each page, Namrata relived a new memory. Why couldn’t she find any words written down, that expressed happiness or excitement? There were pages of her diary where the ink was smudged. Page by page, she flipped through it, finding nothing of novelty to read. She reached the end of the book.
 “Namu, what was the need to invite them over? Why do you need other people?” Nikhil asked in his saccharine tone, holding his wife’s hand.
It was New Year’s Eve of 1999, and Namrata had invited the neighbours over for dinner, to bring in the last year of the decade.
“I thought it would be nice to have friends over, we could spend some time with them and get to know them better.”
“Why do want them with you? We are there for each other. We can have such a nice evening alone. Why don’t you cancel the plan?” Nikhil insisted, holding her hand a little tighter. 
Namrata expected this to happen. How many times before had he explained to her that he was the only one she needed to be happy? She called up her neighbour and lied about Nikhil having an important function that was necessary for them to attend.
Once again they spent the occasion, like every other New Year’s Eve, Diwali, birthday and anniversary, all by themselves, with Nikhil’s love being enough for the both of them to survive on.
Namrata closed the diary and sighed to herself.
 _________________________________________
It was the first day of June, and this new month beckoned a new dawn in Namrata’s life. She went to work and was not troubled by phone calls and messages every hour. She missed this life, where she could walk about anywhere and do anything without having someone following her every move.
In these eight years, she never had the courage to speak up for herself. Of course, she had spoken to Nikhil years ago about his behaviour, but he paid no heed to it. She too, made up her mind to live with whatever came her way. But today, as she was finally learning how to live again, she felt a different kind of joy. She missed this kind of freedom, this new lease of life.
“I’ll support you, no matter what, you know that Beta,” Poonam assured her. “It’s your happiness that is most important. If you feel that there’s no other way, that he won’t understand, then it’s better to end it.”
Namrata loved her mother so very much, she couldn’t put it into words. She probably would not have taken such a step without her encouragement and support. She always wondered what the reason was for God to take her loving father away when she was merely thirteen-years-old – it taught her mother how to live independently, and happily. She knew her mother would understand her heart’s cries. Today, she thought of the mystical bird she read about in her childhood storybooks, the one that burns itself down to ashes, from which a new life begins.
In Kargil, the Indian army was fast capturing Tiger Hill, a mission that was extremely important for the country’s protectors to complete successfully. Major Kapoor was a part of this mission, and his wife, back home, was climbing to her own mountain peak.  In the two months that she spent away from her husband, Namrata lived the past eight years of her life again. This time, the way she wanted to. It was like running through a large meadow – a wide open space to run freely and no one could stop her. She didn’t want this feeling to end.
“We recaptured point 5100 and 5060 at the hill. Over.” Major Nikhil always rejoiced when he was in possession of something dearly important to him. The War, he knew, would soon be over and he could go back to his wife, whose touch he missed, whose face he looked at daily, in the motionless photograph kept near his bunker. 
 _________________________________________
Namrata picked up the white marble frame and headed to the bedroom. It was in a mess as always. Nikhil liked things organised and neat, but no matter how tidy she kept the room, he would have an issue with it. Unfolded clothes, some still slightly damp, lay on a chair, and ironed ones lay beside the ironing board. The morning newspaper was lying on the bed, with the headline Operation Vijay a Success: Kargil War to End Soon written across in bold letters. She picked it up and threw it aside along with her wedding photograph, collected her knick-knacks from the dresser and dumped them in a bag.
 Namrata heaved her bag off the bed, strolled it across the floor, and turning back for one look at the portrait of her husband, walked out of the house. The phoenix had risen. 
                             -------XXX----
 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Victory - Part I

I wrote this short story as part of my Creative Writing course in college, and completed it after many days of procrastinating and facing an acute case of writer's block ! I do hope you like it. Criticism is welcome! :) 



Namrata opened the door with her set of keys, the little heart keychain hitting the wooden door, making the only sound she heard in the otherwise deserted hallway. She stepped into the house and like every day, Nikhil’s painting on the passage wall welcomed her in. It was the one painting among the many that adorned the walls of her house, that she disliked. Portraits capture personalities, she felt, and this one showed neither his infectious smile nor his true nature.

______________________________________________

“I will not tolerate this behaviour, Major Kapoor. We are in a state of war with Pakistan. You have to be prepared for anything. I can’t let you hover near the phone and the mail systems all the time. Either forget about your family, or go home. I can’t have one of my best officers constantly trying to get in touch with his wife when the country needs him,” Brigadier Khanna reprimanded Nikhil, who listened in silence, his head lowered in shame.

Major Nikhil Kapoor did always put his nation before anything or anyone else. It was one of the prime reasons that he joined the army at the young age of twenty. But now there was someone else who needed him as much. Everyone who was a part of Nikhil’s life knew how much his job meant to him. They knew what he thought of his ancestors, the many freedom fighters who gave their lives to make sure India was free one day. He too, thought there to be no greater job than service to the nation. The expression on his face, the way his chest swelled with pride whenever he wore his uniform said it all. If only his wife understood.

“I’m sorry, Sir, it will not happen again. It’s just that I received a message from my wife and wanted to talk to her for a few minutes,” Nikhil explained.  

“A few minutes are what we don’t have, Major Kapoor. Now get back to your post immediately and get your battalion in order. Now!” Brigadier Khanna’s stern tone signified a note of finality.

Nikhil saluted his senior and retreated from the room. A million thoughts were racing through his mind as he changed into his army gear, Namrata’s behaviour being one of them. He never knew, until a few hours before, that there would come a day when he would have to choose between the two things that he revered the most – his marriage and his nation. Little did he know, that miles away in Bombay, his wife had already made her choice.

______________________________________________

Namrata walked on ahead, past the many bookcases lined against the wall, the shelves of which contained hundreds of different books – each one had been a companion to her. Past the photo frames she walked- a picture of them on their honeymoon, one of her on her first birthday after marriage, and her favourite- their wedding photo, in which Nikhil flashed a great smile for the camera as his new bride leaned forward to kiss him. It brought a wry smile on her face, as it had every time she looked at it. It brought back memories of all the happy times, and all her wedding anniversaries, including her last one, that she remembered as though it was yesterday. 

Namrata woke up, as always, ten minutes before her alarm clock rang. She reached for her spectacles on the bedside table, only to find a bouquet of roses sitting there. She wore her glasses and sat up to read the card. “Darling Namu,” she read in Nikhil’s impeccable handwriting, “Happy 8th Wedding Anniversary…Lots of love, Nikhil.” She smiled to herself, kept the card back on the table and took in the beautiful smell of the blooming flowers, the fragrance of which now filled the room, before getting out of bed to get ready for work.

It had been eight years, eight happy years of married life for Namrata and Nikhil. Her husband was, in the eyes of the world, every girl’s perfect man. Their marriage too, seemed like a dream to anyone who knew them. But this, she thought, was the biggest problem – this dream was her reality, and she was beginning to hate it.

Theirs was an arranged marriage. Namrata was introduced to the boy by her aunt, whose only goal in life was to get all the girls she knew suitable husbands, and after they were married, badger them to have lots of children.

“But I don’t want to marry a stranger. I’m going to have a love marriage!” Clearly, Hindi movies were a great influence in her life. Little did she know that she would be swept off her feet by the first man she was to meet. Their first encounter was at her aunt’s sprawling house in Delhi. As they walked around the garden, with just the lush trees and Bougainvillea plants for company, they spoke about their lives, hobbies and aspirations. She observed his every movement, from the way he carried himself, to the sight of his breath that formed a cloud in front of his mouth whenever he spoke. A year-and-a-half after that cold January morning, Namrata and Nikhil were wedded in holy matrimony.

They had a quiet dinner at a fancy restaurant, as they did on every anniversary. He spoke to her about his day – a few years ago she would probably have shown interest, but today all these conversations seemed mundane to her. They got home and he fell asleep as soon as his head hit the pillow, but Namrata stayed up to write her daily diary. She opened to the date, 5th May 1999, and penned down her words. For days now, it was less about the happenings in her life and more about her feelings. An hour later, she switched off her bedside lamp and messaged her mother- “I’ll tell him tomorrow,” before she too went to sleep. But her chance had never come.

Nikhil put on his freshly washed and ironed uniform and waited for the army jeep to arrive.

“Where are you headed to, so early in the morning?” Namrata, still rubbing her eyes, asked her husband.

“I’m sorry Namu, I got a call from the Brigadier. Have to leave immediately,” he said as her held her tightly to kiss her goodbye, and then left.

India and Pakistan were at war in Kargil, and Namrata wasn’t sure whether she’d ever see her husband again. She wasn’t even sure she wanted to. 
                ______________________________________________

“I can’t live like this anymore, Mumma. It’s over.” Namrata cried, as she sat curled up at her mother’s feet. “I thought marriage would be wonderful, it’d be like a new life. But this is not what I wanted. My house is not a house, it’s a cage.”

Namrata wasn’t the only one whose dream was shattered. Poonam, who loved her daughter the most out of all her children, was shocked. Never did her daughter make it known to her that she was upset, or trapped. Why couldn’t she see it, though? How had her motherly instinct failed her? All those times that Namrata came to her mother’s house, she was barraged by incessant phone calls from Nikhil. When they were together, Nikhil hardly ever let Namrata out of his sight. All the mother’s eyes saw, was a loving husband, a caring partner. Now that she looked back, she thought that was probably what her heart wanted her to see. They never saw, however, the bird caged by its master, raging, biting to break free. Today, that bird was begging for a chance to fly.  As this realisation dawned on Poonam, her daughter fell asleep in her lap, her face still wet with tears. 

 Part II-Coming Soon...