Archive for ◊ December, 2007 ◊

31 Dec 2007 Looking Back: Accomplishments

Damn, this was a hard list to make. I want to set a good example though, so okay, I’ll talk about accomplishments. I want to hear about yours in the comments.

1. I was recognized. Sort of. I was introduced to an acquaintance’s roommate earlier this year, and after hearing my name and that I was a freelance journalist, she said, “Wait a second,” went into her room, and came back with a copy of that month’s Marie Claire. She opened it up to the page of my article and almost screamed, “Oh my God! This is YOU!”

2. I was interviewed by NPR. This is an accomplishment not just because it’s NPR, but also because they found me through my work. And liked it enough to want to talk to me about it. The producer initially contacted me to find out about my work as a female journalist in India and the dangers involved in it after I blogged (yes, blogged!) about my experiences in Surat.

3. I traveled solo quite a bit, especially during the first half of the year. This isn’t an accomplishment, really, but for some reason, I thought of the first time I traveled on assignment about two years ago. I wasn’t alone– there was a photographer, a guide, and most things had been taken care of. But looking back– gosh, was I ever really that stupid? I do things very very differently now. And that, most certainly is an accomplishment.

4. Speaking of photographers, I got hired as one. An editor saw some pictures I’d taken (for myself, not for publication), assured me they were fit for publication, and offered me rates that are higher than the rates she’s offered any of the professional photojournalists I’ve worked with!

5. I learned the art of detachment. Sometimes by will, sometimes by force. But mostly, I thought of the few things I’m attached to or obsessive about, and tried living without them. For instance, I love rings– I’m currently wearing six. So I took them off– all of them– for a few months. Or, you know how I’m attached to my books, right? I started giving them away. I’d joined Bookmooch.com last year, but hadn’t really listed books that I was fond of. This year, I listed all of them, and gave away some of my very favorite ones. It may sound weird, but it really did help me detach from not only material things, but other stuff as well.

6. I beat my workaholic tendencies and took a long vacation. I felt no guilt.

7. I broke into some new publications, made good money, learned several new things, and am basically satisfied with the kind of work I did and am doing.

8. I spent New Year’s Eve 2006 with a person I didn’t want to be with, in a situation I didn’t want to be in, at a place where I didn’t want to be at. On a road in the middle of nowhere, caught in the fog, feeling claustrophobic– physically, mentally, emotionally. My biggest accomplishment this year is that New Year’s Eve 2007 will be the exact opposite.

30 Dec 2007 Top Book Picks for 2007

I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night if I didn’t give out book recommendations before the year end. It was a tough decision, but I have, after many many hours of deliberation, chosen my top picks of 2007.

The books I chose from were the books I read this year (no, you don’t get to see the full list), and I haven’t considered when they were published. The finalists are books that made me laugh, touched me, or changed me in some way. An important factor was also how painful it was to give some of them away (I give away ALL my books).

There were 80 contenders. 6 finalists. One clear winner. Here then, are my choices:
.

6. Naked by David Sedaris

5. Artist’s Way: A Spiritual Way to Higher Creativity by Julia Cameron

4. The Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan

3. The Pact: A Love Story by Jodi Picoult

2. Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith by Anne Lamott

And the winner is …

1. Sputnik Sweetheart by Haruki Murakami

29 Dec 2007 Looking Back: Failures

Like most writers, I find it easier to list my failures than I do my successes. But there’s one exceptionally wonderful quality I have– I can find the positive in almost any situation. What that means is that even though it’s easy for me to list where I’ve failed, it’s equally easy for me to spot the good that’s come from it.

A lot of successful writers will advise you to look back on the year and list your accomplishments. We’ll do that tomorrow. Today, I want you to list your failures, your setbacks and your disappointments, and then I want you to examine them closely and come up with two things: the good that came from them and the lessons you learned.

I’ll go first.

***

What Happened: I moved to Mumbai. I didn’t like my life there. I moved back to Delhi. I felt like a complete loser. Not only had I disrupted my own life, but of those around me, and I had failed miserably in all my relationships. Again. Of course, this failure was all in my own head, and the people around me were all very supportive and understanding of my choices. Looking back, I’m extremely glad I moved. I’m also extremely glad that I didn’t stay for long. But at the time I felt like the most ridiculously indecisive person on the planet.

The Good That Came From It: (1) I met a few of my editors in person.
(2) I fell head over heels in love with Mumbai. I had visited the city before, but never really experienced it. I now plan to visit every year.
(3) I realized how much I love and miss Delhi. I always said I hated Delhi and couldn’t wait to leave. It was in Mumbai that I understood how attached I am to this place.
(4) It is solely because of my experience in Mumbai of starting a new life that I have come to my current decision. Consider this my official announcement: I’m moving again. (I’m not at liberty to disclose anything else at this point. Soon though. Very soon.)

Lesson Learned: If you’ve made the wrong decision, accept it and change it. Don’t let ego stand in the way of good sense.

***

What Happened: Without going into too many details, an idea for an series I’d been working on for over a year and had trusted a colleague with, was stolen. The person took a small but important part of the series, which meant that even though I’d eventually be able to do it, it would be old news. I will, as a rule, never touch a story that’s already been published in national media, so this was a huge setback for me.

The Good That Came From It: (1) I was so angry, so upset about this incident, that I immediately went into overwork zone. If my ideas were so great that they had to be stolen, I would come up with a hundred, dammit. You know what? I sat down in front of my computer for two days, and didn’t get up until I had come up with one hundred ideas. I kid you not. One hundred. I have since pursued some of them, and am working on others. My list has grown even more, and since these are important and timely stories, I’m actually asking some of my writer and photographer friends to do them instead.
(2) After I got some perspective on the situation, I realized that my series wasn’t really going anywhere. The person had taken one part of it, but I still had hundreds of pages of research and notes and no clear organization. I broke up my series and started pitching stand-alone pieces. These have since earned me assignments from at least five international publications that I’d been dying to break into.
(3) After a few weeks, I e-mailed the editor of the publication where the colleague had published the story, and sent him some ideas. He has since given me work and become a good friend. He has also introduced me to more editors at that publication.
(4) A friend said it best: “That’ll teach you to sit on an idea for a year and then open your big mouth.” Indeed.

Lesson Learned: What happens happens. If you can’t change it, figure out how to benefit from it.

***

What Happened: I quit journalism. It was due to a variety of factors: I learned that people I had been working with had acted unethically repeatedly, I’d been stabbed in the back too many times by too many people, and the depressing stories I worked on were beginning to have a personal affect on me. I didn’t make any official announcements, but stopped pitching, and instead started working on a novel. I wrote about 20,000 words.

The Good That Came From It: (1) I was missed. I was told I was missed. My editors asked me why I hadn’t been sending story ideas, when I would be back to work, and some came up with ideas of their own that they wanted me to do. I won’t lie. It felt fantastic. (I rejected the work though.)
(2) I’ve always said I’ve wanted to write a novel. I never truly believed I had it in me. Now I’m sure I do. I will finish that novel one day, but…
(3) I got distracted. By journalism. I have sources in some communities who call me when something of interest happens. I received one such call from a source. It was for a story I had been thinking about for months, and had asked him to tell me more about it. He had some new information and his call came at a time when I couldn’t be less interested. Yet, I spent an hour on the phone with him asking questions, and jotting down names and numbers. By the time the next day rolled around, I had done sufficient research on the topic to know there was a brilliant story there. And what do you know– one of my editors loved the idea as much as I did and immediately handed me the assignment.

Lesson Learned: The novel will have to wait. My true love (for now) is journalism.

***

Anyone else want to share their failures?

25 Dec 2007 Merry Christmas

Merry Christmas, everyone!

I have a present for one special reader. A reader of this blog mentioned on her own blog recently that one of her goals in 2008 is to get published in Writer’s Digest. As someone who has twice been published in WD, and has the same goal for 2008, I’m offering to help her reach her goal.

What I will do:
-> I will discuss her ideas with her, and give my opinions on whether or not they work and why.
-> I will critique her query letters. I will show her some of my own.
-> I will show her my techniques for finding editor information and keeping constant contact.
-> I will guide her towards my resources, both online and offline.
-> I will continue to help her until she reaches the goal of publication, no matter if it takes one week or the whole year.

What I will not do:
-> Come up with ideas for her, write her query/article, or do her research.
-> Give her contact information. (I’ll teach her how to find it though.)

At the end of this, I have only one request: that she pass it forward. I will respect her privacy, but if she chooses to share what she’s learned with the readers of this blog, I’d be thrilled. If not, she can help another writer in the same way.

Why I have chosen this reader:
-> She was serious enough about her goal to blog about it.
-> She wasn’t afraid of public embarrassment. I respect that immensely.
-> She comments on this blog frequently.

So there it is. I’ll have a follow-up on this soon.

24 Dec 2007 A Spin Around Mumbai – Part II
 |  Category: Life, Love, Writing  | Tags: ,  | 5 Comments

Notes from my Mumbai journal continued. See Part I here:
http://www.mridukhullar.com/journal/2007/12/23/mumbai-i/

Touching all senses

I’m woken up daily by the sound of the doorbell. For the middle class in Mumbai, there’s a person to take care of everything—there’s the breadwala, the doodhwala, the sabziwala, the garbagewala, the laundrywala, and other assorted “walas.” They all arrive bright and chirpy every morning. They wake me up from my sleep and it’s their faces on my mind as I drift back into sweet slumber.

The smell of fish is something I never get used to. I live right opposite the docks, and each morning and evening, the smell of fish seeps its way through the tiny openings of the window sill. There are days when I’m woken up by the stench. Everything then, to me, reeks of fish—my clothes, my bed, my skin. I drown it out by using obnoxious amounts of deodorant. And it’s only when I leave the city that I realize the smell isn’t stuck in my clothes. It’s stuck in my head.

As I walk down the street opposite the Victoria Terminus, I spot swamis—destitute and forlorn—sitting by the side of the road, waiting for someone to stretch out a palm, so they can predict a future.

I reluctantly open up my hand for one such astrologer. He thinks I’m interested in knowing about my life. The truth is, I’m more interested in knowing about his.

Looking at my palm, he tells me I will get married for love (as opposed to having an arranged marriage), live abroad and have a very successful career. He stresses repeatedly that I’m blunt, independent and obsessive, which are bad qualities for relationships, but great qualities for career success. You’re too restless, he says. You haven’t even settled in one place that you’re ready to move on to the next. You keep searching in the hope that you’ll find perfection and peace. But you don’t. And you won’t. Because peace isn’t outside of you.

He gives me advice on how to avoid the quickly-in-quickly-out syndrome in my relationships and fills me in on my lucky numbers, days and birth stones.

For Rs 51, I get my life story. And his.

Narayan Joshi is in his mid-thirties, has a wife and two kids and has been practicing palmistry for the past fifteen years. “Why do you do this work?” I ask, expecting some deep, philosophical bullshit about how he’s helping people find their destiny.

“Survival,” he says. “I’m not equipped to do anything else. My grandfather did this, my father did this, and now I’m doing it.” He worked in a hotel for a little while, where visitors could get their fortunes told, but he was soon made redundant and found his way back on to the street. “All I’m doing is looking at your palm and telling you what you already know,” he says. “But human beings need that reinforcement and faith.”

“You care about people,” is the last thing he says to me. And this time, he’s not looking at my palm.

Bollywood calling

After three weeks in the city, I haven’t yet spotted a celebrity and I’m quite bummed by that. I ask Siddharth if he’s ever seen any celebrities wandering about. “All the time,” he says. “It’s really no big deal. You’ll be at a red light, and Salman Khan will be in the car next to you.” He says this without any hint of excitement. In fact, he’s quite bored. He’s had this conversation with visitors to the city several times before.

Another friend later tells me why this is. “We’re so used to having celebrities walking around here that it’s no more a novelty,” he says. “The person you’re going to brag to has probably seen a dozen more stars than you have.” They’re not obsessed with Bollywood, he says. Yet, when Aishwarya Rai and Abhishek Bachchan, the latest Bollywood sensations get engaged, it’s front page news in the national dailies.

Each time I walk down Fashion Street, one of the top garment markets in the city, vendors compete for my attention, barking various variations of “I show you Rani jeans. Not want? How about Kareena jeans? Sania top?” I soon make it a hobby to guess which starlet will inspire the next brand of jeans.

But for every one person who’s spotted a celebrity, are ten who pretend to have. I’m sitting with my friend Shruti at her jewelry show one evening, when a woman with an expensive phone and fake accent walks in. “What man, effing Shah Rukh Khan didn’t show up for the damn party,” she says, fully aware of the many pairs of eyes on her. Shruti smirks. It’s quite possible that effing Shah Rukh Khan didn’t show up for the damn party, but it’s also equally likely that the whole conversation has been fabricated for the benefit of the people at the show. That’s another thing about Mumbaikers. They like throwing around names.

Sri, a twenty-something actor, originally from a small village in Haryana and now in Mumbai to become the next big thing, tells me very proudly that he works out at the same gym as John Abraham. He may not have the bulging biceps, the six-pack or the lean body, but he works out at the same gym as someone who does. He’s fit by association.

Like many in the city, Sri came here six years ago to “make it big” in the movies. So far, he’s done one television soap and has been offered a small role in a foreign English movie. Sri started out well, and at the peak of his career, fielded calls from the likes of Yash Chopra. But the film that convinced him of his star status fell through even before the shooting started, and he regrets having rudely rejected the small role Chopra offered him. Now he calls Chopra’s office every week but isn’t given the time of day. Sri, because of his choices, is once again a struggler.

We’re having dinner at the house of my friends Nik and Raj one day, and Sri comes in with news. He’s been offered a big role in a high-budget movie. The problem: he’ll be required to play the part of a eunuch.

“You’re an artist,” Nik advises. “Take the role. And be the best eunuch there ever was.”

Sri thinks about this for a while.

“Nah,” he finally decides. “Screw art. I want the glamor and money of the hero.”

Nik knows of what she speaks, having worked on the production side of the television and movie industry for years. It’s been a case of all or nothing for her, too. With her, I visit a production house that’s starting the shoot of a new television series. Nik’s been looking for work for months, but nothing has materialized. This time however, she knows she’ll get in. She’s come with a “contact.”

Sure enough, as soon as she’s done name-dropping, we’re offered cookies and tea. Nik doesn’t have a resume on her. She doesn’t talk about her past accomplishments. She doesn’t need to come up with reasons why she’s the best person for the job. But Nik is hired. Because she’s come with the one thing others don’t have—the personal reference of the producer.

I’m still whining about not having spotted any celebrities, so on my last day in the city, Nik and Raj take me over to see the next best thing—a bungalow that’s often used as a movie set. I won’t see the workers, but I’ll sure as hell see their place of work. In order to get in, Nik and I make up a story about how we’re checking out the location, and Nik with her industry knowledge is able to smoothly talk her way into meeting the owner. He’s not too keen on renting out the place again, saying that movie crews with their heavy equipment damage his property beyond repair. But he agrees to give it to us for a day, since we’re only doing a short film for the Cannes film festival.

“You didn’t bullshit too much, did you?” a worried Raj asks us as we walk smugly out to where he’s waiting and get into a cab. He’s just found out that the bungalow is rigged with cameras.

Mumbai’s cab drivers, like the cab drivers in most cities, are an accurate reflection of the people who live here. They’re smart, they’re in a perpetual state of hurry, and they help out when they see someone in trouble. The small spaces in their cabs are their own—decorated with photographs of their families, humorous ornaments or religious shrines.

I get out of one of my last cab rides in the city, and can’t resist the temptation. “Bhaiya,” I say. “Have you ever had any Bollywood stars sit in your cab?”

“Oh no, they have their own cars,” he replies. “But I did see Anil Kapoor at Film City last week.”

23 Dec 2007 A Spin Around Mumbai – Part I

In early 2007, owing to a personal problem that seemed like a massive disaster at the time, but would prove to be a temporary setback, I made a hasty decision, packed up everything I owned and moved to Mumbai. As much as I loved the city, I found the arrangement not quite working for me. I was desperately homesick, work seemed sparse, and I had finally found the courage to face up to the massive disaster back in Delhi. So I made another hasty decision (the right one this time), re-packed everything I owned, and moved back.

I spent about a month in Mumbai. Despite the setbacks and indecision, it was a fabulous month, full of exploration, meeting new people and being intrigued by a city that I’ll always remember fondly.

I’m sharing here a few notes from my Mumbai journal.

Mumbai is movement. A transition. A place where people come to follow their dreams, mend their broken hearts, escape from orthodox families. It promises freedom, new beginnings, and another chance at life. It’s a city that never sits still. Like the people, it’s constantly changing, constantly shifting, taking on new roles. As the business city. The entertainment city. The sin city.

If you’re on a boat in the sea one day and see no warm bodies around you for miles, you might begin to wonder where all the people are. What is this huge population that writers and poets speak of, you may think. Head over to the Andheri local train station. They’re there. All twelve million of them. You can smell their sweaty underarms, feel their wet shirts pressing against your skin, inhale the air they’ve breathed out. The trains are packed to every inch of their capacity. Watching people disembark is like watching someone stick their hand into a beehive and a swarm of bees rushing out. I become one of those bees each morning on my visits around the city.

One morning, I head over to a magazine stall to get the latest issue of my favorite magazine. “Khallas!” the guy says somewhat over-enthusiastically. “Khallas?” I ask confused, and he explains that he means he’s out of stock. “You’re not from Mumbai, are you?” he laughs. “You speak such pure Hindi. No one talks like that here.” Of course, this very pure Hindi is what gets me robbed blind by the cab driver at the airport as soon as I’ve set foot in the city. I hand him a Rs. 500 note, which he slickly slides under his hand and says, “Madummm…. You only give me Rs. 100.” I’m not dumb, but after making quite the scene, I’m forced to give in and pay him more.

Within days, I have successfully managed to forget the rules of grammar and learn the localized Hindi. Like everything else in Mumbai, the language is meant to save time and communicate fast.

My friend Siddharth explains this to me. “Let’s say you have to travel to Bandra by train and you go to the ticket counter and say Bandra. The person at the ticket counter will then ask you whether you want a return (two-way) or single (one-way) and you’ll tell him your preference. This wastes a lot of time. So seasoned travelers, when they want to travel both ways say ‘Bandra return.’ However, if you only want to go one way, you’d only say Bandra, and the whole dialogue would ensue again. So, instead, for a one-way ticket, you say ‘Bandra half-return.’ This saves several precious moments.”

Similarly, a half glass of tea from a friendly roadside vendor is called a “cutting chai.” But if you’re fond of the stuff enough to want a full glass, you won’t just ask for a full glass of tea and waste everyone’s time. You ask for a “double cutting chai.” A friend later says a three-fourth glass of tea is a cutting chai. I play it safe. I say “ek chai.”

By the time I’ve completed my month in the city, I manage to get the hang of the local slang and have blended in quite nicely. My butt isn’t pinched. Cabbies don’t rob me blind. The waiter at the restaurant where I dine no longer asks me if someone will be joining me. With my newly-learned bad Hindi, I become one of them. I am no longer the foreigner in this fast-paced city of foreigners.

Alone in the crowd

Every time I feel the need to lose myself in a crowd, I head over to a café on Colaba Causeway, the Juhu beach, or the Lokhandwala market. In the moments I crave solitude, the rocky stretch of the Marine Drive is my favorite spot to sit, observe and write.

I realize I’m in Mumbai, a city of tall buildings that are as close to each other as is physically possible, and hence cannot expect any shred of privacy, even in my home. I dutifully draw the curtains before I change my clothes or practice dance moves to loud music.

My neighbors though, have no such qualms. Through my open windows, I spot a young woman stitching clothes on a sewing machine, a middle-aged man sprawled on the floor in front of his television, and an elderly couple who, every evening between four and five p.m., pull back the shades, look outside, and talk to each other over steaming cups of tea.

As I lie in my bed and read at night, I can hear the sounds of the paan chewer spitting out the red seeds on to the street, the overflowing of water from someone’s tank, children arguing with each other, and the noises of buses, cars and motorbikes on the road. They’re a constant reminder that even in my solitude, I’m never truly alone.

I wander around the docks one evening, the smell of fish enveloping me, aware of the curious gazes of fishermen and women that last much longer than they should. Boats are scattered across the waters, and act as homes for many fishermen who go out for days at a time to catch fish from the deep waters.

On one such boat, a fisherman bathes. A bucket of water sits in front of him, and he pours the water with a tumbler over himself. In the split second that I spot him and he catches me looking, we share an embarrassed laugh. It’s not everyday that his bathing is interrupted by a chick with a camera. I wave a quick sorry and goodbye to him pretending I don’t see that he’s standing in nothing but wet trunks and soap running all over his body.

Space is a precious commodity in Mumbai, as renters who pay India’s highest rates will tell you. But more than anywhere, here I find a sense of personal boundaries, a wanting of privacy and space to claim as your own. We may draw our curtains when we want to get intimate, we may pretend the couple who drinks tea each evening can’t see us cooking in our own kitchen, we may even bathe in public. But that one meter of space around us is our own. And when invaded and embarrassed, we do what we best know how: we laugh.

To be continued…