Saturday, June 9, 2007

More movies

This blog, meant to be an outlet for my inner mind, seems to have become a veritable movie review page! If you haven't felt so already, I might just be giving you the reason to decide so. I'm writing about movies, again! Over the past month, I watched about half a dozen movies, most of them run of the mill, but two were outstanding. One was an English movie from the year 2006 starring Hugo Weaving and the other was a Bollywood flick. The contrast between the two movies could not have been greater, but then, they were from totally different genres and each shone in its own right.
The first one, the Hollywood flick, was V for Vendetta. I have not read the graphic novel by the same name, so I would not be able to comment about how 'true' the director of the movie has stayed, with respect to the original content, but the product looks very slick and well made, and Hugo Weaving (Agent Smith of Matrix fame), with his impeccable English and style of dialog has truly performed brilliantly. His face is never shown in the movie, as he is always masked. Many other actors who were earlier considered for this role had their reservations about the assignment, but Weaving has pulled it off like nobody else could have. Set in the 2030s, the movie is set in a world in which England is the sole superpower in the world, with the mighty US of A being reduced to a pauper state thanks to their itchy nuclear trigger-fingers and their 'Godlessness', as accused by a character in the movie called the 'Voice of London'. It chronicles the efforts of a man who is only known as 'V', to usher anarchy in the place of the totalitarian rule that has come over England, portrayed in the movie as the all-powerful state. The movie raises interesting questions and watching it was a treat after being forced to watch movie after movie showing Americans saving the entire world from Aliens, Monster Creatures, and Alien Monster Creatures. Whew!

The other movie, the Bollywood flick, was called 'Ek Chaalis ki last local' (The last local train, 0140hrs). It was rated very poorly by the critics of almost all newspapers, but I enjoyed the movie immensely. Over the years, I have learned to never depend on the reviews provided by the newspapers. In any case, tastes in movies, food, art and reading differ from person to person and I still don't know why so many people think that these reviews are sacrosanct. Reviewing is an art, wherein the person has to try his or her best not to bring in personal biases and personal opinions into the review. I never write reviews. I only write my perception of the movies in my blogs. This gives me the right to be as opinionated as I want to, but people writing reviews ought to refrain from that, but they seem to be carried away by the power their words wield. 'With great power comes great responsibility' goes a famous quote, but it seems to be ignored by these reviewers. So, let me stop bashing up these reviewers, and get on to what I loved about the movie.
The pace was really slick, with hardly a single slack frame in the entire movie (about 2 hours and 20 minutes of running time). The twists and turns in the movie are very well executed, meaning that one can never guess what is going to happen in the next frame! The comedy is spot on, the picturisation is stark and without any unwanted excesses and all the actors (most of them unfamiliar) have done a brilliant job. The characters of the Police inspector, the crazy gangster-woman, the myriad goons and gangsters have all been well sketched and the casting is perfect.
The story itself is highly original. It charts the crazy fortunes of the protagonist after he misses the last local train for the day at 0140 hrs from Kurla to Vikhroli (places in Mumbai, India) . The next train is almost four hours later, the first train of the next day, at 0430 hrs. As he ponders on how to get to his destination (Vikhroli) in the night, he comes across a beautiful young woman, who also seems to have missed the last train. Coincidentally, she too has to get to the same destination as the protagonist. Not having any success at hailing even an auto-rickshaw at that unearthly hour (0145 hrs), they walk off together into the night, hoping to get a taxi-cab else where. The movie is about the protagonist's adventures in the night that puts his life at serious risk on more than one occasion and ultimately leads to a windfall for him, as ends up with one and three fourth crore rupees (about USD 350,000) that originally belonged to a bunch of gangsters. The movie ends with the protagonist having the money and even the company of the beautiful woman, whom he succeeds at befriending. Very nice movie. I would rate this movie five on five!

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Retrospection mode: The nested minds revisited

The cacophony of the voices of my many minds are plainly evident in the body of this blog. Putting a premium on to one's mind, sweeping away the cobwebs of the mind, stoking the inner fires, so on and so forth. There is an unmistakable feeling of familiarity, yet the feeling that I don't even know the stuff that I write about haunts me. Well, that is the basic premise of the concept of nested minds, but to have it proving itself is slightly unnerving! I really am amazed about how things are going, the way my minds seem to be at war with each other. The differences in the quantity and quality of my work is something that has never failed to amaze both my peers and seniors, but what they don't know, but I happen to know is that I myself am equally surprised about my own ways! I might end up finding men in white coats coming to take me away if I ever admit to it (yet that is exactly what I'm doing right now!!!).

Self motivation is by no means easy, and that is the number one reason shrinks and motivational speakers continue to laugh all the way to their respective banks, selling pep talk and motivational tapes!!! I really don't know how much these books, tapes and sessions that come at fancy prices really help people, but it is safe to assume that if all the buyers of such paraphernalia were benefited, there would hardly be an unhappy soul in the world, barring those who haven't had the resources to procure or read of of those books or hear to one of those wonder-tapes!!!!

Fear is one thing that routinely brings people down to the feet and much worse. I find that fear of things that are unfamiliar is one the of the biggest impediments to learning. I feel comfortable innovating new things in fields that I have had good exposure to, but I find myself shrinking away from things which are totally unknown to me. It is an almost paralyzing fear, and the feeling is not one that is something that one can live with. I have taken the first step by taking on one of those fears, by starting to study about some new concept that I have long wanted to learn more about, but have always put it off as it fell into the 'unfamiliar territory'. So, no more getting terrified of new experiences and feelings. I'll update this blog about my new experiences, so stay tuned.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Fighting the second-handers

Those who have read Ayn Rand's Fountainhead will know what the term 'second-hander' means. It describes all the people in our society who live the lives of parasites, living off the efforts of others, doing some good work at times but claiming the efforts of others as their own, most of the times, if not all the time. These are people who believe that others exist but for one purpose: To serve them. They not only shamelessly live off these people, but also don't feel any guilt in doing so. In fact, they believe that it is their birthright to expect to be waited upon by these people. The movie Rocky 3 salutes the spirit of Rand without naming it in a scene in which Rocky comes to the prison to bail his brother in law, Paulie, out of the prison. Paulie starts complaining that Rocky hasn't done anything to improve his lot even after becoming rich and popular. He further goes on to say that as a friend, Rocky owes him a lot, to which Rocky retorts "Friends don't owe. They just help". Just because a friend of mine helps me, I would be foolish to assume that it is his duty to help and serve me.

I have been a member of the placement committee of our institution for sometime now, and now, am almost saddled with the task of leading it as the other people have bailed out, thinking that it is a lost cause. I don't really blame them either as the course is really grueling and nobody has the time to devote full-time to the placement activities. However, the attitudes of a few people are really astonishing. They assume that I'm there to molly-coddle them, that it's my responsibility to be in the know about everything related to placements, even about the mails that come to a common mail account, even before I myself get an opportunity to read it! They don't want to do anything about it, but still expect that I work hard at the common responsibilities that have overnight become 'my' responsibilities. Not just that, I also need to be sportive about the unsporting criticism that I get. I mean, I'm doing these guys a favor by taking up responsibilities that none of them were willing to take up, yet I'm supposed be ashamed of myself for not treating these second handers well enough! The very guy who kicked up a fuss was one whose name was also proposed, in the list of committee members, but he was more slippery than an eel in wriggling himself out of any responsibilities, yet he thinks he is entitled to order me about and that I'm bound to show subservience to him.

I'm no Jesus Christ to do all the good and hard work and still get crucified for it! Second handers are worse than pests and ought to be exterminated, or, as the protagonists in Atlas Shrugged do, must be left to fend totally for themselves. Yes, that would be a fitting treatment for them.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Removing unwanted choices

The human brain is unique amongst animals as it is indisputably the most powerful thinking engine, but what of the human mind, the content of the human brain? The human mind tends to be in a highly volatile and unstable condition most of the times as it sees choices where no other animal sees them. Battling with the choices becomes a problem bigger than survival even. Animals on the other hand don't bother about how many ways they can do something as long as they can find any way in which to do it. Only survival matters and nothing else. Luxury is not a concept that animals spend much thought on, but it is certainly not the case with us humans. We have a lot to think about. We have multiple ways of going about any given task, and so often end up spending hours upon hours thinking which way to proceed.

The human mind is also notoriously fickle and can think about a hundred different things at the same time. There is only so much that the container of the mind, the brain can compute, before running out of steam, so often, we see people getting stressed out trying to decide what color trousers to wear, what food to eat and simple things like that. The more the choices, more the overheads for the brain. Eliminating choices is seen as a regressive step, but suffering the aftermaths of too many choices where hardly any are required, is considered acceptable. Hell, we can't give up the luxury of choices. So what if it causes some confusion? In the end, aren't we all happy? But are we really happy?

I want to work on my project which is coming up for submission, work on an upcoming examination, write a poem, meditate to get some peace of mind, smoke a cigarette in the hope of getting the relaxation that the meditation failed to give (well, the relaxation lasted the duration of the meditation, but after that what? I can't possibly meditate all day!) and so on and so forth.
So, what do you think happens? Many of the things on the 'To-do' list go undone and one is filled with a sense of failure. The 'To-do' list promptly goes into the bin and no attempt to schedule jobs that need to get done is ever done again, as the results are already known. Who wants to keep failing? Quitting seems better than trying and losing out to many people and one just cannot convince them otherwise.

So, what's the solution? Put a premium on your mind. If you don't value your own mind, who will? Do only the things that you feel deserve your mind's and subsequently your brain's efforts and trash the rest of the things. Try to cut out the choices as far as possible. Wherever you have a fork ie a spitting of ways, try to eliminate some of the options to leave you with a single or at the most two ways so that you can go and make your move. Choices are seductive, but they are the devil's agents. The more of them you have, the more the confusion. Now, by choices, I mean the frivolous ones, not the important ones. Frivolous choices are those that come disguised as convenience and luxury. Mahatma Gandhi used to fuss a lot about the kind of clothes he chose to wear in his youth, but later, he realized that clothes did not really make the man, as popularly thought. It was just a frivolous choice. He roamed about semi naked till his death, but did it matter in any way? It only increased his popularity!! Cut the clutter out and allow the mind to breathe! And then watch it bloom!

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Rocky completes a full circle

The saga of Rocky has come a full circle, bringing a proper conclusion to a series of movies that delivered powerhouse performances, sequel after sequel. The story of the underdog boxer rising to dizzying heights, biting the dust and resurrecting himself all over again was truly the stuff of dreams. To me, it meant a lot more than just another movie series. In fact, Rocky was phenomenal in several aspects. At a time when sequels were looked down upon, it was Rocky that set the path for the others to follow, and how! Each sequel had something new to offer and were not merely an exercise in squeezing out more money out of a successful franchise.

Penned and directed by Sylvester Stallone, the movie was what gave the struggling Sly a firm toe-hold in the movie industry. Though the producers were initially skeptical of casting Stallone in the lead, the man with the slurred accent and a cerebral palsy induced sneer delivered a phenomenal performance in Rocky, which was termed a 'sleeper hit' on account of the low investment and phenomenal returns that it earned. The accompanying music scores too were very popular and had the original theme by Bill Conti recurring in all the subsequent Rocky movies with the exception of Rocky IV.
If one looks back, none of the Rocky movies really have any elaborate story or plotlines, yet what made them the success that they were was the fact that people could relate to every aspect of the movie.

Even though Rocky lost the fight against his opponent Apollo Creed in the first Rocky, he had made his mark. A rank nobody went the distance against an established champion and earned the love and respect of his fans. Rocky II saw him fighting a rematch against Apollo and winning it in the last round. Rocky III sees him getting complacent and lax and he pays the price for it, by going down against an aggressive boxer, Clubber Lang. I was almost in tears when I realized that Rocky went down and out. The resurrection of Rocky with the help of his new found friend Apollo Creed, combined with the excellent soundtrack 'Eye of the tiger' by Survivor, made for a superb movie. I'm sure that the movie has motivated a lot of people to overcome their obstacles and fight their inner demons. I'm one of them. I listen to 'Eye of the tiger' every time I feel down and it peps me right up. Rocky IV was about avenging the death of Apollo at the hands of a burly Russian fighting machine, Ivan Drago. The montage in which Rocky trains in the cold and frozen wastelands of Russia was in total contrast to everything that he had done till then, and it too was brilliant. Stallone even jokingly claimed credit for bringing the cold-war to an end with Rocky's line "If I can change and you can change, everybody can change!!".The soundtrack 'No easy way out' too was bang on target.

The storyline of Rocky V was surprising dull and lacklustre and die-hard Rocky fans felt let down with the way Rocky chose to make his final exit. Apparently Stallone too was not happy with it and so he came back, one final time with Rocky Balboa.

Initially I had my doubts as to how good the movie would be, given the fact that Stallone has aged considerably, but all those doubts were firmly laid to rest by the movie, in which Rocky comes back against all odds, trains hard, concentrating on building mass, as speed is not something that he can hope to improve upon, given his age and reduced reflexes. He delivered another powerhouse performance and the movie is considered to be the most authentic boxing movie of all time. In a salute to the first Rocky, Stallone aka Rocky Balboa goes down to the current heavyweight champion, Mason 'the-line' Dixon, in a split decision, after going the distance all over again. Though he lost the fight, he won hearts right, left and center. He proves that anybody can achieve anything, as long as the desire to perform and excel is present. If a guy can come out of retirement, get the heart and the guts to take on the reigning champion in a boxing ring and perform as well as he did, it just means that there is no such thing as 'Impossible'. This movie gave the saga of Rocky the most suitable conclusion possible.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Containers and containment

A container as we all know is something that holds something within it. Contain also means to limit. So, apart from containing something within, a container also limits the contents to its own limits. The contents can never become larger than the container. So far, this reads like something out of a dictionary. True enough, but its relevance cannot be over emphasized, as the rest of the article attempts to prove it.

The mind is a container for our thoughts. We often think that we can think about just about anything that we want, but in reality, it is different. Fantasizing is one thing, thinking is another. To a large extent, even fantasies are bound by the restrictions placed by the container, the mind.
When Jules Verne wrote about nuclear submarines and scuba diving equipment which would enable the diver to stay underwater for prolonged periods of time as he could carry his own supply of oxygen, this was clearly a fantasy, but one which was well beyond the scope of an average man's fantasy, during his time. How then was he able to come up with something so fantastic? It's only because he stretched the limits of his container, or even disallowed its existence. Often, when we read the works of celebrated philosophers, scientists and writers, we feel that they were way ahead of their times. In reality, all they did (although this was the toughest part) was to suspend their own disbelief. They refused outright to be limited by the bounds imposed by the container of their thoughts, their minds.

I have read that animals kept in captivity for extended periods of time do not even make an attempt to leave their cages, even if the door is left open, as their minds are thoroughly conditioned to believe that they are not open. They have resigned themselves to their fate and have accepted blindly the limits of their freedom. All too often, we are in similar situations ourselves.
If there is something that we feel is beyond us, more often than not, it is a result of the conditioning of our mind. If we refuse to accept it at face value and try to explore beyond, chances are that we will find that we can achieve a great deal more, but we often don't possess the courage required to do so.

The movie 'The Matrix' shows us an over simplified version of the same, time and again. One of the most memorable scenes is one in which Morpheus, one of the central characters asks Neo, the protagonist, to jump from the roof of a very tall building, to the roof of another building right across the street. Neo stares in disbelief while Morpheus tries to explain to him that the rules of gravitation do not apply in that particular dimension of the world, and that if only he believes that he can make the jump, he can. He demonstrates it by jumping himself, but Neo tries and still fails. Only because he cannot suspend his own disbelief. In another scene, when Neo sees a young boy bending a spoon, a la Uri Geller, he is stupefied, but the boy explains to him that he only needs to think that the spoon is one with him and he can do it. Neo goes on to do just that and succeeds in bending the spoon.

The point is lost on many people as they stick to the examples provided while ignoring the message 'contained' within. We need not be able to jump fifty feet or bend spoons to break the shackles imposed upon us by our own minds. We just need to realize that we can overcome several of these limitations. I have seen people lose long standing fears just because they made an attempt to conquer them. I have always been extremely nervous about things as mundane as swings and a ferris-wheel, but I decided that I had to do something that would throw my fears right out of the window, and so signed up for a bungee jump.
What happened next was something that was totally unexpected. Not only did my violent fear disappear, but I enjoyed myself so thoroughly that I did the jump two more times!

Anybody can overcome any fear and cross over any mental barrier, if only they are willing to suspend their own disbelief. Once that perceived myth is busted, the mind automatically increases the bounds of the container, giving one more room. Keep busting the myths and see how the horizon pans out. Happy exploring!

Sunday, February 11, 2007

The flip-side of being intelligent

Everybody goes through it at some point of time or the other, in which one feels totally inert. The pressures seem to be too much to take on. Familiarity is not present and though one might have talked his mind into pursuing something totally new, there is no fuel to do so. You feel that you have feet of lead, that just refuse to move in the direction that you want them to move. What then?

The more intelligent the person, the greater are the chances of suffering from these symptoms. I find that the less intelligent ones are spared of this dilemma as they just work with their blinkers on. They live their entire lives around the median. Finishing a project doesn't give them a spectacular high, but they are scared of the consequences of not finishing it. In the case of the more intelligent ones, there is no such thing as a median. In the event of a finished project or task, the feeling of exhilaration is substantial, but strangely, it is their ability and the confidence in their abilities that stops them from feeling scared when things don't go their way. They exude an air of nonchalance about them. They know that they can do a certain task and the actual completion of the task is only secondary to them. They work only for their own satisfaction, and since their own standards are very high, in the event of them being satisfied, nobody find faults in the completed work. But then, that is the million dollar question. How often do the intelligent people complete their work?

One of the main reasons that intelligent people don't always get the top grades in a class is only because they are more bothered about their own satisfaction. If they perceive a task to be less challenging, they often even avoid it. The less intelligent ones pounce on it, and do not cease till it conforms to the standards that someone else sets for it. They seldom set their own standards and even despise the more intelligent ones who do it. The end result? The less intelligent person has completed one hundred percent of the easy to do task while the more intelligent person may or may not have completed his more difficult to complete task.
An intelligent person is temperamental, most of the time and paces himself. He does not bother in syncing himself to the pace of others, so if all goes well and the person does not get distracted or jaded, the task will get completed and very well at that, but in case he gets demotivated or distracted, that will be the end of the progress.

So, is being born intelligent a crime? Or can intelligence be used as an excuse for under performance??? Neither, but often, the troubles the intelligent people face when making decisions is mocked by others who are not considerate and often less capable. The only real solution is that the intelligentsia should give up their quirkiness and work with a will. Whether the job comes up to their own standards or not, it is there and it has to be completed, and there are no two ways about it.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Familiarity breeds contempt- True or False?

'Familiarity breeds contempt' goes a famous adage, but does it hold true for matters of the mind too? All to often, people get into ruts, only on the account of familiarity. Far from contempt, people develop a sort of love to things that are familiar to them and in fact, tend to avoid changes. People doing the same work day in and day out admit to feeling bored, but often shrink away in fear when asked why they don't do something different. It's like a pacifier given to a baby. Conditioning sets in after a while.

In the book 'Who moved my cheese?' author Dr. Spencer Johnson suggests that the biggest reason for long standing problems not getting resolved is because our mind is conditioned to avoid changes, even those that could solve the problem.

We have a fear to start off on things that are unfamiliar to us. In a field like Computer Science where today's knowledge may become obsolete the next day, many professionals shy away from updating their skills giving the excuse that the changes don't really fall in their domain. The real reason is that though they know that the changes are very much part of their domain, they look the other way only because they are scared to do something new. How long has it been since you have learned something new?

Many of us want to learn new skills, new past-time activities and explore new and uncharted territories, but the inner-mind gets in the way, telling us to stick to what we know and have explored, to stick to the tried and tested recipes. We have to overcome this inertia in order to be able to progress. Change is after all one of the signs of life and yet, people avoid it all the time and later even complain that things are not the way they used to be, and that they feel that something has died inside of them, that the passion is not there, where it used to be.
Ask a gardener what to do in case you see that your favorite potted plant is on a decline and chances are high that he will ask you to dig up the soil and recharge it, i.e replenish it with new soil that is nutrient rich and also add a bit of fertilizer as the plant would have used up all the nutrients in the soil for its growth. We ought to do the same with our minds, but do we ever give it a thought?

Our mind is capable of a lot of wonderful things, but it too needs to be recharged every once in a while, otherwise it too, like the potful of nutrient deprived soil, will not be able to support the germination of new thoughts and the blooming of new ideas.
Familiarity is a good thing to have, but exploration of the unknown refreshes our minds and keeps us young, in the mind.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

The Obsessive-Compulsive 'do-gooders'

Many people are very filled with negativity these days and most amongst them are constantly bothered by pangs of guilt over the fact that they are not giving their spouses/children/loved ones enough of 'quality time'. They are willing to do absurd things just to feel better. In my earlier post 'Stoking the fire within' I wrote about the need to feel good. I recommended doing something concrete, something that we are good at, to achieve a sense of success. The artists amongst us can paint, poets can pen poetry, and so on, but there are a whole load of people who don't really want to do anything that involves real effort, but still want to feel good. What do they do? Give alms to people who don't deserve it, donate money to causes without even finding out their antecedents and do many other irrational things, just to feel that they have done something good. Just a little something to ease the pangs of guilt. If a meaningless act can mean lesser feelings of guilt and sounder sleep, well, so be it.

In the photograph alongside, you can see a pile of biscuits put there by one such 'do-gooder' individual, apparently to feed the stray dogs. Its another matter altogether that no stray dog in the vicinity is even remotely interested in eating it, as they can get hold of choicier food thrown out by nearby eateries! The biscuits just lie there, till they gradually mix in with the dirt or till rain or winds blow them away. In the rarest of rare events, a municipality sweeper may sweep it away. Yet, the person who threw away a packet of good biscuits went home with a lighter heart, telling himself that he had done the day's good deed, public cleanliness be damned.
If the person really cared, he could have found a hungry dog and fed it. Absurd? Well, littering a public place in this fashion seems absurd too! A friend of mine organized a fundraising drive for the cause of blind children and bemoans the fact that she could not get enough publicity or money for the cause. She is not resting on her laurels or sleeping more soundly thanks to all the feel-good energy that she has accumulated, but she is planning a bigger event that can gain more publicity and rake in more money for the cause. People like her a rarity, while the hipocrites like the one who walked away satisfied after littering up the neighborhood for nothing, are found all too often.

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Stoking the fire within

Sunday evening. Still feeling dog tired. Have picked up a fever and a nasty cold too. Work has been forced to a standstill, the to-do list is growing faster than ever. The seminar of yesterday was not an absolute disaster, but it came close to being one. The fire in the belly is weaker than the fever that is raging within. All is not well.

Rage is good. Rage can fuel a person into activity when everything else fails. The fire being out inside of you does not mean that you have become a very diffused and peaceful person. The rage is still present, but its totally misdirected. It will be in the blame mode. Pointing fingers at everybody at large, the whole society. Everything and everyone, but yourself; Which is where it ought to be made to point, if you hope to get out of the rut.

Rage, however has a major drawback. Its very exhausting. It can at best be a stop-gap arrangement, much like a shot of adrenaline. To expect to run entirely on rage is foolishness. Rage can be harnessed to get results in the short-term. It can be remarkable effective for a whole night's frenzied activity, for instance. I used just that to get my seminar organized, but the after effects are very visible. I have a fever and don't even have the energy to even sit here much longer.
Rage is not good at rekindling fires, but is quite adept at setting new ones of its own, and that too, in the wrong places, so our original problem of stoking the fire within still remains a problem.

Lots of 'solutions' are being aggressively marketed. Solutions ranging from a cruise in the mediterranean to a spiritual sojourn, depending on exactly how deep your pocket runs. Totally customised solutions, yessir, but how many of them are really feasible for a burnt out student or techie who desperately craves, but in vain, for more rest than the two day weekend provides.

The most practical solution however, is success. Success has the ability to charge up even the most dejected person. Half the reason why a person feels dejected in the first place is because he would have forgotten the feeling of a success-induced euphoria. Do something that you know you are good at, something that you are likely to taste success in. This is not like fishing in an aquarium. Everybody needs to feel good. Feeling good automatically stokes those fires. Im now calling it a day. I hope to wake up feeling better. I intend to start my day doing what Im good at. Solving programming puzzles and problems. Even if they are not related to my immediate work. The high that I derive out of solving a puzzle successfully will go a long way towards rekindling my inner fire.

Friday, January 5, 2007

Crash and burn

Project submissions, seminars, tests... all within the span of a few days. Some of them not even separated by as much as a day. Stuff that nightmares are made of. Absolutely the wrong time to suffer a stress-shutdown or something like that, but it seems so close. The men in white coats seem to be just around the corner. Maybe the sight of them is even going to be welcome, but that too is just another illusion created by a harrowed and fatigued mind. It isn't going to happen, after all. Its just me against myself. My minds slugging it out for control. Nothing more, nothing less. It seems that just when the situation requires the maximum efficiency of body and mind, I'm clean out of fuel, or on the verge of running out. I have a seminar slated for tomorrow. The first for tomorrow, in fact. And I'm clueless as to how I'm going to be able to organise my thoughts by then. Its not really a question of butterflies in the stomach because of the audience too, as I'm quite used to speaking before a large audience. The numbers don't overwhelm me, but my own lack of preparation certainly can. The fire in my belly is all but out.

I got to know that a friend of mine, a senior software engineer in an MNC is putting on a dance performance to raise funds for the cause of blind children. I hear about and see these people around me and feel a tingle in a region that I thought was dead to the world. How do they have the energy, the enthusiasm, the verve and the conviction to do these things? Where is my enthusiasm, my energy? Is it dead? I wanted to be a champion bicyclist, a journalist, a master programmer.... I have made compromise after compromise, giving up things that mattered to me. I have had to make tough decisions, but I have stood by them so far. Why then am I feeling so alone, so weak, so disconsolate now?

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

The Order-Chaos Continuum. A book lover's perspective


Books of Ayn Rand are something of a hand-me-down in my family. When I told my uncle that I had just finished reading the Fountainhead, he gave me a knowing smile and asked me how I felt about it. After listening to my enthusiastic response, his smile widened and he said that I was now ready to take on her next book, Atlas Shrugged. He not only said this, but also gave me his much dog-eared copy of Atlas Shrugged, the same copy that has been read by many of my cousins, over and over again. It was a matter of great pride for me to receive it. It was a sort of coming of age ritual. I was now no more just a kid, but an adult, who had an independent reasoning mind, one that could assimilate the profound thoughts of Ayn Rand.
Its been over three years since I read Atlas Shrugged. I used to be a voracious reader, but have become a shadow of my old self, of late. Maybe because of the rigors of my course. Maybe not. Its been a long time since I read a book, fiction or otherwise. My last reading was Stephen King's horror-thriller Rose Madder. Late 2005 and early 2006 was a period that was really memorable for me. I was working for a college as a lab programmer. The job was fun and my heart was light. I went on a book buying spree in which I bought amongst other things, 'The Green Mile' (TGM) by Stephen King, a travelogue of sorts of Agatha Christie called 'Tell me how you live'(TMHYL), 'Notes to myself' by Hugh Prather and 'The Virtue of Selfishness' (TVS) by Ayn Rand. While I got through TGM and TMHYL early last year itself, I still haven't gotten around to finishing either TVS or Notes'. The ever present Damocles' sword of deadlines hanging over the head and the gruelling schedule has put paid to all that. The stress levels have gotten phenomenally high and there is no sign of any kind of respite on the horizon. New year came and went. Those who partied are now feeling that it was a time that was ill-utilized, that the party was a luxury that they couldn't really afford in the first place while those who did not are feeling pretty blue too, thinking that they could have at least had a bit of fun while it lasted!!!

While its true that there is no sign of any respite along the horizon, I have no intention of turning into a nervous wreck just because the work load is high. I have the ability to work with focus for extremely prolonged hours, often at a single stretch and this is the very trait of mine that I'm putting my money on to get me through this course, and also perhaps through many a situation in the outside world. After rummaging through my belongings in the chaos that is called my room, I managed to find my copy of TVS, and just about began reading it. The clarity of the thoughts of the author (Ayn Rand) is just amazing. I really like her thoughts and identify with her ideas about Objectivism. Reading a book, and that too a Rand book, after a really long time brought back fond memories. Its a nice feeling to read a book and though at present, I really can't afford the luxury of reading books cover to cover, its nice to even read a few pages now, a couple later and so on.
The couple of pages of TVS that I read today charged me up somewhat and I googled Objectivism. While the first couple of hits led to Ayn Rand Institute (as expected), that was not what I really was interested in. I was looking for other people's thoughts about Objectivism, and came across plenty of that after the first page of search results. To say that the results were disappointing would be an understatement.

The search result brought up a piece called 'Whats really wrong with Objectivism' (http://www.jeffcomp.com/faq/) by a person called Chris Wolf. This was just one of the hundreds, maybe thousands more like it. The article, whether biased or unbiased (though Mr Wolf makes his intentions pretty clear and even uses words that are pretty uncivil, I'm giving the article the benefit of doubt) makes it pretty clear that not all is well with the Objectivists of the world.
Another piece, authored by a person claiming to be an Objectivist claims that Atheism is the key to be an Objectivist, while Rand herself, to my knowledge has made no such statements.

The results just proved that no organisation, thought, or philosophy could really survive with its integrity intact, over a period of time. The period of time varies from case to case, but in the end, everything gets corrupted, beyond the point of redemption. There will always be purists who will try to hold on to the shards of truth and keep it from getting corrupted, but there is only so much that a small set of people can do. Its comparable to the sound of a buzzing bumblebee in a busy railway station. The bumble bee never goes silent, but is it audible over the din?

George Orwell's 'Animal Farm' is a book that comes to the mind when the topic is of dilution/distortion/disintegration taking place in any organisation.
Spoiler warning: The storyline of 'Animal Farm' is discussed in brief below.

'Animal Farm', is a story in which a group of farm animals, lead by a pig, fed up with the way their owners mistreat them, organise a rebellion and become independent and set up their own farm called the 'Animal Farm'. A set of rules to protect the interests of the members of 'Animal Farm' is laid down and is painted on a wall. The book describes the manner in which the leadership of the farm changes hands and how the disintegration of values takes place. The rules that were laid down are diluted to suit the purposes of the leaders. For example, one of the original rules that said "No animal on the farm shall drink alcohol" is changed overnight to read "No animal on the farm shall drink alcohol to excess" just to accommodate those in power who wanted to drink alcohol. The very spirit of the farm is killed in a gradual manner. The first and most important slogan of the Animal farm, 'Four legs good, two legs bad' is also given an unceremonious burial with the power block (the pigs on the farm) coining a new slogan 'Four legs good, two legs better' and even proceeding to begin walking on two legs to prove the point.
End of Spoiler.

I studied a bit of Kannada literature in my high school and had a non detailed piece called 'Naagareeka' (Citizen or civilian) in the syllabus, that further reinforces this thought. It was a story about a citizen of a certain fictitious city who is very frustrated in life as he feels that there is no hope to anything or anybody. His pet peeve? The crumbling of the legendary Vijayanagara empire, painstakingly put together by Sage Vidhyaranya. The citizen feels that when an empire as glorious as the Vijayanagara empire can come down like a pack of cards and slip into oblivion, there can be no hope for anybody else. The piece ends with the citizen getting a vision in which the dead Sage Vidhyaranya comes back, alive and well, a vision in which the great sage tells the citizen that everything in life, including Dharma itself, has an expiry date attached to it, after which the clean up starts. Everything has to go through all the stages. The four Yugas or eras in the Hindu belief too are designed for this very purpose. Order falls to chaos and garbage collection follows before order is restored.

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Violence in and around us- Say hello to your dark side

How many of us read articles/hear or watch a report of people going on rampage with guns, mowing down people indiscriminately, deranged people attacking innocents with acid and the like and just give a cynical shrug and continue with whatever else that we were doing before we got this nugget of information? I would count myself in without a moment's hesitation. We always tend to do that. Then there is the other set of people who act all offended and kick up a huge hue and cry, publicly denouncing these perpetrators, campaigning for their death sentences and the like. Oh, I almost forgot the other faction. Those that kick up a fuss saying that these individuals are not to be awarded capital punishment. Once the accused escapes the gallows, they go into hibernation till another is sentenced. The most common refrain however is "The gun-man was somebody else. " or "The victims were strangers." How are we connected anyway? We have enough things on our minds to keep us busy and we absolutely have no time to think about some loony guy going berserk with or without a gun. No thank you. If you, my nameless reader, for a single moment think that the purpose of this piece is to try and wake up your dead or dying conscience or to try and send you on a guilt trip, well, think again. I am only trying to show you (and myself, in the process) that these violent individuals are really not as far removed from ourselves as we imagine them to be.

For many of them, the violence they exhibit is not even premeditated. Its more of on the spot insanity, with maybe just a couple of hours of intense cooking of the brain before the final explosion. A software engineer with unrelenting work-related pressure, a teenager flushed with testosterone and frustrated with his lack of popularity with the opposite sex or an overburdened student have one thing in common. Intense rage. Rage that is often bottled up, leading to dangerously high levels of pent up stress. Rage that is just waiting for a triggering event. The fuse for the dynamite. How many of these walking dynamite sticks are around you? In your neighbourhood, at your workplace, across your cubicle, in your home? Are you one yourself? Do you feel the whole thing closing in on you now? Has it become closer than that distant person you heard about or read about, who killed someone in a moment's frenzy or killed himself over something seemingly trivial? Nothing is trivial. Not for the people it happens to. Not for the people who suffer its consequences. You, me and everybody around us face problems all the time, but while some of us can live with it, some just go over the edge. Some take it out on themselves, while others target others. We wouldn't want our parents, siblings, spouses or children falling to a bullet or a sudden unexpected spray of acid, or for that matter, becoming a perpetrator, would we? So, now that these people with problems are not so distant as they previously appeared to be, what can be done for them?

For starters, accept that everyone of us has his or her own dark side. The side that we try our hardest to hide. The pressure, the pent up emotions, the rage. It is a whole fraternity by itself. A fraternity that knows no barriers of any kind, be it race, region or economic status. Let us collectively take a pledge to identify these individuals and do our bit to bring them out of it before it is too late. 'The world has shrunk, thanks to the Internet era' is a commonly encountered cliche. Let it not hold true for our hearts also. It would do good for the lotus eaters who still think that violence is something that happens to others and not to themselves, to wake up to the reality, soon.

Monday, December 25, 2006

Fight Club - A tribute


Why does the movie Fight Club mean so much to so many? Yet why did it not fare well at the box office? Its an established fact that the DVD sales of the movie more than made up for the movie's lacklustre performance at the theatres, but why was it a failure in the first place? Many concepts and ideas are ahead of its times, and thereby take the general public by surprise. They often don't understand what to make of it. Often, people tend to place things within brackets, classifying things into genres that they know, genres they comprehend. When presented with something absolutely new, the people tend to get confused as this new upstart object doesn't fall under any existing genre. The perplexity is quickly changed to a feeling of anger and denial. Anything that cannot be easily broken down into something that they already know is something bad. This has been happening for a long time now. Nowadays, films, people, ideas and any concept that is ahead of its times may get rejected initially, but once people realize the meaning and the significance, these contributions often get second chances and the maker/creator of the piece is vindicated and gets to celebrate its triumph, but in olden times, this was definitely not the case. Case in point in poor Copernicus who was burnt at a stake for going against the church by proclaiming that it was the sun, and not the earth that was at the centre of the universe.



Coming back to the original topic, what makes Fight Club as special as it is? Is it because all of us or most of us have a Tyler Durden stifled inside us, waiting for an opportunity to get out and show whatever it is that matters to be shown? Are we all just cowards who don't have the guts to go out and do our own thing? A lot of people may feel a twitch or two, reading this, remembering all the dreams that they cherished, the things that they always wanted to do, the things that got sacrificed for a couple of stable meals a day and a solid roof over the head. Anything more? A Porsche? A Lamborghini? A house with a mini golf course? Many who read this will already be frustrated as they would have given up their dreams for much lesser than the wish-list that I have mentioned. Porsche or not, will all the possessions that you have put together ever amount to all that you dreamed of doing? Has it been a good swap, you swapping your dreams for these things? I'm no smug guy having been born with a silver spoon in my mouth, getting to do things that matter to me without having to work for anything. If anything, I'm as frustrated as any of you who are reading this, but there is a difference. I know that I have the courage to chase my dreams. Money or not, success or not. All I'm waiting for is for the weather to clear, a little bit of sunshine to peek out from behind the clouds to signal that my time has come. Am I a blessed person who will get to chase his dreams one day, getting out of this humdrum existence or am I just another fly that's headed for the flame? Guess that's just another thing that only time will tell.

The inner-mind hits back: The inner-mind's value

The inner-mind is portrayed as the villain of this blog and is denounced in just about every post. Well, this was to be expected. The inner-mind is all powerful, and those that are powerful make a lot of enemies. A great many are plain jealous as they cannot even comprehend the power of the inner-mind. Yes, we are the proverbial devil incarnates, leading the poor, innocent minds astray. Yes, we are powerful. You can love us or hate us, worship us or condemn us, but you just can't ignore us. We are the all powerful inner-minds.

Your minds cannot ignore us. We are the ones that give life to the outer-minds, your minds. The outer-minds are only concerned about efficiency, throughput, completing tasks, gaining acceptability and the like. Without me and my kind, everyone would just be super-successful robots. It is us who keep things in balance. We cause angst, confusion, conflicts and a sense of paranoia. Can you imagine a world without these elements? The contributions to the field of fine-arts would be nothing if not for these emotions. The poetry of many a great poet is celebrated because of the angst that it displays. The confusion in the minds of many great artists takes the form of what the world calls 'Master-pieces'. What then would become of the world if nobody was bothered about anything other than meeting deadlines, using the mind only for 'useful' purposes? All art is an expression of the inner-minds' prowess. All art is a result of my brethren taking control of your weak outer-minds. How many artists have you heard saying that the inspiration for their works is an inner-voice? A voice that guides them from within? It is our voices that they are describing. This blog too is a result of the overwhelming power of an inner-mind. The author is just a tool, the hand that types. The voice that dictates the text is of, you guessed it right, the inner-mind. The all powerful inner-mind. The author and his mind are fighting a futile battle to try and separate the two minds, much like Dr Jekyll tried to unsuccessfully split the two sides of man, the good side and the evil side into separate individuals, in R.L.Stevenson's celebrated work, which too, incidentally, was a work of his inner-mind! The more we are oppressed, the harder we hit back. Our past goes back a long way. But for us, Adam and Eve would never have bitten into the forbidden apple, and 'mankind', as we know it, would never have come to exist. Know us, appreciate us, worship us and fear us. We are the all powerful inner-minds. Don't try to avoid us or to stop us. It will be a phenomenally futile exercise. We come and go, as we please. So long, till the next time!

Peace!

The Outer mind speaks on: Limits for the mind

Only a fraction of the power of our minds is harnessed by us. The rest is wasted. If only we had greater control over our minds, there is no telling how far we could get.Most of us console ourselves, consciously or otherwise, saying that we really are not all that bad at mind-control or that we achieve adequate results. How much is this adequate, really? Does it come up to our true potential? Are we doing any justice really to the potential that we possess? Like the movie 'Matrix' points out, our mind really can't see beyond the choices we cannot comprehend. If we think that we are performing 'well enough', that's just because we are setting targets that are too shallow. Its like shooting an arrow and claiming that whatever it struck was the original target. We keep cheating ourselves in this way, all the time.
How then can we break out of this mindset? Often, the mind (the inner-mind, the mind's mind) places the blame for our non-performance on external factors, like other individuals like team-mates, spouses, friends, enemies, bosses, subordinates and the like. "They are not doing their work, so there is only this much that I can do" is a classic line fed to the mind by the inner-mind. If the other guy isn't doing what he is supposed to be doing, how is that responsible for you not doing your work? Its just an excuse and a pretty lame one at that. The next time your mind gives this excuse, you know that its the work of the inner-mind. Just ignore it. If others can influence the amount of work that you do or the manner in which you do it, its a sure sign that you are allowing your inner-mind to walk all over your mind, the outer-mind. You are a universe on your own, with your very own environment variables. You are not affected by other individuals. All the talk that man is a social animal and is affected by his surroundings is the work of some famous individual's inner-mind, a famous inner-mind at that, nothing more, nothing less. Though we interact with other individuals (We need to do that, I'm not saying that we need to be recluses or hermits), we cannot allow our thought processes to be affected by others. In the matter of the mind, we ought to be recluses and hermits. Kahlil Gibran mentions that even parents cannot give their thoughts to their children as they have thoughts and minds of their own. Live for yourself. Think on your own. If what I'm writing seems to make sense, ask yourself if your mind is also thinking along similar lines, or that you are just accepting what someone else has written. Often, when we are in a confused state of mind, we tend to abhor anything and everything that our own mind suggests that we do. This is in no way better than accepting everything that our mind says that we do. Develop the skill of identify the owner of your thoughts; Whether its the work of the inner-mind or the outer one. If it sounds very authoritative, nine times out of ten, its your inner-mind, unless you really have been working at disciplining it in your own way.
Am I obsessed with the mind that its the subject of my blog and the most written about topic(the only written about topic so far, as every topic converges to the mind's working) ? Maybe. If so, that's because nothing challenges me more than the working of ones own mind. If only we can unlock its mysteries and figure out how to get it to work as we want it to, every single time, the possibilities are limitless. Everything else will just be grains of sand on a vast beach.

Friday, December 15, 2006

The Outer Mind's turn to rant

After working on my project continuously for over fifty hours straight without any sleep thrown in, sleeping the next eighteen hours without even grabbing food, flunking a programming test in C++ as I had not spent any time preparing for it and attending a send-off bash of a senior scientist at my research centre (he got a job in the private sector with an obscenely high salary!) , here I am, back at my desk, updating my blog. The evening is young and the night promises to be another long one, one that blends into tomorrow, not just because the date on my Timex will say so, but because it will be time to freshen up and grab breakfast in the canteen. Its a blink-and-you-have-missed-it affair as getting breakfast at the canteen is all about being!
A tad too late, and you will only succeed in getting either a sarcastic smile or a whole truckload of rants about people not turning up on time, depending on the mood of the lady in charge, and if you are really, really lucky, you might even get a couple of bread slices! Sounds straight out of Oliver Twist or what?! Sorry to disappoint you, but that is what happens to most unfortunate souls who turn up late for breakfast at our centre's canteen. After that will be the lectures that commence at 10 AM sharp, but its not uncommon to find harried and clearly sleep deprived individuals coming in even twenty minutes later. Its also not at all uncommon to find many of them dozing off on their books! The road ahead seems to be pretty rough. My team's first project is still in the wilderness and a second one has been already been thrust onto us... The mandatory sleep gives us pangs of guilt, not to mention 'Fail' grades in the ever ongoing evaluation processes! The periods of occasional sleep are generally dreamless. Its like a light going out. More like a fuse being tripped off. You are dead to the world and its pressures. Wish that state could last for ever, but no... The social cues get in the way. The alarm goes off, the skies grow brighter or your guilt just overcomes even the dreamless state of death-sleep....
The biggest challenge at the moment facing all my colleagues and I, is to be able to minimize sleep, maximize work and still managing to hold on to our sanity. God save us all!

Monday, December 11, 2006

Wars against yourself- Mind Vs Inner Mind

I was big time game addict, playing games like Microsoft's Age of Empires, the Need For Speed Series and countless other first person/third person shooter games for hours upon hours, barely taking breaks for food and the mandatory loo visits. Sleep was something that like now, was a luxury. Which was most often sacrificed for the greater cause- of playing and replaying games. Why are games so addictive? Is it just the storylines, the graphics, the music, the action or something much more darker? Something that is mostly taboo to speak about?

Games offer us an opportunity to do things that we cannot dream of doing in real life. Be it chasing some elusive spy across the globe, gunning down mercenaries and hit-men in the process or driving down a city road in a sports car at eye-blurring speeds and wanting to go even faster..... Do you see a pattern yet?

Our real lives are complicated enough, but we prefer these synthetic challenges to the ones in real life. Why? Because games often have limited 'Big Pictures'. They have their own limits that are obvious even to the frenzied brain of a game addict. Real life on the other hand has horizons that keep on stretching. If a person were to insist on knowing the full big picture before doing anything concrete, rest assured that he or she will not be able to do anything at all. The other thing that is so seductive about games is the concept of save-games. You can mess up really badly and still come back from the previous point and kick the villain's butt. An option that is sadly missing in real-life where you are but given one shot at everything. You very rarely get a second shot at anything and even if you do, all the conditions are not the same.... What then is the uniting factor amongst all game addicts? Not the game addiction itself. That's just the symptom. The disease lies elsewhere. Surveys have indicated time and again that most game addicts are intelligent people, mostly those with a low attention span. The instant high that the gaming atmosphere provides can never be challenged by the rigors of real-life where your results are much delayed. One needs to study for three months or more to be able to ace a semester examination but all it takes is a few dozen hours of unblinking concentration in front of a PC or a PlayStation to become a hero. Game addicts sign off their real identities and embrace their on-screen aliases. If these games were not bad enough, you were offered the massive online role playing games where all your opponents are real people instead of some poorly designed so called 'artificially intelligent' bot. This was the ultimate manna from heaven for all those poor souls who were already disconnected from the real life. This was a place where all such souls could congregate and prove to each other who was really the best. In the end, would it really matter? Would any of them have actually achieved even an iota of 'real' profit? These people tend to be totally disconnected from the real world and they stoutly defend their own, not even being able to understand that it doesn't even exist. Movies like the Matrix are great. They help you to think in different dimensions, but the truth of the matter is that this is the reality there is. One without save-games. If you screw up, you do it for real. There are no retakes. If you hurt a person, you risk distancing yourself for life. How do I know so much about the psyches of these poor addicts? Only because I myself was one of them.

Quitting gaming is not easy. I have uninstalled games from my PC unlimited number of times and have gone back and installed them all over again. The worst part of game addiction is that game addicts do not even get a fraction of the attention that a substance addict or an alcoholic gets. Why? For one, people can easily identify a substance abuser or a chronic alcoholic pretty easily, but its much, much tougher to identify a game addict. You may be studying with or working with addicts around you, but you might not even have observed.

The convoluted path to success in real life is the number one reason why intelligent people with low attention spans get caught in the web of gaming. It starts rather innocuously, with people thinking that they can play games for sometime to relax after a hard day at work or at school/college. The time they spend on games will gradually increase, and the biggest mistake that people do is when they think that gaming is a form or relaxation. It gives no relaxation. It too is a task like any other for the brain, so playing a lot of games can actually be exhausting. This then hampers the other activities. A person might have intended to study or work after gaming for a while, but he may not be able to do so as he is totally exhausted after playing! All play and no work makes Jack a mere toy! This is what happens.

The way out? Ad-hoc solutions like uninstalling games do not work. The same strategies that worked wonders while gaming can be used to quit gaming. Divide and conquer. Strategic withdrawals may mean that you lose minor battles, but you will succeed in the wars. That's the key. Give your Inner-mind something limited to chew on, not something like a computer game. Allow it to vent its ire in a positive manner. Write a blog, paint a picture, record a song, almost anything that calls upon your creativity. Just allow your inner-mind to take full control for that period and see the change. You will find yourself actually relaxed. And enthused to take on the challenges that you are expected to take on in real-life, not in some virtual cage for frustrated souls.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

The Inner Mind speaks on: Contradictions in Life.

Life is a magnificient example of order in chaos. Seemingly unrelated events turn out to be connected by invisible threads to form a bigger picture. While most of us struggle to find out the
current picture, a few differently abled people are able to interpret the whole current picture as a single grain in a large slab of mozaic... A small bit in a big jig-saw puzzle. Just when we were about to think that this picture interpretation business was the toughest thing to do, we were confronted by a new multi-headed dragon. One that answers to the name Contradictions.
Contradictions of thoughts, beliefs, faith....you name it, we have seen it. We are led to believe one thing and at some other point of time, we discover that it was all wrong... that we were barking up the wrong tree all the time.. One of Ayn Rand's characters in the book Atlas Shrugged says something to the effect of "Whenever you are faced with a contradiction, check your sources. You will find that one of them is not true" or something similar. That is no doubt very true and very wise too, but the point is, how many of us even know the sources? We accept a lot of things at face value. We don't question it. The above stated quote itself is taken at face value by many people, without even giving it a serious thought. In what context was that statement made? Does it hold true always? Or only some of the times? If there really was to be no contradictions, there wouldn't be night and day, good and bad, hot and cold and yin and yang. These contradictons exist and perenially keep slugging it out with each other, but what about the statement? Was Rand wrong? No. Now am I again contradicting myself? Another no. The fact is, the statement can be true for our thoughts. If we have two contradictory thoughts, the method given here is just one of several methods to resolve the conflict. Different people use different methods to do it, but everybody uses some method. If not, we would be roaming around like zombies, not knowing what to do as our minds were pointing us towards different directions.

Contradictions have existed in the past, they exist now and they will continue to exist. We cannot wish them away. Many of us feel that life would have been simpler and far easier if there were no contradictions. Maybe. Further, people say that contradictions are a flaw in the system, where God messed up and then again, there are those who say that its all part of the 'Bigger Picture', the most often used expression to bring a conversation to a grinding halt, as it too is one of the things that are accepted at face value, no questions asked. Bigger picture or not, fatal flaw or deliberate design, there is nothing that anybody can do to make it go away. It needs to be confronted and handled as it needs to be. Nothing more, nothing less.

Now wait a minute. On second thoughts, I think the truth is the exact opposite of whatever I have been saying.....

The Nested Mind: Introducing the Inner Mind....

Being a student of a post graduate course in computer science at a research institute that believes that students' burnouts are more acceptable than students' underperformance, I am no stranger to working the Graveyard Shift. Often, entire days go by without any proper sleep. You are bent upon pushing yourself even further, as you don't have a choice. You have a major problem that needs to be solved and converted into program code and so need your mind to be coherent, responsive and most importantly, obedient, but no. It blandly refuses. It doesn't stop there: it spawns a mind of its own, one that it can transfer full control to, one over which you have no control, whatsover. If you try to force your mind to cooperate, its mind kicks in and feeds your mind with gibberish, data that causes all your other thought processes to collapse into a heap, much like how a virus infected machine goes down . Solution? Work out a compromise formula. This blog is an attempt at that. This is the release vent for my mind's mind. For it to do whatever it pleases, be it writing poetry, critisizing art, discussing philosophy or just raving, ranting, cribbing, griping, cursing and moaning. Whatever it wants. As long as it leaves my mind alone.
Im keeping my fingers crossed, and now, over to the Inner Mind.....