Ray

*ing : Katherine Heigl, Gerard Butler
Directed by : Robert Luketic (Legally blonde)

I usually don't waste my time and valuable $$ on romantic comedies but since I had nothing better to do, I went and saw this R rated feature on the weekend. Maybe I should have gone with my instincts and stayed at home since the story was so stupid and that my friends is the ugly truth.

Cutting a long story short, Abby(Heigl) is an uptight morning show producer but the show ratings are plunging. Enter Mike(Butler) who with his in your face advice about relationships makes the show a success but in the process gets on Abby's nerves. She loathes his shallow personality and the manipulative ways he suggests to obtain women. She however tries his ideas to woo her next door greek God neighbor for whom she has fallen head over heels and whaddya know... they work. The friendship between Abby and Mike strengthens and the rest as we all know is predictability.

The thing is not that we know who will fall for who but the really crude humour that the movie throws at us. Yes some of it was really nippy and I found myself genuinely laughing loud but most of it was trash(vibrating panties, gimme a break). Katherine Heigl is getting stuck in similar roles(Knocked up) and should try something new. The only saving grace of this movie is Gerard Butler. I wished the movie makers would have stuck with his original Scottish accent. There is no other actor long enough on screen to talk about.

Overall, you can catch this movie on DVD with your wife, girlfriend or dog(yeah it is that silly).
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Ray
July 26th was Kargil Vijay Diwas, the tenth anniversary of the great victory that we achieved over Pakistani infiltrators in Kargil, the final battle being on the now famous Tiger Hill.

In May-June 1999 I was just another student studying in the 12th standard. In all honesty maybe I was too young, too unpatriotic or just too immature to care about what was happening. Yup I was right up there with many others who have taken our freedom for granted.

Right at that very moment it was interesting to see all the reports and visuals on television. It was very much like when CNN had taken over television to broadcast the first Gulf war.I remember celebrities coming out and doing charity shows in fulfilling their role towards the country. Reporters jumped in and out of dangerous locations with explosions and shelling behind them. It was all very exciting.

But now that I see and read about it, it excites me no more. The media has always glamorized war and indirectly glorified it too. Yes, we need the telly for giving us up to date reports, the statistics, the consequences and the aftermath. But why the manufactured drama? Why the constant need to remind us that our soldiers are brave tough men who are always smiling through the challenges that threaten their life. We know they are and we are mighty proud of it.

This is then the very platform that our fat arsed politicians choose to highlight their party’s contributions to war victories but fail to take accountability for what caused the country to go to war in the first place or why they are too meek to respond to aggression. Once again, a decade down the line, their lack of commitment or gratefulness to the role of our soldiers in Kargil, was evident yesterday when the authorities of the Panchkula administration failed to turn up for memorial service. Even in Delhi, the arrangements were low key. According to the media apparently, the Kargil victory was achieved under the NDA government so the Congress was a bit hesitant in performing a ceremony C’mon fellas atleast feign your jingoism.

It is ignominious that even after ten years, our politicians still fight over bragging rights as to whose victory was it? I know the Kargil war is not a cause for celebration especially as India was the one who had more casualties but it made the victory all the more remarkable. It is so demoralizing for our Army that the central government trivializes their achievements on political grounds. Sadly, we still haven't learned our lessons.

I salute you all Martyrs and Jawans for the gallantry you have shown in all the wars that India has fought (or rather been forced to fight). I am proud of the Indian Army. Jai Hind. !
Ray

The weather was fair.
The temperature was cool.
The track signs were set and
so was I….the fool.

There were 107 other people competing for the 2nd race of the summer series, a set of four running competitions in Boonton, New Jersey. It was a corporate event with my company sponsoring us to run races all over NJ. Someone from the office had invited me to take part in this five km run around the field and I had obliged without hesitation. After running those five kilometers from hell as I would like to call them, I have now realized how stupid we are to take respiration for granted.

In these past couple of weeks, I have realized that I am my own biggest enemy, the main culprit behind my misery. I tend to bring enough trouble onto myself, climb the ladder of unknown challenges with the wrong sort of gear or sometimes with nothing at all and then slip up and fall from the great height of mismanagement on to the hard concrete floor, before complaining that the ladder itself was made of substandard material. Saying Yes to everything has been a ghastly old habit of mine and the genes running under my now badly and perhaps permanently bruised body always want to try something new be it food, game, travel and other things I must have read in books when I was a kid.


Alright so I stood in this muddy field which had just been soaked by a downpour. I decided to do some my warm ups which included jumping on the same spot a considerable number of times before my co-runner reminded me it was a running race and not a high jump competition. ‘What do you know about preparation?’ I wanted to ask her but didn’t since the potential embarrassment of finishing last in this race was at the back of my mind. As the announcer called all the runners to take their positions, I was already stressed out. I had obviously not prepared physically but mentally I had no business to be there. The last time I had taken running seriously was when my obnoxious neighbor Mr. Verma had pulled out his machine gun in response to me inadvertently calling his daughter a sexy b****. (Which she was but hey that is another story)


So I took up my stance at the start line, crouching slightly just like I had seen all those athletes do on television. They say when in Rome, do what the Romans do. Apparently the Romans haven’t being doing much themselves since the last two thousand years other than winning a few soccer world cups. I am an Indian, a part of the community which is not built for performing hard physical labor. We can develop software for the world though without breaking a sweat.

Here is a progressive report of my performance at the race :-

0-1 km: The Tortoise in the Hare skin
The whistle blows and I am off like a new car 0-100 in 6 seconds. It is a good, no a great start as I overtake five people. As I pass them I glance at their faces. They are five old women who seem to be keener on catching up on the latest episode of the Desperate Housewives. I pass few other people but as I turn my head in the direction of the leaders, they have just motored ahead and at that rate they would lap me in my first lap itself.

1-2 km: Early signs
My rebellious knees start to show signs of protest. But I am determined not to let the protest develop into a full blown revolution. However I was more worried about my lungs who I fear, like the world’s financial institutions, would shut down shop for accepting anymore air until the brain granted them a bailout by telling my body to stop this running nonsense. Outside, I found myself alone, a bit more space. Most of the runners are way ahead of me but some people are also way behind me.

2-3 km: Mid-race crisis
The gradient becomes a bit tricky as I start to run slightly uphill. I start to draw more than normal amounts of air in my bloodstream. It has been sixteen minutes from the time I started. Within a few hundred feet, I see the race administrators holding cups of water. I grab one as I pass them and immediately gulp down the liquid. Big mistake. Since I am sucking in everything within nasal range including some surprised mosquitoes, the water too bobs around before entering my nasal cavity and I gasp from its effects having an overwpowering feeling of drowning.

3-4 km: Will I make it?
My left calf muscle hurts badly and there is an irritating motion hindering stitch under my ribcage. Other previously unknown muscles make their presence known too. We are now running around a ranch like area but there are no cattle to be found anywhere. I am the closest thing to a cow, slowing down to almost walking pace. Infact I am walking but exaggeratedly shaking my hands and legs under the pretense of running. Two ladies in their mid thirties zoom past me. “Come on, you cannot slow down now,” one of them says. I can’t waste anymore breath to speak so I don’t say anything. I think she means why die now, you might as well fall down dead at the finish line. So I keep on pseudo-running expecting to hit “the Wall” anytime now.

4-5 km: Deliverance
BANG! And I have hit it finally. I have crashed into the wall and I am not speaking about Rahul Dravid. At one point, the runner’s wall is bound to hit you, the internal struggle between your mind and body. Both are fighting tooth and nail before realizing they are both on the same side- that is putting an end to this foolishness. But then there is the third element, a spiritual one, the dogged soul which urges both of them to plough on. By the time I approach the last half kilometer, I feel I am dragging an elephant behind me, an elephant that has not only been well fed but is lying on its hairy back, hands folded behind head, sitting comfortably with one leg on another on a sunny beach, smoking a cigar and ready to order its next pina-colada. One more person overtakes me, she is my coworker but I am just focused on completing the race. The cheers of the watching people get louder and louder so I know I am close to the finish. And I draw one last iota of strength while approaching the finish line and cross it with my arms raised in the air.


I collapse on my knees as soon as I end the race, wishing there was more oxygen in the air than nitrogen. Thirst is killing me, the sweat burning in hot flashes making me feel I am in a furnace. But I am just overjoyed. I look at the timer to see my results. It has taken me 29 minutes to complete this event, the longest ever I have run in a competitive environment. My position is 90 out of 108(results), not too good considering there were people older than me flying like bats out of hell. But it was good enough for a slob like me. I had done it and more importantly I knew I could do it.

And then came the area of my expertise. Pizzas and drinks were served for everyone and I ate like a pig putting to waste all the hard work I had done. Anyway it provided a nice satisfying climax to the evening. I have also registered for the next event and yours truly might blog about it if he can make it alive through that one. For now, my coworker has the bragging rights but hopefully I can overwhelm her in the next race. Ciao!

Ray

Day 3

*** 7:01 pm ***

I stood motionless looking at the airline groundstaff woman incredulously, not knowing how to react to the words I had just heard from her. There was a faint smile on her face, a small hint of arrogance or disrespect that she and I could have done without. Her eyes, I thought, reeked of bigotry which was saying something since she was undoubtedly of Mexican descent and would have nothing, but narrow-mindedness towards her own race, as a slice of history.
“I want to speak to the manager,” I said in futility as no other words seemed occur in my mind.
“Sure,” she said picking up her walkie talkie and calling for a person named Almirah.

The bag in my hand suddenly let me know that it carried some mass and my arm started to hurt. I walked a couple of steps backwards towards the seats in the waiting lounge and dropped it with a thud. I immediately cursed myself since it also carried my laptop. To say that my mind was in turmoil was an understatement. From the corner of my eye, I spotted the aircraft I would have been sitting in, comfortably sipping my orange juice and digging into some magazine, if only …..if only I had reached the gate counter a minute earlier.


*** Half and hour earlier ***

The excursion to Ruby Falls had been great and we had driven down from there to Atlanta airport well in time, an hour before scheduled departure. On arrival, I had without any delay, got my boarding pass printed out. Mr. Accounts and I then decided to transfer all photos from his camera into my laptop. Since his camera settings are always to the maximum, each photo was around 3 MB in size and it took a good amount of time before all vivid details of my our last three days were safely packed away somewhere on my lappy’s hard drive.

We told our final saynora(s) but not before Mr. Accounts laid out his personal appreciation in a manner which was reminiscent of young actors showering praises on veterans who are way past their expiry date
“Oh I am so glad , you could make it,” he said gleefully
“Yeah, I am glad too,” I joined in
“And, what a wonderful time it was. Wish we could have more of such trips." He said explaining how it provided a great excuse for not talking to his chatterbox aunt for three days.
“Hmmm.” I said aware of his aunt's reputation who could bombard any person in talking range with more gossip than a sleazy film magazine.
And then suddenly without warning Mr Accounts hugged me.
“Oh gosh, we sound so gay,” I said half trying to push him away
“Relax man,” he said giving me a virtuous smile. “This is brotherly love, besides we are not in a state that legalizes same sex marriages.”
"That's what worries me most," I said looking around to see if someone was showing more than a passing interest in us.

I chuckled a bit and thought to myself, that I would surely miss him. After all he was one of my closest friends and in a socially inept country like the United States, I was fortunate to have him as a pal. But as always, old habits die hard and as if someone had brutally poked a pin through a high soaring balloon, Mr. Accounts once again reminded me of his erudition in the field of numbers

“Oh, and yes, as soon as you reach New Jersey, don’t forget to transfer the money for all the entrance fees, I have been paying for you at the parks,”
“I thought we were brothers,” I retorted before I hurriedly made my way into the crowd waiting to get frisked by Homeland Security. Useless chap that Mr. Accounts.

The queue was a long one, not surprising that the weekend was coming to an end and people were rushing to get back home. I, though wasn’t unduly worried. I reached the X-Ray machine.One by one everything came off, the shoes, the belt, the wallet, the phone etc. Thankfully the clothes remained. After clearance, I wasted another 5 minutes in putting everything back again.

Atlanta airport is not an airport, it is a city mistakenly categorized as an airport, for a train or to put it more precisely, an automated people mover moves below each terminal and concourse. That is the bloody size of this sprawling edifice. To get to your gate, you have to be a fit person, not a sluggish moron like me.

My flight was to board at Gate 13 on concourse 4. If not for the automated people mover, I would have reached my gate after the next presidential election. That’s how relaxed I was. As it was, it took me 20 minutes to reach my concourse including the security check. I glanced at my watch because I was getting this instinctive feeling that something wasn’t right. 6:56 pm , the time read.
“Oh shit,” I exclaimed as I made a dash for the gate as fast as I could go. I passed numerous signs telling me that the gate was ahead but it was proving to be a mirage. And then I made it to the departure gate finally.

“Here you go,” I said forwarding my boarding pass to the lady behind the counter still panting.
She looked at me as if I was a small child handing out my birthday invitation to her. And then she pulled out a birthday surprise of her own.

“Are you enquiring about the 7:15 flight?” she asked
“Well…..yes,” I said stating the obvious
“You have missed that Sir. You were supposed to be here fifteen minutes before departure,”
I looked at my watch again. It said 7:01.
“But, yeah it is hardly a minute over. I got delayed at the security check,”
“No, not possible now,” she shook her head
“But why? The aircraft is standing outside. The door is barely closed. Let me in. I have a job to report tomorrow,”
In the most eloquent of terms, she made it clear to me once it for all…
“No, Sir, sorry Sir, can’t let you fly Sir, I have assigned the seat to someone else…Sir”

***Back to the present***“

Are you the one looking for me?” a voice disturbed me from my thoughts. It was the manager, neatly dressed in the continental blue uniform, her white shirt neatly tucked under her orderly ironed skirt. Her name tag hung from her neck. Almirah turned out to be an African-American woman(yes I know I am being politically correct). I repeated the same story to her but her reaction to it was one of indolence.

“Can’t you arrange something?” I asked
“I am helpless,” Almirah said and moved towards the computer behind the desk. After typing something hastily she came up with two receipts.
“Here, we have already put you on the next flight to Newark. You should be fine,”

I looked at the time on the receipt and just sighed. 7:10 am, exactly 12 hours from now. There was nothing much I could do. I had already argued enough with the feisty Mexican and did not have the energy to argue anymore, so I went and sat down back again on the lounge chairs. I called Mr. Accounts explaining what happened. He suggested to me that I take the MARTA(Atlanta Metro) and go back to his place. I refused his invitation since that would have required me to wake up again early next morning and catch the first train to come back to the airport. I wanted to risk no more. I was going nowhere. I wanted to stay as close as possible to the boarding gate.

“My roommate will drop you at the airport in the morning,” Mr Accounts tried convincing me one more time.
“Why would he be so generous?” I asked
“He is not generous or anything. Nothing is free in the US. He will charge you around $40 for the service. He always charges me too, whenever I have to go out to buy groceries or go to the temple”
“Huh,” I said mildly shocked by the things people do, the lengths they will go to get that last penny. “I thought 'you' were Mr. Accounts,” I reminded my good friend
“For every Mr. Accounts, there is a Mr. Auditor,” he said feebly as opposed to the calculating genius he is in front of me.

I declined his idea once again and decided to spend the night at the airport. The first thing I did was to buy a book to read. I got myself A Time to Kill by John Grisham. (No, this is not going to turn into a book review. Besides I haven’t even finished reading it) I returned to the main terminal’s atrium, an intersection between the north and the south terminal and took my place on one of the various couches that were scattered haphazardly along the floor. Adjacent to it was a food court with the same American crappy fast food chains that had thrown the population of this country into the gutter of corpulence. I decided not to wander into that area for my food.

As the night set in, the number of passengers dwindled but there was still a fair number of people idlng or waiting for their departure. Some people worked furiously on their laptops glued to their screens while some others had headphones the size of two tennis balls over their heads lost in their world of music lip synching to their favorite tunes. Some young couples had found bliss in each other’s arms and were not afraid to display their love in public. And certain other souls talked incessantly on their mobile phones.

I lay on my sofa, shuddering from the full blast of the air-conditioner. Even while turning the pages of the book, my main worry was to find a place to sleep. I contemplated whether I should leave the airport and rent a hotel for the night but decided against it. I glanced at my watch every fifteen minutes hoping time would forward itself but it just crept along with the poise of a tortoise.

*** 10:00 pm ***

It must have been two hours after I had started reading that I felt famished. I looked around for something to eat. The disappointing food court somehow looked more inviting now. I walked straight to the Dominos stand and ordered a veggie pizza. The pizza came soon enough. On opening it though, I was amused. The only veggie on the pizza was mushrooms which technically speaking is not even vegetarian. But with the rats in my stomach competing for an Olympic gold medal in a 100m dash, contemplating the taxonomy of all things vegetarian was the last thing on my mind. I gobbled it up, like an impoverished beggar and returned to my couch. Another one hour of reading followed before I fell asleep.

At 2:00 am, I decided to take a walk just to get that good old red liquid to flow again especially in my legs which had gone to sleep with the satisfaction of a businessman who had just sold a hundred elephants in an animal auction. After taking an uneventful stroll, I went back to sleep again for another two hours.

***4:00 am***

“Excuse me, excuse me,” a hand shook me violently
“Huh,” I said trying to open my eyes
“Are you a passenger Sir, waiting for your flight?”
It was a policeman conducting his round of airport inspection. The face was kind but the words he uttered and his demeanor was unyielding.
“Yes,” I replied without hesitation.
“Oh, alright , Sir,” he kind of backed off. He seemed satisfied and left without another word. I wondered what was that about but felt it was a good measure as many people who had no business to be there loitered around merrily on the airport floor.

***9:30 am*** Fast Forward

I have never been so pleased to see the skyline of New York city, like I was now. For the first time, it felt that I had reached home and boy was I glad to be back. The air journey had passed in a jiffy. I had been the first passenger this time for boarding the 7:10 flight and had grabbed my seat like an animal had made a prize catch. I reached my apartment safely and also attended office for half a day. I also managed to arouse some sympathetic looks from the management. Good people, the guys in my department.

That night, after dinner I put in a call to Mr. Accounts again.
“Good thing you are safe and sound. You Jersey people tend to be a careless lot,” he loves taking digs at me
“Bitch,” I said . “It was all because of you,”“
"Why me?” he asked
“It was you who wasted time discussing Atlanta, your job issues, your uncle, aunty and numerous other relatives. And the biggest delay of them all. Your camera, set to take the pictures in the highest resolution. Three…..three f***** MB every picture, are you nuts?. That took the most amount of time and I got delayed”
“Ha…wait till you get an aunty like mine. And talking about the pictures, those pictures have great clarity. You can also see the amount of nikhaar I have in my skin nicely, so no compromise on that. And what have I told you about purchasing a new laptop. Your laptop's slow processor and inadequate RAM were chiefly responsible for the delay."

I wondered if he had turned into a computer expert overnight but I thought too soon.

"And you didn’t forget the money, did you now? Get that done first thing in the morning , otherwise I might have to start charging you interest. Hahahaha. Goodbye” he said signing off with his trademark sinister laughter.

And that is the end of not the most troubling event in my life but a sobering experience nonetheless. Take care people, don’t be lazy and carefree like me. Until the next session of obstinate boredom, ciao….!

Ray

***Day 1***

It was a good night’s sleep despite me constantly dreaming about hanging on the wings of the plane for my journey. It was almost 9 am by the time I woke up and immediately got around to planning the day forward. That’s when Mr. Accounts casually informed me that he would be going for work for around four hours and be back for lunch. Now let me tell you Mr. Accounts has previously made a living out of throwing my best laid plans out of order as if it were a vegetable not fit for consumption. Time has made him more professional which was evident as he quite politely refused my ideas of a morning road trip and I didn't even feel bad.
“What will I do till then?” I moaned
‘Oh well, there is a television……and internet…….umm…..and oh yeah you know there is a swimming pool outside,” he said combing his hair meticulously
“I flew a 1000 miles to browse the net and watch TV?”
“See I will be back in the afternoon and we will go to the Stone Mountain Park.” He left through the door but put his head back in again for a final word. “And that was 871.7 miles you traveled not a thousand, muahaahaha”
Ass. No wonder they called him Mr. Accounts. So I did what was available to do.


I browsed the net. I was lazily checking the India West Indies cricket scores when I got distracted by voices downstairs. I put my nose and eyes through the blinds to see what the commotion was about. And what I saw blew my senses away which fortunately didn’t include my eyes. They were wide open along with my mouth. The reason for this…..not one but I give you five yes five gorgeous bikini clad women, were rubbing their arms and legs with sunscreen and
preparing to lie on the pool lounge chairs, book in one hand and chilled beer in the other.


I have never understood the white man’s obsession with tanning himself let alone a white woman’s but I decided to keep my understanding or lack of it on the back burner for the time being as the air conditioned room I was sitting in suddenly started to feel hot. I stayed glued to the window cursing myself for not getting my swimming shorts. Staying at home in the morning did have something eventful after all. The Americans are a queer lot though. If it is the weekend or a holiday, then they forget all their worries and just party hard as they can. We workaholic, anxiety gripped Indians have a plethora of issues on our heads even when we are on a picnic.
Mr. Accounts appeared as he had promised in the afternoon and I told him about the grand views on offer below.
“Yeah that” he said with boredom. I immediately understood that he was a front row spectator every weekend and what made him all the more happy was that he was getting it all for free.

“Why don’t you try your luck with some of the girls down there?” I asked
“You know me Ray. I will be shivering like jelly and will not be able to get my eyes off the pair. And there are lots of pairs, I would say five of them, so that would make it a grand total of ten br…” he said sheepishly before I cut him off
“Eh wait a minute…pairs?” It was then I realized what he meant by pairs. That is why geeks shouldn’t be sent out on girl hunting missions. Bloody descendant of Ramanujam.

After lunch we were off to Stone Mountain Park which is named after the Granite Stone Dome, claimed locally to be the world’s largest piece of exposed granite. Ofcourse it is all about the marketing but as you can see from the picture, it is a quite a sight.
(Left : Stone Mountain courtesy www.wikipedia.org)


We bought our passes and proceeded to check out each and every attraction the park had to offer. The most famous of them was a laser show projected on the stone carving on the mountain but that was to be at 9:30 at night. So the first thing we checked out was the journey to the center of the earth 4-D show, in which the fourth dimension was the feeling of actually being there. For example in the scene when the actors on screen were rowing their boat through the rough sea, water was poured on us spectators to simulate the effect. After the show we checked out the scenic railroad which was as boring as it got. The glum faces on the train were more scenic than the landscape on the outside.

We tried pedal boating next and it proved to be a good exercise in the searing afternoon sun. We also had some fun to ourselves as we chased and harassed the ducks who were not at all amused by this sudden invasion of humans. I sometimes wonder what do animals even think about us. They must be going “Look at these two legged idiots, got tired of the land and now have come to mess around in the water.”

After leaving the ducks in peace, we took the Swiss-built cable car to the summit of the mountain. It gave us some wonderful views of the surrounding area but there was nothing much else to do up there other than trying to fake that I was hurtling downhill.

All the climbing, boating, duck harassing had made us hungry and we drove to ten miles to Norcross to check out the Global Mall which in reality is a complete misnomer. It doesn’t even cover more than five states of India. Yes, you heard it right – India. I had never seen anything like it before in the US. It wasn’t a huge mall or something but it was completely made by the Indian community for the Indian community. Its most famous attraction was its completely desi food court. In the left corner they had chaat and in the right corner they had South Indian. It was a welcome sight especially since the last week, the only semblance of food I had eaten was pizzas and burgers. I immediately jumped on the samosas and dahi puri and ordered them before Mr. Accounts could calculate the bill. After that sumptuous supper we drove to Stone Mountain Park again where the laser show was about to begin. It was spectacular and since it was on the night before the Independence Day, they did a freedom special with the Star Spangled Banner providing an apt climax.

***Day 2***

We overslept again since we were dead tired from all the walking. Today we decided on the waterpark and set off at one for the Six Flags Whitewater Park. But after driving for more than half hour, we never found it. Thanks to Mr. Accounts and his idea on saving $10 on the rented GPS. His claims of knowing Atlanta very well fell flat on its face as we made our sorry way back home.
En route we stopped at downtown Atlanta for checking out the CNN headquarters. At $13 a tour it was worth it as we were taken systematically albeit briefly through all their programming procedures. We also saw a live news broadcast. I have to say it was pretty exciting. The room was filled with TV screens in each and every space. And in the spaces where they could not fit a TV, they had lights or other electronics. Not the workplace, many of us outside the media like to imagine. Pretty serious stuff. Other things in downtown Atlanta were not so interesting and nowhere close to the northern cities of New York and Boston. The south of US is a very sleepy face unless ofcourse you are a duck and are liable to be shot by a farmer or harassed by tourists for no fault of yours.

In the latter half of the afternoon, we went to the BAPS Swaminarayan Temple. As with most Swaminarayan temples, the architecture is simply mindblowing. Some quick facts
  • The exterior of the Mandir is made of Turkish Limra limestone.
  • The main floor is made of Italian Carrara marble.The ground floor and basement is made of Indian Sandstone.
  • Estimated cost $19 million What amazed me was the carvings on the pillars and the ceilings and they were exactly like the ones you would be likely to find in India especially the temples in the South
There was also flush lighting in the floor, of the ultraviolet kind which cast a nice peaceful blue hue on the white marble walls and ceiling. We paid our respects and made our way out. Since it was a clear sunny day, the temple’s beauty was magnified tenfold, a white citadel standing in contrast to the clear blue sky. We rounded the day off by making some chhole-puri, a bit of wine and watching Top Gun on the telly.


***Day 3 - Ruby Falls***

Today was excursion day and we didn’t have anything planned. After consulting with the Telugu roomie(he looked like a replica of Chiranjeevi , only with lesser hair), we came to know of Ruby Falls. After checking some pictures on the net, we decided that this was unquestionably where we were going. Ruby Falls was 116 miles north of us in Chattanooga, Tennessee and I put my racing car driver skills to good use by getting there in just ninety minutes.



The Ruby Falls are an underground falls located in the Ruby Falls caverns. I will give no description as words are pointless to describe this place. Forget words even pictures don’t do it justice. The only thing I can say is that I have never been inside a cave in my life, not even the famous Ajanta Ellora. So this was a unique experience. It was a 55 minute journey to almost 1000 feet below the Lookout Mountain and although the initial moments were exciting, it tends to become slightly tedious and claustrophobic after a while. But the visit ends with the sight of the falls and that is worth the admission ticket.

So those were the three wonderful days. But Sunday evening after driving back from the falls was an unmitigated disaster which will be the next post.

Till then ….adios. To be continued…

Ray

I am back weary, tired and extremely sleep deprived from a mini vacation in Atlanta. I had a really great time but the problem was that this wonderful experience was sandwiched between two massive and extremely pathetic scheduling disasters. For all those who thought that US transportation is the epitome of efficiency, think again.

Here is where it all started. It was the July 4th weekend, and since it fell on a Saturday, major offices were closed on Friday. I too decided to get out of NJ and spend a few days with a bud of mine in Georgia.

I was scheduled to fly out of New Jersey on Thursday on Continental Airlines at 17:30. At 15:30, I get an email message that the flight has been delayed by an hour. So instead of originally going to the airport directly from my office, I chose to go home first and freshen up before I left. When I made it to the airport, well in time to catch my rescheduled flight, an understated overweight Continental attendant informed me that the flight had left on time.
“What about the message?” I asked with a mixture of shock and curiosity
“Oh,’ the attendant said waving me off,’those things are subject to change,’. She spoke so nonchalantly. It was akin to arranging your marriage with one girl and finding another one sitting next to you in the mandap and in the background your doting father in law to be carries a sign screaming those same words "Oh those things are subject to change since you too lied about many of the high-end qualities you possessed."
‘What now?’ I said already resigned to the fact that I wasn’t going to get on that plane. Even if I could, I would have to wrestle the obese attendant first, which would have taken considerable time and effort and perhaps a whole lot of tickling.
"We booked you on a standby seat for the 19:30 flight. If you want to wait then you can wait."

So I waited and waited, an agonizing five hours because the 19:30 flight didn’t feel like showing up till around 22:30. When asked the reason for this bewildering delay, we got a reply that they didn’t have that many aircrafts to operate and hence they were waiting on some aircraft to free up so that they could direct it to another destination.
“It is the July 4th weekend, so it happens,’ one airport staff commented.
“Come see the Indian railways once,” I replied. “You will be astonished by the sheer volume they handle.’

Come to think of it. The US domestic air travel is just like the bus system, that you miss one and then wait for another one. Not like India where you do no find a seat in the train, you snuggle up with the TC, scratch his back or whatever your fantasies permit, smoke a joint with him and most importantly throw a couple of paper notes with Gandhi’s iconic image and voila you are just a nod away from a berth on the train. The system might be unethical but it works. Not that I am justifying it but just underlining the slippery nature of our legal code. Wonder if a truckload of cheeseburgers, pizzas and fizzy drinks would work out for these fast food loving guys in the US?

So that, my friends, was the trying first day. When I narrated this story to my friend who I call Mr. Accounts affectionately(not that we hold hands and take walks in the park), later that night, he said I should have taken a bath in the morning. I asked him what he meant? He said only if I had taken a bath, I would not have needed to go home and freshen myself and I wouldn’t have got late and would not have missed the f***** flight
“As a result,” he said raising a long pointy finger, as if he was analyzing a major scientific issue, “I am sitting at 2:30a in the night, in the gallery, listening to the agony you went through,"
"I did take a bath," I protested
"Yeah, but you did not apply the right deodorant."
What crap, I thought, dissecting this issue more than even I had evaluated it. Talk about friends, fly a thousand miles to see them and a discourse in personal hygiene you get. More to follow..part 2 - the good part… the three days in Atlanta.

Ray
The hangover is about a bunch of four friends who visit Las Vegas for a bachelor party for one of their pals.

After gulping down their Jagermeisters, the men embark on a night of booze, women, gambling and all possible mayhem. But the problem is when they wake up the next morning, they do not remember a thing. Their entire suite is a mess, there is a tiger in their bathroom, a baby in the cupboard and the to be groom is nowhere to be found. How they piece the clues to what they exactly did last night and try to locate their missing friend forms the main part of the story.

The movie has low budget stars but they fit the bill extremely well. All of them perform competently and there is also a surprise appearance by Mike Tyson. The situations are extremely funny and some of them are just laugh out loud. A word of warning though, this is an adult comedy and lewd comments and imagery is very much a part of it.

A very good watch, 18+ only
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