Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Thursday, November 13, 2014
West J & J Family Meet
Invite for the 'Wild Wild West Family Meet 2014' brings out the spirit of sales whilst acknowledging the contribution of each & every family member of the sales folks towards winning the war externally in the market & internally over one's own mind thanks to the strong foundation of a supportive domestic environment.
Design Credit: Shradha Narang
Thursday, August 28, 2014
A Tale of 2 States - Part 3
As
the Dholakia’s parted ways with me, the interim vacuum was a welcome break with
no occupant as my neighbor – but then, a vacuum is an aberration to the normal
functioning of the universe. Screams of ‘Baba.. Baba.. mala ikdun gheun jaa’ (Father..
come & take me along from here!) frantically filled the void with an
acrobatic & gravity-defying display of break-free attitude by a lean &
almost skeletal late-40’s body strangled with chains to the hospital bed trying
to chart out its own novel course, much alike a shooting star.
Interspersed
with heavy breathing, as the screams & shouts got louder, the medical folks
gathered around the eccentrically vocal patient armed with tranquilizers to
soothe him down. The sudden boisterous entry had ruffled the environs of the
room, as though not to let the storm ebb away, a stream of visitors made a
quick pilgrimage to the by now snoring neighbor. Eavesdropping on the
discussions revealed a case of successive liver failures due to heavy alcohol
consumption which had led to multiple problems over the course of the past few
days in hospital and the doctors had now ‘let go’!
As
the beeline began to swell, I was shifted into another room for the night. With
thoughts continuously rushing to my previous room, the morning broke to the
news that its inmate had breathed his last the previous night. The real paradox
revealed itself when I was given a discharge the same day – 3 days in the
hospital, 3 different neighbors, 3 different outcomes: on-going treatment, case
closure & ultimate case closure!
The
hospital had revealed its kaleidoscopic nature from being a care-taker to a
solution-provider to finally a gory, macabre convener of life & death
sentences – whilst I was positive to be out of it, its relationship of being a
karmic circle closer was surprising. Meanwhile, the ill-effects of my infection
had begun to subside with the care of family & the prescriptions helping
re-build the bodies reserve of platelets enabling a speedy recovery with only a
few more days of home-rest to go…
The
next morning, our chance meeting with the owner who made regular weekend visits
to the estate, one Mr. Huja from Mumbai, was an enlightening session into the
setting up of the ‘Machan’ driven by numerous restoration efforts almost 20
years back in this part of the tropical cloud forest situated over 3300 feet.
After
a decade long project that involved pruning of wild trees & removal of the dense
carpet of Karvi weeds, a single bamboo Machan (similar to Jim’s Corbett’s
treetop hunting platforms) was built as an observation point which was further
improvised to build a more permanent home - the current Heritage Machan. The
uninterrupted views of the forest’s beauty from a comfortable setting drew
considerable interest from folks that visited the vacation home in-gratis.
To
ensure the continued sustainability of the forest & provide livelihoods to
the locals, the Machan opened up its panoramic views for a charge to outside
visitors 2009 onwards. A year later, 3 additional Machans (Canopy
Machans) were built in line with popular demand.
The arty Machan cafe |
Our Customer Feedback |
The
passion of the owner across the 45-minute discussion at the cafe over breakfast, was obvious
with small nuances of the property covered in detail and his personal
involvement evident in every aspect right from the rustic furniture at the café
to the creeper that went up the nets surrounding the trampoline paid attention
to; an aspect no 5-star can boast of in a true sense.
Thanking our host for our 2-day mental-spa & of course, an experience-cum-memory of a lifetime, as we headed for our drive back home, the vibrant views of the past few days ripe in our minds were like green shoots that would sprout with their freshness spread across endeavors we undertook for the upcoming future tasks; with our rejuvenated minds back on the road, we were ready to take on newer milestones...
Epilogue:
My experiences in a quick succession of 3 months at the hospital and then at ‘Machan’ seemed quite disconnected & bi-polar when viewed as instances – but, as a pattern, they seemed to fulfil the same void at different planes.
Our active mental wanderings, very much like our hectic physical trails need a panacea of sorts – the ‘Machan’ was to the mind what the hospital was to the body. Whilst symptomatic deliverance of abnormalities at a physical level may be few & far between, the mental disease of being stuck in a monotonous thought pattern as part of hectic urbane lives today is an increasingly plaguing trend – breaks from the mundane are good ‘here & now’ solutions to the mental blitzkrieg; but, in the larger scheme of things, we all need a stronger, steeper & self-anchored totem that will hold us in good stead at a time when our mental pre-occupations are stuck in the limbo… may be the answer lies in transcending the physical as well as mental states to discover a newer state which holds the key to our other 2 states as well… Happy self-discovery!
x---------- The End ----------x
Creative Inspiration: Ashwin Sanghi
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
A Tale of 2 States - Part 2
The torture of our
previous neighbour’s uncouth habits had got onto my wife’s nerves - Mr.
Dholakia, the patient I shared my next room with was an interesting old gentleman.
The silence of the new room now was almost deafening with hardly a word shared
between my neighbouring patient and his accompanying wife. Wondering whether contrary
to my previous neighbor, they had taken the ‘Silence Please’ notice too
seriously, I tried to initiate some conversation but to no immediate response. Apparently,
Mr. Dholakia had been unable to talk and eat which was precisely the reason of
his visit to the hospital right in the midst of an on-going family wedding.
As Mr. Dholakia
communicated with actions and post-its, Mrs. Dholakia informed us of her
husband’s unfortunate tryst with cancer of the vocal cord some years back which
had left him bereft of his voice. Successive operations & treatments later,
he had been able to blurt his mind out thanks to a sound box fitted into his
system, but today, on the occasion of the wedding of his grand-daughter, he had
turned ‘mute’ with nothing edible going down his throat. As the new grand-son
in-law had circled around the fire hand-in-hand with their grand-daughter, our geriatric
dear Mr. & Mrs. had needed to circle around casualty folks trying to get a
hang of ‘how-to un-mute and eat’.
As my treatment
progressed well, Mr. Dholakia’s reports had begun to pour in by late evening.
Unable to diagnose appropriate reasons, the doctors had begun to dig deeper; unknown
to all, the past few days of family wedding functions had been a major occasion
to snack on an awesome Gujarati spread & Mr. Dholakia had lapped up most of
the delicious offerings that had come his way.
Having lodged itself at an appropriate position in his throat such that no spiel would come out and no food go in - it was only when a cough tickled Mr. Dholakia’s guttural glands that a ‘pea’ was thrown up in a sneeze; like a Ram Gopal Verma flick, the climax had hardly lived up to the build-up, but then the moral is that aka the famous David-Goliath fable, a ‘pea’ could really be a ‘show-stopper’.
Having lodged itself at an appropriate position in his throat such that no spiel would come out and no food go in - it was only when a cough tickled Mr. Dholakia’s guttural glands that a ‘pea’ was thrown up in a sneeze; like a Ram Gopal Verma flick, the climax had hardly lived up to the build-up, but then the moral is that aka the famous David-Goliath fable, a ‘pea’ could really be a ‘show-stopper’.
As their
grand-daughter had walked into her new home, the Dholakia’s walked out of the
hospital with the unassuming ‘pea’ dislodged… as they left, the gentleman bid me
‘get well soon’ with an appropriately worded humble request…
God Bless the Dholakia’s & the humble ‘pea’!
As our day unfolded
to a spectacular view of the early morning sun-rise encapsulating the green
valley with its ochre rays, our stroll in the wilderness exposed us to the wooded,
peaceful and serene estate. A spread of healthy indigenous trees bearing
flowers & fruits combined with pruned wild trees, interspersed with waterholes
dug for animals to quench their thirst spoke volumes of the ecologically
balanced nature of the forest and the responsibility with which its care-takers
had restored the biodiversity.
Wildlife such as squirrels,
rabbits, mongoose, porcupines and grey langurs were a common occurrence. With a
proliferation of insects, crabs, moths, frogs and snakes; birds from the indigenous
Myna to the migratory Red-wattled Lapwing had nestled in higher numbers making
the forest their home; definitely, a haven for all bird-enthusiasts.
Our pit-stop for
breakfast back at the dining-place was a buffet of fresh local produce sourced
directly from the villagers in the vicinity with some amongst the staff also
serving it out to us. On chatting up with a few, it was heartening to know of
the local support provided to them by taking up social projects for the
development of the Jambulne village, half a kilometer away; all this apart from
training them in hospitality & educating them on relevant environmental
matters enabling ‘greener’ lives.
Our local guide
during the hour-long evening trail was a ‘google’ equivalent on the flora &
fauna of the region; driving home some local trivia, he interspersed it with
information on the estate - 100% off
grid and run only on sustainable resources with solar power panels & wind
mills set up across, the Machan lived up to the spirit of eco-tourism in its
true sense by limiting accommodation so that each guest could have over an acre
of green space to oneself, reducing the stress on the forest whilst providing a
serene experience; so much so, that the water for consumption was ‘pure
mountain’ in its source – pulled up from a 300 foot deep bore well.
A rare specie of a flowering thorny leaf plant |
The watering holes set up across the forest |
The idyllic setting
of a lantern –cum-candle-lit dinner in the lap of tall bamboo trees with
hammocks strung across them was like poetry to the eyes – a fine mix of local
culinary expertise with a romantic setting.
After the sumptuous meal, our verandah offered the most amazing spread
of astral constellations twinkling across the perennial stretch of ether – the
enormity of the universe & our pygmy-like existence in its backdrop as
though closed in on us as we drank in the scenes of the celestial gems studded
into unique patters light years away and of those that chose to be outliers
shooting off the treaded path to discover their own novel course.
x---------- End of Part 2 ----------x
The concluding Part 3 shall be uploaded day after
Sunday, August 24, 2014
A Tale of 2 States - Part 1
As my body heated up from the intermittent fever that had run up to over 104 degrees since the past 4 days, unaware of the damage that a creature named Aedes aegypti had done internally, I landed up in Kokilaben Ambani hospital for treatment and the casualty staff almost seemed adamant of wanting to keep me with them unless I showed any signs of cooling off, literally. Giving into their demands (& my fears), with pokes made through my largest organ - skin I mean, of course - bang in the middle of the night of 1st Jan 2013, I was admitted into a spacious room shared with another sleeping patient separated by a curtain; the new year sure had started with a bang!
The morning after was
a mix of some more fluids being passed down the intravenous as I consumed
colourful systemic solutions - the colours of the capsules, however, seemed to
fade when compared with the colours that awaited my arrival into the washroom
for my morning ablutions. With sprinklings of the leftovers of betel-nut leaf (paan) chewed with areca nut (supari) that clogged the drain,
the wide basin had transformed into a gory spittoon. As though the touch of red
in the room wasn’t enough, attempts were apparent to add more colour to the
background of the saintly white tiles through muddy outlines with an evident
treading of slippers all across, especially pronounced on the seat cover of the
WC.
Apparently, my
sleeping room partner was the father of the owner of a large ‘tabela’ in the
heart of the city (no offence meant, but basic hygiene compromises seemed to be
brewing trouble). Whilst the owner had slept through the night looking after
his weakened father who had shown no interest in consuming anything edible
since past few days; the responsibility of taking care of the old man would be
shouldered by the grand-son for the rest of the day – only the grandson was as
though, literally, blessed with a mobile phone. Turning a blind eye to the ‘Silence
Please’ notice strewn across the hospital, as the young lad played ‘Temple Run’
at high decibel, my thoughts increasingly started running to the temple for the
complete lack of sensitivity despite reminders to mute.
As my concerned wife
looked across with agony at the intruder of silence, the medical reports came
in to confirm the doctor’s initial judgments of ‘Dengue’ fever!
Numerous bends after
hitting Lonavla, we negotiated a few slopes on the road to head along a muddy path
that curved into the Jambulne village vicinity. Keeping our vigil for 2 white
painted rocks that seemed to be the only torch-bearers for the entrance of our
next 2-day sojourn at the Machan, we skipped the hidden treasure at first but second-time
around turned in to discover the estate that opened up in full throttle once at
the main gates.
Located in one of the
25 biological hotspots of the world and a mere 3.5 hour drive from Mumbai, our tree
house (1 amongst 4 within the estate) rose 45 feet above the forest to exhibit an
unimpeded, spectacular view of the flora
& fauna offering complete serenity in the lap of nature.
Carefully designed to minimize any impact on its natural surroundings, the elegant interiors and unique architecture of our wooded tree house seemed instantly perfect for our holiday - an island of green unto itself! The eclectic room was a mix of paintings of the Raj interspersed with meticulously picked handicrafts, evidently reflective of a connoisseur’s hand - the outstretched verandah-like private deck housed relaxing chairs offering an aerial view of the kaleidoscopic greens below, whilst the bright sun-lit washroom provided the perfect balance of a private space in the midst of the alfresco forest.
As our active urbanized minds and stretched backbones came to rest on the mattresses, the evening sounds of melodic bird calls on their retreat had begun to reverberate across the valley.
x---------- End of Part 1 ----------x
Part 2 & 3 shall be uploaded over alternate days
Friday, July 18, 2014
Don't Let Her Go!
Your body is the tree to nurture,
Don't Let Her Go...
The day starts with the brush in your mouth,
Going to & fro...
The first meal you put into your mouth,
Defines how you will grow...
The first client you meet, your mouth's breath speaks,
How the meet will flow...
Yin & Yang call the mouth a reflection of your Self,
So don't you go slow...
The good night kiss from your spouse is what,
Defines you as a pro...
At the end of it all, your teeth are the only ones,
You'll leave behind when you go...
Your body is the tree to nurture,
Don't Let Her Go...
The above was developed as part of 'Shopper Academy' at J&J when linking our oral health brand Listerine to overall body wellness (depicted as a tree) on lines of the popular number by Passenger 'Let Her Go!'
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)