25 Apr 2009, 2:48pm
When there is a fan...
Posted by Script Writer | Category [ Writing ]Comments (10) | Trackbacks (0)
I remember it like yesterday, which in a weird and twisted way it was. And which in a weird and twisted way does not imply that I remember yesterday very well since most of it was spent recovering from a dozen shots of vodka from the night before. I was 11. My father, like all fathers of that era, made it a point to attend every PTA meeting. There are times when I wonder why they don't make fathers that way anymore. Guilt money has substituted parental obligations. But that is beyond the purview of this blog. We don't take up unpleasant issues, even if they are potential pandora's boxes.
Mr. Ravi Kumar. He was my science teacher. Some say Scripto has brilliant memory if he can remember something that far down the lane. Others say he has nothing better to remember. Either way there are serious concerns over his life, or the lack of it. But I digress. Digression is something I have successfully managed to avoid in my last few posts. Depressing. Especially since I had made it into something of an art form.
Inspite of myself, I am not above making 'tribute' posts. That trait is in line with the bundle of contradictions that I am. But if this is a tribute post, then what is Mr. Ravi Kumar doing on it? Two reasons. One, I like showing off my memory. Two, the tribute is not to him. The story, however, must be told.
See, it was during that infamous PTA meeting when my father introduced himself to Mr. Kumar for the very first time. And how did Mr. Kumar respond? Simply, "Oh oh, you are Scripto's (of course, he did not call me that - I am just using a pseudonym here) father. I am his fan!" Now the point to be noted here is that Mr. Kumar's English was very non-gult like, which means he did not mean to say, "He is my fan" and ended up saying it the other way round. To the lot of us who have heard sentences like, "He has not come to work today. I hope he is not well." when in fact it should have been "He has not come to work today. I think he is not well", coming across a gult who knows his English is more than a welcome relief.
I have not known Scripto-fan long enough to say anything about her English. But I am willing to look on the brighter side of things for a change, despite my gloomy outlook. This post is a tribute to her. Long live Scripto-fan and her ilk!
Current Mood: Gloomy
Current Music: Some band playing behind my office...
Mr. Ravi Kumar. He was my science teacher. Some say Scripto has brilliant memory if he can remember something that far down the lane. Others say he has nothing better to remember. Either way there are serious concerns over his life, or the lack of it. But I digress. Digression is something I have successfully managed to avoid in my last few posts. Depressing. Especially since I had made it into something of an art form.
Inspite of myself, I am not above making 'tribute' posts. That trait is in line with the bundle of contradictions that I am. But if this is a tribute post, then what is Mr. Ravi Kumar doing on it? Two reasons. One, I like showing off my memory. Two, the tribute is not to him. The story, however, must be told.
See, it was during that infamous PTA meeting when my father introduced himself to Mr. Kumar for the very first time. And how did Mr. Kumar respond? Simply, "Oh oh, you are Scripto's (of course, he did not call me that - I am just using a pseudonym here) father. I am his fan!" Now the point to be noted here is that Mr. Kumar's English was very non-gult like, which means he did not mean to say, "He is my fan" and ended up saying it the other way round. To the lot of us who have heard sentences like, "He has not come to work today. I hope he is not well." when in fact it should have been "He has not come to work today. I think he is not well", coming across a gult who knows his English is more than a welcome relief.
I have not known Scripto-fan long enough to say anything about her English. But I am willing to look on the brighter side of things for a change, despite my gloomy outlook. This post is a tribute to her. Long live Scripto-fan and her ilk!
Current Mood: Gloomy
Current Music: Some band playing behind my office...
26 Apr 2009, 4:44pm
wow, extremely touched by the dedication, scripto! to know that beneath all those thick-skinned layers of contempt, ridicule, gloom and morbidity of an mcp from the cow-belt, there could actually be a kishen-kanhaiya-type dilwala, falling in love with a gult who "perhaps" knows her english, is quite a "heartening" revelation... gee, real impressed! thanks
27 Apr 2009, 3:30pm
Scripto-fan, again let me just assume you genuinely meant all that you said and that it was not genuine sarcasm. Thank you.
However, I am far from a Kishen-Kanhaiya type dilwala. You should not tarnish my image with such suggestions. But it is quite a turn on coming across a gult who knows her English. That I genuinely mean.
8 May 2009, 8:25pm
If dreaming was soul-food, then we're probably starving our souls or switching diets pretty often.We prolly lack a simple freedom to dream for dreams' sakes. Nice post scriptwriter
9 May 2009, 5:52pm
Thank you, Jaiwantika. But I am not sure my post was about dreams.
9 May 2009, 7:16pm
*eeeps,this is embarassing* I was trying to compliment you on some post I had read in ur archives..there was this line on dreams there. I genuinely remember commenting on that post itself, but dunno what happpened, coz the comment turned up here.Just shuffle thru ur old posts, if u don't mind, unless of course, u know them all by heart...
9 May 2009, 7:44pm
Well, I do know most of them by heart :-p. I am self-filled that way.
But thank you for the compliment. I quite liked that post too. :)
9 May 2009, 8:21pm
"self-filled"...isnt that "self-willed"? whatevr. Yeah, it Was a really nice post. I found ur list interesting, too. So you hate rand as well as everybody else :D I remmber being this yuppie schoolgirl who stood up in some posh english seminar full of english profs to say the Fountain head was one of my favourite books. I realised then, thats it was truly unfashionable to express genuine admiration for something the proletariat loved to cult madness.At that time, I tried to mend matters by telling them I was also hot for Rhett Butler (GWTW)but even THAT book was trashy enough to be made into the first Hollywood film in color ever,so I made no headway.All said, we can nevr really escape the stigma of having read a non-"good book", and having loved it.
9 May 2009, 9:39pm
Jaiwantika, you seem to be a woman after my own heart whatever that phrase means! I can't agree with you more on the stigma of loving non-good books.
10 May 2009, 11:19am
Hey, thanks. This actually reminds me of when someone said 'don't read books..all books are bad', when they were asked to list their best advice to the world. By that rule...every book has the right to a fan following, and a market no matter how bad it is. Which is pretty much the writing scene today.Someone also said once that hearts made better reads than books...certainly,"well-booked" hearts find their due markets and intelligent audiences.It's wonderful we agree on so much :)
11 May 2009, 10:51am
congrats scripto, you finally found a real "fan"! or, did you just become one? ha ha.. :p