- Shawshank Redemption - The story of hope
- October Sky - The story of passion
- The Man from Earth - The story of history
- Cindrella Man, Into the Wild - The story of life
- Stranger than Fiction - The story of writing
- Goodwill Hunting - The story of gift
- Veer Zaara, The Notebook, Titanic, An Indecent Proposal - The stories of love
- 3 idiots - The story of students
- Baghban - The story of parents
- Little Manhattan - The story of kids, 'in love'
- Few Good Men - The story of judgment
- Speed I, Rambo - Action
- Arranged - The story of marriage
- Rang De Basanti - The story of justice
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
On Movies
Monday, July 26, 2010
The Little Bird
Thursday, July 22, 2010
A hell of an update
- I visited Bodh Gaya, the place where Buddha got enlightened, on car with my family as I was so desperate to travel. It was a serene place, though there were not many things to see, but still, it was a good time to spend away from work and other real-life pressures, and with my parents, sister and my dear camera. Thankfully, I got some real nice clicks there.
- On way, I finished a book called 'Go Kiss the World' by Subroto Bagchi. It's a marvelous book by an entrepreneur turned author and it emphasized on his life journey and how his life conspired to let him reach his ambitions, with values and integrity intact. I've ordered another book by Bagchi titled 'The High Performance Entrepreneur'. I would read it on my way back to Delhi.
- As I reached home, internet dwindled. Without internet for four days, I had to skip my work, but it gave me time to read and write a lot. Day before yesterday, I wrote 3000 words in a day and felt really accomplished.
- Yesterday, I got my old guitar fixed and its sounding really sweet after all that renovation. I want to jam so badly, but hardly anyone seems to give me company here. Let us see.
- On Tuesday, I started ace cyclist Lance Armstrong autobiography - It's not about the bike - and it's a riveting read. It's not about the bike, it's about life. And death.
- I went on a photographic expedition with my friend Debanjan. We carried our SLRs across the residential colonies and everyone seemed to give us a what-the-hell-are-they-doing kind of stare.
- Today I had a day out with my school friends. It was fun. Watched the movie Udaan, which was nothing but a slow-and-tiresome piece, however Ronit Roy was really impressive in his role; after which we had wholesome lunch and some doses of air hockey.
- What more? Two days left, internet fixed up - I think work would take my days. In between I'll write my sequel.
- I'm done for the time being, I wanna lie down and finish Armstrong's book; as of now, only two chapters are left and I left it at the critical stage where he was to go for the Tour de France.
Friday, June 18, 2010
thewittyshit.com
Sunday, June 13, 2010
When Silence Speaks
Sunday, June 6, 2010
Urge
Friday, May 21, 2010
On starting up
- Ideas are precious. Share it, but with caution.
- People won't appreciate(they don't generally know how to), they won't see a future(most of them are myopic!), they would question your ability(they seriously think that you're infertile!), they would say it's not the right time(they're unsure about themselves and they want to paste their diffidence upon you!).
Just listen to them. Revel at the fact that you've been gifted with the passion for the idea that no-one else has. - Find a partner. Who is passionate, different and trustworthy. Shake hands, firmly.
- Partner with a person who (a) you're really compatible with, (b) who is totally different from you in skill-set, and (c) who shares the same passion and vision for the idea as you. Respect him/her.
- Make sure that your partner is staunchly critical yet not offensive. Be the same to him. Stauncher, if possible.
- It's not the one with whom you first shared your idea, who can be your partner. It's the one who first shared the excitement for your idea, who can be your partner. Remember.
- Once done with the skeleton, meet 'talented' people - the creative ones - who can suggest ways to improve your idea when they don't like something, instead of just smashing it. It polishes your idea.
- Avoid losers. It's easy to recognize them. They'll always suggest why something can't be done instead of suggesting something that can be done. They would take away the input and give you no output.
- Welcome critics, but avoid cynics. It keeps you encouraged.
- While hiring people, always remember that enthusiasm precedes talent. It holds for you too.
- If your friend's advices are really good, include them. If not, smile and say, 'Thank you.' Remaining unperturbed when unwanted suggestions are flooding in is an asset for an entrepreneur. It offers you stability.
- Hire people who're frank enough to say, 'I want to join you because I want money.' They would tell you before they ditch you.
- While making your core team, remember that long distance relationship sucks! Make sure your team-members are near to you, so that you can fuel their enthusiasm frequently, assess their work and see the progress yourself. It makes things easy.
- Seek friends who you respect and who respect you, for suggestions. Mutual respect is really important. It enhances creative output.
- Be happy with yourself and your idea. It brings confidence.
- Write - your ideas, your learnings and your plans. It brings clarity.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Life
It's a new day.I get up and say.'Today, I am gonna run!''For sure, it's gonna be fun.'Somebody once told me that life's a race.This is the only reality you've to face.I agreed to it, thinking, 'How true?'Run, that's what I am supposed to do.Oh! it's gonna be fun.This race called life, I'm gonna run!I run and run until the day comes to an end.I come back home, smashing my friends.Accomplished, happy, but tired.I drop to my bed. Bleary-eyed.And fall into the trap of my dreams.Where the race ain't over, that's what it seems.It's another race there.Tougher, if not equal, I swear!Life's a race, how true?That's the little secret I would tell you.For years, the process continues.Successes many, failures few.I grow old, still racing.Without any idea of what I have been chasing.Years go by, my fate awaits.It seems bad, as if I had missed something great.The messenger of 'Death' appears.I am dreadfully tired, full of tears.For, my time has come.I can't see what I have done.And what, undone!In a bass tone, he speaks to me.As though a grave decree.'I can't take you!' He commands.'I'm done with my life. Why can't you?' I demand.'Because you already died.''When?' I cried.'The day you started running, out of your own choice.'Suddenly, a memory flashes before my eyes.'Weren't you the one who gave me that advice?''That life is a race.''That's the only reality what I've to face.''Ah! Yes, but you got it all wrong!''That was not even the part of my song'Then he sang, 'Life is a grace.''That's the only reality, you've to face.'My eyes open up, abruptly.I find myself lying in dark, all lonely.Someone pulls my head. And it's all light.And I scream out loud, as if in fright.A lady in white cuts the cordThat connected me to my God.And I see, the only reality I could faceIs that life's a grace.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
When you aspire
Monday, April 12, 2010
Harsh Meets Harsh
Sunday, March 14, 2010
On Words
- Something can be called your 'passion' if it can make you lose your sleep; something can be called your 'gift' if it can make others lose their sleep for it.
- You happen to be the best gift God has given to you.
- An idea can change your wife.
- It is more important to have a mind full of ideas than to have a mind full of knowledge. The world is full of people brimming with knowledge. Interestingly, they are the ones who work under the directions of 'the men with ideas'.
- Ideas act like nuclear reaction - one idea leads to other and the chain reaction starts, for eternity.
- One is never short of ideas for the person who means to you.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
I need a break
Monday, February 1, 2010
The Law of Attraction
It's 4.25 pm and I am sitting on a comfortable chair, light brown in colour and am staring at the monitor in front of me, with alphabets being poured down on the screen according to my wish. There are headphones in my ears and they are playing the song 'Here I am' by Bryan Adams into my ears. Incidentally that's my favorite song too, having the best combination of lyrics, music as well as the feeling of hope embellishing the soft background.
In one hour, I am going to have my first tryst with a foreign language i.e. French. I had no special plans of learning a foreign language lately, though I would have done it some time later in my life, since my semester schedule this time is already packed with tiresome courses and a stimulating research project, but around a week ago, I got an internship for the coming summer in France, in the city of wine - Bordeaux and I got very enthusiastic about visiting the land of renaissance. To enjoy my stay to the fullest, I decided to learn French, whose classes start from today. It's going to be an interesting experience, I sincerely hope so.
As a matter of fact, I wanted to share something. No, it was not the news of my internship, rather it's my experience with the law of attraction. To those who have not heard/read about 'The Law of Attraction', I would urge you to read the book called 'The Secret' by Rhonda Byrne. For your ease, I am giving its crux - the law of attraction states that - if you really want something and truly believe it's possible, you'll get it. There she had talked about something called as a vision board, where she asks us to paste pictures of whatever you want to have, since nothing stimulates universe more than a want backed up by visualization.
In December, I was down with typhoid when, just to pass my time, I took a photo of mine and edited it in photoshop and placed myself in front of Eiffel Tower, with my index finger touching its apex, quite gleefully. It came out looking quite realistic and I told my cousin sister Aishy, 'See, this is a photograph from the future, I am going to France this summer,' just out of the blues. Throughout December, I had applied to USA for internships hoping to get a chance to visit the land of Obama. But all the replies that I got were negative. I didn't apply to Europe at all, since I was too much into US. And then I left applying for internship even, the heap of rejection took its toll on my perseverence. Throughout these days, my photoshopped image of measuring Eiffel Tower's height with my hand adorned my desktop and my gtalk profile pic.
In Jan, I came back to IIT and got busy in many useless things, leaving the internship thingy completely at bay. However, one day, just out of the blues, I went to a friend of mine, who gave me the email id of one professor in France. I came back to my room and sent an application to the Professor and the day later, I got the invitation later. I was euphoric. You should have seen me then. The smile on my face didn't fade for almost two days. I got an internship in France with the very first application that I sent, though I'd sent around 120 apps in US and got rejected every time because of funds shortage or inavailability of vacancy. The time when I had given up hope, this miracle happened. Isn't it incredible?
I am sharing the picture that I modified in December. I know I am looking stupid, but please bear with me. It isn't about me after all, it's about the law of attraction.

Monday, January 18, 2010
Book Review - The White Tiger - by Arvind Adiga
Rating - 9/10
I have had a feeling right from the childhood days that only those make it to become a great writer, who have got an uncommon, enigmatic and somewhat unique name. The kind of name that has the power to stay in your mind for quite a long time. My strange feeling, owing its origin to the examples from real life, be it Salman Rushdie, Roald Dahl, Ruskin Bond or Jhumpa Lahiri, has assimilated great examples with every passing day. Arvind Adiga, the Booker 2008 winner for his debut novel ‘The White Tiger’, is the one who came into my uncommon-name-list, of-late.
His first book, The White Tiger, has indeed proved itself to be the white tiger amongst all other contemporary books. Choosing a refreshingly new style of story-telling, Adiga made his novel one of the most engrossing reads of the decade. The novel narrates the story of a poor, uneducated and ‘half-baked’ village-lad who is unconsciously entangled in the vicious circle of slavery and exploitation by the high-class, the so-called affluent society and how he carries on his education by listening and watching people and that determines his subsequent actions which in turn liberates him from the chains of subordination, chains of slavery. Adiga’s writing style is lucid, simple-yet-appealing and captivating. The story runs with a great pace provoking the imagination and what-happened-nextism in readers’ mind to the zenith, with intelligent sarcasm embellishing the whole of the plot rendering a breathtaking ironical humour running throughout his narration.
The book is in-fact a long letter addressed to Mr. Jiabao, the Premier of the China; written over a period of seven days in eight different chapters; who is to visit India in a week to meet the entrepreneurs of India – often regarded as the masterminds behind India’s sharp economic development. The narrator is the one who’s writing the letter to Mr.Jiabao and he describes what’s there at the grass-root level of India’s progress. He brings it out by relating his own story and relates how he rose from the poverty by his insolence intertwined with hook or crook, by the mere play of foresightedness, deceit and ruthlessness, by having the necessary grit to break free from the shackles of slavery; and then moving to Bangalore to become one of the prominent entrepreneurs of the mega-city. It is an enthralling journey of how the corrupt and amoral society takes its toll on a gentle, meek and servile soul and instigates him to break the master-slave barrier that has been running since the ages in the roots of Indian society; and make his presence felt in the society, by measures that are inconceivable but vehement.
It brings out the real India, the actual picture of corruption and deceit behind the concept of ‘India Shining’ and what all lustre is this ‘shining’ taking away from the already-dark India. Adiga deserves all the accolades he has got for the book. The book is a mirror to Adiga’s intelligence as a writer.
This book is the author’s take on reality of the nation with marvelous story-telling and deep, insightful and well-researched description of what constitutes the base of India – the poor exploited souls – the society that has been ruled by the rich since history, the society that’s unknown to the world, the society that has been kept away from being described in literature.
This is the story of a not-so-common common man. This is the story of the White Tiger. And take me seriously when I say that this story is a must read.
P.S. This is the first book review I've written and I loved writing it.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
On Spontaneity and Creativity
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Arbit

Besides this, life is running great. I have joined an MBA coaching class which I am relishing to my best, have got great interest in entrepreneurship off-late and writing work of my next book is going on track. How are you all?
Tomorrow, I'm going on a date with this city of ours, where my camera meets the pride of Delhi. Will cya there.
Sunday, December 27, 2009
The Toilet Awakening
Earlier I used to contemplate, introspect and think; without any particular motive, rather just to listen to what my heart had to say sometimes. Now, as I notice, I have started thinking with a hope to come out with something funny or witty or extraordinary so that people 'like' it or appreciate it. The mere way of my thinking is now being governed by how others respond to it, which is what is disconnecting it from my self. Contemplation and introspection had taken a vow of silence since many days, rather many months, and this lull continued to exist till my present state, until two days ago.
Day before yesterday, as per my habit goes, I took an old newspaper out of the heap and went into the loo. Reading while attending to nature's sacred call had been a habit that had got into my nerves since my school days, after once listening to Derek O' Brien in BQC, who shared that the secret to his excellent English was that his father made it compulsory for all his brothers to read newspapers aloud while in the toilet. Fearful that my Dad would not quite appreciate me carrying things to read in the toilet, I took them stealthily and preferred to read them silently. This way I used to escape from studies during my pre-JEE days, by letting the hollow pot bite my bums and the barbarous mosquitoes do the same everywhere else, for hours, while I kept skimming through the Page-3's of several newspapers in one go.
Anyway, coming back to the point, day before yesterday, there was this old newspaper that I carried to the loo as a silent spectator of my live performance and it contained a small interview of the legendary lyricist, Gulzar. One of his lines during the interview stirred my soul from within, only to realize later that it was my stomach making noises, but still it was one of the most profound sentences one could read in the toilet ever. He said, 'I am at such a stage of my life where awards are more but achievements are less.'
I was stunned. As I saw within me, rather introspected after such a long time, I realized, 'Apparently, I am now running after awards, because awards are something which is conferred upon us by someone else while achievements are something that is conferred by our self upon ourselves. And achievements are the real gold that I should strive for!'
I've realized what has went wrong. In the race of winning the hearts of others, I had lost touch with my own heart. I had almost forgotten it. And, neither did I win too many hearts, you see, life is quite unfair if you lose contact with your life-line. Thanks to the toilet awakening, I am enlightened and back on track.
So the bottom-line is, if you're ever in doubt - any kind of dilemma it may be, your solution is just a few steps away - 'Do the loo.'
Despite being together, something sets us apart.
The heart ...
# which taught me the difference between right and wrong
# which assured me that for a definite purpose, I was born
# which made me stand alone when no-one had faith in me
# which inspired me to face adversities with utmost glee
# which told me that perseverance always triumphs
# which remained my guide, through all jerks and bumps
# which gave me the belief to pursue my passion
# which offered me the courage to dream beyond imagination
... And it's never too late,
To reopen that closed gate!
P.S. Quoting the inimitable Gulzar saheb, 'Dil to bachcha hai ji.' :)
P.S. From now on, I am noting down my thoughts not on facebook but in a notebook. :) :)
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Being an author - an experience
1. The real friends show enormous faith in you! They are the ones who share your happiness.
2. Fans are friends, for they fuel your ambitions.
3. You start seeing a story in every situation of not only your life, but of anybody's life who happens to cross your eyes. The whole world seems to be a big story, with each event having a tale to tell of its own.
4. All you need as a writer is a friend who has some time to listen to your thoughts, ideas for stories and tales sprouting in your mind and suggest to make it more real, better and touching. I thank God for giving me such friends - Rajiv, Ravi, Aman, Aishy, Saumya, Ankit, Keshav, Avinav, Pallavi, Supriya and Apoorv.
5. You come to know the difference between the real criticism and the biased ones. The real criticism is the one which suggests you how to improve.
6. You get to know how to handle appreciation as well as criticism with an open mind. You tend to respect the genuine criticism and ignore the biased ones.
7. You like to appreciate aspiring writers more, since once you too were at their place and you see yourself in them.
8. You don't encounter any hitch about whether you'll be able to write another book or not. Confidence in writing touches the acme.
9. You don't need to worry about getting published! Once published, relieved forever.
10. There are just two kinds of 'readers' - those who like you as a writer and those who don't!
11. However, you often encounter the third kind of 'people' (not readers) - they are those who hate you, without any reasons and you feel sorry for them because they need help. My Dad, who happens to be my only mentor, said to me just before I was going to get published, 'If somebody dislikes your work, then there is something wrong with you. But, if somebody hates you/your work, then there is something wrong with him/her.'
12. Each small accomplishment seems to be just a beginning in the never-ending road of life. You realize the BIG-ness of the word called 'life'.
13. You find it really funny when you encounter sudden hostility from strangers - those who don't even know you. It brings a strange kind of pleasure, more so because this kind of hostility owes its origin to envy.
14. In the end, it's just you and the flight of your imagination that plays the melody - it's the flight of your lifetime and you just wish that it never ends.
P.S. This is completely personal recount. Any similarity is purely co-incidental.


Sunday, December 6, 2009
Helloz fellows!
Anyway, it's also quite intriguing to note that even common people like us have news - and that too can be classified into good news, bad news, weird news, shocking news, kickass news and freaking awesome news or freaking awful news. So here, I present some news from my side and I choose to classify them into just two categories - good and bad, since I'm freaking awful at classification.
Starting with the bad ones first :
- I am suffering from typhoid from the last 8 days and still it's on. I was bored lying on the bed whole day with 104 fever so I am writing this, despite the fact that my head is about to burst.
- This means that my plan of writing my next novel in this vacation has been evil-eyed. Though I keep thinking about the story-line and nuances in the plot all the time, but I don't have enough energy to sit and write. Hope I get well soon and do my job with utmost passion.
- Well, that was all for the bad news. See, God is not that ruthless!
Now it's time for some good news :
- Third print of my novel has almost sold and the fourth print is going to come soon with all the earlier typo-errors rectified. The big news associated with the fourth print is that it will carry a tag called 'A National Bestseller' on it.
- Secondly, my semester, yes, the semester witnessed my best performance so far. I got an SGPA of 8.38 with an A grade in the Creative Writing course under the guidance of Prof. R.B.Nair, one of the leading contemporary poets of India. This has really been a confidence-booster since this was the busiest semester for me and still things worked out fine. All thanks to God.
- What else, yeah the title of my next novel has been decided. It will be called 'The Book'. And you'll be astonished to notice how much I've matured as a writer in the last one year, after writing my first novel. Quoting few lines from my just-started seven-page manuscript -1. A book is a journey into another world.
A world that is unknown, unpredictable and captivating.
2. I’ll write for the rest of my life but I failed to write my own life.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Encounter
With a torch throwing light
I searched across the streets
Hoping to find a ghost of fright
Waiting to give me a mistreat
My eyes were wide open
In search of someone strange
Suddenly a young boy appeared
Whose face looked somewhat deranged
‘How dare you spy’
He thundered, ‘In my territory?
Here only death is permanent
And your life – temporary!’
Instead of getting scared
I almost jumped in glee
For I’d found the ghost
Who would set me free
‘At last, I’ve found you
Now you’ll help my spirit redeem
Oh ghost brother!’ I ask,
‘Why so frightened do you seem?’
He took my torch
And threw the light on my face
He could find nothing there
But just an empty space
He threw the torch
And ran back apace
After-all, the fake ghost saw
A real ghost without a face…