The alphabetical ardour of life

T

Earlier this week, the night before the solar eclipse thingie happened, I am sitting at the barber shop in Dwarka under the KFC outlet. And I am feeling particularly unsettled. It is my first visit to this place you see.
Style has no language

I have no idea if this true for all men, but I think it is. Guys hate going to strange, new barber shops. When we find a barber shop we are comfortable with, we like to stick with it forever. A hair cutting ‘saloon’, as it is called in any place in the world where there is a local Malayali population, is one of those low-mental-overhead decisions that guys make. We don’t think about it, analyze it or agonize over it in any way whatsoever. Once we find a place that can cut hair, deliver a decent massage and has a reflected TV screen in the mirror in front of us at a convenient angle we are pleased. We drop mental anchor.

And this has nothing to do with the barbering process itself mind you. It’s not like I plan my haircuts or need to have it done in a particularly artistic way. I am pretty sure that if I had the right combination of long arms, flexible elbows and curved mirrors I’d probably just cut my hair myself. And do it in the exact same way I first got it done when my mom realized my dad was old enough to take me to the local saloon unsupervised.

So unlike the missus, who is fraught with the turmoil of choice every time a haircut comes up, I just walk out of the house, entirely in autopilot, settle into a chair and say “Medium short, short sideburns, keep it short in front”. And 99% of the time that is the entirety of my conversation with by barber. For the next half an hour or so I sit coma-like. Like a vegetable and my mind blanks out, leaping from thought to thought to thought in no particular order.

Even those conversations that men traditionally have in barber shops–politics, sports and such like–are entirely pointless and transient. If you ask us what we spoke about just 10 minutes after we step out of the air-conditioning we probably won’t remember a thing. Barber shop conversation, from the male perspective, is like a screensaver for the mind.

Which is why, when you consider all the factors, that men and women have completely different conversations when it comes to haircuts.

Woman One: I am going to get a haircut
Woman Two: Oh awesome! Where?
Woman One: [Refers to a new haircutting place. Normally named after the ladies who own the place, i.e. ‘Anamika and Anandavalli’ if classy, or, if more edgy in an MTV sort of way, named after entirely unrelated concepts. For instance ‘Sepsis’. Or ‘Opticuts Prime’.] Woman Two: Oh wow Sepsis! Awesome. Ask for Vinod, He is the best.
Woman One: Fingers crossed. I’ve asked for him. But apparently they can’t be 100% sure.
Woman Two: Best of luck. What cut are you getting?
Woman One: I am thinking of getting a Deep U in the back with short bangs in front.
Woman Two: Wow! Trendy and all! [NO WAY you can pull that off. But whatever. Fool.]

Contrast with the following:

Husband: I am going to get a haircut
Missus: Buy milk when you come

Which is why I was sitting in the saloon in Dwarka the other day super-aware. This was the first time I was partaking of the outlet. Nerves jangled. Everything felt a little strange. There was yet another shady brand of locally produced talcum powder on the counter, the swivel chair felt particularly unsteady and the TV, alas, could only be seen in double reflection off mirrors on the back and then front walls of the shop.


India TV was on. And had a complete pre-eclipse astrology package going on.

Which brings us to the real topic of this blog post. Excuse that bit about men and barber shops. Think of that bit as an AA Gill-ish rant.

And that topic is: The curse of alphabetical order in our lives.

Let me explain.

Having cornered the paranormally paranoid segment of the Indian TV viewing market, India TV had one of their staff astrologers in the studio explaining how the solar eclipse could impact your personal life. And in order to deliver true TV 2.0 personalized service the astrologer was doing this in order of first letter of name. And agonizingly slowly.

Through the entire course of my haircut and head massage, he only managed to go from A to C. Which meant that by the time he reached S, the first letter of my first name ‘Stud’, it would be well past midnight. And since the missus and I had already decided to catch up on Law and Order Special Victims Unit DVDs when I returned, I would miss my eclipse prophecies entirely.

So during the walk home after the cut, paper bag full of KFC in hand, I began to wonder about alphabetical order. About how, almost from the moment we are born, the alphabeticality of our names begin to haunt us. And finally, like a crazy weekend with a Facebook-account using friend, the experience haunts us for years after. With a first name starting with S and a second starting with V, that meant a lot of waiting for things to happen. And opportunities missed to Andrews, Anils, Deepaks and so on.

Shirley was the first consequence of the alphabetical order of my name. I had to sit next to her on my first day in kindergarten and was quite traumatized by her pastimes of choice: playing with either a plastic toy camera, or nasal mucus… the latter not always her own. I was quite troubled at the time and would have left Kindergarten severely scarred if it wasn’t for Jibu Jose who always shared his lunchbox. (Sausages in ketchup. Always. Awesome.)

(Note: Shirley later went on to grow up and look almost exactly like dusky hot shot model Nina Manuel. Jibu sadly did not.

Booger babe

Of course at that tender, innocent age it seldom occurs to the child’s mind what’s going on. When you are in kindergarten anything is possible. There is no systemic bias and human prejudice. As long as you ran to Jibu’s seat immediately as the bell rang, you got sausage.

But reality began to seep in when, a year or so later, yours truly qualified for one of those poetry reciting competitions.

In the beginning being called on stage in order of first names seemed like a cool idea. Why be the first to go on stage and embarrass yourself when the audience is still alert? By the time Sidin Vadukut’s turn comes along, the audience has long since disintegrated into several little Dumb Charades and Chinese Whispers games. Unless you screw up in spectacular fashion–forgetting all lines, peeing in shorts before going on stage, break down into tears and so on–no one will even realize you came and went.

But then Andrew M happened. Andrew M, who I am sure I have Whatay-ed about before, was the Sachin Tendulkar of poetry recitation.

No wait. No. What am I saying.

Andrew was the Bobby Darling of poetry recitation. The moment he walked on to stage the audience felt silent, the judges perked up ready to imprint 10s in the mark sheets, and the English teachers picked up the biggest prize parcel of wrapped up books and began writing his name on it.

That’s because victory for Andrew M in any pursuit that required emotive speaking and a high pitched voice was just a matter of turning up. This boy made the BeeGees sounds like a sub-woofer. He could sing any word in the English language, ANY WORD, and people melted into little puddles. Andrew could stand in front of a mike and go “Gangreeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeene” and the normally frozen Principal Sister Margarita would go open mouthed, roll up her eyeballs and collapse.

Which meant that Sidin Vadukut, who usually came four hours after Andrew M, could simply do nothing to out-recite the Falsetto Fiend. (Once we both chose to recite the exact same poem, something about a Snowman who’d eventually melt and die. Andrew ran around the stage like those Olympic ice dancers, arms flailing, tears welling up in his eyes. Later I stood in one place, LIKE A SNOWMAN YOU IDIOT FOOL JUDGES, and delivered my lines. Andrew won his eleventh copy of Wren and Martin later that evening.)

The months, years and competitions went by. But even as I could never reconcile with the Fiend, our class was declared old enough to use the student’s library. This was a super-huge deal of course. Our library had the complete Hardy Boys, Nancy Drews, Jughead Double Digest and a sizeable archive of Young Times and Junior News. (Local children’s newspaper supplements. Mostly posters of Milli Vanilli, Spot the Difference puzzles, recipes with yoghurt and banana, and Dennis the Menace and Shylock Fox comics.)

Alas once again I had to deal with the nomenclature nemesis.

Our school was (still is) run by nuns who imposed discipline and orderliness with a certain Burmese Junta elan. (Burmese Nunta? Ha!) If someone fainted during the morning assembly under the hot Middle Eastern sun they just left them there on the ground. Only to be trampled over later as we marched back to our classrooms to the beat of a mildly hypnotizing drum. (Ok I exaggerate. They sent a nurse to pick up the kids, who then took them to the medical room, drugged them and then sold them to this kidney racket out of Ras Al Khaimah.)

So in order to maintain quiet corridors, the nuns decided that classes would visit the library, once a week, in alphabetically ordered groups of five or six.

Woman on top

I NEVER EVER got a Hardy Boys issued from the library. As for Nandy Drew I think I only ever got that Secret of the Golden Pavilion book in the usual routine of things. The good books never lasted by the time it was the turn of the Ss, Ts and Vs.

Instead I had to make do with the terrible, imported from India or [shudder] donated by well-wisher books that sucked. My first ever library book was, for instance, ‘The Sign of The Snake Tattoo’. A terrible book with an anatomically impossible oil painting of a turbanned man on the cover. He looked to one side, with his slightly dislocated shoulder, floating independently from the rest of his body, thrust in the opposite direction. The upper arm had a, GASP, snake tattoo on it just in case the title wasn’t emphatic enough. I remember nothing about the book except for a chase scene in it through ‘the bazaar of Agra’.

Sidin, Shirley, Sunil, Sneha (wonder where she is), Vincent and company all had to make do with the detritus left by then or wait till the end of the academic year by when everyone had already read the good stuff.

Soon a black barter market developed in library books.

We identified suitably named Elsa, Delbert, Franklin types in the class who cared nothing at all for books. And bribed them to go earlier and bring us the good stuff. (Later in life we did MBAs and became management consultants. The suitably named inherited their father’s footwear chain and bought Maybachs.)

Of course I am not saying that the Dreaded Alphabet Curse (DAC) did not come with a few benefits. It was, in fact, helpful in several cases. For instance when the nuns decided that EVERYONE must try out for the sports day teams. They lined us up in DAC order and made us all do the long jump. (Andrew M landed on his face. Which was awesome. But then he began to cry in pain, like that Coldplay fellow, and the girls went wild. Which sucked.)

By the time I landed in the sand with the grace of a birthing giraffe, no one had any mocking laughter left.

Also later in high school when he had John B. the psycho maths teacher, being Sidin helped. He’d take the attendance register and go down the list one by one asking each fellow the homework problem. By the time he reached me I’d have done my homework in the interim. Or at least managed to give an answer that was no stupider than anyone else’s. (The idea in high school pressure situations, of course, is to never ever stand out. Always, always get punished collectively.)

John B.: What is Gauss-Jordan Elimination?
Santosh: Gauss-Jordan elimination is a process to scientifically eliminate, after proper calculation with requisite data and mathematical…
John B.: Next!
Sidin: Gauss-Jordan elimination is a method to mathematically resolve, after adequate processing with necessary numbers and quantitative…
John B.: NEXT!
Santosh and Sidin: Under the table high five!

Now you’d think that DAC would go away by the time you reach business school right?

He overcame

V for very. W for wrong.

I spent all of first term sitting in the last row, in an extreme corner of our amphitheater-like classroom. Way over professor radar, mostly making faces at other people across the classroom over professors’ heads.

It was awesome. While it lasted.

In second term they flipped the order and I found myself in the bottom of the class where I stayed for the rest of my ‘diploma equivalent to an MBA’.

In the years hence DAC has continued to haunt me occasionally. There is that embarrassing moment outside bars and clubs as the bouncer looks for my surname in the list of authorized invitees. (It doesn’t matter if your name is Zalim Zardozi Zabaglione. The bouncer will always begin with Aarti A. Aravindan and work his way down.)

During things like campus placement, interviewers are so exhausted by the time they come to Vadukut, that any above-mediocre joke is enough to grab their attention and get a second round call. By then their bodies are beginning to shut down having heard 400 people tell them that “my goal in life is to learn enough on the job and then set up my own company”. (This because the Professor in charge of Placements said at the seminar that a good strategy is to tell companies that “your goal in life is to learn enough on the job and then set up your own company. This will make you stand apart and look uniquely risk-taking!”. 400 people noted this line down verbatim diligently.)

In my case DAC has taught me patience while I wait, the ability to think on my feet as John B. worked his way down the name list, and a disturbing Harman Baweja-esque ease with performing in front of an audience that does not care. It also gave me something that all of us strive our entire lives to find: something entirely outside our control to blame all our failures on.

So all these thoughts were going through my mind as I walked home from the barber’s. And I thought I should share this with you guys. Because, who knows? Perhaps you are an Aditya or a Bernard who had your own set of troubles when you were in school. Do tell what it feels like to be first by default.

But then I’d forgotten to buy milk from the market and I had to go back again.

Note: Barber shop photo from Failblog.in

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154 Comments

  • Fantastic. Having a name that started with V, I had similar trauma in the Middle-east school library. I used to detest the Aruns', aakashs' etc. But then at times,it was advantageous, especially when you got allocated to the last seat/ row in examination hall;) or when someone had to give proxy attendance and ur best friend's name started with an 'A':))

    It all changed in UK though, where it was surname and I got stuck in the middle with a 'M':)) he hee

  • You name-starting -with-lower-half-of-alphabet guys can't even imagine the horrors of having a name starting with A,B,D etc…missing attendences due to reaching barely 5 sec late after it has started, always on the damn 2nd bench from the front in every exam meant i actually got poor marks for not studying unlike other lucky few, sitting in the front row throughout my 1st year in iim trying to pull my eyelids apart to resist sleeping while luckier junta snored away to glory and ah…as you said yourself, always be among the first ones to present our homework….i have enough 'experiences' to decide that I won't name my childrens with anything that starts before M,N…apne bachon ke liye itna to kar hi sakta hoon…:)

  • yeah – i was an AB, first in line for all sorts of embarassment. got beaten in assembly for laughing at pigeon poo as well just because i was in the first line. but sitting in first row gave me the ability to completely zone out while still absorbing some information, enough to put together a coherent answer that would pass the 'paying attention' test. i wouldn't trade that for anything, but like johnny cash – i wouldn't name my kid 'sue'

  • V is any day better than having a surname starting with Y!

    I was last in almost every class, all my school life. Till Std VII, when a guy (yes a guy!) named Zeenat joined. he flunked that year and I was back to the back of the queue. Sigh…idiot didn't even know how to copy properly from my answer sheet!

    Advantages of that included being in the last row for exams, where we were seated alphabetically and out of the sight of the invigilator who if it was Mrs. O, I had a sureshot chance of scoring 95+ (Coz she would curl up with the latest issue of Femina once the sheets were distributed and would collect them again only when (a) the mag was completed (b) bell would ring. πŸ™‚

    Disadvantages included several of the stuff you mention in the post tho I almost always managed to work out an alternative (at the library for instance, I had my name put down as C Y instead of Y C)

  • Hilarious stuff!!
    BTW, does the initial B stand for Britto?
    He who overloaded the bio students with silly questions of integration and differentiation, that as future doctors, they had all chances of using?
    πŸ˜€

  • Nice Sidin … good to have you back.

    I am an S R .. i think the advantages of staying at the end of the attendance register ( HW, making up answers, latecoming, et al … ) outweighed the disadvatnages … My kids are defly going to be named Zinedine Zidanes …(i'm somewhat of a fan too !) …

  • I have faced problems similiar to the library problem and many other similiar ones. But being an R, I always used to get to sit with all the girls named Rs. All my life, my crushes have always been one of the Rekhas, Reshmas, Reshmis, Revathis, Rachnas, Remyas….once it was a Smita. So you see, they have influenced my personal life a looot.

    • Damn, that explains my love life. Not many gals with names starting with A B C etc. (Damn, I can't remember one now.). Why so much injustice in the world πŸ™

  • As a former student of Indian School Muscat, and a fan of Young Times and Junior News, I feel strongly obliged to point out that our favourite flatfoot fox was Slylock Fox. Not Shylock, who'd be happier in other (somewhat inferior) literary works.

  • LOL! loved it, and yes, its not always bad – with a first name vivek and surname vaidyanathan, now way in hell was i first in line for anything. Except when they reversed the order every alternate week for borrowing books at the library ( i should also reveal that it was one of my first 'process initiatives', (ahem!) since i was the library prefect (ahem, again!).
    the last name thing worked swell when it came to arabic homework, history projects, class punishments, and ofcourse the attendance. And how can i forget physics, chem and computer science labs – i'm pretty certain there was not a single lab experiment in the entire 11th grade i had to demo – god-level peace. (especially with those mirror experiments!)

  • Hahaha. My initials are AA. The double whammy if you will. All through nursery to post-graduation i've been Roll No. 1. And if you think going up for recitation first is good, think again. At least by the end, the audience is too bored to listen for every mistake. And yours is never the first paper corrected by the examiner. I was even threatened in college once to make sure i did well…just so that the examiner would be in a good mood when checking the answer sheets!
    πŸ˜€

  • Hmmm….lots of co ex-gulfie students here.

    I'm a DD but that didn't matter in my school (ISM, Oman) since we were always marched to the library, assembly, sports drills, etc. in height order. But that's another post in itself right?

    For exams, seating was always according to roll no. I'm not sure how that was allocated, but it didn't matter since we had mixed classes to avoid cheating and our seats kept changing.

  • It was the first day in high school. Everyone was in the Assembly Hall and our teachers had discovered some sort of sorting algorithm to put us 300 or so students to four different sections ABCD. And my crush B with whom I studied from LKG was sent off to section D. My name started with P and I think that was the only time that I had prayed with such intensity to send me to section D. I still cannot forget that 5 dreaded minutes. Fortunately God heard my prayers and I also landed in section D. Unfortunately the A (another Fiend) from Section A, who was sitting next to her until 7th standard proposed her before I could do it, maybe telling her that A and B are always together. After all what can B and P bring when they are together other than BP!!

  • LOL, are you an assault on the phani bone or what!!!

    — Barber shop conversation, from the male perspective, is like a screensaver for the mind. (Amaaaaaaaaaaaazing line man! Why cant I think of lines like this to spice up my writing?!??!)

    — entirely unrelated concepts. For instance 'Sepsis'. Or 'Opticuts Prime' (Lol, true, I always wonder whats VIBES got to do with slimming/beauty etc… You get slimming vibes when you walk in maybe! :)))

    — (Note: Shirley later went on to grow up and look almost exactly like dusky hot shot model Nina Manuel. Jibu sadly did not. (Ah, must have a lot to do with those sausages I assume)

    — the audience has long since disintegrated into several little Dumb Charades and Chinese Whispers games (hehhee, nice one again. Bought back the memories of several such games we invented in the assembly hall. Name-place-animal-thing, i-write-on-your-back-you-guess-the-name/alphabet/number/film star/politician/scientis{yeah ok i jest!} being notable few others.

    — Andrew won his eleventh copy of Wren and Martin later that evening(LOL, too good…. once again you wreck havoc with the funny bone)

    Gems man, I tell you.

    P.S: When I pointed out the repetitiveness should also acknowledge the “freshness” :))) Thanks for not falling back to the panjus and the mallus again

    P.P.S: Have been a AA all my maiden life am an AC now… Life isnt that bright on this side of the rainbow must say! Though yeah Kendriya Vidyalayas (where i rstudied) was more into segregation based on “height”

  • hey, you have just been awarded the Barbery Bravery Medal for showing awesome courage when faced with myriad germs and disease options at the local haircutting salon! what's next? the guys who sit under trees with a mirror tacked onto the trunk, high chair a la billu barber,small radio hooked to the nearby electric pole?

    • I once got a shave from a guy like that. And for four years in Trichy most of my hair-grooming was carried out by the most shadiest individuals imaginable. Every single branded bottle in the place was refilled with cheap local substitutes.

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  • Rofl..You write good man!!!
    Btw…I just wanted to add that these days even girls care the least about their so-called hair-cut.To hell with it….Iam saying this as a personal experience..

    • And they all just straighten it no? Seriously what is with the straight look. Not one thing human grows that straight you know.

  • Ashish.
    Which means present-sir-slip-out-of-window, first dibs at the library (heheh), and anything you say as an answer (especially when copied from the mohits and sudiptos) was automatically original while they had to justify source…
    On the other hand – homework HAD to be done, class reached ALWAYS on time, always giving the questions post-viva and never getting, and every mistake came with 54 opportunities to kick yourself afterwards. 103 during MBA.

  • Counter- DAC: the phenomenon of knowing what experiments you are likely to get in high school science practicals. In addition, the phenomenon of having oh-so-bored-and-tired-professors sending you through viva-voce with a nod of their droopy heads.

    • True. Every single lab viva voce I've given in my life has been a towering farce. By then the answers didn't matter. You just had to amble up, look sad and intimidated and you passed.

  • Sidin, as a fellow 'S' man myself, I totally empathize. While in school having an 'E' in a surname seemed to help..until came board time and the official 'V' took over. No matter how I cut it after that there was no way out of the hellish wait for everything. Of course, the H.W. factor that you pointed out was a definite plus. In school, I managed to circumvent some lack of books by simply getting into the extremes of the library teachers' good books πŸ˜€
    Otherwise, the barbershop thing is something I personally realized (you beat me to the post, damn you) – I still go to the same barber whenever I go back to India. Its like an assurance that life has not changed too much.

    Awesome post man. I feel justified in hunting out any and all RSS feeds associated with your writing as a great thing now πŸ™‚

    • I am assuming it has something to do with layers of meaning. Or layers of business analysis. Or it is a spoof analytics firm.

  • My initials are DC. My class 10 all-state board exam roll number was 0007. I was delighted with the '007' bit, but nothing more. It meant I was the first one from whom the answer paper would be taken, unlike the Sidin Vadukuts who could scribble in a few more lines. Not that I wanted to.

    However, largely I managed to stay somewhere in the middle, what with most children having names with “A” and “S” and “B” and “R”. This meant I was never the first or the last to enter the library, never the one to sit in the first or last row, unless I fought and also, never the last to meet an interviewer – or the first. Sigh. Our names!!

  • Hi Sidin,

    How are you? How is everyone at home? Take care, and please writing such funny stuffs.

    PS: I don't love you though it may sound like it.

    Warm regards,
    Sidout.

  • Fantastic, saar. Even if you had just stopped post the barbershop bit, it would have sufficed. As it is, you have exceeded our expectations and amused us much, much, much. And when I say “us”, it is royal usage. Like the late Maharani Gayatri Devi, God bless her gorgeous face and attached soul.
    Very fine. πŸ™‚

    • Yes… she was one of those people who was famous for just being famous no?

      Your highness has pleased this humble subject. (And I walk away backwards.)

  • A delightful read. You've struck a chord with both my 46 year old husband and 13 year old son with your hair-cutting experience and poetry recitation debacle in school respectively! And, then me (I won't give my age πŸ™‚ too by repeating a rehearsed goal at an interview.

    cheers

    • I've never got a comment from an ENTIRE family before you know. Whatay thanks. But the real cool thing is that at 46 your husband is still getting you to to do his work–commenting on blogs–for him. He is my hero.

  • ROFL. Awesome post Sidin !

    I have always been Roll No.1 with the Aa and it has been horrible on this side as well. I was always the first person to get those stupid math questions to which answers I did not know!!! I was also the first in the Q for all viva, lab experiments. I also had the extra burden of remembering all questions and passing it on to the remainder of the class !! My books/papers were the first to be corrected by the teacher and thus ended up having too many red marks because she/he was extra alert when correcting the first book/paper!!!

  • Until I was in my degree college, I refused to be associated with my surname. Its Varghese, I told myself and everyone around me that Abraham was my surname.

    sadly reality caught up with me. But after I got to know my grandfather a bit more,( I have my Grandpa's name for a surname) it changed.

  • one of my friends in college had name starting with A and surname with V……. he had the best of both worlds and troubles as welll

  • at least, you get to buy milk on your way back. no wasted second trip to the market. my mom's more like, “you are a great fellow. i'll consider it my good fortune if you don't touch anything and go straight into the bathroom when you come back.” because you're not allowed to touch anything before having a bath, no kidding. i once asked her how come we don't wash currency notes (change from the barber) and she almost sent me to hell.

  • My last name is Anand..and I have my share of problems..you get your interview call even before the first yawn comes out..and one has to wait for the entire party one to be told sorry you are not fir for this position.

    really nice post..and the hair cut thing you told is quite apt

  • Young Times was NOT a newspaper supplement! Sidin! I'm shocked! Yes, the good folks at Khaleej Times brought it out (it was even edited by a Mallu lady, no?) but it was definitely not a supplement.

    Aah, Otto the Alien, Drabble comics, the WWF column which had stuff three months after it actuall happened, Uncle Malik's stampogram (or something of the sort)

    Thanks for bringing back the memories though πŸ™‚

    • In fact, and this is no going to make me sound any younger, but when I was really small it was, I am pretty sure, a supplement. Which was then spun off into a magazine. And then someone told me that it later went back to being a supplement kind of thing again.

      Ah yes. Otto the alien who lived in Umm Al Naar no?

      Sigh. Good times.

      • Strange, because I've read a couple of those 'history of YT' issues and it was started as a magazine. Or maybe it was a supplement way, waaay back… Ok, I'm not helping your younger cause am I?

        Did a bit of researching. Bad luck, it looks YT has stopped.

        References:
        1) http://www.orkut.co.in/Main#Community.aspx?cmm=
        2) http://www.facebook.com/pages/young-times/32634

        This is sad indeed. Didn't think YT was doing all that badly. If youth-centric magazines in the Gulf don't work, and cricket magazines in India don't work (Wisden, Cricinfo), what hope is there for the print medium? πŸ™

        • I think it then became something called Yuth. Or some such ridiculous thing meant for kids who think they are adults but actually are babies. Or something like that. I still remember waiting to hear the magazine hit the doormat outside… sigh…

      • How is calling someone 'Mallu lady' any different from 'Tam guy' or 'Golt dude' or something?
        And I've written the name in the comment immediately above. Her name is Roopa Kurien.

        Read things fully before shooting off comments, please.

  • You new layout looks brilliant. If only you could adorn it with frequent posts…

    PS: That was a polite request for you to post more frequently, by the way. I can threaten you of course, but that won't go well with the layout. So please.

  • I don't mean to be rude here but it's almost two months since the last post. On a more relevant note, my initials are T T so I do understand what you had to go through.

  • School: No problems generally because we used to get arranged and called by increasing order of height and I was comfortably near the end. Being of a reticent nature, this sure helped.
    B-School: Same trouble as you Sidin. Did not like to be in the line of fire of RaviC.

  • sooper πŸ™‚ have been away from your blog for whats been ages i think. the last one was your astronomically famous one 'The trvails of single south indian men of conservative upbringing'… funnily I am back reading a post on the same basic subject – names! πŸ™‚ But have you considered the likes of us named after an letter bang in the middle of the english alphabet. We get the best of both worlds more often than not πŸ™‚

  • Dont you love AA Gill is Away? …”Japanese are what aliens would be if they learnt being earthlings by correspondence and wanted to slip in unnoticed”

  • *Aswin*

    It's like the CATastrophe that happened a month back.
    You always are the lab rat for testing something.

    Wish I had a library with that rules at school. Sigh.

    I always forgot my lines in the oratorical contests and I always fell on my face in the trials, long jump or football. I don't remember girls going wild. I remember them laughing out loud.

    Seminars at my college were always to be taken in the alphabetical order. And every sem, it would go till J or K and stop there. Sadly, we were usually too sleepy in class to realize it. By the time we realized this by the end of third year and started our 'Reverse the order' agitation, seminars were over.

    I always had to do my exams or lab tests on the first day. You cannot hear the questions that come in the test from anyone but the teacher, who would only tell them to favorite kids (each of them having enough evil-grin-grudge on me to watch me fry during the tests)

    It is widely known that most offices never praise you or the team for the good things you do and ensure you are fried (fried, not fired) for anything you screw up. And the screw up list, when mass mailed, would always, always be in the alphabetical order.

    Dork… No, Dark days indeed.

    • By the way I have always wondered why babers spend more time cutting hair behind our head than in the front. Invariably all the barbers I have gone cut hair behind my head for first 20 minutes and then spend 5 minutes for the prinipal front portion.

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  • Hi Sidin. Nice post πŸ™‚
    My name is 'Aditya' and in school the roll-num was; yes u guessed it right; 1.
    I was always the first guy to recite a poem, solve a math problem, describe the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms, stand first (facing the dais) during the PT Drill and so on….
    By the time the teacher crossed 25, he grew so bored and frustrated that he would just, plain discontinue and the Ss and Vs were always lucky.

    Life taught me to take every challenge as an opportunity and (try and) deliver the best.

    • Being A is has always been a pain a average and trouble making student like me. I am Anoop and invariably I had to recite poems , lead the National plegde ( India is my country…) in the daily school assembly , submit lab records in engg college and finaly do presentation in MBA. DAC never left me. I used to sit in between Vipin and Rajeev and I can still remember the smirk they gave when I had get up and go to front of the class to read out Hindi poem as per the DAC order.

      I didn't want my son to face this dread and so named him Rohit. Not an A or Z. The strategic intend was to give benefit of time and yet avoid being complacent.

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  • 26 Jul 2009 … Earlier this week, the night before the solar eclipsethingie happened, I am
    sitting at the barber shop in
    Dwarka under the KFC outlet.

  • Fabulous! I know everyone would relate to this post. The mucus sucking classmate,’conversation on haircut’ with a female friend, what i tell when hubby goes for a haircut, Β “stick to one-barber” motto of hubby, DAC…. endless things that i could relate too. Adipoli post!!!

By sidin

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