Friday, 25 September 2015

A Trip Down Cambridge's Lanes

It is 1 am in the morning on Saturday and for once, I have the next two days work-free. After a hearty Friday night dinner with my colleagues, I am lying in bed thinking what am I gonna do the next 48 hours. Such days happen to come by quite rarely when you are onsite but when they do, it is absolutely vital that you make the most of them.

I just realize that a friend of mine, Nicky is in London that week. So I randomly text her and enquire about her weekend plans. Since she’s in town for only a fortnight, maybe she would have something on the agenda. And she most certainly did. She had planned to visit Cambridge with some of her colleagues. She cordially invited me to go along and after a couple of minutes of diddle-daddle, I agreed. We were supposed to meet at the Canary Wharf DLR station at 10AM and then take it from there.

With my chai latte in hand I met Nicky and we set off towards King’s Cross station to catch the hour long train to Cambridge. As we were in the tube, I realized, albeit a little late, that none of her colleagues had come along and to speak of colleagues, I hadn’t told mine about my plans either. They were asleep when I made the plan and I had snuck out before they’d woken up.

Nicky and I met in high school. She’s a year younger to me, hails from Mohali and currently lives in Gurgaon where she’s working with one of the Big 4 accounting firms. It’s incredible how we live merely 10KM away in Gurgaon but were meeting after almost 1 year, 10 thousand miles away in London.


Soon we were on the Great Northern Rail speeding towards Cambridge. That is when I checked in on Facebook, notifying everyone, including my still asleep colleagues that I was going away for the day.

We disembarked on the platform and before starting our tour of the city, desperately hunted for a good place to eat as both of us hadn’t eaten a thing. We roamed around nomadically for a mile or two, searching for a good restaurant on Zomato and finally ended up at Novi.

An ultra-modern setting fused with an ‘earthy’ furnished look, it seemed like a good place for us to break our fast, plus, our table had a good view of the street so we were sold.

With the hunger pangs out of the way, our exploration commenced, one college, one museum and one avenue at a time.

First up were the Fitzwilliam museum and just across from there, the ‘Judge Business School’, which looked more like an overgrown kids’ play den than an MBA college.

These 2 took most of our afternoon. We were in no mood to eat anything but did fancy some afternoon tea and the best place for that, ‘Fitzbillies’, an iconic century old bakery/café was there for the pickings. With tea and lemon cakes and chocolate éclairs in our bellies, we resumed our tour. We roamed around as the hot afternoon sun alternated with dense clouds and every 15 minutes, a tiny hint of rain.

Our sunglasses were on, jackets ready and umbrellas open as we walked through cobbled streets and reached King’s college. The overarching giant of an estate, its towers were a thing of absolute beauty. The structure was so huge and spread out that wanting to see the whole spectacle we had to go around the whole block, taking us almost an hour to cover.


To rest our legs for a while, we sat down at the side of the river in front of Trinity College and saw people row rafts in the water which the Brits call ‘punting’. We sat there for I don’t remember how long and reminisced about a decade ago when we were still teenagers. If I had a memory pensieve filled up with my most treasured memories, most of them would be from the time when I was in high school and going down that path again, about what we used to do, wear and act like, was really wonderful.

As the sun began to set, we chanced upon Church of St. Mary the Great, a centrally located parish church. It was inside the church that defined the moment of the day for the both of us.

The choir was at a rehearsal session at the head of the Church and even without an instrument, it sounded just what I presume would sound like in heaven, if heaven were to exist at all. Sitting there, frozen into our seats listening to all the notes, the Soprano, Alto, Tenor and Bass, it was truly mesmerizing.

For some evening nibbles, we retired to La Tasca, a Spanish Tapas restaurant where we could hardly finish one single platter of chicken wings but downed two full pitchers of Sangria. Outside, we also saw the infamous singing binman.

A bit buzzed, we roamed around, soaking in the city as we came across, ‘The Fountain Inn’, a small pub where we picked up two pints of Guinness and walked up a small hill just opposite the pub, to sit and drink s’more.

From the hill, we could see the whole city and in the daylight even at 9PM, we had the full view of what our day had been spent around. Dark beer laden bottles in our hands, we sat down, brooding and reflecting. With a semi-loud clink, we put our bottles together and cheered to I do not remember what. Gulping down the beverage, we stayed there for half an hour looking over the architectural beauty that is Cambridge.

Soon enough we reached the bottom of the bottle and the hill. Picking up a box of nachos, caught the last train towards London (Aboard which, with no regards towards our fellow passengers, gorged on the crisps throughout the ride), fully content and glad we made this plan.

Friday, 8 May 2015

Buzzed Aboard

Sitting in seat 23E of the flight Air India AI 111 on a Sunday afternoon, I write this post en route a London (and am posting it 5 days later when I have some time on my hands to actually do that). 

Travelling on a company/client sponsored trip for a project, I don’t think I am all that excited at this moment. Well maybe when I land at LHR, it’ll be different?

As the Indian capital and almost everyone I know battles with the scorching heat, I am set to be greeted by the British capital which is currently clocking 90 C. I barely have a jacket or too with me and a ‘trench coat’ or ‘umbrella’? Nope.

As I thought about taking out my laptop and putting this all out in MS Word, I had a can of Heineken in my hand, the 2nd of the 2 can alcohol quota that can be served to a passenger on board I presume. I am buzzed aboard this flight, in a middle seat between one of my colleagues on the left and an aged woman on my right, frequently peeking at a spectacles clad, skinny cute girl with shoulder length hair sitting in 22K who, after a little recon, seems to be working with ZS Associates, a Sales & Marketing 
consulting firm I guess.

With Eminem blasting through my headphones, this is the only time I think I’d get to write something up that is totally unrelated to the project I am travel to London for. Literally swamped with work, we’ve been notified that neither do we have weekends anymore, just 7 day long weeks till this engagement comes to a close by mid-July nor can we hope to go sightseeing in London for the first few weeks.

Oh well. It is what it is. Being the over planner that I am, when we expect the workload to simmer down a bit, I plan to apply for a Schengen visa and visit Paris, followed by Geneva, Florence, Barcelona, Nice, Strasbourg and the likes. Ummm, too much? Well, I’ll try to check boxes against at least 3-4 of those cities.

Visiting Paris has been a dream since after my friends and I got ourselves enrolled at Alliance Française. La Ville Lumière. Oh la la. Well, now it’ll just be an English Channel and a EuroStar ride away. I’d also gotten though an Assistantship program sponsored by the French Education Ministry where I would’ve lived and worked with a primary school in Western France for a period of 7 months starting this October. 

Oh it would’ve been so amazing. I would’ve come back totally ripped (assuming I would’ve eaten healthy and worked out regularly which I highly doubt), with fluent spoken French and a very unique sort of experience on my resume. But as always, ambition, career growth and future B-School probabilities came into the equation and took ‘Mon Reve Parisien’ away.

If not 7 months or 7 weeks or even 7 days, one thing I would love to achieve on this trip is to spend at least 1 full friggin day in Paris, strolling around on Champs Elysees singing ‘Oh, Champs Elysees, hugging Eiffel Tower so tight my ribs would come close to cracking, sitting in a roadside café with cobbled pavement and sip hot coffee, having French baguette and some wine in a park, taking a boat ride in the Seine and of course, showing off my semi-fluent but very rusty French skills in front of my colleagues.

So till the time I achieve this objective and write a follow-up post describing every ounce of my week long Eurotrip in super minute details in July (over planning at its peak over here), I’ll try and get back to work I need to finish on the plane, the reason why I cramped my already cramped cattle class leg space by keeping my laptop bag under my seat and not in the above compartment.



Jusqu’a la …. Au revoir!

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

Fix You


When you try your best but you don't succeed. 

When you get what you want and not what you need. 

When you feel so tired but you can't sleep. Stuck in reverse....

If you're a Coldplay fan, you would know this song even before you got through the first line. With the keyboard playing in the background and Martin crooning in his trademark pitch, I could listen to this song all day long.

Specially after finding out for whom this song was written. In case you didn't know (and aren't a Chris Martin follower like me), he wrote this song for Gwyneth Paltrow after her dad passed away.





When the tears come streaming down your face.

When you lose something you can't replace. 

When you love someone but it goes to waste. Could it be worse ...


This is my favorite Coldplay song but it wasn't the first one I'd heard. Actually, I don't even know which was my first Coldplay song.

It was one of those late nights at office when almost everyone has left for the day but one unfortunate team is busy making final touches to the deliverable and trying to meet their 'EOD' deadline.

Since no one was there to object, my manager back then, PG started playing this song on his phone out loud. Only a few seconds into the song, I got reeled in. So I asked, "What band is that?". PG looked at me with an expression that you might get when someone asked you, "What does water taste like?"

As if it should've been obvious, he told me that it was Coldplay. Okay, so I was intrigued enough to check it out.

Lights will guide you home. 

And ignite your bones. 

And I will try and fix you.

The first Coldplay song I heard was 'The Scientist', followed by 'Yellow' and other hits like 'Viva La Vida', 'Atlas', 'Fix You', & 'Paradise'.

So yes. Fix You is my favorite song by this band. I've recently been told that guys usually like this one but not the girls. They don't want a 'Guy' to fix you. They're capable of doing that, along with anything else a guy can do.


High up above or down below. 

When you're too in love to let it go. 

But if you never try, you'll never know. 

Just what you're worth.



Anyhoo, these are my 2 random cents worth of thought on this song.


Tears stream down your face when you lose something you cannot replace. 


Tears stream down your face I promise you I will learn from my mistakes. 

Tears stream from your face .....



Lights will guide you home. 

And ignite your bones. 

And I will try ... And fix you ...

Monday, 9 February 2015

Lullaby


'I would wrap you in angels, just to keep you safe. 

I would walk to the Sun, just to hold you close. 

While the world breaks your heart, I'll be here for the fall. 

Though the days might betray you, know that I never will.'



This the very first paragraph from the song 'Lullaby', one of the only 3 songs that "Martyrs & Poets" released before disbanding.

I do have the other and more popular 'Replay' in my playlist, but this one strikes closer to home, I don't exactly know why. I'm not exactly what you would call a romantic so that's not it. Maybe it's the situation in which I heard this song for the first time, that it kinda stayed with me.

It was during the last few scenes of an episode from 'Criminal Minds' when Jason Gideon (Mandy Patinkin) reconnects with his son after ages.

This phenomenon,  when we associate a certain song/tune to a past memory, real or imaginative or to a certain sense/emotion/situation, is known as a 'Song - Memory Association'. The same way our olfactory system associates a certain odor, good or bad with a certain person, activity or memory.

Anyways, enough with the scientific gyaan. What I wanted to jot down here in this post is what I associate this specific song to.

It was the summer of 2013, the month of July to be more specific when I met this girl I got infatuated to. Right around the time I heard and got fixated to this song. I'm not sure if she fits into the song well or if she needs to be cushioned from the problems of the world and all the stuff that Nate Picard wishes for his muse in this song but as I associate this song with her, I do wanna wrap her in Angels. Whenever I listen to this song, I can remember her sitting across me in a striped salmon - colored shirt, the same color that I was also coincidentally wearing.


'So take all your faith
Be more than I ever will

Lullaby Baby
Lullaby Baby I'll keep you here

While the world might break you, be strong in your will
And Trade all your scars for love

And be wreckless with love
Be more than your father
Don't betray all your hope because love conquers all

I would wrap you in angels, just to keep you safe'


It's not just this song. There are a variety of songs that remind of situations frozen in time. Linkin Park's 'In the End' sends me back to my boarding school days when I heard it on a collector's album called 'Progressive', for the very first time, on the shiny new stereo that our housemaster had so graciously installed in the dormitory. This was also the first song, the lyrics of which I had learnt by heart.

The first song on Side A of the cassette was 'In the End', followed by 'This is How You Remind Me' by Nickelback. We would always listen to these two and then rewind the cassette to the beginning. Until we bought LP's albums and started fixating on 'Numb', 'Breaking the Habit', 'Points of Authority' and other hits. So a week back in the gym when my iPod played 'In the End' and 'How you Remind Me' one after the other, it was enthralling what I experienced next. Using Hiro Nakamura's powers (TV Show - Heroes), I was teleported back in time, when I was 14 and standing in awe, in front of the wooden box that held the stereo.

My playlist has evolved over the years as I'm sure everyone else's also must have but these songs, like lullabies sung to my subconscious mind, are etched into my memory not only in the form of tunes and lyrics but vivid and living memories.