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sitanshi talati-parikh

sitanshi talati-parikh

Category Archives: Musings

the power to be who you want to be

23 Saturday Jan 2010

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Entrepreneurship, Sahil Parikh, Success, Thoughts

Somewhere along the way, we have lost our identity, our individuality. we have lost a sense of whom we want to be or what drives us. because we are so scared of – what others will think about us, whether we will live up to others’ expectations, whether we will be able to fulfil our own and others’ dreams with that vision, with the fear of failing, with the fear of not being secure.

Three things led to the creation of this blog post – reviews of the Three Idiots movie, Robert Kiyosaki’s latest Be Rich & Happy, and my entrepreneur-husband Sahil.

It started with the 3i movie… i kept reading reviews tweeted by people about how the movie is brilliant, about how chetan bhagat has been wronged, about how the movie sucks because it sells dreams not reality, about how chatur is the real hero, and we shouldn’t laugh at him, because we are laughing at ourselves, we are all Chaturs. And in there lies the flaw and the brilliance of the movie. This is where 3i is bigger and more meaningful than Bhagat’s story can ever be. It is the triumph of vision, of course, but over that it is the triumph of the makers in bringing us in uncomfortable touch with the Chaturs in ourselves. However much of a dreamer, a visionary and a non-comformist you are, there is a Chatur in you and a Chatur in the people around you, who pull you down, who want you to to conform. As someone rightly points out, 1 visionary needs a 100 Chaturs to do the hard work. Agreed. But that doesn’t mean you don’t give people the chance to dream big, to be their own visionary. Just because we want those 100 Chaturs doesn’t mean we selfishly take away the power to make them understand what they are missing if they remain Chatur.

The next point is that Chatur is successful in his own way – he did make it. Yes, but he achieved the obvious, materialistic and conformist road to success – the kind that makes us selfish, capitalistic and greedy individuals, who cannot appreciate thinkers and visionaries, who evaluate success in terms of net worth. There is nothing wrong with being Chatur – we are not ones to decide which path is right and wrong. What we do know is that we need to keep the passion and fire alive and burning, we need to accept that if we have a greater calling, we may need to chose to not conform to societal norms. We need to accept those who are trying to do something different, because there is no right and wrong path, and nothing can be evaluated on the basis of a paycheck. If you have the right values, the right belief and the passion, success WILL find you. You don’t need to chase it. You just need a little faith. In yourself. The kind that Rancho was trying to get us to have.

Robert Kiyosaki of the Rich Dad Poor Dad fame, in his own capitalist way, tries to get the Chaturs to not conform and not live life based on that mindless paycheck. That has what has killed the US economy and it will kill Asia too, if we forget what’s important. Invest in yourself (in your vision) and if you have the right beliefs, with the right ideas and you will be rich and happy. It’s too simplistic in its current form, but the bottomline works – you need to steer clear of the rat race to build something big, to dream big. It questions the conventional notions of ’security’ of the parrot people who live on the rat tracks.

Sahil, my entrepreneur-husband, has done the job-route. He knew he would not be happy until he followed his dream to own his own company. He’s living his dream. But his friends, in cushy jobs and family businesses are obviously more ‘settled’ than he is. He is still in startup stage. Long hours, managing his own team…it’s a quiet pressure that comes along with being a risk-taker, along with following your dream. There are those who admire him for taking the tougher route. There are others who suggest that he should quit while he is ahead and find something ’safe’ where he can manage his life with a steady income. Who’s the correct one here? The most interesting example is that of an entrepreneurial family friend, who suggests that maybe Sahil should consider alternate forms of income because at this stage he should be ‘settled’. He points out that his own son, has a great cushy job, a 401k and a nice nest egg already – that is the right path. It is a great path for some. Not for those who think about building something bigger than they are, something that will live on when they are no longer there, for those who have a vision and just need the strength and the patience to see it through, and the courage to accept failure and the renewed vision to start again, if required.

I’ve noticed that there will be many who will question you in life, who will judge you and who will think they have a better solution for being you than you do. If they are not you, they cannot be you. Only you have the power to be you. The problem arises when you think or give others the power of attorney to your life and mind. That is scary. It is as if you have allowed society and others who don’t understand your vision to enter your mind and heart and take over. The proverbial serpent will twist you into such a frenzy that you stop thinking clearly, you lose focus of your vision.

It is important to realise that there is no formula in life. What works for someone – it’s great, I’m happy for you – but it may not work for me/you. It may not make me happy. And at the end of the day, I have to live with myself, sleep with my thoughts, and walk in my own shoes, not yours.

Marine drive, sunset

13 Wednesday Jan 2010

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mumbai, Photos

Img00033-20100113-1853

It is a little bit of solace after a long day of work. If only we could make our city live up to its full potential.

survival of the tastiest

27 Sunday Dec 2009

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Food, nonvegetarian, Thoughts

i have yet to understand meat-eating pet-lovers. i haven’t really reconciled to meat eaters to start with, but what’s the scene with non-vegetarians loving their pets? they bathe them and care for them as if they are their own kids, even more than their kids. americans may forgo a meal to go that extra mile for their pet. but they wont forgo meat on their table. while food choices are up to the individual, i find it painful that people with the power of greater understanding and empathy, who don’t do things merely for survival, would willingly choose to cause so much pain to another living thing simply to satisfy their taste buds. the way animals are farmed, the way they are created and tortured, it would make anyone shudder with repulsion. but when the meat it tasty, who cares about how it was created, right? Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Meat raises pertinent questions…and the New Yorker has done a good job of presenting the case for the book. http://3.ly/meat

While I know not everyone can become a vegetarian or vegan, it helps if people think twice about cruelty to all animals, not just their household pet.

While cosmetic testing on animals is banned, and Legally Blonde 2 presented one helluva case, what about the billions of animals that are tortured and dying every day to make for an appetising entree? Cruelty takes place in many ways, and its important to start looking at the mass killing that you might be perpetuating, while ignorantly giving your pet a bath with scented oil.

And if you must eat meat, why not your pet? Its easier to kill and eat a stranger, is that it? So should mass homicide be pardoned, if a person is very loving to his/her immediate family?

death comes in threes, with an unexpected act of kindness

23 Wednesday Dec 2009

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Death, Thoughts

from the time someone told me that death comes in threes, the morbid part of my mind began watching out for it. one down, two to go etc. i mean not that i wanted it, more like fearful anticipation. the theory hasn’t failed me so far. its been a few years.

today, however i realised that i havent been looking for the unexpected, only for the fearfully expected. every time something darkens your universe, something or someone comes along to brighten it. it can be a smile, a caring hug, a few kind words, but they mean more than they would on a normal given day. especially if they come from unexpected sources. and sometimes, your personal and professional life collide to the extent that someone from your work existence gets a chance to give you solace or be there for you when you least expect it.

it’s important to remember that kindness/ empathy doesn’t come easy – humans seem to have dropped that natural ability to care for someone outside their direct influence…possibly around the time selfishness became the mantra for survival. in all my times of grief, i thank the people who showed up for me, and hope i can do the same sometime, somewhere.

not here, not right now

21 Monday Dec 2009

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Greece, Mykonos, Thoughts

there’s something about wants. they drive u insane. i mean it could be even just wanting some peanuts to munch on, or living in greece (im retiring in mykonos, and thats a fact.) today, on a monday, i drove to lavasa with my family and friends and it felt nice. but the pressures of the real world kept sliding into my thoughts, and taking away from the present moment. i wistfully held onto the thought of spending a great deal of time in a place like this, far away from the madness of bbay. but that wouldn’t work would it?

it’s human nature to create, generate madness; and human desire to want to escape it. if we stop lying to ourselves, we thrive in our own madness. we wouldn’t last a day in a sanctuary of peace. that in fact, would drive us totally mad. so, in our madness, we find our sanity. if only, we could appreciate the power of now. and enjoy every moment – mad or not, for what it is. The moment we question our happiness, we lose control of our mind. Live now, live free. It is the answer to our future.

drinking humble tea

08 Tuesday Dec 2009

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Thoughts

I think one of the most underrated qualities today is humility, and sincerity. In fact, ironically people attach a premium to cockiness – women find the bad-boy swagger strangely attractive. It doesn’t take much for something to go to your head, to make you think – whether it stems from confidence or insecurity – that you are the shit. That the world revolves around you, and life happens because you exist. Everyone has some role to play in life – on a stage, there is a drama to be staged. If one can accept that we are all learning, every single day, from so many others, we would always drink humble tea.

It’s not really about who you are or what you have or who you know. It’s really about what you do with it. You can be the biggest star and have the humility and grace to not have any airs and graces, no pretentions and truly be normal. That doesnt make you less of a star, it just makes you more real, more likeable and more appreciated. It is refreshing to see that, and the cynics find it tough to believe it. The cynic in me has been squashed today – for once.

Fame and money, are so dangerous – they are an addiction. The high gives you the impression that you own the world, that the world lies at your beck and call. It is that illusion of immortality that needs to vanish, before your life falls around you like a pack of cards. Remember Scarface? It’s so heady, being considered important, wanted and admired; that when life changes, it’s incredibly tough to deal with.

If someone in a relative seat of power can remain grounded, all battles have already been won. You don’t need the cup then, the saucer will do just fine.

greed drives ambition, gathering mossy dirt

05 Saturday Dec 2009

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Thoughts

It’s not what I am doing, it what I am not doing. Is that ambition or greed? Where do satisfaction/ contentment end and a lack of drive begin? I guess it’s also about personal goals – if u are only working towards your own satisfaction that equals greed eventually, but if your goal is greater than yourself, it’s about humanity and to make the world a better place that would never be too much. Finding a deeper goal in life is what makes it worthwhile. It’s quite pointless otherwise. But what if you spend your whole life, waiting for that deeper goal? You tried with a vague end and no means. While you are trying you wonder what drives you.

How much is enough? How much will you push someone for greater targets and goals? There’s a fine line between full potential and stress from impossible targets. Impossible to draw the line. One person’s ambition is another person’s greed. One person’s complacency is another person’s contentment.

Everything in life is so relative, that one wonders who defined what works and what doesn’t? If humans have the capacity to err, then they may have erred about a lot of things. And we follow them blindly. Religion being a prime example of blind faith. If we just put blind faith in principles and ethics, and less into rituals and false moralising, it would be so much easier to accept people, life and situations. Most fights revolve around the most pointless of things. What is fundamentalism, if not a highly misguided premise that you are right and someone else is wrong? Who defines this for us? Why can’t there be multiple rights and multiple wrongs? After all, that’s what quantum science would like us to believe – that reality exists at multiple levels, time is just a thought and existence is relative.

Everywhere in life, there is a fine line between what’s good and bad – unfortunately most people have crossed the line so early and so thoughtlessly that the line isn’t visible to them anymore. Let’s stop, consider, let be, and let go. Let be all that doesn’t really matter and work on what does. How much energy do we waste on things that are supremely unimportant, that we wouldn’t even think about tomorrow? Simply because it exists now and maybe irritates us now? As Sahil says, if every time we are annoyed, mad, or confused, if we stop to reconsider if this will matter tomorrow or in a year or even in 5 years, it really won’t seem so important.

We often spend more time worrying about the consequences, when they haven’t really happened. But, living life in the way it is, takes away a bit of the drama, now, doesn’t it?

resisting change and plateau-ing lives

01 Tuesday Dec 2009

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Thoughts

The burnout rate is pretty darn high. I mean we haven’t even got to achieving our goals and we are ready to retire – the glass beach house in Mykonos is calling. I don’t know whether it is the burning ambitions, the high level of connectivity, the deep need to get ahead or simply a desire to resist change, that people can’t last out in jobs, in relationships, and suffer from ADD. I do know that we are all desperate for a simpler life, a life that is less full, less complicated, less involved. December gets to me – the need to represent society and yourself everywhere is just intolerable. the need to be a successful Type-A is painful. The need to make everyone happy is difficult. And in the midst of it all, finding yourself is impossible. Who are we, and where are we headed? The eternal existential question hounds me. Recently at an interview with a young Bollywood star, I was humourously reprimanded for not thinking ‘facts’ and thinking about the things we can’t control – it reminded me yet again, how much time we waste is worrying about what lies ahead, and simply, not living in the moment. No fear, no worry, no angst can touch you if you live with the facts and live in the present. But then, life would be so bland without all the drama, right? Life is an existential drama and we are simply enacting the scenes. And to, stage left, scene two.

desi-pan and paan-chawal

27 Tuesday Oct 2009

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Thoughts, Writing

Honestly, it has always bothered me. The Indian writing in English (particularly of the diaspora). I can see people going into exacting details about the nuances and sights and smells….its cloying. There is something shriekingly Indian about it – like we are not fine just being in our own skin that we need to overtly display it in every sentence with the haldi, the masala, paan, the works. There are very few writers whose works work for me, and most of the others I just prefer to avoid. I can’t abide the nostalgia, the sense of what could have been and the mysticism. And often the not-so-subtle desire for social change that makes it just so oppressive. It doesn’t make us respond or emote better if we read exhaustive descriptions of the sights smells and sounds of the neighbours. I wonder when we can actually just drop the clinging to desiness and culture and just start relaxing – in being, naturally who we are: urban Indians, global citizens.

a buzzload of marketing and a dollop of money

09 Friday Oct 2009

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Marketing, Thoughts

so at what point do you concede that marketing drives content everywhere? it’s quite a vicious cycle – to keep publications afloat, ad revenue is the bread and butter. at what stage does it become the most important aspect of editorial content? when does one draw the line to say, screw the moolah, we gotta say what we gotta say? while ethics are not in question, it’s actually a fact that we write what we are paid to write, rather than want to or believe in writing. in a free market economy, while sustainability is important, one also needs to hold onto the right of free speech. if we say something too vicious (but true) we can alienate people and so the advertisers. if we choose not to write abt something we don’t agree with, then we may alienate the people that keep us going. the grey line has been crossed and we need to stop and reconsider if we would sell our souls to pay the price to keep the written word alive. An international men’s monthly announced their annual issue with a huge “in association with…” It is as if alcohol brands are now going to be associated with media and the top people in the world that media represents. everywhere, everyone has fallen prey to ad-driven content and marketing. so it all boils down to one thing: corporates hold the strings to everything: politics, media, consumer goods and therefore consumers. How far will we go? The show 24 is not far off the mark when it speaks about the government not being the enemy as much as the world;s corporate houses – after all, money is more powerful than power itself.

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