Friday, December 31, 2010

The Millenium's first decade in retrospect

Quick snapshot of this past decade! :)

2000 (New Years in Chicago)
- Appa joins the Foreign Service
- Moved to Germany
- Went on my first trip without family - Amrum (many firsts on that trip!)
- Played on a school team for the first time

2001 (New Years in Chennai)
- Was in my first play
- Travelled across Europe with family on a Eurail pass

2002 ( New Years in Chicago)
- Started learning tae kwon do
- Learnt rowing and rowed my first national competition
- Moved to Bangladesh

2003 (New Years in Chennai)
- My aunt got married
- Decided to become vegan
- Baked my very first birthday cake
- Went to Australia in the summer
- First time on the bungee trampoline
- Swam my first butterfly race

2004 (New Years in Chicago)
- My baby sister was born
- Moved to Calcutta
- Won my first national medals in rowing

2005 (New Years in Chennai)
- Finished my O-levels
- Won the single scull in both the junior and senior category at the West Bengal State Rowing Championships

2006 (New Years in Calcutta)
- Spent the summer in Germany and the US - again a summer of many firsts
- Visited the hospital I was born in Dubai - New Dubai Hospital

2007 (New Years in Calcutta)
- Finished my A-levels
- Turned 18!
- Started my BA in Sociology at MOP Vaishnav College For Women in Chennai
- Stayed in a hostel for 3 months
- Moved in with my grandparents for the year
- Won my first All-India University rowing medal in Chandigarh

2008 (New Years in Mumbai)
- Moved back with my parents
- Became an executive member of the Student Council in college

2009 (New Years in Chennai)
- Spent the summer interning in Melbourne
- Went to my first Aussie football match
- Became President of the People's Club in college
- Won gold in the single scull at the All-India university rowing championships

These are just some of the things that happened this past decade. We'll have to wait and see what the next decade has in store! :)

Goodbye 2010!

It is the last day of the year and the decade and looking back it has been an incredible year and quite an unforgettable decade! :)

What was Meena upto in 2010?

- Won the coxed fours at ARAE in Chennai
- Finished my BA in Sociology from MOP Vaishnav College For Women, Chennai
- Passed in First Class
- Visited my great grandmother in Tuticorin
- Traipsed around Singapore for a few days to relax, recuperate and shop
- Proud owner of a MacBook Pro thanks to my grandparents
- Joined Teach For India
- Started teaching 3rd grade at Rashmi English Medium School. Have a wonderful class of 24! :)
- Learnt how to cook
- Turned 21! :)
- Spent my birthday at Hard Rock Cafe in Bombay with some of my favorite people! :)
- Own my first car
- Prerna came to visit in Pune
- Nikki came to visit, watched a Hindi movie together and had an unexpected start to a milestone weekend
- Moved to Pune and moved into my very first apartment
- Trek to Koraigad with an awesome group of friends
- Went on an overnight trek to Rajmachi
- Cycled to Khadakwasla
- Visited Hyderabad after many years and had a wonderful visit
- Ran my first 10 K at the Pune Marathon
- Ran my first half marathon at the Goa River Marathon
- Attended home boi's wedding in Vizag! :)
- Family got a new Swift and I was the first to drive it!

We'll have to see what next year has in store for me! :) :)

Looking forward to 2011...

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Running rush

I sat there wondering why I had come to McDonalds. Probably to show that I was fine and normal and that my classroom was fine and dandy. Or probably because my brain was fried and I was hoping that Ronald McDonald had some answers. Either way, I spent most of the time staring at the TV screen watching EPL highlights on ESPN. Only towards the end did I start talking and joking and thank god for that.

It is unusual for me to be quiet and straight faced. For those of you who know me, you know exactly what I mean. I am either smiling or laughing and constantly yapping. Most people would give anything for me to be quiet for a few minutes but it also serves as a source of worry as this is an obvious indicator that everything is not OK.

I didn't quite know what was wrong or why I was in a blah mood. I drove home listening to the radio as usual. As I parked my car and entered my apartment building I thought why not go for a run? I hadn't run in the morning and thought it better not to wait for the run the next morning. I decided to run after about an hour and settled down to finish a few small things.

I finally got up and headed downstairs for a run. The next 20 minutes took me to a place I needed to be and cleared my mind. My heart and feet were thumping to the beats of the music but as I ran, a calm washed over me. Things inside settled and my thinking became clearer and things seemed a lot easier and definitely more manageable.

I guess once in a while it is hard to keep things in perspective and be objective. Here, where there is a race against time, I think it is a constant struggle but the only thing I have learnt is that it may not necessarily be a bad thing. It pushes me to work harder and question myself. It also pushes me to be more efficient and really prioritize!

Running may not be my first suit but it is slowly becoming my vice...

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Mumbai Marathon 2011

Please start pledging money for Teach For India:

http://wishberry.in/users/wishlistview/1099

Every little bit counts! :)

Friday, October 8, 2010

Investing stakeholders

Wednesday was an extremely eventful day to say the least.

The day started off with me going to school, just like any other day. We were told we would have to attend some Zilla Parishad training for two whole days, all in Marathi. Of course, we were ecstatic about the training! ;)

There was this hope that I would only have to go for half the day after school, but our Principal had a change of heart and wanted me to attend for the full day. So around 10 AM I headed to a nearby school and sat down among about 150 English and Hindi medium teachers for a 7 hour long Marathi "bashan" on the new ZP format for assessing our students!

Following the training, I walked out with the hope of heading to a Western classical performance. I put my key in to open my car door, took it out, sat in the car and looked at my key. The key was slightly bent. I touched the tip of it and it snapped into two and I was just left staring at the key that was now in two pieces.

One of the teachers from my school was with me and I was supposed to drop her back home. I was like um... there's a slight problem. My car key just broke and is now in two pieces. Then I showed her the key. We decided to find a chhabi wala close by to get a duplicate key made. We started walking and about 5 minutes later learnt that if we went into the Yerwada market, we could possibly find one. After a good 15 minute walk, we found a chhabi wala who was willing to make a duplicate key.

When asked how much it would cost, with no hesitation he said Rs. 150. I, for one, had only Rs. 40 in my wallet at that time. Yes, I know, just wonderful luck! We successfully bargained him down to Rs. 40 to make the key. YAY for bargaining skills! :) With a key in hand that would hopefully work, we headed back to the car. Once back, I tried opening the car door and couldn't.

We tried all kinds of things, including shaking the car to get the door open, but it just didn't work. By this time, the other teacher's uncle had come to pick her up. They were nice enough to go back to the chhabi wala, pick him up and bring him to the car. The key by now was bent and out of shape. He fixed the key and 2 minutes later had the car door open. Amazed I started the car and headed to drop the other teacher off at home.

Once at her home, she insisted that I come in and spend a few minutes, so I went into their house. A nice, quaint house and such a warm, welcoming family! It was amazing how the whole family called me in with smiling faces and such affection. They insisted that I have dinner with them but I told them that I would have to head out as it was getting late.

After about an hour, I walked out of the house and headed to my car. As I was driving back home, I was just thinking how wonderful it was to visit their house and how welcoming and affectionate they all were. We talk about investing stakeholders all the time but how many of us take it to heart. I'm pretty sure no one would have told this teacher anything about investing stakeholders but she just did it. I think that at the end of it, I felt that we should not look at ourselves as being different from the other teachers in our school, or feel different but rather just look at the wonderful things that they offer and the things that we can learn from them. If you look hard enough, there is something we can learn from every single person we meet! :)

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

City of Angels

Do you believe that each one of us has an angel watching over us? Do you believe in heaven? Do you believe that its important to feel pain? Do you believe its important to know what a pear tastes like? Or.....do you believe it would all be better if you could hear music when the sun rose and live in blissful ignorance?

"And I don't want the world to see me,
Cuz I don't think that they'd understand,
When everything's made to be broken,
I just want you to know who I am"

"And you can't fight the tears that ain't comin,
All the moment of truth in your lies,
When everything feels like the movies,
Ya, you bleed just to know you're alive..."

Today was the first time I watched City of Angels. I didn't know what to expect and neither did I expect this song. For some reason, I thought there was another song in this movie that never played and was pleasantly surprised when this one did. One of my favorite songs, I now understood what it meant and how it could mean so many more things. Definitely an interesting watch for the heart! Makes you question and wonder....and wonder and question...those simple things in life that we take for granted...makes us think of our struggles and the many things that we choose to ignore...the many things that we struggle to come to terms with...the many things that we grapple with on a daily basis....but it also makes us think about the simple things in life...the things that make life worth living...the things that make life so special....the things that make us human....and the things that only humans have....

Food for thought...or rather exercise for thought....five minutes later I was pulling away at my ergometer...guilty for not waking up early enough in the morning to finish my workout...on the other hand, thankful for the order of events...allowing my mind to literally wander to the heavens and back while I rhythmically pulled at the handle of the ergometer.

The sweat mixed with the pain gave a strange sense of pleasure and satisfaction...a high that only exercise could give....a fulfillment that only physical strain could deliver!!! For this feeling, I wake up every morning...for this feeling, I drag my tired body out of bed and pull on my sneakers...for this feeling, I go through the pain and the strain at the end of a hard day.......for nothing as wonderful as the oxymoronic pleasurable pain was unleashed from Pandora's box....

Tomorrow is a new day, where I wake up looking forward to feeling this pain all over again...looking forward to my screaming muscles and my aching lungs....looking forward to the meter counting down and the time ticking away....looking forward to the rhythmic spinning of the flywheel...stroke after stroke....minute after minute....the small things in life make life worth living and the angels watching are really missing out on something special!

Friday, August 20, 2010

Sense of possibility

Last week I was at my wit's end with what incentives and investment strategies I could use with Simran to get her to do her work and complete it. It seemed impossible. She was extremely slow with her writing, even if it was just copying from the board, she didn't complete any of her homework, she didn't bother to write in the workbooks or even complete assignments in her notebook. I tried telling her all different things. I know she absolutely adored me but for some reason didn't see reason in completing her work.

Finally, before she was leaving school one day I told her that she would not be allowed into my class the next morning if she didn't complete all her pending work. If she didn't, she would have to stay outside class and complete the work and then she would be allowed into the class. She agreed and left the class. I kept my fingers crossed that this strategy would work.

The next morning she came in again with her work incomplete and I sent her out immediately and told her that only if she completed her work she would be allowed to be part of the class. I believe this struck a cord somewhere and in record time she completed her work and came into class to show it to me. I was amazed to see that not only had she completed it all, she had also gotten it all correct.

That day, at the end of the school day, I told her again that she would not be allowed into class the next morning if she didn't complete her work. The next morning she walked into class all proud and beaming. She very proudly pulled out her workbooks and showed me that she had completed all her work. I was elated and ecstatic.

Again, for the millionth time, I learnt not to give up, at any point on any of my kids....they were all going to make it...but I had to believe...because if I didn't, no one else would....for them, all they have is a belief and a hope....