Thursday, May 6, 2021

Ramani Thatha (1930 - 2020): A few memories

 This is a note about my maternal grandpa Mr K.S.Venkatramani who lived a complete life almost finishing 90 years before he passed away in 2020 during the pandemic situation. This is a totally unplanned note and I am just pouring out whatever comes to my mind about him, whatever I remember of him, my relationship with him and the journey of his life from my lens.


My first memories of him are as a sincere and a diligent man who had a well organised home office at Salem. I used to visit him and Bali paati every year during my summer holidays with my mother (and later with my cousins who lived in Avadi, Chennai)

The office used to be in the hall itself, which used to be neat and clean with a Remington typewriter a table with a glass top and a few inserts inside of important numbers, visiting cards and some God photos. Behind that table on the wall were photos of various Gods and there was an office bureau. That was it. There was another small sampling room with weighing balances and some pounding instruments.

I loved sitting on his office chair and always wanted to use the type writer. I have tried my hands at typing something or the other on that typewriter multiple times (often in his absence). The font I am using for this post is a typewriter font. 


From those days, I remember him as someone who used to have a fixed daily ritual of cleaning everything including his cycle and a Tvs50 that he had and doing a Pooja for everything. Like his belongings and things, he himself was also neat and clean and like a staunch Iyer used to put a veeboothi pattai on his forehead and a kunkumam. You could call him siva pazham wearing spectacles. If I am not wrong those spectacles were photo sensitive as well which turned black in sunlight.

Coming to their relationship, I had never seen my thatha and paati really fight at all. Very small arguments here and there but they used to mostly be soft with each other.

While it was a Home office, he used to maintain office work boundaries for sure. He used to like me a lot and used to always be soft with me. He liked the fact that even as a child I used to read a lot of books and talk in a very mature fashion. I was close to him.


I used to pester him to take me along, when he used to pay visits to the town for his office needs or any purchases. I loved going to Five roads, Chamundi supermarket and sometimes to Salem junciton
He used to live in a slightly far away area called Reddypatti. He was a man who was good at Kanjira percussion instrument. I always tried to grab it from him and play it myself. 

He had lived in a couple of houses in Reddypatti itself. I realised very late that he worked for Essen & Co, which was primarily involved in mining quality check sampling and reporting. I came to know later that there were many chances for him to make side money if he let some low quality samples pass, but he was a man of integrity and never budged. He made some enemies due to this, but always gained respect as "Iyer".

He was a soft and emotional person and never indulged in too many social activities and kept himself to his home and family. His only friend was Varadarajan mama who he got acquainted with as part of his job at Essen. He maintained that friendship for several decades together before he passed away. I have also met him many times when I visited Salem. I once went to Yercaud in his ambassador car as a kid.


Thatha was a well-educated person. In those he finished his BA, but he wasn't a very street smart person or a money or asset hungry person to figure out ways to invest his money in assets. You could even call it foolishness, but can you imagine that in spite of being in service for so many years he never purchased an own house for himself (to live in whenever he retired) or have a retirement corpus for himself. This stumps me too but that was what he was.

He was also not someone who would take too many risks. He never changed his job from Essen & Co. He moved locations a couple of times to Belgaum etc but came back to Salem. He was conservative with his daughters. He got my Periamma married really early. It was 70s and understandable, but inspite of my mother being a great athlete he didn't allow her to go for nationals training to Delhi. But he got her trained in shorthand and typing and ensured she got a job and also supported her family before she got married. This confidence and independence that he instilled in my mother continued later when she got married and became a confident working lady. I am proud that his daughter and my mom in her early 60s is still working (now for herself and her business) with the same sincerity and diligence in spite of health issues.

My Ramani Thatha was a person who had some power of understanding people and in some cases do face reading through which he could judge their real character, tell them what was troubling them at that point and also give some suggestions for the future. 

One thing I remember from those days in Salem was they used to use all high quality things only. Be it milk, curd, the items they used day to day and so on. My paati was very organised in the way she managed the house and the kitchen. There was a sense of balance and harmony when we went to their house. And I don't know how to describe it but a sense of richness at their place as well, not exactly opulence

During summer times when it used to get too hot, we used to go to the terrace and lay down the jamakalam and sleep under the moon and the stars. Paati used to tell us stories. Every year we used to get our dose of velakennai, vepankozhundu and enna thechu kuliyal. Paati used to have a maid call Ponni and another girl P...amma. We had fun playing dayakattai, cards and pallanguzhi with them as well.

He sincerely continued working beyond the age of 60 and till he turned 67 with the same level of energy and diligence. He quit his job only when he was really forced by his daughters to take it easy. He moved to Chennai and started staying with Periamma and Periappa in Avadi after handing over whatever he had saved for himself. Those were the early / mid nineties. I was also in high school and missed the Salem trips


That was a time when I had a health problem in 9th class and really needed support to go to school or even to be taken care of at home. Also given some differences between Thatha and Periappa, mom decided it is better Thatha and Paati move to Hyderabad to a place close to our Krupa Krishna apartment. My loving paati took care of me and Thatha used to take me to school and back. We got him a red Sunny that he used to use. Even after we moved to Chandrapuri colony, in some time we found another 2 room bathroom place closeby where they could stay. 

Thatha was a person who couldn't sit idle. Even in his 70s he was a very busy man. He kept himself busy with his regular routine. He used to always help Amma with things, clean up the stuff around the house, get the scooter repaired, water plants, go to Bhavan's college to collect interest for the amount he had lent many people (this was an arrangement Amma helped him with to get some monthly expenses going). And whatever things he used to maintain he used to keep it clear, well-oiled and working. This is a great quality that anyone could learn from him. That kept him going for the whole time. 

When I used to go to Engineering college, I used to return by 3 PM and directly used to go to their place at Aditya enclave. I had a great time playing cards / Daya Katti. Would spend time till Amma came back from work and we used to go back home. I am lot closer to Thatha Paati than Kaku Anna / Julu Akka because I have spend so much time with them during my growing years. They've been a rock solid support to me always

They moved from there to Chandrapuri colony itself in the ground floor of no.91 if I am not wrong. They got closer to us and then finally when we rebuilt our house with a first floor setup, they moved into our house itself. They have been such a support to Amma and us, can't even imagine how it would've been without them here.

Even at the beginning of my Engineering, he was the one who accompanied me to college and got me joined on the first day. Cant forget that day till now. I have always had mature conversations with him about what I want to do in life, who my friends are, about my parents etc. Many times he would do face reading and also guide me. 
Even till like recently, a couple of years back I have asked him about suggestions

One thing I know for sure, the dynamics between my both side grandparents were civil at best. They didn't have a great rapport. Their natures and mindsets were different. I had to walk a thin rope managing their dynamics when Gopu thatha and paati used to come live with us and with Ramani thatha and paati living on first floor. 
This continued till the time I got married. 

One thing that was common between both my grandfathers was - both of them were men of integrity, cared for their families and both loved to watch cricket and followed it closely (probably was a thing with every educated man of their generation). Both used to read Hindu paper from first page to last page. While Gopu thatha used to read books as well Ramani thatha didn't have that habit. Ramani thatha being the dad of girls always had a lower hand in anything and also never had a chip on his shoulder / showed ego anywhere. But there was always a cold vibe between both grandfathers.

We celebrated Ramani thatha's 80th birthday in a grand way in Chennai. This was after my marriage sometime in Nov / Dec 2010. I don't know if it was because of the Drishti of relatives from that event or what, situations changed for us in a matter of few months
Early in 2011, my mother was diagnosed with CML - blood cancer which shook all of us including my Ramani thatha who was very close to Amma emotionally. 

Ramani thatha was a very emotional person and used to be always worried about his daughters' safety. He used to be very anxious when Amma used to get late from office or we would be late after going out somewhere. This nature would irritate some independent people who need space, but I could understand his concern. I realised this anxiousness being a common feature of all dads of girls. But Ramani thatha was a little more.

With my mom being sick and under medication, while Ramani thatha and paati were a big support to her, my parents decided that it was tough for my dad to take care of mom and also support Ramani thatha.
And given Periamma couldn't support them immediately, my dad had to find an old age home - Sankara in outskirts of Chennai and joined them there. It was not the best of places. While it was a separate room, was a far cry from what they were living in Hyderabad. The bathroom facilities were not the best and they had to come to ground floor and go up for food, or anything else. They struggle for sometime. I visited that place along with Seeta and spent some time with them. I understood how tough it was for them there.

In 2011-12 when I had travelled to US, I had made it a point to call both my grandparents once every week and speak with them. Now, I might give any excuses but I haven't been calling Ramani thatha and paati in recent times. And I don't know how I had that discipline to call them every week. Somehow, it felt good talking with them. My colleague even wondered how I did that at that time.

Coming back, within a year or so, Thatha got sick due to urinary infection and that was a time Periamma really took care of him in Chettinad hospital. He had bed sores and all but he was a fighter and he recovered soon and got back. That was a time when Amma still wasn't very well to support. She felt very guilty for sending Ramani thatha to the ashram and then these things happening

After that, Ramani thatha along with Paati went and stayed with Periamma and family and then later in Thirumullaivoyil house. The rent for the house was taken care of by Amma but Periamma took good care of them every now and then and monitoring them closely when they were living all by themselves there. There were ups and downs in the relationship and tensions but they lived peacefully.

I vividly remember once I went to just visit them stayed with them for a day, took them to Ambattur, bought a new set of sandals for Thatha, took them to a good restaurant and had some dosas, vadai etc. That was just for a day but I really spent good quality time with them.

Thatha really liked Seeta and whenever he called he would definitely talk to Seeta and ask about her. I am also happy that Sahaana could visit them a couple of times and she at least remembers Ramani thatha. She spent more time with Gopu thatha and she still is reminded of him. 

One thing that we should learn and I keep trying to tell my parents as well is the kind of marital harmony that Ramani thatha managed with Bali paati. Both of them cared for each other, never went to extremes and stood as a rock. This helped them survive together for such a long time. Paati was and is still emotionally very strong even though she might not be physically. While Ramani thatha is a little weak emotionally he has never treated paati badly ever. 

On the emotional angle, after Periappa passed away due to accident and Kaku left for Seychelles back, Ramani Thatha and paati moved into Annanur house with Periamma. Periamma had a tough time dealing with Ramani thatha and Paati day in and day out. She was losing it and in some situations let it out on thatha as well. Poor thing she can't be blamed as well. I personally feel grandparents could've adjusted a little more given Periamma's situation in life, but you can never understand old people and their emotions unless you reach that ripe age when you are at someone else's mercy but still want to stick to your own likes and dislikes and heightened sense of insecurity.
At one point Ramani thatha had enough of the acerbity in Periamma's words and walked away from home, took an Auto and wanted him to take him to the sea. He was ready to take his own life someway. But somehow the auto guy managed to get him back after a long time. His old heart couldnt handle the emotions. It didn't have the strength at the ripe age of late 80s. 

After that incident in a month or so, I went and visited him and spoke with him. It felt good sitting and spending time with him, listening to what he had to say from his side, again asked him about some of my insecurities and what he thought about me and my future. He again mentioned that he had a special relationship with me and he liked opening up to me. I asked him not to repeat such things and ignore any such incidents in future and be strong.

My mom in the last 5 years especially after my Periappa passed away has been feeling and dealing with the guilt that her sister in this situation is taking care of her parents and that she isn't able to physically support them. Ofcourse she has been sending them money and visiting them every once in a while but that guilt keeps pinching her.

My mom has been praying to God since a while now for him to take her parents away in a painless way. When Ramani thatha passed away, my mom was shattered and struck with guilt that she couldnt be with her dad in his last days. She had planned a visit, but due the COVID situation everything got cancelled. 

When we came to know about him passing away. One good thing we felt was he didn't suffer too much before passing away. Even in the COVID situation we immediately travelled and were able to arrange things for his last rites. His brother's son performed the last rites and we were all there till the end with him.

While he has decided to move on the after life, I know he will always be with me and us as a guardian angel. I have really enjoyed my time with Ramani thatha and had great experiences with him and cherished the grandpa-grandson relationship with him.

I have been thinking of writing something about him since the time he passed away. Finally, the right time has come during this break I have taken between my jobs to pen these thoughts down. I am not sure how structured these are, but these are the thoughts directly from my heart to and about him.

Love you Ramani Thatha!


Friday, January 4, 2013

Short Story: The Red Devil


START

Short Story: The Red Devil

Christian was feeling at the top of the world. The satisfaction of owning a brand new Ferrari F430 was inexplicable and unparalleled. It gave his a feeling of having arrived at the big stage. He had owned a lowly Chevy for a while now and was getting restless and itching to upgrade to a luxury car. His peers owned an Audi R8 Spyder and a BMW M3 GT which were good cars in their own right but a Ferrari was just in a different league. Lamborghini he felt, was not for him as he despised the yellow color and felt it was more of a ladies’ car.

 He had been slogging day and night to achieve this target which he had set for himself last year. The crimson red Ferrari F430 spider was always on his mind when he was chasing those quarterly targets. The smooth curves, the high-revving engine and the effortless acceleration were what he dreamt of. He never cared about the jeers from his peers about his old Chevy. He knew very soon their Audis and BMWs would stand no match for his Ferrari.

And then came the day when the brand new Ferrari F430 was royally delivered to his home. The paper work was all done well in advance. Christian took the new Ferrari on its first ride after the purchase. He stepped on the gas on the straight stretches and the car just sped effortlessly. It did great on the curves and bends without giving him any discomfort whatsoever. It was as if the Ferrari was made for these tracks. The other cars on the road simply couldn’t match up to the red devil and he was reveling in the stares that he got.

He was enjoying the whole experience when he heard a honk. He looked back with a scorn on his face and thought, “How could anybody honk my Ferrari?!” it was an insult. He pressed on the gas and was driving as fast as he could. He heard the honk again but this time he also heard his mom shout from the kitchen, “Chrissy I think it must be daddy. Open the door, will you?” Chris dropped his 1:18 scale Ferrari F430 model and rushed to the door, climbed on the stool and took a peep through the door scope. “Yes, it is his daddy! “, he shouted with excitement.  He opened the door and immediately gave his dad a bear hug. He said, “Daddy I have been waiting for you from so long. You are the best dad! I just so love my new Ferrari and the driving course that you gifted. Look at Ron and Ian’s cars, aren’t they so boring?! What will you gift me the next time I stand first in my class?”

END
- Radhakrishnan Ravi

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Short Story: Out or Not out?


START

Short Story: Out or Not out?

 “It doesn’t get better than this. Nothing come even remotely close to an India-Pak world cup semi-final in terms of sheer excitement!”, so goes Ravi Shastri’s cliché into the microphone. The crowd is packed and brimming to full capacity in the Eden Gardens stadium on a cold overcast Sunday afternoon.  The crowd is chanting “Rameshhhhh… Ramesh..”, the name of the best batsman in the team. He is on 96 and India needs 4 runs off the last ball to beat arch-rivals Pakistan and make it to the finals to play Australia which has already qualified by beating South Africa in a close match in Semi Finals-I.

The bowler Akram Khan just started sprinting towards the bowling crease when Ramesh’s thoughts flashes back 13 years to that special day which changed the course of his life -

Circa 2000:

 Indian cricket was in doldrums with match-fixing scandals and bad performances by the team. BCCI had put forward a plan to create a National Cricket Academy(NCA). Young players with special talent from across the country were to be selected and groomed to make them ready to take their coveted places in the Indian cricket team one day. “Every cricketer’s dream”, thought Ramesh.

Ramesh was the only son in a middle-class south Indian nuclear family.  The norm was to focus on academics, complete an MS/MBA from an Ivy League university and settle down in a good corporate career. Sports sadly, were never in the radar to be considered as a career option.

His life was at cross roads. It was the NCA selection match and he had to perform well to get selected. This was the last hope to prove to his parents how serious he was about his cricket. Ramesh’s dream from childhood was to play for the country and beat the supposedly infallible Aussies in a World Cup final and he knew this was his last shot in that direction.

The criteria for a batsman to get selected through the NCA selection matches were as follows:

  1. Spot selection- if you score a century in the match
  2. Panel selection- a panel of selectors choose a pool of players from the NCA selection matches from across the country and then shortlist based on some criteria (not revealed)

Ramesh knew that he had the talent in him to earn the automatic selection. He was aware that the second option involved a lot of politics and one needed influence to get the selection and he had no chance at that. He had been practicing diligently for this match for the past one month and put extra hours in the nets.

His team mates used to call him Dravid Tendulkar, for possessing Tendulkar-esque precocious talent while having the work ethic and perseverance of THE WALL. Sachin was his hero and he had got the MRF bat and signed it “Sachin Tendulkar” himself as he couldn’t afford the costly branded MRF bats signed by the God of batting himself

It was match day and he had woken up early, cycled to the local Academy nets and practiced for an hour. He was all determined and prepared to make it big. His only competition in the side was opener Vijay. He was a talented batsman but didn’t have the temperament or the work ethic of Ramesh. Being a relative of the selector from South Zone, he was sure he could sneak his way into the National squad by the second option. Ramesh’s aim was to score a century and was focused on it.

Ramesh walked in at No.3, his favourite batting position and was batting well. He had promised himself to play his natural game and not be overwhelmed by the situation. He was his fluid self and was hitting the sweet spot on his bat consistently. He reached the half-century mark in 60 balls and knew he was in good nick. He played with controlled aggression after that and was on 99, one run away from getting automatically selected for NCA squad.

The field was brought in close with all of them inside the ring. The fast bowler Raman bowled a bouncer. Ramesh tapped it close-by and started running for that final single that would take him closer to his dream. The close-in fielder picked the ball and hurled it towards the stumps. Ramesh knew it was a close call and he dove. All the fielders went up in the appeal and they were literally crying and begging the umpire. Ramesh’s heart was pounding hard (could beat around 200 bpm) and he could almost feel it in his mouth. The umpire was in his typical position to judge a run-out.

All players had their sight on his right hand and his head. “Which would move first?”, was the question on every player’s mind.

The local commentator shouted into the microphone, ”And the umpire’s decision is:”-

NOT OUT:

Circa 2013: The scene shifts back to India-Pak World Cup semi-final. Akram Khan bowls a length delivery. “And it’s a six. Ramesh plays a swashbuckling innings to take India to the finals of the world cup! What a player!!”, exults Ravi Shastri, the commentator. Ramesh points his bat towards the dressing room and the crowd and shouts to himself, “Yes this is a dream come true!”

OUT:

Circa 2013: The scene shifts back to India-Pak World Cup semi-final. Akram Khan bowls a length delivery. “And it’s a six. Ramesh plays a swashbuckling innings to take India to the finals of the world cup! What a player!!”, exults Ravi Shastri, the commentator. “Appa, yeah!!! India won the match!!, now let me play the finals”, cries Ritesh, Ramesh’s 6 year old kid grabbing the joystick to continue the game “EACricket 2013” on his XBOX 360! Ramesh just smiles and tells himself, “My kid will beat the Aussies in the World cup Final J!”

 

Epilogue:

The umpire decision on the run-out chance in the selection match is NOT OUT:

Ramesh gets automatically selected to the NCA squad. He performs well in the Academy training and gets an Indian ODI berth in 2 years. He goes on to become the best batsman in the Indian team

The umpire decision on the run-out chance in the selection match is OUT:

Vijay gets selected from his team instead of Ramesh due to nepotism while Ramesh is dropped in spite of his valiant 99. He goes on to do an MS from Texas Dallas and now works for a Silicon valley firm in SFO. He has a 6 year old son, Ritesh whose hero is also Sachin and plays EA Cricket 2013 with him on weekends

 

END

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Super-mom 2020, will she be better than my mom?

I am lazing around at home with absolutely no work to do.. so this devil's mind realized that it had not posted anything on the blog for a long long time. So here it goes..

This is about the movie Sasirekha Parinayam which i happened to watch on TV this Sunday. Was an OK types movie with all the now popular antics and tantrums of Genelia. While watching the movie i realized how the characters in the movies change according to the changing behaviours and cultures in the real life.

The hero of this movie is Tarun(yes he has made a comeback after the chocolate boy stint of his in the early 2000s) and Genelia plays the female protagonist. 

I couldnt resisit doing an in-depth analysis of the kind of characters that were portrayed by them in the movie( yes i am that jobless now!).
The characteristics of the hero:
Calm and Composed
Cool head over shoulders
Caring
Atleast looks responsible
Has seen the outside world and understands its demands
Patient(very)
Takes well thought out decisions

The characteristics of the heroine:
Naive
Throws tantrums
Not afraid to throwaway her marriage
Demanding
Doesnt look very much exposed to outside world or feels the need to
Cute and intruguing(atleast for the movie)
Brash
Impulsive decisions
Irresponsible ( if u will)

Mind you this is not a one-off movie which has such character portrayals, this is something which has come to be a sort of norm while etching characters of a (Gult/Tam) movie nowadays.

As the cliche goes, "reel life imitates real life", i would put my money on you finding every other guy or gal on the street or in your neighbourhood having qualities similar to those listed above more or less.

I would clearly put a huge disclaimer that this is no male-chauvinist speaking here and i have just unbiasedly illustrated the change in the behaviour and characteristics of the X/Y/Z etc generation. 

Gone are the days where the girl would be subdued,shy and confined to her home and college, learn the errands at home ( give a helping hand to mom), a bit hesitant to voice her opinions, be ready to take on family responsibilities etc. In a way it is good that there has been great leaps in woman empowerment and the fairer sex is demanding its pound of flesh in the corporate jungle. But somewhere down the line i am really worried if the quintessential woman has lost those special qualities that we always admire in our moms who are:
Patient, Responsible, caring, multi-tasking, a true home maker, adjusting to situations et all
I really hope our future generations will continue to have such super moms which we were fortunate to have. 

At the same time i am not trying to drive home the point that all guys are like how Tarun is in the movie, but from whatever little experiences i have had IMO the current generation guys are far less chauvinistic ( i wont say that we've totally lost it :P), more open to adjusting, even if unorderly at times understand responsibility, yes the brashness remains but controlled one though. ( Yes i am going to get brick bats from the gals for this!)

I really want to see, if at all there is a sequel Sasirekha Parinayam - 2 where the couple get married and later have kids, i want to see how Genelia manages the show and the kind of chemistry the couple will have.

I really hope she kicks a$$ and forces me to put a foot into my mouth. :(

Go Genelia go!
Go New-age girl to be woman go!


Friday, January 23, 2009

E summit 2009

This is one event for which i have put my heart, sweat and blood for to make it happen.
Tomorrow is the event, hope it goes on well for the team..

Cant call this blogging but posted after a long time..
Totaly exhausted. I think inow i can put on my tshirt which reads "100% overworked"

Totaly swamped tomorrow:
1. my event
2. Wipro online test
3. Mom coming to Calcutta(yippie)

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Structured Creativity!

Oh i am back. As my orkut status reads, term 4 in IIM Calcutta is really screwing me. Lots of projects, quizzes, portfolios to manage, endterms looming over(just a day left). Amongst all this frustration, drama and jugaad there are some creative and lighter moments which while screwing you one side, still manages to bring a laugh or smile on your face by the sheer uniqueness and brilliance of it.

One such hillarious thing is our tryst with a course called Structured Finance in the term 4 of our MBA. This was one of the few courses which didnot have a cap or cutoff grade. For the uninitiated, cap in a subject means the professor has set a predefined maximum intake (Eg. 50 students) and cutoff grade meant u needed a minimum of B+ in a few related courses to opt for the course . So this subject was opted for by a whooping 144 students in the batch. There were two tranches of people who had opted for this subject. One lets call it T1, who were really focussed on finance, specifically markets and had come to know from the seniors that he is one of the best visiting professors taking a finance course in IIMC. The other T2, were guys who were having a mixed bag portfolio of subjects. They were looking to take one FIN course and Struct Fin seemed a good and easier option since it dinot have a cap or a grade barrier.

And here comes Prof. VK, the securitization stud who teaches at a level which needs atleast some basic knowledge about bonds, fixed income, options etc. Most of the T2 and some of T1 were in for a shock and had given up on the subject in in the 3rd,4th classes itself. The classes were conducted on the Saturday mornings which was the worst time to go to a class. All this culminated into an indifference on the part of many students towards the subjects and many had made it a habit to sign the attendance sheet and leave the class. The professor dint care about it in the first few classes but started getting frustrated slowly. And then he thought enough is enough.He had his own way of vendatta. He started conducting quizzes in the last 5 minutes of the class when atleast half of the class had left after the ritual of signing the attendance sheet.

Quiz 1: He started with the first quiz. With just 5 mins left for the class to end he asks the students to take a sheet of paper out of their books write their names and reg nos and answer a few SIMPLE questions. People still couldnt believe that they were actualy going to write a quiz. Before anyone could even react to what happened the quiz was over. Half the class was literally RAPED since they just missed a quiz which had 5 marks weightage ( 5 marks really matters here since you might lose or gain a grain for even 0.5 marks).

Quiz 2: The same event happened 2-3 classes later in the last 5 mins of the class. This time people were accustomed to the surprise if not prepared for it. Some of them managed to call their friends who had already left to rush in time to attend the quiz. This time it was more interesting. This was like a real Quiz Quiz. We had to guess the word or the concept which you could decipher from a cryptic statement. There were 15 suchs.
One interesting one was:
"It goes well with bed, bread and bonds!"
The answer was: Spread
There were many nore such interesting hillarious cryptics. One was relating "wardrobe malfunction" and CDOs, can you beat this for creativity.(Answer was Ramp up Risk:). We managed to survive this one too

Quiz 3: By now we were like anticipating a quiz almost every class. Risk averse people slowly stopped leaving the class after the ritual while the risky guys left and had someone in the class who would buzz them if at all the quiz happened. The creativity levels in setting the quiz was growing exponentially. I was wondering if the Prof had a split personality - one which was a hardcore FIN focused securitization God and the other was a Creative and Art oriented person.
Ok without deviating from the topic lets go bang onto the quiz. This one was a Yes/No or True/False type quiz. We were a bit happy that we dint have to write paragraphs like we did in Quiz 1 or concepts like we did in Quiz 2. This was merely a Yes/No one but no it was not to be cake walk. In the quiz we actually had to write if each of the 10 topics which he gave was taught in the class or not! If yes we had to write a line on it. It has negative marking too. There were people rushing in in the middle of the quiz. Yes the buzzers haddone their job. The vendatta part of this quiz was that if u didnot attend the classes properly you wouldnot have any clue what he had taught even if you learnt it on your own. The funniest thing was when we came to know that all the anwers were "No" i.e the Prof hadnt taught any of the 10 topics in the class!!

Quiz 4: This was an encounter that i faced just today. As usual the Saturday morning blues. Again the last 5 mins quiz. Here ended the routine or stereotype. The CQ(Creative Quotient) was hitting the roof. This quiz was the randomest of all. We had to write as many one-liners, punch lines or Rajini type "Oru dadavai sonna nooru dadavai sonna madiri" one -line punches. This happened when is was my frustrated best because of Struct Fin. Still i managed to rack my brains and come out with some some bizzare and few horny ones
Some of them were as below:
SPV(Special Purpose Vehicles) are like pimps!!
In securitization, there are many friends who want to share your joys and sorrows.
REITs(Real Estate Investment Trusts) are like beehives. Each hole is a unit in it and every bee(read investor) has a right on the hive. The bees provide honey to the beehive(read investment)

And thus ended our last class on Structured Finance!!

This professor is so much into securitization that he even made 2 different tranches or classes(exams) during our end terms. One was a low risk moderate return, a written test. The other one was a high risk high return class which was a excel based spreadsheet exam. Even the evaluation was weird as he came up with his own Beta( scaling factor) for the risky tranche.
We manged to make him realize that he was playing securitization games with our Grades and got our End term de-securitized.

I hope i maximize my returns in the End Term exam..

PS: Pardon me for the highly loaded Finance jargon. The theme of the post needed it to be so..

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

DD1 Nostalgia @ 3 AM in IIMC

Today i truly got nostalgic about DD. As usual we at IIMC were going full swing on the IP messenger discussing all the latest gossip on the campus, about the frustrating Term 4 and how the quizzes, projects and exams screws you. The topic suddenly drifted towards the old DD1 channel and what people remembered the most about it. Now everyone pounced upon this and went back to the good old days when DD 1 was the one and only channel and there were so many interesting things that came out. Some of them that we had totaly forgotten. It had taken us back to our childhood. Of those chitrahaars, rangolis, sorry for the interruptions, Didi's comedy show and what not. The newsreader aunty with her 2 rupee coin sized bindi. To put a few things down on paper sorry on the post. Here we go: ( the list is too long so bear with me). I beat you will remember atleast some of it and that would surely bring a smile on your face.

Remembering DD - 1
1. Sorry for the interruption screen
2. The calendar photo that they show with some crap music as filler
3. All regional channels will restart at 8 AM. Over to Delhil screen
4. Chitrahaar ka woh logo
5. Rangoli's hostess with that flower pot on her side gives some arbit gyan and plays some old songs
6. The kaal chakra thing bfore Mahabharath starts
7. Sunday noon news for the hearing impaired
8. Potli baba ki
9. UGC programs
10. Super Human Samurai
11. Super Hit muqabla
12. DD1 female news reader - fully clad in saree, huge 2 rupee coin sized bindi and her hair tied like a volley ball
13. Swami and Friends
14. That DD1 logo with the music in the morning when telecast resumes
15. Chandrakaantha
16. Rozgaar samachaar
17. Raashtriya saaksharta mission
18. Mala-D Ad
19. First Nirodh Ad (Guy opens a friend's drawer and finds lot of girl's photos)
20.Baingan Raaja
21. Rukaavat ke liye khed hai
22. Ek chidiyaa
23. 11 am program for farmers
24. CIET le kar aaya Tarang Tarang Tarang Tarang
25. Vande mataram in the morning (sigh..... I really miss that one)
26. kisan bhaiyon ki choupal
27. mile sur mera tumhara
1)Mile sur mera tumhaara
2) Bhaje Sargam
3) Lijjat Papad advertisement
4) Spirit of Unity Concert
5) He-man Cartoon
6) Vyomkesh Bakshi
7) Chanakya
8) Tenali Raman
9) Tehqiqaat
10) Junoon
11) Swabhimaan
12) Shanti
13) Aparajita
14) Waqt
15) Dekh Bhai Dekh
16) Zabaan sambhaal ke
17) Motu Patlu aur shekh chilli.... doctor chadda hai bheeghi billeeee (still remember the title song)
18) Stone Boy
19) Milkibaar ... give me the power
non-stop nonsense :)Non stop nonsense - oh that was cool, 4 videos in the screen each with a lagAnd finally the guy comes out and acknowledges the applause from the crowd
1) Ulta Pulta
2) Flop Show
3) Waghle ki duniya
4) Buniyaad
5) Hum Log
6) Doosra Keval (Shahrukh Khan)
7) Jungle Book
8) Shikaari Shambhoo (small serial ... didnt run for long)
9) Phulwaari Bachon ki
10) Rambha's island
11) Disney hour (Tailspin, ducktales, darkwing duck, quack pack etc..)
1) Bhaarat ek khoj
2) Turning Point (A science show featuring Girish Karnard)
3) Gaayab Aayab
4) Meena (cartoon to promote girl's education)
At the night- Primetime
Knight Rider
Street Hawk
Oshin
Fauji
Nukkad
Circus
Buniyaad
Kile ke Rahasya
Byomkesh Bakshi
Tehkikaat
Reporter
Surabhi
Turning Point
Bharat Ek Khoj
Mitti Ke Rang
~plztoadd: : Swabhimaan: : Shanti: : Ek Do Teen char ( yes there was such a serial): : ek, do teen , char.................charo mil kar saath chalein to ho jaye chamatkaar : : : : Chuna chuna .... some paint ad: : : Torino .. its a new new feeling .. ( was an Indian cool drink )
Emi ramayya emi alochistunavEmi ledu ma intiki godda chavadiki em veddamaniIndulo alochinchataniki emundiCharminar Asbestor sheets veste sari!!
Elephant ad of fevicol featuring rajkumar hirani (director of munnabhai MBBS)
Aishwarya Rai : "Hi! I am Sanjana, do u have a pespi?"
Mera joota hai Lakhaani
O ho ho schooltime Action ka Schooltime
Khaae Jaao Khaae Jaao, United ke Gun gaaye jaao
Asli masaale sach sach, MDH MDHAmritanjan - poye pochu, its gone ad
"Kya hua?... Bacha kyun ro raha hai?.... Use woodwards pila... jab tu chota tha to tujhe bhi wahi pilati thee"
"Vicco turmeric, nahi cosmetic, Vicco Turmeric Ayurvedic Creame"
"Soundarya Sabun Nirma... soundarya sabun Nirma,Tum Husn Pari, tum jaane jahaanTum sabse haseen tum sabse jawaaaaaa"
"Detergent Tikiyaaaa..... 555"
"Dhoondte reh jaaoge"


Forgive the repititions and numberings. I couldnt start formatting and renumbering them. Too huge a list and yeah cases to be done for tommorrow so apologies..
I am sure the Y2k generation can never relate to these things. Please pour in your comments if you could even relate to a part of it.

~RIP DD1