Today I knew I just had to gather everything inside me and
just write.I turned twenty three on November 9. Almost a woman now(?) Had a nice dinner with friends. I don't really get excited about my birthday anymore. I feel nothing really. A tinge of shock and disappointment, at how I can't help getting older.
I've been listening to ‘Death is the road to awe’, the OST of The Fountain. It transports me into another realm of the universe. I just finished reading The Lowland, the latest book by Jhumpa Lahiri. What a beauty. The ending killed me. Reading Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami now. Enjoying it immensely.
I've been listening to ‘Death is the road to awe’, the OST of The Fountain. It transports me into another realm of the universe. I just finished reading The Lowland, the latest book by Jhumpa Lahiri. What a beauty. The ending killed me. Reading Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami now. Enjoying it immensely.
In other news, I’ve managed to cross off one of the things
on my wish list. We all went to Goa after the exams! It was exactly what I
needed. We loitered around the beaches, played with the sea waves, zipped
zapped zoomed all over Goa on our hired scooters and drank and ate and danced
and did everything possible in three days. What a holiday! We used to come back
at 4 or 5 in the morning, crash on the beds like there’s no tomorrow, get up
late, have a lazy, delicious breakfast and then just rush to the beaches. I love
the sound of the beach. It’s one of the most joyful sounds in the world.
It has been two weeks since I came to Bombay and started my
internship at The Indian Express. Honestly, I don’t even know how to describe
the entire experience. I live in a 3BHK with 3 of my other friends and a couple
of strangers (who are now kind of friends as well). I travel by the local
trains every day, Andheri to Churchgate, which were so alien to me fifteen days
back. Now I don’t even have to bat an eyelid before hopping on a train. I see
the red stripes and the ‘ladies’ symbol and BAM! I’m on it in no time. It has
become so routine, so normal, so …necessary. I sit at the window seat, plug in
my earphones and tune myself out till I reach my destination. The office was
overwhelming the first day. It is located at Nariman point, one of the most
commercial and developed places in Bombay. The building overlooks the sea, and
Marine drive is right outside. That place excites me, thrills me. Every time I
have to go to CST or cross those iconic landmarks or look at the skyline, I can’t
help smiling. This is one of the best cities in the country! I am in Bombay! I’m
working here! I’m living here! It is really happening!
Talking about work. So they have put me in the Crime beat as
of now. When I was told that, my mind went like, “Oh my god, I’m done for. How
will I ever do this?” But my superiors/mentors/colleagues are so helpful and
encouraging. I feel like laughing when I compare them to my previous internship
superiors. They are patient with me, they tell me where to go and how to go and
what to do. I call them for the silliest reasons and they guide me through it.
In the past two weeks I’ve done 2 suicide stories, 2 accident stories, a murder
story, a couple of press conferences, and several small 100-word reports. And
it has been a ride. To think that I had never gone inside a police station
before in my life, and now I visit senior inspectors and police officers almost
every second day. I was petrified at first. Lost. Blank. Ignorant. But slowly,
I started getting the hang of it. I would give myself a pep talk. “I’m a
journalist! It is my right to ask for information, and they owe it to me. These
are public records and they are bound to tell me what people need to know. Just
go and talk to them. They can’t throw you out.”
Some days, however, they almost do throw you out. Not literally, but they may snap at you, ignore you or pretend they are not who you think they are. They have more important things to do, cases to solve instead of talking to some newbie reporter. And I understand that, which is exactly what makes this job so challenging. I have had police officers who have made me wait for hours only to tell me they have to go somewhere urgently. It is mind numbingly demotivating. But you've got to get your story, by hook or by crook. It makes me question my own capabilities. Am I good enough for this?
I admire the energy of this place. Not only my office, but
the entire city. Everyone is busy, and everyone walks with a purpose. No one stares at you, no one tires to touch you. No one even has the time to look at you. Which is why it is liberating to work here. It is not odd to come home at 12 in the night. I know girls who come later than that. This place is for people who are really just trying to work and make a living.
The
stories done by the other people in my office are sometimes so good I wonder
how I will ever be able to reach that level, but I know I can if I push
myself hard enough. I’ve seen good days, and bad ones. Some days were so
frustrating I almost cried in the toilet. It is physically painful when you
travel and walk in the heat for hours and you don’t get any information for
your story. I have often wondered what I’m doing. If I want to do this. If I’m
meant to do this. But I can figure that out for myself later. Right now I’m
just glad at how much I’m getting to learn every single day. I’ve travelled in
buses where there has been no place to move and where passengers are somehow dangling at the door, their entire body hanging outside precariously. I’ve travelled in loud, noisy,
hot, crowded trains where I have stood for so long my legs have lost all feeling. I’ve
gone from one place to another looking for the scene of crime, only to be met with ignorant faces and disappointment. I've eaten at small roadside shops alone. I’ve gone
hungry. I come home by 10:30 at night. I change, have my dinner, read a few
pages of my book and I’m out in minutes. But I know that at the end of my
internship, even if I don’t report groundbreaking stories, this will all be
worth it because it would make me tougher. Stronger. Build my character. Every time
my report gets edited, I get better at writing it. I learn every day. Maybe
this is all to compensate for all those jobless, useless, idle days I have
spent sleeping and watching reruns.