Wednesday, April 15, 2020

An Apparition @ WEP Entry # Antique Vase

My days start with pots and pans. As they roll further, I push 'l' after 'p' and cook stories. :)
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“If you dare break the glass around me, dare peep inside …… beyond the pride, which you call luster ..…. beyond two and half a millennium - stashed, trapped, within my pores … born of clay, burnt of fire, touched by a few twigs ..… I’m all Memory …... of decays of my long-gone siblings and clan .....”
Through this outburst she confided for the first time. In a summer afternoon. I was sitting before her, appreciating red and black figurines on her lustrous black surface. At Northern Hall in this Villa de Papyri replica. Off duty.
If lucky, my post on duty used to be her. Else, I used to spend awhile with her after my shift. That “awhile” used to range from half an hour to hours, depending on my other jobs and family engagements, since my first visit here, half a decade ago, to reconnect to my Mediterranean roots.
Since that summer afternoon she used to sprinkle at me bits and pieces of her ancestry. Her passage from a Mediterranean island to this Pacific coast in New World.
That summer I spent several afternoons with her. My son was camping North. His mother was doing afternoon shifts at one job and evening on the other. I had only day and evening shifts in all my jobs.
I started here anew doing odd jobs since I had fled a military coup d'état, more than a decade ago. One of my jobs was at a Gas Station on Sunset Boulevard.
Mr. Benenio Klavan, my rescuer, used to be a regular customer there. He visited Turkey several times on journalistic assignments. He used to talk about home a lot. Once he suggested, “Why don’t you visit Getty Villa on PCH, Rafiq? You might feel at home. The ancient odor of life that you miss here, you may feel that there.”
Therefore, there occurred my first visit to this repository of ancient Mediterranean life. I still have my first five-dollar parking stub.
Soon after, I sought employment with them. Because of my Mediterranean memory they hired me.
Then came repatriation. Intellectual property laws were making the vase to return to Athens, Greece.
I got my ultimate opportunity to hold her in my arms. She sighed, “This’ so much wrong...”
I had no time to sooth her. Instead, I started wrapping her with bubble wraps. Then I peeped inside to fill it with paper shreds and met Eutropios, the potter.

In soft light of early morning, Eutropios was offering a prayer to Athena. Euaristos, his son, joined him. After that the father started wheeling vases. The son was drawing and curving on the surface of already dried pots, applying slip on them.
Eutropios left the wheel to knead some fresh clay out of natural pool. Euaristos took his turn on the wheel to scrub off excess mud from previous day’s sundried pots and vases.
Methodios, Eutropios’ apprentice, had just arrived. He brought some natural clay and was pacing towards the natural pool to sink it for getting rid of its impurities.
Suddenly, Methodios threw off the clay; rushed to the kiln, took out the firewood splinters from hearth, splashed water on it. Immediately the kiln was full of fume instead of flame. There were pots and vases inside for first baking. With sudden drop in temperature they all became crudely baked. Euaristos murmured, sticking his eyes on the wheel, “What’s wrong with you?”
Methodios spat his answer, “Wrong you are and your father. All you worship is Athena and Hestia. You must obey Circe. She sent me, Omodamos, to convey her wishes.”
Eutropios listened and asked Methodios, “Take the day off.”

Yet, Methodios stood stubborn by the kiln. Eutropios ignored him, prayed to Hestia, adjusted the flame in kiln and placed next batch of potteries for burning.
Methodios shrieked, “You didn’t pay heed!”

Then, he brought a log from the riverbank, rammed the kiln with it. Fumes started pouring out through cracks of the shattered kiln. Methodios grumbled, “Lesson from Syntribos.”
Leaving all work in hand, father and son started mending the kiln. They were too busy to mind Methodios.
Worshiping Hestia, again, Eutropios ignited the kiln. Euaristos put another batch of potteries in it.

Methodios charred the kiln wholly by airing it too fast and chuckled, “A spank from Asbestos.”
Euaristos ran to the pool, brought pales of water, drenched the kiln to cool it down.
Then, Eutropios asked for Hestia’s forgiveness. Methodios responded by hammering the whole kiln muttering, “Wrath of Smaragos!”
Sun was down. Eutropios called it a day.
Following morning, praying before Athena, as usual, he started working. Methodios pulverized the kiln, shouting, “Sabaktes’ ultimatum.”
Then he ran away.
Eutropios had to, hence, started rebuilding the kiln. Euaristos helped his father by mining fresh mud, carrying it to the workshop, sifting pebbles from finer clay, kneading lumps and delivering them to the building spot.
Once the kiln was ready to use, Circe appeared before Eutropios. She demanded, “Obey me.”

Eutropios denied. Circe turned Euaristos into a mouse.
Heartbroken, Eutropios brought the mouse home. At night, he dreamed that Athena had sent Hermes. Hermes whispered warnings about Circe into his ears and gave him an armlet of moly to ward of Circe’s magic.
Following morning, Circe appeared at Eutropios’ workshop. Before She could make a move, he grabbed her, dragged her to the kiln, tied her up on the hearth, as if he was going to set her afire.
Scared, Circe murmured, “Untie me. I’ll render such carnal pleasure that no nymph could ever render.”
Eutropios remembered all words of Hermes; hence, ignored Circe’s alluring advances. Instead, he made Circe swear in names of Gods, “I won’t further meddle with your affairs.”
Before leaving She brought Euaristos back to his human form.
Worshiping Athena and Hestia, Eutropios and Euaristos resumed turning wheel and burning pots.
I finished packing and sent off the vase towards its land of origin, among its pugnacious ancestors.
Also available at Google Books
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Thank You Denise for guiding me through the details about participating in WEP Flash Fiction Challenges.
WORD COUNT: 993
FCA – FULL CRITIQUE ACCEPTABLE
It will be great if you weigh every word exploited here and give your honest opinion blatantly.

Friday, October 18, 2019

Testimony of a Ghost Runner

It seemed that I had been waiting for eternity. Annoyed and worried, pacing up and down the room, time and again, I stepped into the balcony and looked down. Except for a drenched family of a stray cat and her kittens, curling up over each others’ body for warmth, beneath the shade of the entrance, there was no spec of life around. The shadow of street light in the shallow pool of rainwater beneath the light post is rippling in wind. A sudden yet very short spell of gusty wind broke a few branches of neem tree in the yard. Faint rumbling of thunder from higher clouds was persistent noise for that half of the day. Was it a knock at my door? I turned back and found Gjuly meddling with Fidgety.

Gjuly happened to be my pet ghost. It used to be so ghostly that it never had a gender. It never thought but acted. That was all I need. But my other pet ghosts were not same. Some of them used to be very argumentative. I kept them mostly for those days when I used to find myself in scarcity of wit that could generate varied opinions spontaneously. In those days, they supplied me with plethora of viewpoints. Otherwise, I used to keep them engaged in playing lazy board games. They did not create a fuss at all about such engagements. They remain complacent in a notion that I have honoured their intellect.
Fidgety happened to be my pet moth. When it came to my place, it was near transparent. I drenched it in ferrous sulphate solution and gave it a pale green colour. Then Gmarc, one of ghosts of strong opinion, protested. To keep everyone happy, I ordered Gsept to burn the borders of Fidgety’s wings. Gsept is efficient and meticulous. A true doer. It first separated the wings from Fidgety’s body. Then it passed outer borders of each of the wings, one after another, over a narrow flame, so quickly that the iron sulphate coat has been oxidized, but no part of wing vain or protein molecule in it was burned. Then Gsept fitted the wings on Fidgety’s body. Thus, Fidgety’s wings got borders of maroon colour.
Both Gjuly and Fidgety used to act silently. They were even able to remain out of sight of most of the people. Fidgety, in presence of guests, always remained stuck to the refrigerator, camouflaging with all other magnets and rubbers. Gjuly used to disseminate its parts into the interstices of any of the curtains. Therefore, whatever Gjuly had done with Fidgety was not the source of that soft knock. I did not see anybody coming.  It was a little perplexing. The other ghosts, too, used to make no sounds while in action, of any sort. They used to move, used to talk, even used to argue silently. Too many sounds were around that night. Yet I did not reach the door, but kept trying to figure out the reason and source of the possible knock.
**************
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************

This story belongs to an anthology of my short stories, "Ghost Runners & Others". It comprises ten different short stories of ten different tastes, shades and environments. Some set in paranormal India, some in serene forests and mountains. Some are spread from remote villages of Telangana to the United States. Some speaks of a controlled restrictive society and its freedom seeking denizens thriving through odds of politics, corruption and natural disasters. Some are depiction of strife of relationships. Some clings to brighter hopes and joy. Some include contemporary discourse on gender and beyond (what we do not know and are ignoring as a knowledge under peer pressure and scenarios that are waiting for appropriate moments to explode into experience).  In nutshell, it narrates stories of contemporary  Indians and their diversity.

******

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Voyage of Doriya a.k.a Dhee

I am not sure if the water is too cold. All I know that if the boat turns upside down, I shall bear the heat. Or, the cold, as it may appear. If I stuck to a shore before I reach my destination, I must find a way to proceed further South. All I know that nothing can impede me. Not even death because death is not impediment to life but a life event.
Amidst anxiety if I can make it to South safe, my gladness for being far away from Crescendore, is quite conspicuous. Strange! Crescendore is the island I owned and built a civilization there. It is, now, about to turn into a raging volcano. The process of island turning into a volcano can bring in tsunami. Sea will lose its current tranquility. Even then, I must continue rowing southward. War has been tearing the continents on North, West and East to Crescendore all apart. Those were nearer from Crescendore than the one I am trying to reach in South, though.
All my life beaten by humans I left one place after another. Yet I embraced humans to build one thing after another, and finally this civilization. I had no hint until recently, someday I had to leave the piece of land I discovered almost a decade ago, not because of humans but because of Nature. Life is full of Black Swans. One never knows that they occur until and unless one encounters them.
I used to be a good student. My father assumed that someday I’ll become a scholar and teacher like him. He used to call me Dhee, the patience. But, my mother used to call me Doriya, the confluence. While my father imagined that I should remain calm and stoic, my mother imagined me as a hub of intermittent turmoil and tranquility, which I found more real than an image of eternal stoic. Hence, my father lost hope in my growing up and called me disobedient. Disobedient, obviously, in fulfilling his wishes about my becoming a grown up of his imagination. My mother, hold my gear with all her strengths in the time when I used to go through turmoil, though at times she could not hide her fear that I might end up being drowned. She used to sing soothing tunes during the tranquil times while I sailed through the sea of life a bit relaxed.
After school, father goaded me to study Mathematics and Philosophy.  But my intention was to know Nature more. My choices were Natural sciences, Earth science and Mathematics. Mother stood by me. She was happy when my teachers praised my studiousness and ability to learn fast. Father was happy, too. His consolation was that I was studying hard, at least. Occasionally, I topped my class. But that never mattered to me. Nor to my parents. Even, not to my teachers. Never to my classmates. I was happy for I was learning a lot of new things and about the camaraderie with almost all of my classmates. The teachers were caring. All these made my parents satisfied then.
Soon my happy world crumbled. In the evaluations of college education for passage into University, I failed. Some said, “It’s better than passing with a fair evaluation. You got another chance to prove yourself.” A teacher went to sue the University board. My father retired in gloom. My mother lit a dim lamp of broken heart and keep on singing to me in cracked voice that I must not lose hope. Inside, I was restless for I knew that I performed as always I do, my bests, though the results said otherwise. Outside, I became too tough, almost impossible to bend and prone to break at any blow stronger than my strength to withstand.
In the next opportunity, I barely passed, even after topping in several papers during the internal evaluations of college, after failing the university evaluations. The teacher’s law suit against the board was dismissed because I never agreed to be part of that. Somehow, I was scared about confronting the corrupt board. I still had hopes of scoring enough to accomplish my dream of being selected as a researcher in one of the world’s best institutes that studies Nature. After barely passing University evaluations, my hopes started drying up. Rumors were there that University board is prone to bribery. The laggards in the college had bribed them to obtain the best scores of the class and dumping the laggards’ scores on the best scorers.
I just did not pay heed to all these. I left college after fulfilling the mandatory period of attendance for obtaining the degree. Then I started looking for job. I tried to use my degree and my studies over all previous years of my life. Within a few years I bagged one. These few years appeared as if I had always been this straggler and I never studied or passed an examination in my life.
The job paid scantily. Besides, it demanded physical strength and tenacity. I never knew that I had so much will to be a bread earner. My will made me physically strong to bear the job. I started as a farmer for the State owned agricultural farms. The job enlightened me with the fact that all these years I was not just good at studies, but studying helped me acquire an ability to learn, to learn fast, to remain patient while practicing learned lessons till achieve efficiency, if not mastery, and to deliver analytical outputs based on lessons learned. This added knowledge about myself boost my confidence, helped me to wade through surprises of life.
My job performances often used to be praised by my supervisors. That irked one of my colleagues. That colleague became very jealous and started teasing me over anything and everything I did. Spoken words has never been powerful enough to harm my soul. The colleague’s fierce envy took a desperate turn to harm me physically. We used to live in adjacent quarters allotted to us by our employer, the State. Even pieces of agricultural fields assigned to us were adjacent.
One morning I woke up to find my yard being covered with glass shards and iron pegs.
************
Curious what's next? Try -
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07Z6P787B => United Kingdom    
for Kindle Edition
Also try Hardcopy (ISBN: 9781700341518) available at : 
This story belongs to an anthology of my short stories are now out. It comprises ten different short stories of ten different tastes, shades and environments. Some set in paranormal India, some in serene forests and mountains. Some are spread from remote villages of Telangana to the United States. Some speaks of a controlled restrictive society and its freedom seeking denizens thriving through odds of politics, corruption and natural disasters. Some are depiction of strife of relationships. Some clings to brighter hopes and joy. Some include contemporary discourse on gender and beyond (what we do not know and are ignoring as a knowledge under peer pressure and scenarios that are waiting for appropriate moments to explode into experience).  In nutshell, it narrates stories of contemporary  Indians and their diversity.
Mostly FREE with Kindle Unlimited Subscriptions. Otherwise available for a pittance both Hard and soft copies. 
 Spend Less, Read More.   
Be enlightened and entertained.

Deepa’s Actualization

Deepa has been working hard. For years. She had only one dream in her life. A dream of attaining a standard of life. Earning a life of comfort for her parents. Transcending their lives of toil and pain to a life of tranquility and breather. In this crowded world, she only has her parents. Despite their illiteracy, they admitted Deepa to an Convent school so that she not only becomes literate, but she learns good English. They have arranged for best tutors and coaching centers so that Deepa can become a software engineer. Deepa started earning a living at a very young age of twelve. She used to provide tuition to her neighborhood kids. In Laxma Puram, the village where Deepa was born to her lower caste parents and has been brought up, all the people belonged to one or the other lower castes and were illiterate till the generation of Deepa’s parents. These parents used to earn a living from hard physical labor of wage earner. The entire village aspired to do well financially and as first step of accomplishment of the thought, the parents started sending their children to schools that teach English. Yet the children needed help at home to understand their lessons from school better. This need had created earning opportunity for Deepa.
Tutoring helped Deepa build her communication skills better. While justifying her need for education loan or her suitability to a job, she made her points at ease, without butterflies meddling with her stomach. She heard of too many people at these stages having butterflies at their stomachs, though none for her. She secured a moderate rank at the entrance examination of her engineering course. Her caste quota appeared to be of great help in choice of the colleges. She managed a seat in a government sponsored college and was awarded a scholarship that made her residential costs at the campus free. For meeting rest of the course expenses, she had to borrow from a bank. Here, too, her caste and gender played a helpful role. She went ahead of several applicants as her caste and gender, had started by then being favored after enduring eons of disrespect. In college, she has found herself cornered just because she had made it ahead of many because of her caste and gender. It invited her unwanted enmity from girls and boys. She withstood it. She had the faith that once in her life she would be able to alter all these judgements of the fellow people and she would be judged only by her merit.
In search of excellence, purely through merit, she had been enlightened with option of pursuing post graduate studies in the United States. She heard in college that the United States is the country that is rewarding to merits irrespective of caste, creed, gender and race. She decided then to emigrate to the United States if she obtains an opportunity to enter the country as a student. In her endeavor to pursue a post graduate study in the United States, she found that she must have great amount of savings to survive at least the first couple of weeks. Besides, she must have some means to support her parents so that they no longer need to earn a living from hard physical labor at stone quarries, at agricultural fields, at construction sites.
She made a plan, spread over a decade. She took the first job offered to her on campus. She started doing the job and paying back her student loan. Within one year, she has been assigned with an onsite role in Europe. Like in India, she toiled there, too, over weekends, at stretches of thirty-six hours, supporting customer interactions of a bank, while her colleagues took off to visit places in the foreign countries. She saved every possible penny. After returning to India, she not only repaid her entire student loan, but also, she was able to make fresh loans for building a reinforced house for her parents. She has been happy that her parents would be able to join the league of the owners of concrete houses in Laxma Puram and become inspiration for several parents living in thatched roof mud walled cottages and rearing their children with strong determination.
Following year, she landed in South Africa supporting the information technology projects of a bank there, again. She felt a departure from her ambition to moving to the United States. She dreaded the feeling of loss. She tightened her jaws and remembered her parents’ faces sculptured with wrinkles of stress even at a very young age. She started working even harder. She started planning even smarter. Returning from South Africa, she repaid all the loans she made for reinforcing the house. The house, by then, became spacious enough to become warehouse of fast moving consumer goods. She made another entrepreneurial loan for starting a distributorship of fast moving consumer goods. She purchased lands by highway to start one food corner, one cyber café and one grocery shop under same roof. The highway was about to be extended as part of Golden Quadrilateral Project. This is what she heard from the media. Like the highway, her project by the highway was tentative then. She wanted to be ready before the highway starts buzzing with traffic.
She continued to stay in shared apartments as paying guests in the city of her work. She started siphoning all her money towards the businesses she perceived. The businesses made her travel to home every weekend. Her mother was quite overwhelmed by then with the responsibilities of distributorship. Learning to read and write along with learning to operate computers within a very short period was a huge achievement and accumulation of stress at her age. Deepa’s father was occupied to his armpits in the project of developing three businesses on the spots by highway. She started repaying all entrepreneurial loans by this time from earnings of the distributorship. She was supporting her livelihood and her parents’ livelihood from her salary of the job.
Ravi appeared at this point in her life. He was very impressed by the spirit and professionalism of Deepa. He joined Deepa’s team and kept in touch with her even after they were released from the team. Yet Ravi could not express his love much. He was very dependent of his parents for his studies and job. His parents used to be established farmers and sold lands to support Ravi through his engineering degree from a private college. Ravi had a sister in the United States where his brother-in-law used to be an immigrant and his sister, too. Ravi, too, had dreams of going there. His sister could have supported his dream, but his parents would not allow him to avail such support. It is against their prejudices that their son-in-law being benefactor of their son. Ravi had lean chances of travelling abroad as he had a very poor communication. Deepa took this lack of communication skill deterring him from overtly expressing his love for Deepa. When they were working as offshore team for a bank in the United States, there had been talks several times for Deepa’s onsite travel. Deepa did not avail those options for many reasons. The prime reason appeared to be her business ventures being at nascent stages. The real reason had been travelling onsite in the United States was not accomplishment of her dream. She was determined to travel there only as a student of merit.
Suddenly the competition for distributorship increased with others copying her idea in the village. Deepa’s mother had been struck with hypertension. Her father had to take time off from the business projects at highway site. It became difficult to pay back rest of the loan amounts just from Deepa’s earning from her salary.
Ravi asked Deepa to meet his parents around this time. Deepa had not been very sure about the future of this relationship. She had always found her cornered by others because of her caste and what she had achieved. If Ravi had been thinking of marrying Deepa, then the caste would be the biggest possible barrier. However, she met Ravi’s parents. She got the vibes full of disrespect. Ravi’s mother asked Deepa, “How will your parents will pay dowry for your marriage if you are the only earner? We’re thinking of sending our son to where my daughter is. His in-laws must arrange that for him, as we did for our daughter.” Ravi mentioned, “She can travel to where my sister is any day if she avails onsite opportunities laid before her. Then she can take her husband as her dependent.”
In a short while, a scheme became unfolded before Deepa. Gradually she made herself detached from Ravi. Surprisingly, it was not painful. She felt relieved that she had not been in an intimate relationship that could have been based on deceit. There was no love, no respect, but a prospect for Ravi to depend on Deepa’s caliber. Deepa could have joyfully borne the burden if Ravi and his parents would not reflect their perspectives of dowry and related interests on Deepa. In order to avoid Ravi more, Deepa changed her apartment, first, then her company. This change appeared to be financially very beneficial for Deepa. The new job appeared to be fur more lucrative compared to the previous one. Even then it remained harder to repay the loans and prepare herself for travelling to the United States for pursuing a post graduate degree course.
Deepa grabbed the first opportunity laid before her to travel to the United States, at this point. The decision was out of dire need. The highway was taking longer than she could have borne the financial stress of her businesses by the highway near Laxma Puram. She left home again, this time leaving behind an ailing mother and a fatigued father. However, stepping in the United States appeared to be rejuvenating for her. She was toiling hard as usual. But even then, she was having lots of free time for enquiring about post graduate courses in the universities. With rendezvous with the professors and admission departments she started preparing herself for her GRE and ToEFL. The money she was earning there, helped her get out of the financial burden for the businesses by the highway. It helped her mother see a cure and control for her hypertension. It also helped Deepa’s father to find breather from the financial challenge which he can barely do anything about. He started looking into the business with new enthusiasm and confidently advised Deepa to think of abandoning the idea of running cyber café as mobile data became affordable among the highway travelers and households became connected by broadband. He further advised her to expand the food business and diversify chiefly in to food and beverages shrinking the groceries option.
With so many things happening around in this few years of almost a decade, Deepa found herself much older than her actual age. Most often looking at the mirror she discovered her mother’s image, older with wrinkles of stress and experience. Most often, she heard that student life had been free of all stresses. This adage was not true for her. She spent all her student life in extreme poverty and financial stress. After, repaying all the loans of her life, with the businesses running steadily, she wished desperately to go back to school. Yet she need some savings for her parents to survive during her school days independent of the earnings from the businesses, so that her parents could spend a life of retirement if they wished. With all these thoughts and plans running through her head, she wrote her GRE and ToEFL in a gap of a month and scored so high that all professors she approached from MIT through Duke to Idaho State University, asked her to finish the admission process and join the courses following fall. Thus, she obtained another year to her preparation and financial preparation for her parents.
As soon as the application season commenced she applied ten universities and institutes of her choice. She contacted back her favorite professors at the college from where she graduated with her engineering degree, but to her dismay they all were retired from work but one. Yet she requested them to respond to the recommendations asked by the universities she was applying with. She waited with beating heart for the selection outcome season. She has been excited again, as much as excited she used to be at eighteen after writing too many examinations for being admitted into an engineering course. Yet this time excitement is too much for the outcome was related to her freedom from judgements that had always undermined her merit, sincerity, hard work and achievements. The excitement was much deeper for the outcome can bring her an immigration to the United States, the society that has been built by the immigrants, starting from the Native Indians whose ancestors crossed Bering strait to build civilizations all across the Americas.
It was around February. She received the first email from the admission office of MIT. It declared that all her efforts has gone in vain. She could not make it to MIT. She thought for once to stop relying on her merit. Later, after a day’s work at office, she found solace in her aspirations that before the responses from the professors she never thought that she would ever be able to make it to an institution as prestigious as MIT. There were still nine more results to be out. Deepa held her breath and faced on message of rejection from all other universities and institutes. Fortunately, Idaho State University informed her that they could keep Deepa’s application live for following fall and would wait for her to submit her transcripts in proper format with details of subjects she read per semester. This information ensued a knee jerk reaction in Deepa. She opened the remaining copy of transcript issued by an ancient Indian University that issued her engineering degree a decade ago. To her dismay, she discovered that the university issued a summary of her scores, only. It brought a realization to Deepa that it was not her merit, but the failed procedures of the university she studied in India deterred her admission to the universities in the United States.
She prepared to go back to India. For collecting her transcripts in the prescribed format before following fall. Returning home, she found the highway in fully functional form. The active highway boosted her food junction to a great way and it started making profits after years of struggle. Her distributorship of fast moving consumer goods was in deliberate need of expansion with another larger warehouse. Yet she ran to the university. She was just intoxicated in her passion to go back to school. The university denied her transcripts in any other format citing their age-old policies. She knew that her classmates who went to post graduate schools even five years ago, got their respective transcripts approved by the departmental heads in college. In her time of admission, the institutions and universities in the United Sates were asking approval on transcripts from the registrar of the University and were not recognizing approval of any other authorities. Deepa, driven by her go-getter attitude, wrote an application to the registrar attached with transcript in pertinent format and all supporting documents. She sent all those documents by speed post to the university. Yet she sought a personal appointment with the university registrar.
The registrar appeared to be very professional. She heard Deepa’s predicament with patience and approved Deepa’s transcripts with proper procedures on the very day of the appointment. Deepa sent those transcripts to the University of Idaho. The specs of grief for being rejected by MIT gradually disappeared from corners of her heart.
************
Curious what's next? Try -
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07Z6P787B => United Kingdom    
for Kindle Edition
Also try Hardcopy (ISBN: 9781700341518) available at : 
This story belongs to an anthology of my short stories are now out. It comprises ten different short stories of ten different tastes, shades and environments. Some set in paranormal India, some in serene forests and mountains. Some are spread from remote villages of Telangana to the United States. Some speaks of a controlled restrictive society and its freedom seeking denizens thriving through odds of politics, corruption and natural disasters. Some are depiction of strife of relationships. Some clings to brighter hopes and joy. Some include contemporary discourse on gender and beyond (what we do not know and are ignoring as a knowledge under peer pressure and scenarios that are waiting for appropriate moments to explode into experience).  In nutshell, it narrates stories of contemporary  Indians and their diversity.
Mostly FREE with Kindle Unlimited Subscriptions. Otherwise available for a pittance both Hard and soft copies. 
 Spend Less, Read More.   
Be enlightened and entertained.

Saturday, June 8, 2019

বাংলা মিনি সাগার প্রথম সংকলন হাফসেঞ্চুরি পাওয়া যাচ্ছে


বাংলা ভাষায় মিনি সাগার প্রথম সংকলন। লেখকেরও প্রথম বই। এতে আছে ৫০টি বিভিন্ন স্বাদের মিনি সাগা, যার থেকে কিছু মিনি সাগা সৃষ্টি ও কর্ণিকা ওয়েবম্যাগ দুটিতে ছাপা হয়েছে। বইয়ের ভূমিকায় লেখক বলেছেনঃ
“দি ডেইলি টেলিগ্রাফ আয়োজিত ১৯৯৯ সালের মিনি সাগা প্রতিযোগিতার নিয়ম – পঞ্চাশ শব্দের মধ্যে গল্পের শুরু, বিস্তার, শেষ; শিরোনাম সর্বাধিক পনের শব্দের, হাইফেন দিয়ে জোড়া শব্দের সংখ্যা লেখকের স্বেচ্ছাধীন -মেনে এই সংকলনের পঞ্চাশটা মিনি সাগা লিখেছি।
বিশদ বিবরণ এই লিঙ্কেঃ
অল্প কথার গল্প/ Stories of Few Words

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Complain to the Election Commission of India

To,
PGRS Cell, ECI

Subject: Total Prohibition on use of Amplifiers, Banners and Roadside Stages in Election campaign

Dear ECI,

       We are already receiving campaign contents through text messages to our cell phones. Besides, there are election  campaigns through social media, viz., FaceBook, WhatsApp and YouTube. Also, there are campaigns through advertising slots of Radio (FM and AM [short, mediam, broad waves]) and television. Messages from political parties, their conglomerates, individual candidates, candidates' aides are anyway before us all the time. 


       Thus, old ways of campaigning through amplifiers are redundant. If election time amplifier usage can totally be prohibited then it can be prohibited for religious purposes, too. Amplifiers disturbs students, agonizes patients, annoys children and elderly people, distract drivers and pedestrians. It causes disruptions in life. 


       Similarly, banners sprouting from any public pole and angle is redundant. Moreover, Banners are dangerous. April is the month of thunderstorm with unpredictable wind speeds. Last year, a thunderstorm suddenly sped to a hundred kilometer per hour. It plucked out all metal banners on reinforced concrete pillars across streets of Kolkata and its suburbs. Flex banners flew miles. If such an banner drops on windshield of a moving vehicle during a stormy weather condition on a busy bypasse, several lives can be lost. Campaign banners are generally stuck to weak soft wood sticks. Thus, heavy fles tears off its holder under weakest wind. Along with small flags, banners when torn, makes the streets dirty and chokes the drains. Therefore, banners must not be used anymore in election and, hence, in any other campaign.


       Last but not the least, roadside campaign stages create road blockades. Such blockades are often replicated in religious ceremonies and personal celebrations. These stages block traffic. These are noisy campaigns disrupting lives of students, ill persons, elderly persons and children. These campaigns go hand in glove with use of amplifiers. Therefore, restricting campaign through gathering people to confined halls (used for puja, marriage, birthday celebration et cetera) and limiting noise of meeting within the precincts of the hall can reduce traffic risks and usage of amplifiers. Hence, please prohibit all roadside meetings.


        Looking forward to quick and prompt action,

Thanking You, 

Sanhita.


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