Here is a bit of advice for amateur cooks who are just learning the tricks of the kitchen affairs. Never compare your cooked items with the best food that you have tasted in the genre. Compare it with the worst you ever experienced. The challenge then is only this much that you fight to save yours turning out to be the worst. In this there is more chance that you will pass the test. I do the same as I try new things in the kitchen. I usually put my product in relation to a peasant woman’s offerings. Well, they are a nice couple. They have good heart but good heart doesn’t always mean good cooking mind also. She smiles like an innocent girl but her food will challenge you at many levels. The main test is to stop your tears as her pure smile wants you to finish the thing. But then she has what many good female cooking minds don’t have, a good heart and a pure smile. Most importantly, I get a benchmark in taste, which I can very easily build upon. I manage it easily and that’s pretty encouraging.
Carpenter ants are the elephants of the ant-world. They are
big, have nice protruding pliers that can take a nice nibble at the human skin.
We played a bloody game with them as kids. Put a tiny bit of saliva on its
mouth, out come its fangs, ready to sink into the target. Then we would offer
our skin, mostly it was the big toe. Being the bigger elder in the paw carries
extra responsibility. The angry ant would then bite and sink its double weapons
into the skin. The bigger and angrier ones sank it pretty deep. Then we would
have our sadistic glee. Pull the ant from behind. It would snap into two. The front
still sunk into the toe skin and the behind in the fingers for some childish
postmortem. The insertion would then be plugged out, leaving a little trail of
blood. The one who had the privilege of messing up the toe to the best extent
would declare himself a winner. A pretty disturbing game, I accept. But that’s
the world of boys in the farming community. They cannot have mushy teddy bears
in soft beds. So they pick out carpenter ants.
Well, that was decades ago. We carry very soft skins now. Sitting
on a chair and writing, I raise my foot out of the big black ant’s way as it
crawls ahead. These are very sensitive times. An ant bite can spoil the entire day,
so why take risk. It moves on and meets a fellow big ant coming from the other
direction. They stop and snuggle up to twitch their antennas. It seems a pretty
hearty gossip. They can actually identity their own kin relations from the same
nest. It is a kind of chemical signal. Here they are strangers belonging to
different nestings. They just move on after this brief greeting.
Big loafs of clouds are drifting across the sky’s blue. A
single strand of cobweb is flying in the soft breeze. Its one end is still
moored somewhere. Sunlight sends a molten wave of shiny silver cascading across
this thin medium as the reflection moves up and down the thin line. Nature
knows how to entertain itself.
There are plenty of flowers in the unkempt yard: Red, pink,
white and yellow roses; white and lilac sadabahars:
red, white and scarlet hibiscus; soft red and orange geraniums; deep red peregrina;
mild indigo petunia; purple red and pink bougainvillea, gentle red of Jesus
thorn; white of the pinwheel or light of the moon; and little white blooms of parijat that keep the smiles going well
into the dark. They say that a fairy is born every time a flower dies. In the
yard there must be plenty of fairies then. If it’s true then I request them to
drive away the snakes hiding around. But maybe snakes are mere wormy playthings
to the fairies. Why would they then bother the reptiles?
An unkempt yard carries multitudes of advantages for someone
looking for solitude. There are little inconveniences of snakes and mice. These
but can be managed with a cat. The cat itself is a big inconvenience but its disadvantages
pale in comparison to a snake. A cat will irritate you, the snake, on the other
hand, scares the hell out of you. The main advantage of a disheveled yard is
that it carries a miniature forest kind of feeling. Birds set up their nests.
There is an entire world of insects on the ground. The branches wave at you
with unconditional friendliness. By the way, the beautiful greenish bee-eaters have
skipped their monsoonal trip to the yard this year. Last year there were many
who chucked out dragonflies midair and feasted on the branches. So the
dragonflies have better times this season.
The monkeys seem well determined to out-populate the humans.
I saw simian child brides carrying babies with much effort. The big rascal is
now into child marriages. The worst are the adolescent males. They pluck out
mischief out of thin air. The other day, one gallant tried puppy-ride. It
jumped on the back of a puppy. The latter tried to maintain its run but crashed
after a few panicked gallops. It howled for a complete hour as if it had been
boiled alive. The elder canines yelped and barked helplessly. Then a blacksmith
gypsy arrived in the street and shouted for the sale of rudimentary sheet iron
tools and utensils. The street dogs find it utterly unbearable. Forgetting the monkeys,
they walk in a long trail after the wandering hawker. The victim puppy also
draws out pride and walks with taut tail as part of the retinue. Having brief
memories really helps them.
The lazy kitten is obsessed about the bowl. All day it looks
at it and doesn’t spare licking even the empty bowl repeatedly to ensure there
isn’t a single crump left to make the ants happy. I am fed up with its
unrelenting demands. It needs to be taught that life doesn’t center around food
only. To break its invisible magnetic chain tying it to the bowl, I have
devised a mechanism. A cat hates water, even more than the dogs I suppose. So I
spray water at it sometimes when it seems that the craze for the bowl is crossing
all limits and it may turn a lunatic cat. It finds it scarier than even a grenade
blast and shoots off to hide in the yard, another matter that it has learnt to
forget it too easily and crawl out after a few minutes. After getting a mild
shower it sat sullenly under the parijat
tree. That’s the best I haven able to push it so far, just taking that much
effort to look in the direction of a prey. High in the branches there is a soft
jingling of chirps. The silverbill has her house full. It stares into the
globular grassy nest, waiting for the impatient dumpling to commit the error of
stepping a wing out too prematurely and tumble down on a cat’s table. A lot of
them do it in fact, so cats usually wait patiently below for days on end,
looking for that slight misadventure by the soft, meaty hatchling. The silverbill
parents have very soft trills. The reprimanded kitten’s brother also joins in
the staring game. There they eat the nest with their eyes. A tailor bird couple
finds it deeply disturbing. They have tailored their nest somewhere in the
lower branches. The stitched nest of three leaves is well camouflaged. But they
cannot take a risk. ‘Why are you staring this way?’ they shoot back. These
little creatures are well made for quarrels. They are ready for it all the
time. A few babblers also join their winged brethren. Soon it’s a big brawl.
The cats find it unbearable for their ears and leave in disgust.
The other day, a big-mouthed fatty male cat arrived in the
yard. The bowl-licker turned on its heels and scampered into the verandah and
turned invisible. The bowl is too precious, so this life has to be kept safe.
The barn dweller kitten crouched more in defense, its hair upright and gave a preeny,
sharp weepish growl. At least it tried to stand guard. The bigger male knows
that this tiny rascal will take away his girls in future so finds him enemy.
The smaller Romeo also knows that to win a girl in future it has to pass this
test. All around it seems just a fight for girls across the species. The bigger
rival toppled the smaller one. I stand and watch. I know exactly when to
intervene. I know at what point it may turn fatal for the little cat. But
before that the little one has to show that it can fight. The bigger suitor for
girls is almost double in size so the smaller one rolls on its back and raises
its front paws like an expert pugilist. It growls and hisses hideously and
furtively throws around its punches. That’s the fighting spirit! As an underdog
you fight to save your neck and give a few scratches on the opponent’s face.
When was a fight decided by the body size? It’s basically in the spirits. The
tiny firecracker forces the big bully to retreat. After the fight it looks
pretty ruffled and roughened up. But it has shown enough spirit and willpower
to remind the bully cat that his girls will have a dashing young lover very
soon. The sissy bowl-lover crawls out and goes out to check his brother. He
cuddles and puts his ruffled moustaches in order by affectionate licking. Well,
no problem cat with the aesthetics. You love your bowl; he has his eyes already
on love beyond the fence.
The major advantage of getting married in teens is that you
become a grandparent in just your forties. There are many such grandparents in
the village. If a grandson is born to such couples, they have enough youth in
their legs to shake to bawdy Haryanvi songs in celebration. Yesterday the air
shivered with loud thumps and beats of coarse music as the mammoth woofers and
speakers shook the walls to match the pride and happiness of a couple that
turned grandparents in just their early forties. Liquor flew freely. The
Haryanvi songs created a kind of earthquake. The drunkards have such audacious
lungs to even shout over the loudest music. They even out-sanitized the normal
people during the pandemic. As very healthy and disciplined people fell victim
to the virus, the drunkards stood well and safe surprisingly. Possibly the repeated
sanitization of throats proved better than hand sanitization. They even know
it. In fact they boast about it. Even the worst drunkard, nearest to death in
the village, kept his shouts and drunken pouts even without a sneeze. He is
still alive and kicking and drinking well. ‘And we don’t take even a single
precaution like you guys!’ they boast in a condemnatory tone at the lesser
non-drinking mortals. Well, that shouldn’t encourage more drinking. Living
without awareness is no living at all. We have to be in our senses to enjoy our
pleasures and cope up with the pains.
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