Red, purple, blue, green, yellow...

There is a spoiler for Karthik calling Karthik ahead, so if you won't be reading any further, I'll wish you Happy Holi right here.
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I watched Karthik calling Karthik last evening. I couldn't stop thinking about how lonely Karthik's character was, growing up. His parents can't see his imagined brother. He keeps getting frustrated at being picked on. He must have been feeling abandoned every single time something goes wrong in his life and there's no-one to commisserate with him. How horrible must a man's reality be, that he's willing to flee it even though he is chronocally risk-averse. To feel that alone and hunted for so long in life.

That movie made me very sad. It's like a note on the dresser that tells you of the times we've hit the ground running to chase away our demons. And why we hold on to love so fiercely - real or imagined. It is, without exaggeration, our only chance at getting saved.

After the movie, my friend and I were having coffee. Around us, there were so many people. So many minds, with their own calculations and complications. Their own coping and defense mechanisms, their chinks in the emotional armour; their fears of shadows, their yearnings for the deep night, their endless wait for a dawn where they'll be free. There is so much of that around. It's overwhelming.

I thought of that all the way to Vashi, whilst a big, round moon followed me on the way home. It marked the beginning of a celebration where people will go out, laughing and happy, and smear color on each other's faces.

I find Holi ridiculous. But I realize that, in the thick, coagulated morass of emotions and thoughts that we seep in, face value is a precious thing.

Happy Holi, everyone. Keep it colorful. Keep it light.

Comments

vanderloost said…
Hi Chiffoo,

Since you are so fond of literature, I hope language will not be a constraint in understanding the underlying meaning of the following verse which goes like this

Ek samay shri krishna prabhu ko
Hori khelana mana aayee
Ek se hori mache nahin kabahun
Yaa te karoon bahutaayee
Yehi prabhu ne thaharaayee
Kaisi hori machaayee
Acharaja lakhiyon na jaayee

Happy Holi Chifoo!

a
Mukta Raut said…
hi vander,

I think I need a translation. This is what I understood. Once upon a time, Shri Krishna wanted to play Holi. He wondered whether he should play Holi with one person or many. But he decided to play it on a scale that astounded millions. (Not sure of the last part.)

Is that what it means?
Ashish Shakya said…
Hey how goes it?

I have similar coffee-shop moments (or other public space moments) sometimes as well. So many stories around you, right?

Oh and I returned your call on Sunday (I think) but I guess you'd called from your Mom's cell, so she answered. Dunno if she told you. We should catch up sometime again.

Hope you had a good Holi :)
vanderloost said…
Hi Chiffoo!

You are almost there. But that's the literal translation. The underlying philosophy symbolises Holi with the cosmic interplay of the Infinity. The question is not whether the Lord (the Ultimate, whosoever that be) could play Holi with one. But the larger significance of Holi would be diminished if played in isolation. May be this is too much for blog cootchie cooeeing!!!!!!!!!













Hi
Dewdrop said…
Very insightful... I felt the same when I saw KCK... and a lot of movies evoke that kinda feeling - I felt the same in Taare Zameen Par...