Saturday, December 30, 2017

Discoveries (Happy New Year)

It s that time of the year again. It ends, not with a whimper but with a bang. I've done it all this year. I've made new friends, discovered stuff about myself, fallen in love (temporarily) and kicked my depression out.

I have one new year resolution. By the end of 2018 I shall be off my medicines. This will help me tremendously in the long run, mainly because of all the side effects, weight gain being the primary concern.

This year has been about discoveries. I've discovered people whom I genuinely am in sync with, I joined an office and am discovering that two ends of a wire has unlimited possibilities, I've felt free after a long time.

Here is to more discoveries. Here's to finding new things out by myself. Here's to the future and here's to leaving the past behind.
Happy New Year (In advance) from your one and only


The Bilge Master

Monday, December 25, 2017

The Christmas Change- A Guest Post by Paige Voorhes

The post below is written by my friend Paige who lives in Texas. She has kindly written a few lines about how Christmas is celebrated in her family. Please welcome Paige to the blog people!
Merry Christmas from Paige and me!
The Bilge Master

In my family, Christmas is not a day- Christmas is a season.  As a child, my mother transformed the house.  The décor that filled the shelves, covered the walls and draped over the furniture were all replaced come December with varying degrees of winter’s magic; a snow-covered village on the table, an oversized stocking on the door, Santa Claus in every room.  Mom loves Santa.  He sits by the television painting toys, his face smiles up at you from couch pillows, and he stands regally atop the Christmas Tree, watching over us all. 

The tree itself was most often artificial, and Dad would drag it out from wherever it had been stored all year, untie whatever was gripping the torn box closed, and set it up piece by piece in the corner of the living room.  He would then drape lights all across the fluffed out branches (until pre-lit trees blessed this world), hoping all the bulbs still worked after being unceremoniously thrown into a box last January, left to tangle amongst itself.  Once that was over, my mother would wrap the tree like a present with a garland or ribbon.  Only then was the tree ready for ornaments.

The ornaments themselves were a personal favorite of mine.  Some were simple- a wooden cut out of a nativity scene, for example.  Others were a bit jollier, like the three slice-of-life Santa’s Workshop scenes depicting various stages of Santa’s day.  There were the homemade ornaments my siblings and I brought back annually from elementary school, looking more and more tattered every year.  There were the ornaments that predated my birth, personal favorites of my parents from their childhood (like my late grandmother’s glass ornaments or my mother’s Garfield cat).  Ornaments representing pets, hobbies and birthdays filled the gaps, and the ceramic heart symbolizing my grandfather, gone before I was able to meet him, meant a lot to my mother.

Christmas wasn’t just about the home transformation, either.  In the kitchen was where we made our magic.  My Grandma and mother baked tons of cookies, from traditional cut-out sugar cookies (a favorite with us children, who decorated them once they cooled) to gingerbread men to cookies topped with cherries or chocolate kisses, to the nut filled ones I avoided.  All month our kitchen was filled with the delicious scent of baking.  It would peak on Christmas day, where every morning my mother would make us all a Monkey Bread cake, to eat whilst opening presents.  In the most recent years the cookie baking has died down, but every Christmas morning I help my mother make that Monkey Bread, and every year our growing family eats it in the living room, surrounded by gifts.

Traditionally for my family, Christmas Eve was spent at my Grandmother’s house.  Her, my aunt, and my family spent the time together opening presents from each other.  There wasn’t a large tree- my grandma had one, but it was only a few feet tall, and she would cover it up with a trash bag every year for storage in the attic, ornaments and all- but I do remember a golden bell she’d hang from the door frame.  If you pulled the cord it would sing carols.  I loved it.

On the short drive back to our place my parents would point out red dots in the sky and claim that it was Rudolph.  We would beg them to drive faster, get us home so we can get to bed!  If Santa comes and we’re awake, he won’t leave us presents!  We would pile into the house, knocking the snow off our shoes, and run to the computer.  Mom would pull up the Santa Tracker, and we would see exactly where he was.  It was a miracle we were able to sleep.

One year I woke up early to my father sleeping on the couch near the tree, our video camera propped up in the other room pointing towards the front door.  When I woke him up he sleepily explained that he had fallen asleep trying to catch Santa, and the video camera that he was hoping to record him on had run out of batteries.  Drat!  Luckily, they were able to replace the batteries and film us opening the presents the next morning.  You know, since the camera was already there.

Something fun about Santa is that for our house, he would use special Santa tags and wrapping paper.  I didn’t notice it as much when I was younger, but when I noticed that Mom and Dad’s presents came wrapped differently, it was another magical charm that made Christmas special.

When you reach adulthood, Christmas changes.  Santa doesn’t bring adults presents.  But Santa doesn’t need to.  Because in adulthood, it is your turn to play Santa.
Now, you get to buy presents for your loved ones.  You get to be responsible for their smiles and happiness.  And just as you give, they give back.  Christmas becomes less centered on you and your joy, and more centered on the joy all around.

We moved away from my Grandma many years ago, but I still have a Christmas Eve tradition.  My husband’s family always celebrates with family gifts on Christmas Eve, just like we did as children.  So every year, my husband and I buy gifts for every niece and nephew that we have.  Sometimes we buy a present for every adult, and sometimes we play Secret Santa, and we love to play a present swap game.  Everyone brings something for dinner, we have warm drinks, and when it’s time to open presents the room becomes a chaotic explosion of wrapping paper and cardboard.

My family gathers the morning of, while my in-laws are opening Santa’s gifts at home.  My sister’s family gets a visit from Santa, and afterwards we gather around our tree and swap presents we have bought each other.  We always open presents in the same order- youngest to oldest. Everyone sees what everyone opened, and opening in a round gives us plenty of time to enjoy our hot, gooey Monkey Bread paired with egg nogg or mimosas.  It takes a while to get through everyone, but that just means more time together as a family.


Some traditions stay the same over time.  New traditions form with age.  Christmas is an ever flowing constant in my life, and I love it even more as the years go by.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Moonlight Sonata- A Guest Post by Debdip Maitra

The poem below is written by Debdip Maitra, my senior in college. It has been languishing in my inbox for a while now, but I've dug it up! Welcome him to the blog people!

The Bilge Master

Hiding dreams in pianos gathering dust,
Living life in nights of wanderlust,
And the dreams twist and turn and lead to you,
Tell me darling, do you at times think of me too?

Living lives in words unspoken,
In the silence amidst the reflections broken,
And the world it spins on and on and on...
Tell me darling, do you miss me when I’m gone?

Breaking my heart on nights like this,
With memories of summer, and a lingering kiss,
My heart now smells like stale cigarettes,
Tell me darling, do you miss me, in fading vignettes?

Floating my thoughts off on starlit dreams,
Watching them row away on the moonbeams,
And as the moonlight sonata once more enthrals,
Tell me darling, do you remember me at all?


Friday, December 15, 2017

Faith

My life was in shambles
As if caught in a never ending storm
One day, I met You
And a flashlight appeared in the darkness


The Bilge Master

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

The Park Bench

We are not friends
Just strangers with memories
Of times gone by
In the blink of an eye
As we held hands
On this park bench
The world was simple
Touchscreens were far away
And the spider hadn't come yet
To spin the world wide web
And now, when all this has happened
We have changed
Oh how strange to be forty
Sitting on the same bench
But growing old with you
Just isn't the same


The Bilge Master

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Backfiring Magic

There are a few days when I sit and contemplate. I think about how our world has changed so much, about how we were there when Federer won yet another Grand Slam, or Nadal the French Open; and then my thoughts wander even farther. I think about my childhood.

When I was a wee lad, we had a landline telephone. It had a receiver with a cord attached to it and a dial pad with numbers on it which you had to push in order to make calls. Then they made a mobile phone. It was black and white with a simple UI and nothing very special under the hood. It allowed us to take calls even when we were not inside the house and for me, that was nothing short of 
a miracle. We were the last non-wireless generation

Another thing we had was a music system with a turntable to play LP's on. We had a varied collection of LPs and we would listen to them frequently. But, the charm of this music system was the cassette player. Sometimes, when rewinding or fast forwarding, the tape would get stuck and we had to stop what we were doing, take out the tape and use a pencil to manually wind it forwards or backwards. My child will never know the relation between pencils and cassette tapes. I doubt if the next generation will know how a cassette tape works.

We also didn't have eBooks. We had books. There was no Kindle in our times, unless you count the word kindle.  Smartphones were also a distant futuristic invention. Computers were big, consisting of three parts- a monitor, keyboard and mouse and a CPU. No octa-core processors or 16GB RAM. They were simple machines, capable of what (at the time were) wonderful things. Computers today have become so small you can carry them with you.

We had no WhatsApp. Yes you read it right. We didn't have Facebook either, or Snapchat or Instagram. When I was 10 years old, Facebook launched itself. We saw WhatsApp being born and smartphones being made. We also saw the XBOX and PlayStation's 1st generation and saw them rise to XBOX One and Playstation 4. We lived the rise and fall of the compact disk.

The world has become very small indeed. I have Facebook friends all over the world and have had video chats with some of them. Just this one fact boggles my mind. The fact that I can talk to someone in Romania or the Philippines without moving from my chair. The coming generation will be born into this small world, with all kinds of technology surrounding them. They won't be able to identify with my childhood, and when they grow as old as me, technology's very face will have changed yet again.

But, by making this world so small, I feel it has lost its wonder. We used to go out for walks and admire nature. We used to like going on trips, with our primitive phones, some of which did not even have cameras. We met face to face and talked that way too. We didn't know Pokemon beyond 150.

Now, we have all this magic. But we are not magicians. We were innocent and now that innocence is lost.

The Bilge Master


Monday, December 4, 2017

The Ultimate Question

There was once a man who created Something
After applying differential calculus
This Creation was a marvel
It knew all the questions
But not the answers
And so people did not know
What they were to do with it
Until someone asked of it
To tell them what
The Ultimate Question was
And the Creation replied
When we say "Let there be light"
Is there actually light?


The Bilge Master