August 2008 Archives
Here I am in a taxi in Bombay. I spent time with locals -- they all called it Bombay. I was the only one saying Mumbai. Evidently, that convention is more of a political idea than one embraced by the local populace.I spent Saturday in Bombay seeing the sites. I went to Elephanta Island, did some shopping and got the grand auto tour.
The highlight of the driving tour was seeing Bandra Reclamation. My driver stopped to show us a new bridge being built. We saw the bridge, albeit from a distance, but the bridge wasn't our focus. We noticed the hundreds, perhaps thousands of couples gazing romatically at the sea. I've seen spots in the U.S. where couples "make-out" or "neck". All of these spots feature privacy and room for a few cars -- perhaps a dozen. Here at Bandra Reclamation, there were cars and couples as far as the eye could see. All in a country where people don't generally "date" like we do in the U.S. and even casual public acts of affection seem muted by U.S. standards. Don't forget Richard Gere was charged for kissing someone on the cheek. Love or perhaps lust always finds a way. My driver said that it was generally much busier on a weekday when workers would claim that they needed to "work late" but would find their way to meet their love interest.
I took a longer motorcycle ride this trip, still riding on the back - thankfully wearing a helmet this time. Riding a motorcycle connects you with the road in ways cars never can. You smell the exhaust, breathe in the dust, hear the driver in the next car and feel the bone rattling pothole. I felt more like I was really there when I was on the back of a motorcycle. Thanks Milind for the cheap thrills.
India touches me in a way other places do not. It isn't the ancient buildings or the colorful scenes of everyday life. The people that I know in India - they are why I feel like I've left part of my heart there. More than any other group of people I know, they exist in a connectedness that I don't experience here. You sense the connectedness in their hospitality and the way the are quick to celebrate. It's not the way I was raised. I was raised as a only son, of an only daughter, in a culture that values the "go it alone" pioneer spirit. Now grown, when I see what it is like to live connected with others it resonates with me.
It's hard to say goodbye.
There is a new show on HBO, "The Life and Times of Tim". Based on the clips it bears no resemblance to my life, but you never know -- it could be about me.
A lingam in a rock hewn cave on Elephanta Island.
Spook Country by William GibsonMy review
rating: 3 of 5 starsLike every other Gibson novel I have read, the ideas in the novel are fascinating, but ultimately the plot flutters and sputters along.
So they finally indicted the identity theives who stole 41 million credit cards from a number of retailers in the U.S. You can read the Washington Post article if this doesn't ring a bell.
I think there should be a seperate prosecution for the people who created a wireless cash register system that was so utterly insecure as to defy imagination. Someone didn't do even a slashdot style due diligence to see if the system would be reasonably secure. I would like to see the exec in court for incompetence.
Why am I not surprised that there is a sausage parade in my home state?
How impoverished is a political system when an lowly author is an enemy that demands as much attention as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn did in the days of the Soviet Union. Who is the Chinese author who will make an impact of this size? Read the obit for yourself if the name doesn't ring a bell.





