Tuesday 7 December 2010

So who said shopping can't be a learning experience?

Yeah, what's with people criticising shopping, calling it 'retail therapy' and snickering when women declare 'we are going shopping'. Shopping can be a transformational, enlightening and err... strangely weird exercise... especially when you are shopping for someone you don't know at all. Even if it is a 5-year-old boy!
I mean in this day and age, even five-year-olds have a unique perspective on life. And no one who has had to convince your five-year-old to wear a particular dress will argue otherwise (oh, by the way, you cannot convince today's kindergarteners about anything!).

So there I was last evening, late for a birthday party and still hunting for a birthday present. This was Ditu's classmate's birthday, the first such invite, and understandably, I was a little nervous about going at all: didn't want to meet a lot of lah-di-dah women (while my daughter's school is great and offers wonderful child-oriented education, it also tends to attract the butterflies. Period.).
And now I had to find a birthday gift for one little boy whom I just knew as Abraham ('He's called Abu at home, Amma. Since we are going to his party, we can call him like that': gyaan from Ditu). At the kids' store, I did the only thing I knew: when in doubt, head to the books section. I was browsing through the books, when I felt a tug at my sleeve. And not even thinking, or rather thinking that Ditu wanted to pick something for herself, I said: "No!"
My very understanding child caught on to my mood, and said: "I don't want anything. I just think you should be looking at something like Ben10 or Chota Bheem. After all, Abraham is a boy!" Gender-based advice? From my daughter? All of nearly 5? I just stood there, all agape, and she continues: "I really don't know what he likes, but I always hear Georgie and Abraham discuss Ben10."
So Ben10 it was, but me being me, I couldn't get myself to get the action-oriented Ben10 toys; just bought a Ben10 colouring set, approved by Ditu of course. ("Yes, Abraham looooves painting class!") And me being me, I also stopped to look at a couple of little table-chair sets that I wanted to get for Ditu's room. And my little one pipes us with more gyaan: "Mumma, that's for me na... You have time till my birthday to get it. Or we can come back after Abraham's party to look at it some more." *Beatific smile*
Now if that wasn't a particularly enlightening shopping trip!

P.S. And hey, pardon me my prejudices: I had fun at the party too, with some of Ditu's classmate's moms. And I realised sometimes makeup is a mask in more ways than one, and sometimes women just hide behind it due to their insecurities. But that's a post for another day, and perhaps Ditu will have some insight into that as well.

Saturday 4 December 2010

It happened last night!

Shameless me! Am back again after my last post where I wrote about "blogging for discipline" and then took off on one of my biggest breaks from blogosphere. And I don't even have a decent excuse, so I am not even going to try!
Am back, after a sleepless night spent almost entirely on Twitter and catching up with some of the blogs and websites I love. In particular, drew inspiration from funny-fab blogger Judy Balan (do follow; she's amazing and can pep up your worst days) and the November edition of SPAM.
No, I am not going to attempt humour... you either are funny or you aren't and if you try too hard you may end up as a joke. I am just very enthused about blogging again... some of you can argue that it's probably cyclical! Come to think of it, maybe I should check out my blog posts to figure out if there's a pattern to my absence.
Again, that's besides the point. And the point is that I have no point to make but I am just glad to be part of this vast, amorphous community of bloggers and social networkers (dunno if that's the term, anyways I mean all the people on my TL and FB) who do sometimes-ordinary, sometimes-bizarre, sometimes-random stuff... and reading all that makes my day! Especially a day, rather night, like yesterday when I couldn't sleep, thanks to body ache presumably associated with a viral fever, and was up till the wee hours.
It was a bad night for TV! Every movie channel was showing wet-rag movies; I think there should be a strict code for movies shown after 11pm: they should be thrilling or edgy or experimental or at the least interesting. Spare me the blah! True that I couldn't sleep but boredom is not a sedative!
Which is when I logged on and found that Twitter was brilliantly, vibrantly alive in the dead of the night and that while I was away 'working hard' my Google Reader had patiently accumulated 1000+ feeds for me to catch up on... so I did just that! And believe me, it was just as great as curling up with a good book.
The long and short of it is, I had great fun online and while that sounds typical nerd-ish, it was so not! And before I sign off, I promise to be back again... soon!

Tuesday 7 December 2010

So who said shopping can't be a learning experience?

Yeah, what's with people criticising shopping, calling it 'retail therapy' and snickering when women declare 'we are going shopping'. Shopping can be a transformational, enlightening and err... strangely weird exercise... especially when you are shopping for someone you don't know at all. Even if it is a 5-year-old boy!
I mean in this day and age, even five-year-olds have a unique perspective on life. And no one who has had to convince your five-year-old to wear a particular dress will argue otherwise (oh, by the way, you cannot convince today's kindergarteners about anything!).

So there I was last evening, late for a birthday party and still hunting for a birthday present. This was Ditu's classmate's birthday, the first such invite, and understandably, I was a little nervous about going at all: didn't want to meet a lot of lah-di-dah women (while my daughter's school is great and offers wonderful child-oriented education, it also tends to attract the butterflies. Period.).
And now I had to find a birthday gift for one little boy whom I just knew as Abraham ('He's called Abu at home, Amma. Since we are going to his party, we can call him like that': gyaan from Ditu). At the kids' store, I did the only thing I knew: when in doubt, head to the books section. I was browsing through the books, when I felt a tug at my sleeve. And not even thinking, or rather thinking that Ditu wanted to pick something for herself, I said: "No!"
My very understanding child caught on to my mood, and said: "I don't want anything. I just think you should be looking at something like Ben10 or Chota Bheem. After all, Abraham is a boy!" Gender-based advice? From my daughter? All of nearly 5? I just stood there, all agape, and she continues: "I really don't know what he likes, but I always hear Georgie and Abraham discuss Ben10."
So Ben10 it was, but me being me, I couldn't get myself to get the action-oriented Ben10 toys; just bought a Ben10 colouring set, approved by Ditu of course. ("Yes, Abraham looooves painting class!") And me being me, I also stopped to look at a couple of little table-chair sets that I wanted to get for Ditu's room. And my little one pipes us with more gyaan: "Mumma, that's for me na... You have time till my birthday to get it. Or we can come back after Abraham's party to look at it some more." *Beatific smile*
Now if that wasn't a particularly enlightening shopping trip!

P.S. And hey, pardon me my prejudices: I had fun at the party too, with some of Ditu's classmate's moms. And I realised sometimes makeup is a mask in more ways than one, and sometimes women just hide behind it due to their insecurities. But that's a post for another day, and perhaps Ditu will have some insight into that as well.

Saturday 4 December 2010

It happened last night!

Shameless me! Am back again after my last post where I wrote about "blogging for discipline" and then took off on one of my biggest breaks from blogosphere. And I don't even have a decent excuse, so I am not even going to try!
Am back, after a sleepless night spent almost entirely on Twitter and catching up with some of the blogs and websites I love. In particular, drew inspiration from funny-fab blogger Judy Balan (do follow; she's amazing and can pep up your worst days) and the November edition of SPAM.
No, I am not going to attempt humour... you either are funny or you aren't and if you try too hard you may end up as a joke. I am just very enthused about blogging again... some of you can argue that it's probably cyclical! Come to think of it, maybe I should check out my blog posts to figure out if there's a pattern to my absence.
Again, that's besides the point. And the point is that I have no point to make but I am just glad to be part of this vast, amorphous community of bloggers and social networkers (dunno if that's the term, anyways I mean all the people on my TL and FB) who do sometimes-ordinary, sometimes-bizarre, sometimes-random stuff... and reading all that makes my day! Especially a day, rather night, like yesterday when I couldn't sleep, thanks to body ache presumably associated with a viral fever, and was up till the wee hours.
It was a bad night for TV! Every movie channel was showing wet-rag movies; I think there should be a strict code for movies shown after 11pm: they should be thrilling or edgy or experimental or at the least interesting. Spare me the blah! True that I couldn't sleep but boredom is not a sedative!
Which is when I logged on and found that Twitter was brilliantly, vibrantly alive in the dead of the night and that while I was away 'working hard' my Google Reader had patiently accumulated 1000+ feeds for me to catch up on... so I did just that! And believe me, it was just as great as curling up with a good book.
The long and short of it is, I had great fun online and while that sounds typical nerd-ish, it was so not! And before I sign off, I promise to be back again... soon!