Having considered and exhausted our list of must-visit places withing driving distance of Bangalore, this long weekend, the husband and I used all our guile (me) and charm (the husband) to get our two of our good friends to agree to drive with us to Goa, and spend a weekend at Palolem.
As so Goa it was.
And it was goood.
Palolem, in South Goa, gets my vote on Lonely Planet for the best beach paradise in the world. It had my vote when I first stayed there around 7 years ago, and every successive trip had me longing for more.
And part of the charm of staying in this beach paradise are the stilted beach huts that are dismantled and stored away every year in the monsoon. If you don't stay at a beach hut, with its paper thin walls then you miss out on hearing the waves crashing on the shore every night, you miss out on waking up to the sight of the sea outside your balcao, and the sight of a sand- littered floor.
And the 6pm onwards happy hours at the bars, the who-cares-a-damn-if-you-are-too-fat-for-your-swimsuit attitude among all and sundry, the trance parties that carry on from 8pm till 4am, the lying on the sand and watching the a group of Israelis drumming up a frenzy till the wee hours, oh and the squid the fish and the prawns !!
A parallel universe created by the sea, the sand and the experience that is Palolem.
the view from here ....
Monday, January 17, 2011
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Eat, Pray, Discover Yourself
Women's lib dons a new look with the book and movie "Eat, Pray, Love".
The movie (and the book) tries to be set in a tone that is very different from other women-centric movies (ok ok, chick flicks if you insist). The protagonist, Elizabeth Gilbert, in her journey of breaking free from being molded as a typical New York wife with a house in the suburbs and an apartment in the city, discovers the simple joys of eating good food and wine in Italy, makes an attempt (and fails) at finding peace through meditation in an ashram in India, and finally comes to Bali to make true a prediction made by a 9th generation medicine man.
But just as you think the book tries to achieve something different, she goes ahead and (yaaaaaawn) .... falls in love with nothing less than a Brazilian man who is conveniently one of those "all-male exterior with the tenderness of a lamb and love-making skills of an Adonis" stereotypes.
Don't get me wrong, I love the notion of a movie that ends with the happy couple falling in love. In fact I, along with all the 100 odd women in the theater (exception the two rather shame-faced men who were probably darting their heads from side to side as their wives would have held their hands) sobbed in unison as Elizabeth relived moments of her wedding dance, and we all laughed in unison as Ketut Liyer, the medicine man advised her to "smile from the liver".
This silent resonance of women in a movie hall continued through the movie, with all of us empathizing with the main character's breakdown moments and not quite understanding why she divorces her husband, but being happy for her at the same time.
Yet in the end, it reinforced the idea that all happy endings should involve fading into the sunset with the right guy. So in that sense, how different was it from Sex and The City or Pretty Woman, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, or even Hes Just Not That Into You (yes yes ... I am guilty of having watched and wait for it ... ENJOYED these movies).
Maybe I should just sit with my husband and hold his hand as he watches Die Hard and imagine us fading into the sunset.
The movie (and the book) tries to be set in a tone that is very different from other women-centric movies (ok ok, chick flicks if you insist). The protagonist, Elizabeth Gilbert, in her journey of breaking free from being molded as a typical New York wife with a house in the suburbs and an apartment in the city, discovers the simple joys of eating good food and wine in Italy, makes an attempt (and fails) at finding peace through meditation in an ashram in India, and finally comes to Bali to make true a prediction made by a 9th generation medicine man.
But just as you think the book tries to achieve something different, she goes ahead and (yaaaaaawn) .... falls in love with nothing less than a Brazilian man who is conveniently one of those "all-male exterior with the tenderness of a lamb and love-making skills of an Adonis" stereotypes.
Don't get me wrong, I love the notion of a movie that ends with the happy couple falling in love. In fact I, along with all the 100 odd women in the theater (exception the two rather shame-faced men who were probably darting their heads from side to side as their wives would have held their hands) sobbed in unison as Elizabeth relived moments of her wedding dance, and we all laughed in unison as Ketut Liyer, the medicine man advised her to "smile from the liver".
This silent resonance of women in a movie hall continued through the movie, with all of us empathizing with the main character's breakdown moments and not quite understanding why she divorces her husband, but being happy for her at the same time.
Yet in the end, it reinforced the idea that all happy endings should involve fading into the sunset with the right guy. So in that sense, how different was it from Sex and The City or Pretty Woman, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, or even Hes Just Not That Into You (yes yes ... I am guilty of having watched and wait for it ... ENJOYED these movies).
Maybe I should just sit with my husband and hold his hand as he watches Die Hard and imagine us fading into the sunset.
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Moving on...
I'v moved five houses in a little more than four years, and am currently onto my sixth. No, no, no one's stalking me and I dont have the cops on my heels, thank you. But the nomadic house hunting has been an annual fixture for a variety of reasons, ranging from ex roomie getting married to ex roomie moving on shore to self getting married to new job location.
But its the current move that really breaks my heart .... take a dekko at below pics and see why...
Its time to say goodbye, I've lived here for seven months and have loved every moment of it....Sigh!!
But its the current move that really breaks my heart .... take a dekko at below pics and see why...
Its time to say goodbye, I've lived here for seven months and have loved every moment of it....Sigh!!
Friday, September 10, 2010
The Weekend Strikes ... and the hunger too
Oh Bangalore... how you pamper me.
You left me spoiled for choice with the myriad of options for a food lover like me. You made sure I didn't miss home when you showed me Little Home around the corner of the house where I first lived. You also showed me the secrets of cuisines I had never sampled before, the delights of Thukpa and Momos at the Tibet restaurant at Dubai Plaza, the hit combination of Dosa Chicken at Empire, the brilliance of Thai food at Shiok, the Korean pickles and relishes and spicy pork at Soo Ra Sang. And cosy little hideaways like Sue's Kitchen where I was tempted with Jamaican jerk Chicken and Crab Curry.
For those let-your-hair-down-nights, you provided me Legends of Rock and Purple Haze, and for those extra special nights you gave me Thirteenth Floor to go with my high heels. And for those days when I just missed the beach and needed some breathing space, you gave me... well nothing can really replace the beach, but then when Pondicherry is just a drive away, then why be so picky?
But there are times you have disappointed. You have yet to show me one good place that can serve up a semi-decent chicken cafreal, or a vindaloo that leaves me with streaming eyes. Koshy's, did you say? tut-tut dear Bangalore, allow me to introduce you to messieurs Martins and Lobo of Margao and Calangute. But then you redeemed yourself with kick-ass coastal fare at Mangalore Pearl and Kubay. And provided me my sustenance, prawns and fish, without which oh Bangalore, I would have suffered withdrawal pangs.
Cometh the weekend and you shower me with choice, oh bangalore how you pamper me :-)
(pics taken from www.mybangalore.com, www.bangalore.burrp.com)
You left me spoiled for choice with the myriad of options for a food lover like me. You made sure I didn't miss home when you showed me Little Home around the corner of the house where I first lived. You also showed me the secrets of cuisines I had never sampled before, the delights of Thukpa and Momos at the Tibet restaurant at Dubai Plaza, the hit combination of Dosa Chicken at Empire, the brilliance of Thai food at Shiok, the Korean pickles and relishes and spicy pork at Soo Ra Sang. And cosy little hideaways like Sue's Kitchen where I was tempted with Jamaican jerk Chicken and Crab Curry.
For those let-your-hair-down-nights, you provided me Legends of Rock and Purple Haze, and for those extra special nights you gave me Thirteenth Floor to go with my high heels. And for those days when I just missed the beach and needed some breathing space, you gave me... well nothing can really replace the beach, but then when Pondicherry is just a drive away, then why be so picky?
But there are times you have disappointed. You have yet to show me one good place that can serve up a semi-decent chicken cafreal, or a vindaloo that leaves me with streaming eyes. Koshy's, did you say? tut-tut dear Bangalore, allow me to introduce you to messieurs Martins and Lobo of Margao and Calangute. But then you redeemed yourself with kick-ass coastal fare at Mangalore Pearl and Kubay. And provided me my sustenance, prawns and fish, without which oh Bangalore, I would have suffered withdrawal pangs.
Cometh the weekend and you shower me with choice, oh bangalore how you pamper me :-)
(pics taken from www.mybangalore.com, www.bangalore.burrp.com)
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
On 4 Wheels And A Prayer
I know I signed up for this voluntarily. When I decided to shift jobs, I accepted the fact that my daily travel routine would be, on an average, 1.5 hours one way daily. The company-provided transport being the BMTC dabba-like-contraption that it is limps and crawls its way through Bangalore’s outer ring road, through traffic, the likes of which I have never seen in my 4 years here. The first one week, I ranted and cried so much to the hubby about my commute that he decided to shut me up by buying me a car. And has meekly agreed to teach me city driving. It was either that or hearing the good name of BMTC being mutilated daily. He’s a wise man.
But I have an inherent fear of driving that I doubt I will ever be able to shake off. It doesn’t help that when one drives, the mind recalls images of the day one almost drove one’s parents’ car into a nallah (after backing the car into a wall, then panicking and getting out of it and leaving the hand brake down on an incline, leaving the car rolling to said nallah). It took me a month to gather the courage to put hand to wheel and foot to pedal after that.
But for the sake of the hubby’s sanity and my own well-being, I must forge on. I have great regard for those gifted people who are not as challenged at eye-hand coordination, or such things as judging car-to-bumper spacing, or not-freaking-out-when-rabid-dog -zips-across-the-road. I envy them unfairly talented drivers who juggle effortlessly between choosing their favorite songs on the deck while cooing on the phone and maneuvering their way into the teeniest parking space simultaneously with just a touch of the wheel.
Parking a car takes a particular DNA make-up. Somehow the genes that are responsible for this fine art found their way into my sister through my parents (fine drivers that they all are), but did not so much as touch me with a barge pole. And so, unless the parking lot has enough space to land a plane, I choose to look elsewhere.
Having driven (or having got away with my kind of driving) in Goa for many years now, driving in Bangalore should not be a problem, right? Wrong, so wrong. Where Panjim has never felt the need for a flyover, Bangalore is the flyover capital of the country. Goa witnesses a traffic jam once a year – when the carnival is on, and Bangalore, oh where do I begin? So much for so-called city driving experience.
Anyways, lulled into a false sense of security, with the demons of my past behind me, I signed the papers last week. Now, if only the hubby could get me the 4-wheeler equivalent of bicycle training wheels!
But I have an inherent fear of driving that I doubt I will ever be able to shake off. It doesn’t help that when one drives, the mind recalls images of the day one almost drove one’s parents’ car into a nallah (after backing the car into a wall, then panicking and getting out of it and leaving the hand brake down on an incline, leaving the car rolling to said nallah). It took me a month to gather the courage to put hand to wheel and foot to pedal after that.
But for the sake of the hubby’s sanity and my own well-being, I must forge on. I have great regard for those gifted people who are not as challenged at eye-hand coordination, or such things as judging car-to-bumper spacing, or not-freaking-out-when-rabid-dog -zips-across-the-road. I envy them unfairly talented drivers who juggle effortlessly between choosing their favorite songs on the deck while cooing on the phone and maneuvering their way into the teeniest parking space simultaneously with just a touch of the wheel.
Parking a car takes a particular DNA make-up. Somehow the genes that are responsible for this fine art found their way into my sister through my parents (fine drivers that they all are), but did not so much as touch me with a barge pole. And so, unless the parking lot has enough space to land a plane, I choose to look elsewhere.
Having driven (or having got away with my kind of driving) in Goa for many years now, driving in Bangalore should not be a problem, right? Wrong, so wrong. Where Panjim has never felt the need for a flyover, Bangalore is the flyover capital of the country. Goa witnesses a traffic jam once a year – when the carnival is on, and Bangalore, oh where do I begin? So much for so-called city driving experience.
Anyways, lulled into a false sense of security, with the demons of my past behind me, I signed the papers last week. Now, if only the hubby could get me the 4-wheeler equivalent of bicycle training wheels!
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Non-violent TV watching.. is there really such a thing?
If you are married or live with your significant other, then you will understand why the idea of non-violent TV viewing is actually a myth. The day optical fibers and coaxial cables brought with them a plethora of options in TV viewing, the almighty probably decreed that a man and woman can never agree on a single, mutually agreed upon TV show to watch.
This probably remains one of the biggest mysteries of all time, ranking up there with other unresolved enigmas such as what does Lady Gaga really look like underneath all that make-up? or how does Himesh's music really sell? or how does Victoria Beckham become a fashion icon by being anorexic and pouting for the camera? But lets not digress.
My biggest grouse really is when a seemingly intelligent young man who follows CNBC TV 18 like a religion and reads the Economic section of the TOI like the word of God, can also, in the same breath, watch with bated breath as Sly Stallone is beaten to pulp in a boxing ring, in a movie with a standard plot that can be summarized as: "Boxer is challenged by reigning champion of the time. Boxer accepts challenge. Boxer defeats champion in final showdown" repeat 6 times till boxer becomes a drug-abusing aging star. Or when said young man begins flipping channels and stops in awe at one where cars are flying and guns are blasting and there is general bloodshed, or if there is the presence of the timeless acting talents of either Bruce Willis or Nicholas Cage or the afore mentioned Sly.
Now, if you are a male and you haven't already shaken your fist at my blasphemous description, then I admire your constraint and will reward you with the view from the better half's side.
Now the better half is a very accommodating person. And believes in equality of the sexes and all that. But he doesn't fathom why I simply must find out who Rahul Mahajan chose to marry and why. And why, if I hate the show as much as I claim to do, must I still tune in sometimes to watch the vagaries in his wife-picking. Or why I must watch Carrie Bradshaw and her 40+ "girls" run around New York in heels. Or that the reason I watch this show is partly because of said heels (and clothes and bags).
If the above views do not apply to you, then you are probably in the courtship phase of your relationship or you fall in that wise 20% category of happy couples who have decided to avoid bloodshed by buying two TV sets for the home.
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