07 April, 2017

What Great Work is About

When composing music for a Mani Ratnam film, composer AR Rahman sends melody elements that reflect feelings...like love, passion and so on, to Ratnam for his approval.  When asked how he decides that Ratnam will like a particular tune,  AR says, “It's not about him liking a tune.  When I compose something,  I have to like it first. I have be proud of it and feel, ‘Ah, this is beautiful’ or ‘This chord progression is nice’... If it emotionally moves me, then I am sure he will like it as well.”

And that tells me a lot about what great work is all about!

06 April, 2017

The Age of 'Planted Facts'

Economist John Keynes was quoted as saying, “When the facts change, I change my mind.“ Which  sounds as a statement distinctly lacking intellectual honesty. Turned out what he actually said was,  “When my information changes,  I alter my conclusions.”

There is a subtle, but important difference between, “the facts” and ”the conclusions”. The former refers to some objective change, that is, or should be, apparent to all: the latter to the speaker's knowledge of relevant facts.
But in times rich with ‘planted facts’, how is one to reliably distinguish between objective and subjective facts? 

We do live in difficult times!

05 April, 2017

Why Are You Saying 'yes' When You Mean 'No'?

Paul Coelho puts it well, “When you say yes to others, make sure you are not saying ‘no’ to yourself.“ And that is what I have been prone to doing for the longest time imaginable! Every once in a while, I find, there is a ‘yes’ on my lips, when actually there's a ‘no’ in my heart. As a result, I end up kicking and cursing myself for not being strong enough to say what I actually feel. But something actor Kalki Koechlin said, shows me a way out of this uncomfortable situation. “Saying ‘no’ every once in a while” says the actor “acts like a detox. Let the world not take you for granted.” 

Detoxed! Yesssss, that's it, that is exactly how I'd feel after I steel myself and actually say the 'n' word!  

Bye bye remorse, bye, bye curses. 

Hello 'feel good', hello 'feel strong'!


04 April, 2017

Dealing with Failure

Olympic gold medal winner Abhinav Bindra narrowly lost a position on the podium at Rio. Tremors due to epilepsy, diagnosed in 2014, had  caused him to drop and break the sight of his rifle, minutes from the event. But he refuses to blame either his broken rifle, or his neurological condition for the loss. “An athlete is not scared of failure or of doing badly,” he says, “an athlete Is scared of regret. And I have no regrets because I put my best into it.”

My Take: To deal with failure is to move from regret to reflection and from paralysis to analysis.

What's your take?

03 April, 2017

The Art of Giving

Money and power have been conventionally treated as metrics of success. But Arianna Huffington,  co-founder of the Huffington Post has an interesting and useful take on it. She says a third metric needs to be added.  The third metric comprises of four pillars; wellbeing, wisdom, wonder and giving. Given the conventional importance accorded to money,  does giving necessarily have to be by way of money? I don't believe so, and here's a story to illustrate what I am saying.

When animal rights crusader and minister,  Maneka Gandhi was thirty and looking for funds to get an ambulance for her newly set-up animal hospital, she wanted to approach her ‘personal hero’ Ratan Tata for funds but didn't want to approach him directly. She was advised to speak to a certain Mrs Moolgaonkar, whose husband was held in high regard by Ratan Tata. By a happy coincidence,  it turned out the lady knew Maneka from a brief interaction they had six months ago. “Remember,”  she told Maneka, “you helped me pick up my bag in an aircraft and put it in the overhead bin? That was me, because of that, I will speak to Mr. Tata.” She kept her word, and Maneka got her ambulance.

Maneka may not necessarily have meant it as doing a good deed, but just coming from a position of helping someone who could do with some assistance. 

Giving then, does not necessity have to be by way of money, it can also be by way of our time, our knowledge, our space, or use our network to facilitate someone in need. Or it could even be a small courteous gestures such as helping someone with heavy bags. What is important is to have a willingness to give. Because, then the heart finds its ways.

The bonus? The universe returns the deed in many unexpected ways.

Pause. Think. Go.

Flash back It was several years ago that I met him on a Bombay Walk - the ones where they take you around to see and learn about the colonia...