Thursday, June 11, 2009

Maybe this is how parents feel. The cousin whose education I have been sponsoring passed the XII board exams with flying colors. I feel proud but I am happier with the fact that the kid is worth spending. Maybe this is not how parents feel.

I wanted him to study computer science engineering; agreed that everyone is doing it and the stream’s become pretty boring but for a kid whose family is poor, the fastest and guaranteed route of getting a job and earning money is to study CSc. Engineering. But I feel the kid somehow sensed the extra responsibility that has been heaped upon me after my brother’s expiry – my nephew’s education. And with everyone back home learning that salaries at my current company have been delayed for the last 2 months, the kid backed out and told me that he would rather study BSc at a college back home in Imphal. As they say, sometimes in life there are just too few options.



As my years of work experience increase, my belief that life in the private sector is not so different from life in the government sector grows stronger everyday. In private companies, transparency no longer exists. Promotions/career growth is wholly dependent on your relation with your immediate boss. The big shots continue to earn huge disproportionate salaries that are not even (1/100)th of the revenues they bring in to the company. Satyam was not the first and the last example. Take Infosys, the company considered to be one of the most ethical & transparent companies by so many people around the world. The company had announced a freeze in hikes for this year for all employees but just about 2-3 months back, whooping oh-my-fucking-god hikes were announced for a group of very senior people. Does it mean that ALL the employees of Infosys were not performing except for these old-fat-greedy asses???

I got so pissed off when I learned that the librarian at my company had been fired a few months back. That poor guy must be earning like 5-6 thousand rupees a month. Let’s even say 10,000. How much has the company’s balance sheet and cash flow statement changed after that guy was fired? How about those dickheads who earn nothing less than 15 lacs a year for handling a single project and managing at the most 10 people? And whoever fired him, I am sure that asshole could have saved the librarian’s job by taking a 1% cut in his/her own salary.



It’s funny how people expect you to change overnight after marriage. Have been doing the washing, cleaning, cooking....ever since I was in my teens. I didn’t allow my elder sis or mom to wash my clothes since I was in standard 7, I observe the same principle with my wife too. We wash our own clothes, we cook and wash the dishes together almost all the time, and we clean our flat together. And then we have all these married friends who are FULLY dependent on cooks and housemaids, and whenever we meet on the weekends they are like, “How do you guys maintain your figures?” And I am like, “Oh it’s easy. We fuck like rabbits!!!” Just kidding:-)

Coming back to the first line in the above para, marriage has indeed changed me. I don’t sleep alone anymore, and I always sleep with my arms around S. I don’t come home from the office to an empty flat anymore; I look forward to seeing S again in the evening, and talking and laughing with her. Dying young is not so romantic anymore. I drink lesser these days, though I will never ever stop drinking for anyone or anything. Same goes for rock music and guitars.

And one more thing I learned after marriage is that when I feel angry, depressed, frustrated, or sad, nothing makes me feel better than holding S in my arms tight without saying a word.

8 comments:

Dreamcatcher said...

You posted after ages and ages. Welcome back :)

SwB said...

awww ... our boys gone soft! :)

good to see a post from you after so long.

cheers,
SwB

sushmita said...

About how parents feel, in the two possibilities you suggest, there is not enough involvement. Parents see the child as an extension of themselves - they themselves succeed through the children's success. This extreme level of identifying with the child is troublesome - that's what I've seen in people around me.
I really liked your post. I enjoyed reading your evaluation of how marriage has changed you. Somehow, I have been in a relationship for two years now and I share your feelings. Unfortunately, I no longer have 'unexpressed' things in my mind, and that, I think, makes me incapable of writing - I'm still trying to write though. Maybe there are other reasons for why I'm not able to write.

White Magpie said...

On marriage - You are lucky. Good post!

On Infy, Satyam etc - you know how it is. Shit floats on the top. In my company itself, we could save millions across indirect expenses if we could cut down on getting people across the world come to India for a single client..Lots of other ways. But nopes. Removing people happens to be the suggested solution.

Anonymous said...

I would say touchwood on the end of the post... and do a silent prayer that it always remains like that :)

and regarding the job thingy WM said it all, i wonder cutting some people would really help them is it???

Layon said...

Long time man!

Congratulations and all the best wishes for a beautiful married life.

LostLittleGirl said...

Aww completely loved this one. It made me smile so much :)

I get what your nephew is going through, I'm glad he's going to save his mental peace and do what he thinks is right instead of burdening himself in the process of studying for the best job.

Anonymous said...

we need more men like you, this post gives me hope :)