Tuesday, December 9, 2014

My life is not my own

I don't know how I survived drinking that much rum in one sitting. 500 mLs of rum in a clear plastic bottle.

The kind of plastic that is malleable to the point it becomes your stress buster as you run marathons or power through long hikes in the Shenandoahs.
The kind of rum that was affordable to me as a college kid making maybe pennies an hour.
The kind of survival that makes me sit up at night and write this embarrassing tale after four years of wondering, "How am I here right now?" It really is a more favourite question of mine to ponder, compared to more scary ones like "Why am I here right now?" which I've left to God to help me clear an answer out of my muddled head in digestible quantities. Much like my liver.

My liver is the one organ in the my body (and most other human bodies) that has the ability to regenerate itself. But of course, to a point. The average human can consume up to 15mg% of alcohol an hour, as it takes several hours for the liver to clear the blood of that alcohol content(1). Liver or alcohol clearance researchers please feel free to supplement this factoid. Let's do some plugging about chugging into that equation: 500mLs of grade F alcohol / 3 hours minimum of grade A partying and hanging out with chums = ~167mLs of alcohol. Standard deviation of this number is ~+/- 10mLs given the precision of my memory about time and quantity- all I recall is having a water bottle full of rum when I walked into the restaurant and an empty one when we all walked out. So given those assumptions and margins of error, I consumed over 100mLs of alcohol per hour that night I went out to fit in.

"Fitting in???" Yes. Super cliche reason to drink. Proud to say that I fell for it. Why was I so concerned about my image? Who knows. My current state of not giving two shits is radically surprised by former self's stupidity in this regard. Four years and all I have to show for it is a liver and second (and third and fourth) thoughts when it comes to drinking. Maybe this counts as growing up. A little.

IF only the story ended there. Heels. The modern day equivalent to Chinese foot binding. Something I've been ranting about since sophomore year of college during philosophy class. And then let go of as an argument when I saw that guys liked my butt better in heels. So much more important than standing up for my rights, right? I recently donated the pair of heels from that night to goodwill, praying that the person with size 8.5 feet would have better luck carrying themselves around in them than I did.

When I fell, *Sam said he didn't dare come see what happened because he heard the crack of my skull on concrete. I was a healthy girl ~140 pounds and 5'6'' so that's a lot of gravity (140 pounds*0.45 kg/1 pound*9.8 m/s^2= 617.4 N of force) just standing up straight on the sidewalk. Which I tried my best to do until I blacked out standing up. The next thing I knew Kevin was freaking out and so was Julie. In fact Song, B.R and Manishk were too. And then I was in the living room with faces staring at me. Mike's brotherly voice came in and out, "Minu...dude...minu...can you drink more water please?" All I remember is getting up to look at the mirror and start howling about how no one will marry me with a face like that, and that it would make my parents mad. So naturally, my atheist self at that time throws out a prayer, "Force of the universe, if you can hear me, please don't let my parents find out I was drinking." I kept repeating this sentence in my head as I ate something, fell asleep, woke up and took the bus home.

Man. Coming home that morning was tough. I luckily had Julie to stick with me the whole night and help me feel a little bit more human than I did the whole time I walked back to my house. My mother's face was utter torment for me to watch. It was the same face from when I had skinned my entire leg skateboarding, except this time I wasn't laughing and saying that it will be ok.

"Who did this to you?" No way. My mom is giving me an out!!?? "Uh..." "Minnu. What did you say to someone for them to have done this to you? Tell me!" Still had to pretend like I was a good science student though, right? "No mom I was carrying books last night and I fell." "-___- what." "Yeah so I had those five exams right? So I was carrying those books around, I was walking up the stairs and I couldn't see so I fell." "...Minnu...go to your room and lie down please. I can't look at you right now."

I could. I had a purple left side of the face and a fairly normal looking right side. On the purple side, my face was swollen twice the size of the non-purple side, there was blood dripping from the top of both my eyes into a pool at the inner corner of my eyes, and coming out through my nose. My mother had been a general practitioner in India and has seen her share of burn victims and wounded protesters from Chennai. This woman couldn't understand how this could have happened to her daughter, who was wondering the same thing.

I made some turmeric paste for the rising bump on my forehead and resigned myself to living a life with the disfigured face. Shameless turmeric plug- that herb is so anti-inflammatory that I now do not have any noticeable swelling on my forehead whatsoever. Other than the occasional adult acne.

I put on some shitty song on the radio and wondered how I would get through the week of interrogations from my parents. Not to mention looking like Halloween during thanksgiving of senior year. And the graduate school applications I was now filling out thanks to getting a green card after ten years. No more visas to limit my work hours! Now I can slave away, pay taxes, get drunk and fall on my face!

"Minnu who did this to you? Which boy?" You're kidding me. Could my dad not smell the alcohol seeping out of my skin? "No naani I was carrying books and I fell..." I finished lamely.

He storms off and watches TV, sipping from his one beer the whole night. I go to the living room and try to make conversation but neither of my parents would look at me. "Tomorrow we are going to the doctor's office. Good first day of thanksgiving break for all of us."

My sister at this point knows what had happened and is watching in horrified younger child silence as all of this unfolds, amazed at my ability to get away with anything. I was ashamed to say the least. What if this had been my sister following my example and then not making it through alive?

"Alive? Of course you're alive! In fact from the way you fell, that bone should have been pointing inward and causing massive brain damage, and your eyes seem to be just as bad as before so looks like you're good to go," the doctor concluded from my x-rays. She also looked at me through squinted eyes, asked my parents to leave the room and told me to tell her what really happened. Panicking, I blurt out that I had been drinking and fell. She gives me a stern look and says, "After all that your parents have done for you? You could have been dead from the fall."

The fall. Everything after the fall was bleak. I spent the break ruminating over my poor choices, wondering why my parents were putting up a facade about my drinking. Not one question or comment out of their lips was about drinking. Were they just ignoring this fact? Could be. In any case I let them have more silence than words to their questions and kept myself on a fresh turmeric paste regimen. That and all the great Indian food like rasam, fish, string beans, sambhar, and rice thanks to my parents. I healed very well and was able to start working out the next week without smelling like rum.

Years later, after Jesus found me, He helped me dig up this long-buried memory to unpack and I realized how much of a miracle that night had really been. I had prayed for my parents to not find out I was drinking and they didn't until I told them last year- three years after the fall. More importantly, God did me one better- he kept my chums around to give me enough water to clear all that alcohol, and a break from school to heal me to the point where my liver, my forehead, and my brain had not been damaged. As far as I know at least. I'm growing my liver back and, just like my faith, it seems to be doing just fine. My brain and forehead, well, who knows. Time will tell. Until then I'm not drinking more than a few sips for polite accommodation to my hosts at dinner parties.

So I DO know how I survived that night. It was through a very non-committal prayer to a fairly unrelated request that got supplemented by the much needed physical healing. Thanks God, you're the best!

Or, The Best. I never know whether to make compliments into titles when it comes to God. I should re-read A Prayer for Owen Meany to get more comfortable with capitalization.

(1)http://forcon.ca/learning/alcohol.html

*Names changed to protect privacy of those not willing to be embarrassed yet.

*** THIS IS NOT A STORY WRITTEN TO SING OF MY BRAVADO AND ENCOURAGE YOU TO DRINK HEAVILY AND EXPECT THE SAME MIRACLE. THIS AESOP'S FABLE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE PHRASE "EXPECT MIRACLES, BUT DON'T BE AN IDIOT ABOUT ALCOHOL"***


Tuesday, October 14, 2014

When data smiles back


Scouring through signals to find one nitrogen slice that smiled back at me :)

Monday, October 6, 2014

Kindling

The earth sighs
Its deep longings
For the summer
In my ear
So
I shall write it down
Giving warmth
To the cold thoughts
About barren lands
And stark trees
Rekindling the fire
Within dry dead branches
So we too
Can see their smoky
Memories of fiery summers.


Postmodern love

Oh but what will I write
That is new on this earth
That will rock His socks off
That He hasn't heard before

Oh but how will I say
How much I love Jesus
And how much He shows up
Always

I feel so empty
When I try to write out my love
To the God who has made my desires
Does He not know already?

Then why do I pray?
Then why do I write?
Then why do I live
But to sing to you anyway

Yes you made me
To sing to you anyway
Yes I have woes
To pray to you everyday
Yes I write to get close
To THE original hipster
The one who IS before everything WAS
To be
A postmodern poet in the eyes of God
I may seem silly and pointless
Except for that little joy that comes dancing
When I feel God's love
Trickling through like syrup
Sticking to all the cracks of my heart

The point of leading

To come to
The point of leading

Is to share sorrows
And be unafraid
Of seeming weak

Is to bring each other to
A place of self-discovery
A seemingly lonely journey for two

Is to freely
Trust your ideas
In the hands of others

Is to freely
Hand others
Ideas to take as their own

Is to boldly
Speak the bitter truth
For those teachable moments

And to embrace others
And to let them embrace you.
True you.

;)

 

I didn't come to Jesus to become an American

When I first learned of you
I feared I would lose myself
My culture
My desires
My world would crumble
If were to become Christian
A little christ
I would become a Westerner
Have a checklist
To work till I die,
Think whiter
The better
Call Europe cultured
While India is just "exotic."
I would become a bigot
Losing the streams
That quenched my thirst
From the beginning.
I pushed your arms away,
Thinking you are
But a hollywood movie: Unbelievable.
Rising from the dead? No way. Unbelievable.
Until my world crumbled
Piece by piece:
Pierce by pierce, betrayal
Tore through my heart
Leaving me gasping for air
As they chose their Barabas-
A thief who stole my work
And shamelessly lied.
Blow by blow I delivered
Evidence to show the truth
For did it not matter? To be truthful?
Step by step I climbed their ladders
Seeking justice amongst the people
Afraid to stand out and stand up for the truth.
Tear by tear I lost my faith
In humanity, in society, in science.
As I left behind everything I held as my future
I walked, I shook and trembled
And crumbled, as I heard my friend say,
"Unbelievable. Your story is like a movie!!"
Drop by drop, your voice drifts into my head,
"NOW YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL."
Silence. Who was that?
Jesus? My imaginary friend? Had I gone mad?
Your words echoed in the caves of my heart
I had no doubt- this was the real deal.
"What about my parents? What would they say?"
"I MADE THEM."
Fear swiftly left, as calm settled
My hesitations from before lifted, with unparalleled clarity.
Peace by peace, you enter my soul
And I decide to follow you, Jesus.
Not because I like going to church,
But because I now know who the Truth is.
Not because I like to help others,
But because I now know who Love is.
Not because of humanity
But despite humanity
Not because of fear
But despite fear
I come running to your arms.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Unwanted imp


I've had it with doubt
 Seeping in unnoticed
 An imp throwing
 Small stones in my
Mind to far corners
Where they don't belong,
Filling instead my thoughts
With memories long buried
Under the tombstone of forgiveness
Digging up feelings
Long forgotten.
May god help me
Sift through these recurring
Images taking my eyes
Off the cross
Where I try
Everyday
To hang more of my ego to dry.

Fall poem# 1


Well the clouds told me
Today is a day for poets
To pen down their hearts
Onto flying pieces of paper
Encircling them
As if the pages were bees
Wanting the nectar
At the tip of their tongues
At the corner of their eyes
Gathering at the crease
Of their brows waggling
At the wonder of emotions
Around them
The clouds ask me
What of all these poets
Surrounded by pages like bees
Ready to soak up the pollen
Of haphazard thoughts and
Turn them into honey-
Immortalizing fleeting feelings
In cages of amber verse rhythm and rhyme
Clearing a space in today's skies
To feel with abandon

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Dishwashing: an experiment in motivational leadership

Well, the first thing that ran across my mind was guilt. How many times did I not do dishes when living with my parents, or previous roommates? Clearly this was karma manifested - a yellowing sink with 2-week-old dishes hosting their own ecosystem of bacteria, mold and my personal favourite- ants.

So that's the lesson then. Karma. What goes around comes around. Surely now that I've come to this earth shattering realization, the dishes would get done. Oh wait. They're not going anywhere. They're going to be there now, some more and ...somemore.

God knows why I have chosen to actually start caring about dishes at this point in my life. I mean, I was pretty apathetic towards them till now. Now, the sight of a unkept sink piled ridiculously high with moldy dishes made me irate. Workplace altercations - no problem! Solve it with a little bit of "a gentle answer turns away wrath (Proverbs 15:1)" Societal pressures about singlehood in mid-twenties? Ha! I'll chase contentment more than a checklist manifesto for my life that "requires" marriage. Water off a duck's back, as Americans like to say. Motivating a team of acquaintances to put an event together? Motivational leadership to the rescue! Send out emails, and wait on god to work on their hearts and the event.

Neglected dirty dishes? I'm at a loss. I can't even fathom why I felt such annoyance at such a trivial household chore not getting done. I avoided doing them most of my life because I felt that females who did any household chores were succumbing to the secret agenda of the "women-belong-in-the-kitchen"ites. I woke up from that erroneous approach by understanding that doing chores around the house is not a gendered activity- it's an activity in being CONSIDERATE to those who live with you.

Consideration may seem like a vague term to some. Possibly if that wasn't instilled in your K-12 education like in India and Singapore. So for those who did not get this concept of thinking of others while growing up, ponder these three levels of consideration regarding the common sink area:
Level 1. Doing your own dishes. Good job! You didn't break any plates so your roommates trust you! You go on to...
Level 2. Doing house dishes on some sort of rotation. Alright! Great system guys, sink harmony makes the house a loved and respected place for each other. You should ideally land here BUT WAIT WHAT'S HAPPENING!!! THERE'S...
Most coveted Level 3. Doing house dishes for months in a row. No end in sight.
Tis a rude shock to move into the third level when the first and second levels seem pretty comfortable to one's sense of shared duty and respect towards the house.

Months ago, I took the approach of putting up a sign that I thought would signal humour and wit to my roommates about the dishes not getting done, "Tired of your maidservice? Then it's time to do the dishes!" Felt pretty clever- using humour to inspire some light-hearted dish washing fun.

It had short-term success, but was not a sustainable way to keep the dishes from piling up and welcoming insects into the kitchen. Clearly sign's message did not stick to their brains long enough, or as a priority, for them to wash the crumbs and saliva off their own plates. I've lead several projects in academic and not-for-profit settings and have spent six years actively seeking out different means to motivate a team of reluctant members to get on the same page and work towards challenging goals. Why was I not taking the same approach here? Because this was far more challenging as my leadership goal - it involved motivating friends who are close to me to get on common ground and finish a mundane and non-urgent task. It's not karma that I'm supposed to get out of this situation, it's a lesson in motivating others through a personally frustrating scenario/ a seemingly trivial gripe. Yes, this is my academic treatment of an oddly irritating problem. Really, I'm just as surprised as you are that I actually care about washing dishes.

Given above background and preliminary data, I am going on a classic bottom-up, discovery-driven fishing expedition to keep the sink free of dirty dishes for two days out of the week.

Experimental design
Aim 1: Gently drop hints about cleaning dishes on a regular basis to promote Level 1 consideration where each of us washes our own dishes. Methods will be verbal, as visual methods from preliminary experiment did not work in the long run. 
Aim 2: Play 1000 blank white cards, but switch out all cards to "wash dishes." Rationale is that most of the house loves playing nerdy board games.
Aim 3: Announce a party that will gather roommates, focus on how living together has been beneficial while slowly moving towards sink. Turn on music and then point out that since we're all here, we should do dishes.

Evaluation of results
Same for all aims. Frequency per week of clean sink (two days) and volume of sink that is clean  (e.g. sink is less than 50% full of dirty dishes) when roommates clean their own or others' dishes. As the control, I will be washing all of my own dishes, but not of others (reverting to level 1 consideration).  Timeline before Aims are evaluated: next three weeks, before we get a new roommate.

Alternate approach and strategies
If none of the aims proposed are viable, this blog post is a mechanism to get external ideas on motivating a team. In the case of observer's effect (i.e. the roommates read this post), us suffering intellectuals will be able to actually treat the matter with some sort of importance by discussing it for a change.

Feedback on background, absent hypothesis, and experimental design is welcome.