Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Golfinger.

I never liked golf. I remember making fun of my dad and asking him why he didn't play a "real sport".

But lately I've been getting interested, and figured out that the game is a lot more skillful and challenging than it seems. I've wanted to learn how to play since last year, but then life got in the way. (Gosh, I sound like one of those old farts who play gol...I mean...well...moving on...)

So when a friend invited me to a driving range last week, my hands began shaking with excitement, and I was beside myself with euphoria, and...just kidding, I said "Sure, okay, why not?"in a very casual manner. 

This isn't just any driving range though. It's the Chelsea Pier, an immense multi-storeyed netted structure sticking out into the Hudson River, giving you a beautiful view as you, well, in my case...suck at golf. 

I stepped up, took my stance, kept my knees bent and my elbows straight...and missed. More than a few times. Got frustrated, contemplated giving up, and then decided to try one more shot. 

And it happened. I swung, and watched it go sailing through the air in a perfect arc with just the right elevation, landing about 50 metres away. 

I'm talking about my 9 Iron, of course. The ball stayed at my feet. Got a few high-fives from bystanders for that one. 

But the nice people at the pretty driving range gave me a new club and I managed to actually hit the ball a few times with it! 

So all in all it was a good maiden golfing thingy. My number one takeaway - Launch your first club into outer space, the second one they give you will work wonders. 


Maybe next time I'll use the 5 Iron. From what I understand, that one goes even further! 

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

A Dream Deferred - The Young India Fellowship Experience


As of half an hour ago, I made my final presentation at the Young India Fellowship. After a year full of intensity — whether it was the discussions and deliberations both in class and outside, the desperate all-nighters with a term paper due the next morning, the late-night team meetings or the late-night parties — it ‘s all over. Finito. “Done.” as my BBM status says. “No more of that”, as Othello says at the end of a play we studied, analyzed and dissected in one of my most memorable courses of the year gone by.

I don’t know how I expected to feel at the end, but I wasn’t prepared at all for how I’m feeling now.

I don’t feel the sense of joy and euphoria that I felt when I gave my last school exam and ran out with my friends yelling “Freeeedooooommm!”

I don’t feel the sense of quiet relief and reluctant nostalgia I felt on my last day of college, where my sadness at leaving was soon overtaken by excitement and anticipation of what lay ahead.

I just feel kind of weird. I wish there was a better, more eloquent way to describe it, but there really isn’t. In fact, as I type this, I find myself sifting through my emotions to find a match. You’ll know the result by the end of this post.

Throughout the year, we dealt with the confusion, exasperation and sheer desperation that come with studying a different set of subjects every six weeks, and submitting a coherent piece of material to be evaluated by the end of each course. Team meetings often descended into arguments, individual assignments were a mad scramble to get shit done before the deadline, and presentations were sometimes very painful to put together and talk about in my sleep-deprived state.
Still, even through the toughest, most infuriating assignments where I was literally tearing my hair out, not once did I even begin to wish I was somewhere else, or doing something else. It was stimulating, it was challenging, and it was exhilarating.

I can state with complete conviction that you would be hard-pressed to find a more intellectually stimulating environment than the one that YIF provides. I was always struck by how easily a discussion on where to go after class, or what was for dinner in the mess that night, or even the usual lighthearted banter would descend into an intense debate about Marx and Gramsci, or the issues of rural migrants, or the ‘real’ definition of an entrepreneur, or the lack of sporting infrastructure in India…you get the picture. You name it, and I’ve probably discussed it with my fellow Fellows over Maggi and chai.

Every moment at the Young India Fellowship was a chance to learn, an opportunity to grow. In the past year, I have absorbed more knowledge, formed stronger bonds and broadened my horizons more than I did in the twenty years that preceded it. I have learned to question. I have learned to push the boundaries. I have learned how to learn.

But most of all, I think what has made this experience so hard to let go of, and what makes me wish more than anything I didn’t have to let go of it at all, is the sheer force of 154 (and counting) hopes, dreams, aspirations and inspirations that give me the confidence and courage to follow my own. It is a force that propels each of the Young India Fellows forward in their quest for making a difference, and the thought of not being in the direct presence of this life-changing, paradigm-shifting force is rather terrifying.

I think the biggest testament to the impact that the Fellowship has had on me is the fact that I don’t want to leave even though my next destination is the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
I got my letter of admission from Columbia a few weeks before the offer from YIF, and much to my surprise, I found myself asking my dream school for a one year-deferral. It took some persuasion, since they only grant deferrals for medical emergencies or ‘exceptional academic opportunities’, but they finally agreed.

And one year later, the only thing I find myself thinking is that ‘exceptional’ is an understatement of exceptional proportions.