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phasing out

Am I excited? It is a ubiquitous question of late. I don’t know what my answer should be. I know they are expecting me to say YES! of course. But honestly, since the day I decided to accept a definite offer, the day I sealed my fate, so to speak, ‘excitement’ has been farthest from my mind. It is as if the glossy picture that I had been staring at, aiming at all this while has suddenly, as I neared it, shed its patina of gloss and become just another matte print.
There are grand plans to be made, experiments to map out, students to entice, a lab to set up. But all I can think of is which plasmids I should take, how will I ship the fish, will the Customs let my things through, when will my brain ditch me and expose me for the fool that I am.
There is a ‘scientist’ to become, an office to choose, computer and instruments to be ordered. But all I can think of is the admin babus to appease, the director to please, bank and hospital staff to be battled.
There is a new life waiting to begin, new excitements to happen, new bonds to be forged, old ones to be polished up. But all I can think of is how many boxes to ship, how to protect the fragile, what is essential and what not, why is no one buying my furniture.
There is a heavy monsoon-like downpour in Boston today; the purples, yellows and whites of the new spring flowers are bursting forth, water droplets dancing on the puddles of clean water in the potholes. But all I can think of is the muddy slush of monsoons in Delhi, the unmentionable, unknowable solution that flows down the ditches, the drenched skeletal little kids knocking on your car windows…
From my vast experience of life I KNOW that these are phases one goes through. It is my firm belief that to squeeze the most of life, I need to immerse myself in each phase completely, thoroughly. If it is grief, wallow in it. If it is anger boil a bit. If it is weakness, succumb to it. If it is melancholy, submerge in it. It too shall pass. And so this too shall pass. But until then, until that excitement steals back into me, I will just have to deal with the mundane and keep craning my neck to see if there is light at the next bend.     

Comments

Anonymous said…
Hi Chetana, just saw the blog and realised the huge news! wow, congrat!!
I'll send you a longer email soon, and I'm not anonymous, but just tech-lazy...
Inbal
Anonymous said…
Hi Chetana,
great news. I was your junior in CCMB. You have been an inspiration to all. I wish you the very best in India. Welcome home.
regards
former student W310
Anonymous said…
Hi Chetana,

Good luck to you. Its been a long race indeed but with a trophy in the end. I will miss all those get togethers we used to have...movies and eat outs though I had been quite busy lately with the house renovation. I will probably see you back in India or here if you plan to attend a meeting...
supersensitive said…
Two ideas:
1) How about decreasing price of furniture to almost absolute nothingness?
2)I always believed in the Garfield hypothesis, "if it feels good, overdo it"
ChetanaX said…
Hey Supersensitive, Thanks for the ideas. (1)The price of furniture decreases as an asymptotic curve, never reaches absolute nothingness, but gets closer and closer.(2)Chetana's motto: "even if it feels painful, overdo it"--this is most relevant in reference to consumption of fatty, sweet food!
ChetanaX said…
Dear "former student W310" I am curious to know who you are. After all its not everyday that I am an inspiration to someone :-)
Anonymous said…
Hmmmm...do you remember "jaane mann jaane mann" with a mallu accent?
former student W310

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