Sunday, March 29, 2015

March Delight



It is spring again.
The earth is like a child that knows Poems by heart
                                 -Rainer Maria Rilke 

It has been a good month. To do a little round up, I thought I will share with you some wonderful (not jaw dropping) photos from instagram


Cherry Blossoms 
The cherry blossoms everywhere in the capital brings in a different aura. After battling with the gruesome cold and dark winter, the blossoms is a significance that an arduous task is accomplished. A sense of fulfillment and achievement in the air. Indeed, the mountain air is brightened. 

Solo road trip 
I took this first ever solo road trip. To somebody who loves solitude it isn't much of a deal. Having said that, it sometimes became a little monotonous and I had to sing along to the stereo and give a lift or two to the little girls on the way to home from school. 

Books 
Finally I completed the trilogy of IQ84, the first book of the year. It left me totally broken, disturbed, anxious and happy at the end. That’s what Murakami’s books does to you. 

What has been your delight this March? I'd love to hear in the little comments section below.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Road trip with the bestie

Sonam, younger cousin and I

Kuzuzangpo from warm Phuentsholing! 

For the next two weeks, I will be calling this warm place my home. Thank goodness, I escaped the friggin’ Thimphu cold. This trip came at the perfect time when it coincided with the long holidays. 

To make best use of the long holidays like everyone else my bestie Sonam and I planned a trip to Siliguri, India. I have never been there before. When you have a friend who is as equally dramatic and dysfunctional as you (not all the time though), nothing seems impossible. Our story dates back to high school where we met, clicked and became friends instantaneously. We had to be separated because the two of us were invincible bullies and reunited six years later after university. Thanks to Facebook. 

On 21st February, we were supposed to depart Phuentsholing by 7:30 am but my very punctual aunt dropped us at 6:30 am to the bus stand. The bus stood there looking groggy like me in the early hours of the day. The seats were not very comfortable and we had to squeeze our ways in. It was an old bus and seemed rather tattered. I wondered if it would reach us to our destination. 

“Why are the concerned authority least bothered about the condition of the public transport?” I asked the very bored guy behind the ticket counter, rather curiously. 

He didn't even take his eyes off from his ticket register to answer me. I shouldn't bother him this early, I thought and boarded the bus. 

The bus driver looked in his late forties. Clad in a pair of grey cotton trouser and a black sweatshirt he pulled the bus out of the station at twenty minutes past seven. The bus was half empty. 
With due permission from the driver, we chose to sit three rows behind him. I took the window seat. Next to our row sat a rather quiet but good looking and adorable couple. They looked in their early twenties and was well dressed. But they hardly communicated throughout the four and half hour journey. They must have run out of words, I thought. 

Behind us were a group of young boys who were returning to university after their break. A middle-aged man in front of us asked if we are students as well. We rolled our eyes at each other and shook heads in unison. He didn’t ask further. 

As the bus reached Jaigaon, it honked and braked every three seconds. People started streaming in. Soon the bus got crowded with people standing on the alleyway. I shuddered at the thought of this scene in summer. 

The bus sped on and on, on the never ending straight road ahead in the middle of tea estate. Women, carrying bamboo basket and small spade were seen going to work in the tea garden. Some of them were carrying large stack of woods on the bandana tied head and walked well balanced without wavering their head or eyes. Bicycles on the sideways were seen carrying three people. 
The long stretch of road bored me soon, it put me to sleep. 

When I woke up the bus had stopped for a quick lunch. We immediately got out and ordered hot chapati with aloo dam and dhal. The chapatis were taken straight out of the fire and on to our plate. It felt so soft and tender in the mouth when it was rolled with some aloo dam. 
We were told the journey was for approximately six hours. So not to starve midway we asked for an extra plate of dumpling. 

Soon after, the engine roared to life and off we continued on the rest of the journey. The cool breeze seeped in through the window panes as the bus climbed a small hillock and reached a large bridge and a junction. A group of least bothered monkeys were seen playing around. A fresh aroma of roasted corn came from the vendors when the bus stopped for a while at the junction. I wanted to munch on it but the heavy lunch earlier hadn't left me any space. So I resigned to the idea and instead looked away to the green and magnificent river below the bridge. 

From the junction, towards the right was the way to Sikkim. “Love, we should plan another trip towards the right some other time,” Sonam said. I nodded in agreement. In about another half hours’ drive, the bus started stopping midway and people got off. The adorable couple also got off the halfway. The girl looked sick. 

When the bus finally came to the last stop, we were the only passengers left. Reluctantly, we got off too. We were informed that it was 6 hours’ drive and when it was just 4 and half hours’ drive, we couldn't believe it. After confirming with the driver, we got off. 

We asked for a phone booth around to make a quick call to my cousin. A kind rickshaw puller lend me his mobile phone. Afterwards, he said the fare to my cousin’s place was Rs. 400 when asked. Later, we came to know that it was Rs. 30. 

What the Bhutanese normally do is head to KFC. So you can imagine where we had our meals for the rest of the stay. Shopping was so much fun. We shopped around until the shops closed for the night. Sonam said she wanted to ride the rickshaw. But I was worried it would be too much for the poor rickshaw walla judging by Sonam’s size and weight. Nevertheless, we did try with the three of us and paid extra cash. My smart cousin shared the seat with the rickshaw guy facing us while Sonam was all apologies to the rickshaw walla. 
On the way we found out that the rickshaw wallas lives in slums by the river. When the monsoon swells the river in summer, their slums gets washed away leaving those homeless. Life is indeed, difficult. 

If you know, visiting a water kingdom is on my 30 before 30 list. When I knew about the water kingdom in Siliguri, excitement got me thrilled only to learn that it was closed for winter. Disappointment. 

The experience of travelling with your bestie is beyond words. We have so much to talk about that we never run out of words. We used to wake up, eat, sleep, go to school, and share the same bench together in high school. We even used to flunk class together, read novels in study hours together instead of textbooks and used to be called to the principal’s office ‘together’ for mischief. We were like twins. 

Spending time with each other and reliving those memories all over is a treasure. Sonam is now a Lecturer at Samtse College of Education. To this day, when we are together we still behave like that high school kids. She is one of the person with whom I’m most comfortable with and she never fails to amuse me. Friendship is timeless. 

Have you travelled with your bestie? 

Wishing you a lovely week ahead.
post signature

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Dear February

Image courtesy: Pinterest

Dear feburary, February, why do I always get your spelling wrong? 

Do you know that you’re the perfect calendar month? I like to think that this makes you sexy and perfect. 

O that February face of yours! So full of frost, of storm and cloudiness. 

Early in the mornings when I pull the curtain to let the light in, the dewy mist you have left on my window glass the previous night makes me so lazy to get up that I leave the curtains hanging there and snuggle back to my warm duvet. 

The crispness in the air has decreased a lot now. Plenty of your sunny days indicate that spring is almost here. 

The warmth in the air has resurrected my plants. They have started to breathe and I can see few leaves popping up already. Does that mean that spring is right around the corner? Definitely it is. Just the thought of it soothes my heart. 

There is something very intimate about you, O February! I will miss the long cold nights when I can snuggle in bed and read away the night. I will miss those rosy cheeks you give us in the cold. I will miss wearing boots and scarves. I will miss writing to you on a lazy Sunday afternoon listening to sweet emotion on the radio. Sigh! We humans are never satisfied. 

But one thing. I shall cherish you while you are here. Please be good.

post signature

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Word of the year


For reasons unknown, I always have difficulty in the beginning of the year. I find myself struggling a lot. I struggle to get out of bed in the morning, I struggle to run errands. I struggle to read and write - the refuge to my thoughts. The creative juice seems to stop flowing altogether. 

The sail isn’t that smooth. I went through my archives on the blog for the past years and it confirmed my doubt. I have always written dark posts in January. I don’t know why that happens. Perhaps it’s the dark, cold and long winter months. Perhaps it’s the dry weather. Or the promise of a snowfall which tires my heart from waiting. 

When heading home at the end of a tiring day at work, my colleague always remark, ‘oh it’s so dry in winter, everything seems lifeless.’ I nod my head in agreement with a little hmmm sound as I scan the brazen tall, thin trees around, plastered with scowling faces staring at me. I stare right back at them with a look of annoyance. That air of confidence is long lost in everybody because everyone seems crippled with the dreadful cold winter.

Another dear friend says he wants to do nothing but drink whiskey and pass the long winter nights in front of a fireplace. ‘And turn an alcoholic by the time winter is over?’ I joke at him. 

It’s a struggle altogether. I have been meaning to find a WORD for the year. I struggled in that as well. Until yesterday afternoon, when I was out for a walk up the hills, closer to the mountains that an epiphany hit me. Yes, I found the WORD. It’s POSITIVITY

I like to think that I’m a positive person. Whenever something unpleasant occurs I try to shrug it off and focus on the good things. After all, you only live once and life is too precious to be wasted on negative energy and thoughts. But this year I’d like to assert more on it. 

Like a thunder and lightning before the rain, winter is here before the bountiful spring reappears and warmth and life all around is restored. It won’t be long before I get to see the flower buds and feel the warm air on my face. I shall close my eyes then and let the air fiddle with my hair. 

On these cold nights, I shall look at the moon hanging like silver earring in a black sky and realize that life is glorious. And that I have no business to take it granted. As I mark my calendar every day, I’m hopeful that I will get to hear something good very soon. That my hard work would be paid off. I’m positive that even if I don’t get rewarded, I will always have a better tomorrow, for God has a plan for me. 

For it’s about the perseverance you have in life. For it’s the new day you get to live and experience. For it’s the gratitude and goodness in life that you deeply care about that you want to spread around. For it’s the patience for the snowfall. And this lousy feeling of sadness will pass away. Somewhere something incredible is waiting to be known. And I hope, somewhere in the next year, I surprise myself.
That’s positivity. 

Have you found your word for the year? 

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Friendship

Three days and it will be 2015. Today is the last weekend of the year 2014 and the last post for the year. Nostalgic? Certainly I am. 
And a little excited as well because I’m looking forward to the next year. I’m hopeful that 2015 would be even better. 

On a lighter note, this post is not about my ramblings which I normally do. This post is  dedicated to my two friends. It’s about a tradition we have. It’s about the lives we have had thus far. It’s about my two girlfriends, Dechen Wangmo and Pema Choki. It’s about our friendship. 

As adults it’s so difficult to make friends. I’m sure everybody agree to this. It’s even more difficult to make friends when you are an introvert. Every individual is different. We have our own priorities, tastes and preferences in life. And especially for me, if it doesn’t click, I immediately step back and withhold my friendship with that person. Because friendship for me is everlasting. For a lifetime.

But. But I’m glad that I have these two lovely ladies whom we run to each other whenever we suffer heart break from our love interest and from the husbands. These two women are the ones I run to and cry on their shoulders like a baby. In happiness and in sorrows, in good days and in stormy weather, we have been there together. The warmth of each others' shoulders are forever meant to be there. 

with Pema
with Dechen
Pema and I have known and been together since undergraduate days. We were roommates in our freshman year in college. And even in PG days we became roommates. 9 years is a long time to have known each other. And our friendship has become like old wine, the older it gets, better it becomes. 

Pema and I met Dechen during our PG days, as roommates again. A heart of a gold she has. With twinkling eyes, she is a sexy momma to a year old toddler and is always full of enthusiasm and positivity towards life. A fitness and health enthusiast, she is creative and inspiring. You can follow her on instagram to get some dose of inspiration and creativity. 

Apart from the regular catch ups, we have this tradition of meeting for a brunch before the year ends every year. Thus, this tradition happened last weekend. We met up, hunted for some warm and cozy coffee shops and spent hours catching up on each other's lives.

My life has been the same and boring like last year and the years before. But these two women have moved so far in life already. They have tied their knots, had a baby and juggles life between work and home and family. And me? The coward me? I have remained where they left me. Nonetheless, I hope to gather some inspiration and the strength from these bold women, take some lessons and follow their footsteps in 2015. Bless me, O Lord. 

I thank you for your part in my journey. Friends indeed are the sunshine of life. Thank you for being my sunshine, Pema and Dechen. I'm incredibly lucky to have you ladies in my life.

As the year comes to an end, I would also like to thank my dear readers for being with me throughout the year. Reading my ramblings and sometimes leaving a comment inspired me a lot to keep blogging thus far. And I hope you will be with me in the years to come. I wish you a marvelous and a blessed year ahead. See you in 2015.
post signature

Saturday, December 20, 2014

2014 // The year to reading




So we are in the last leg of the year 2014. Isn’t it the best time to contemplate on your goals and challenges? As I started this year I had one challenge set; to read and read. Well, if you ask me if I achieved it. I did. Definitely. There is nothing like setting a goal and working towards it. 
 
I challenged myself to read these 9 books. I did cheat a little though. I skipped Inferno. When I got hold of it, I realized that I had past the age of Dan Brown’s books. It no longer excited me. After making it to a couple of pages, I immediately stopped. It wasn't juicy and ripening any more to keep me hooked. There are certain authors’ that no longer mesmerize me. It could be an indication that my taste for books and literature have changed. I couldn’t get a copy of The Messenger though.

Nonetheless, I read 14 more books which pretty compensates for missing on the above said books. In fact, it more than compensates. So here’s the total list of books I read in 2014:
  1. And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini 
  2. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov 
  3. The Husband’s Secret by Liane Moriarty 
  4. The Hypnotist’s Love Story by Liane Moriarty
  5. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath 
  6. I am Malala by Malala Yousafzai 
  7. Looking for Alaska by John Green 
  8. Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn 
  9. The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin 
  10. Palpasa café by Narayan Wagle 
  11. Those Pricey Thakur Girls by Anuja Chauhan
  12. Lean in by Sheryl Sandberg 
  13. Matilda by Roald Dahl 
  14. Heidi by Johanna Spyri 
  15. Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami 
  16. The Catcher in the Rye by J.D Salinger  
  17. A Leaf in the Wind by Jean O’Hart 
  18. Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner 
  19. Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell
  20. The Gold Finch by Donna Tart 
  21. David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants by Malcolm Gladwell 
Some of the reviews can be found here and here. Number 20 and 21 are audiobooks which I listened to while commuting to work, before going to bed at night and whenever I was free. Listening to audiobooks changed my life. I can never get bored because there’s always something that occupies me. Since I listen to it from my cellphone (now who stays away from your phone? I don’t.),it’s a lot easier. It sometimes makes you feel that you are conversing with the author in real. And of course it improves your vocabulary ten times more. 

This year has been the busiest work wise, especially during the second half of the year. It was so difficult to make time for reading yet I could finish 21 books. I’m proud of my achievement. The old adage rings a bell? Where there’s a will there’s a way. 
I have a long way to go though. Since I made this 30 before 30 list I have finished reading 32 books in 2 years and still counting. Another mile to go and I’m pretty confident that I will achieve it. What better way to dedicate to another year of reading since Bhutan has declared 2015 as National Reading Year to commemorate the 60th birth anniversary of our beloved 4th Druk Gyalpo.  

I’m sure that when I could read these number of books you definitely can. So I encourage you to take to reading in 2015 especially the young minds. Parents can always read bed time stories to your children to inculcate the habit of reading in young minds. After all a child who reads, thinks. I’m sure we all can manage 20 minutes from our daily 24 hours clock to dedicate it to reading. 

So I’m focusing the year 2015 to reading literature, though fiction will somewhat be in my daily reads.  I will be starting with The Mill on the Floss by George Eliot. If you have any recommendation on the books on literature, I’d love to hear in the comments section below.

Were you able to achieve your goals in 2014? And what do you plan on doing in 2015? 


P.S: I’d like to thank the lovely Rima for sending me The Happiness Project, The Hypnotist’s Love Story and Gone Girl all the way from Singapore, my friend Kunga for sending me A Leaf in the Wind which was personally signed by the author herself from Australia. Indeed, life is so much better when friends understand your love for reading and send you books as birthday gifts. Thank you lovelies. 

Have a lovely weekend! 

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Celebrating Autumn : the year's last loveliest smile

I like to wear my heart on the sleeve when it comes to autumn. And it isn't a secret here in this little blog.

Plenty of warm sunshine, the crisp air, clear blue skies and blankets of golden leaves on the ground makes my heart flutter.
On days like these, I like to go to the park, read a book under the sun and take a nap, which I did last weekend only to attract weird stares from people at the park. At the risk of not seeming too creepy I quickly picked up my things and headed home. Tomorrow is officially the end to this glorious season. 

This morning when the sun played hide and seek, I was nervous thinking that I wouldn’t be able to go out to bask in this glorious season for the last time. Hopefully, Mr. Sun came out and we didn’t waste a minute in heading out. It was truly breathtaking to go out and take photos in different parts of the capital. I couldn’t help but pose in almost all the photos at the risk of looking narcissist. And the inner child in me came out and I tried catching the falling leaves, played with the leaves (as seen in the pic below) and mistook a wild nut for hazelnut and ate it. Thank God, I'm still breathing. Thus this post. :)


Happy Thanksgiving weekend!

LinkWithin



Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...