Mar 25, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life, Ramblings and Musings
Climate Change is Real: Day 7 of My Lone Vigil
©March 25th, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
I awoke at an early hour, emerging sluggishly from a swamp-like sleep, in which I could not detect any dreams. As I got ready, put the dog out, heated up old coffee, and dressed, I was feeling pretty detached.
Still, I looked forward to going out there to battle the elements with my trusty sword, or rather, Warren’s trusty sign, “Climate Change is Real.”
Today, I was better prepared. More layers, thick gloves, the same scarlet and orange scarf as yesterday, two pairs of pants, moon-boots, hat – all that good New England preparedness which it took me years to learn. My phone and i-Pod were charged, and ready to go. Holly took her time coming back in. I was briefly frustrated, then shrugged it off. Whatever. She’s a dog, and has her business to attend to. It must be hard being so dependent on her humans who let her in and out, and decide when she can be taken for a walk. I felt bad for her, then shrugged, again. She has a very good life. We each pay the price for safety and shelter. What we do get is boundless love in the case of our dogs, though.
Holly was as good as gold when I left. She always is.
I was there at 7:54 a.m. sharp. Pah, again! Well, there’s always Monday to look forward to, and two days of blessed rest on Saturday and Sunday (of course, “rest” is a relative term)!
The air was rich with March moisture. While it cheered me to see the fog (I like fog), the fine, misty rain, which is more insidious than an outright downpour chilled me to the bone, despite it being about 40 degrees or so. I don’t like the cold of rain – I prefer the cold of snow. In any case, it got much warmer as the day wore on, just not in the hour that I stood there, fingers numb despite warm, thick gloves.
It being Friday, the traffic was somewhat sparser at the beginning, but grew denser as the hour unrolled. I sang Raga Bhatiyar moodily, my mind on other things, such as how awful old coffee tasted, and what possessed me get to bed so late all of this week, and did we have a future on this bleak planet, and why couldn’t I focus on Bhatiyar?
It didn’t matter. I sang, and my voice got stronger, and clearer, but the foggy air did not.
Listening to our Guruji’s voice, I re-focused my efforts. More taans and meandering aakars, gamaks and then, this very philosophical song (which I believe our teacher, Pandit Shreeram G. Devasthali wrote. Correct me if I’m mistaken in this memory, Warren):
Kahe Dekhata Mukha Chandra
Asthai: Kahe dekhata mukha chandra (why do you look at my moon-face? Note: It doesn’t sound so silly in our language, because chandra is not just moon; it signifies radiant, shining, effulgent beauty, and such-like concepts.)
Dekho na, dekho na mukha chandra (do not look at my moon-face)
Nahi dekho mora mukha chandra (same thing)
Prati dina yaha cheena hota (Every day, it [the moon, and my beauty] wanes)
(“This beauty is ultimately going to perish,” said our teacher at this point)
Antara: Athi chanchala jobana roopa (“The form/beauty of youth is fleeting, flickering, transitory”)
Ghadi pala yaha ghatata jaata (“Every moment, it gets diminished, goes away”)
Mohe nahi isape ghuman (“I don’t have any pride in this, because every moment it’s going away, it is so fleeting, I know for certain that it is not going to last …” so explained our Guruji.)
I love our teacher’s philosophical, exhortatory songs!
The cold seeped into my fingers and feet, but I didn’t mind so much anymore. There is something lovely about March rain. I admired the deep browns and grays behind me, where the Fells began (or ended), and stretched into the unseen distance. I was grateful for stereo vision (as I am every day). A few brown-yellow leaves from last fall stood out, brightly three-dimensional, against a background of dark brown tree-branches, and the pearl-gray gleam of water behind them made me glimmer in response. I admired the reflection of the golden headlights of the cars on the tarmac, moving steadily towards me in the dim rain. I looked up at the sky, and admired it for being the sky. Now, as I write this, my favorite Beatles song Because sneaks, unwittingly, into my head.
Because the world is round
It turns me on
Because the world is round
Ah Ah
Because the wind is high
It blows my mind
Because the wind is high
Ah Ah
Love is old, Love is new,
Love is all, Love is You.
Because the sky is blue
It makes me cry
Because the sky is blue oo
I know exactly how John Lennon felt. I resonate with all of his lyrics, and all of his music. The sky can make me cry. The wind does blow my mind. The convexity of the earth does turn me on. Where the cars appear on the slope beyond my vision, and heave into view, the earth is curved and sexy (the cars aren’t).
Okay, I’m rambling again.
Today, there were a few smiles, a few waves, one thumbs-up, no negative head-shakings, except for one woman. I saw a couple of bicyclists, one of whom waved to me, as he does every day. All of these, plus muted birdsong and birds, and the moody fog … all of these images, visual and sonic, just hung around me like a dream.
I thought of the head-shakers, as I picked up my effects, preparing to head on home. I think I know why they do that. We’ve all done that at some point in our lives, perhaps more than once. When we don’t understand something or someone, we feel superior. It’s easy to put down someone, much easier than trying to understand them.
I will try not to do that in my life with things and people I don’t understand. It’s a cheap and easy cop-out, and a loss of opportunity to learn and love the world around us, flawed though we are, and frail and foolish though we might be. We are still beautiful and worth saving.
Have a good day or night. Thank you for reading. Happy weekend!
_____________________________________________________________________
Tags: #Because, #ClimateChangeisReal, #ClimateVigil, #John Lennon, #PanditShreeramG.Devasthali, #The Beatles, #Warren Senders
Mar 24, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life, Ramblings and Musings
Climate Change is Real: Day 6 of My Lone Vigil
©March 24, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
(Woman with Sign, standing in for Man with Sign)
Everything becomes a habit, that’s why we should treat any activity with the caution it deserves. Come close to it, sniff around it, find out whether it’s good or bad, then let it become a habit, if it’s ultimately for the good. The problem is that good habits are very willing to die a quick death. As for the bad, those are SO hard to get rid of (as everyone knows).
My good habit from this week? Getting up earlier and earlier in the morning before the alarm went off (of course, this “earlier” is nothing compared to the “earlier” of the time when I was a school-teacher, but it’s VERY early compared to my rather recent late-rising tendency) – today it was 6:45 a.m.
My bad habit? It’s still the old, old habit of getting to bed very late at night.
Okay, moving on.
With yesterday’s reheated coffee in travel mug (ugh – but I made a fresh pot upon my return!), dog let out and let back in, orange-scarlet scarf in place, black shirt, grey pants, green hat, dash of lipstick, slash of eye-black (but very muted hardly visible), moon-boots laced up, and phone in hand (but no i-pod, because I forgot to charge it), I headed out, and made it to the location at 7:40 (it’s getting better all the time).
The wind was not pleasant, and I was ill-prepared for the elements, plus foggy from lack of sleep. Not many layers beneath my coat, thin gloves, and hat kept off the worst of the chill – but I was cold. Cold can make one numb, or cheerful. I started off numb, then grew cheerful, then numb again. I found out later that it was 37 degrees (so foggy was I this morning that I didn’t check). I felt yanked around unceremoniously by the weather this whole week. I feel like protesting. Wait! I AM protesting!
I had Guruji’s (Pandit Shreeram G. Devasthali’s) voice in my head, even if I didn’t have his voice in my ear (since I’d left the i-Pod behind, and the music thingy on my i-phone wasn’t cooperating). Technology is fun, but it can get old. I began to sing Raga Bhatiyar again (both Hari hari nama, and Barani na jaye, along with gamak taans, aakars and sargams, created nice rhythmic patterns, and it felt good. Sang lustily and defiantly into the cloud-layered, windy sky above me. The cars went by, and I didn’t care for the first few minutes.
There were many, many smiles, waves, nods and thumbs-ups today. Several were from women this time. A woman driving with three children in the back, smiled at me, and all three of her children waved. Three young women in a bright, swanky car gave me a thumbs-up. A man drove by in a van, and his passenger stuck his head out and said, “You bet it is!” in response to the sign. A couple of bicyclists rode by, smiled, waved. The usual trucks advertising technology, tree-services, home-security, Verizon services, Clean Air, and so on trundled past. Several drivers wanted me to look at them, so I did. Our ocular spheres rolled about our orbits, each registering the other. There was not ONE sneering face or skeptical look. It was a good, uneventful day.
I tried to think profound thoughts. Nothing happened. It was a Curly kind of day (I’m tryin’ to think, but nothin’ happens!”). It was a Joseph-Heller-rambling kind of morning. The wind didn’t help. My fingers were getting resentful at being out in the cold without much protection. I consoled myself by saying that I had a warm home to return to, and that an hour in the cold was simply like waiting for a bus that one just missed. It would be over soon. I didn’t castigate myself by saying, “There are SO many people out there who don’t have what you have, so shut up, and put up.” Why? Because I castigate myself enough already.
I looked around at the birds. Yay, they were there! I heard a birdsong that was familiar, but didn’t know what bird it is: Tweee, tweee, tweee… twetwetwetwe (Tufted Titmouse? Wren? I really must brush up on birds – it isn’t enough to just love anything these days. One must know about it in some relatable way. However, might I be excused for my ignorance for now? Thanks!) A lovely bluejay flashed by and landed on a branch. Three birds of nondescript plumage tweeted imprecations at the sky. There were no cardinals or geese to capture my imagination.
The cars were denser today, and the air began to feel less pleasant as time went on. I saw a few Indians who looked at me in an amused, bemused way from their affluent cars. I saw many professional-looking African-Americans in their polished cars who gave me a politely interested look, several people who might have been South-Americans going by, looking quizzically at me, and one weary-looking black Rastafarian passenger in a car driven by a white woman. He directed a solemn look at me as they drove past me, giving me a barely perceptible nod. I nodded back, just as imperceptibly. I wondered briefly about them, as one does. I wondered whether he’d suffered from police pat-downs, whether the woman who drove him was his wife or girlfriend, whether her being the driver might protect him from being pulled over for DWB, whether he and the African-American drivers who went past me who looked expressionlessly at me as they went by thought, “Ya, well, easy for you. You are not the one who’s going to get targeted. We have to protect ourselves every day. How will this help?”
I don’t have any answers to any questions. It’s hard enough to just live our lives, and try to beat the Winter Blues. It’s harder if you don’t have enough money to feed yourself and your family, about which, thankfully, we don’t have to worry. It’s very hard if you have to watch your back every day, not knowing if you will be the next victim. It’s hardest when you know that none of this will matter if the coasts of the world as we know it are mostly underwater within half a century.
I was not sad, just cold. But I sang well, and I was happy when the hour ended. With the wind pushing hard against me and Warren’s sign, I wended my sleep-deprived way home. I felt as if my legs were wading through molasses. I still sang, though, and my voice sounded clear and bell-like. Not bad for an hour in the cold in traffic!
Perhaps, gasoline fumes are good for singers who wish to protest Climate Change. (That’s snark, in case you worry that I truly think this!)
Thanks for reading, everyone. It’s been fun in its own strange way. Three more week-days of writing these posts, then Warren will be back. I cannot wait!
_________________________________________________________________
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #ClimateVigil, #GasolineFumesAreGoodForSingersSNARK!
Mar 23, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life
Climate Change is Real: Day 5 of my Lone Vigil
©March 23rd, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
(Woman with Sign, standing in for Man with Sign)
So, with Raga Bhatiyar humming around my ears like a drunken bee, I awoke just before the alarm. This is not my favorite trend, being by nature a night-owl, but I’m proud of myself, despite myself.
Freshly brewed coffee (finally!) in travel mug? Check.
Let Holly out, and get her back in? Check?
Holly’s food and water replenished?
Ear-buds in place? Check.i-Pod charged up? Check.
Gas turned off? Check.
Driver’s License in pocket, in case the Man decides to randomly check my ID (one never knows, especially if one is brown)? Check.
Phone charged and ready to go? Check.
Doors locked? Check.
Wakefulness? Um … let’s move on, shall we?
Muted lipstick and eye-black for those who like such things? Check.
This was my attire: Green scarf, red turtleneck, dark-blue sweatpants, sneakers, mustard-yellow buttonless cardigan-thing, olive-gray-green brimmed felt hat (mine, but which Warren appropriated, and I don’t mind, but I’m taking it back for now!)? Check! Motley isn’t too far behind at the rate at which I’m going. I think I’ll go for wildly clashing colors tomorrow.
And still, after all this efficiency, I was there twenty-three minutes past 7:30 a.m. Sigh. I envy men, I really do – well, at least my man, at any rate. He is punctual and ready, always. I think that somewhere, subconsciously, I’m still resenting anything that resembles my old school schedule, which was too absurdly early for any thinking human being. That is my excuse, and I’m sticking to it!
Well, I got there, set up my post, and spent my one hour, singing “Barani na jaaye,” a beautiful composition in Raga Bhatiyar that our Guruji taught us in January of 1994, when we spent a year in India studying with him for hours on end, almost every single day, except when we were sick, or on the rare occasions when he was unable to make it to Muktangan to teach. This composition addresses a woman, saying that it is impossible to describe her; all similes fail when the singer is struck by the beauty of her effulgent moon-visage. On top of all this, she is so beautifully ornamented, and perfumed with different perfumes, that he loses his senses, or loses himself when he sees her face and her beautiful form and gait.
Barani na jaye
Mose upama tehare
Mukha chandra ki
Barani na ja …Taiso hi attara,
Aragaja lagave,
Sudha bisaratha, mukha dekha,
Chaal madhamaata ki
Such was the beauty of this song, that I lost myself in it, and paid no attention at all to the commuters for some minutes, then tried to re-focus myself.
Right away, I saw many smiles from women today, many nods and waves, many thumbs-up (immediately followed by one SOLE thumbs-down by a grumpy guy – I waved cheerfully at him, waving him away). One man with a Vermont license plate, and Bernie 2016 bumper sticker, waved cheerfully, rolled down his window, and said something like, “… more than one way to make a change,” and drove on.
The coffee was fragrant and heavenly after a couple of days of tea at that hour (which is truly hellish for a morning-coffee person like me), and I was happy despite four hours of sleep. The sky was muted, and the wind blew on and off, threatening to displace Warren’s sign. It was odd to see how different the sky was on three consecutive days. Snowy-white on Monday, bright, cheerful blue on Monday, and opalescent gray today (I happen to like this pearly-gray, pink-imbued color). It was cold, but not bitterly so. I was glove-less, and grateful for it.
Guruji’s voice as usual made mine come alive. I’m so happy to sing again! I went to sleep with the sound of it in my head, and awoke with it, and have been singing on and off all day today. As usual, there were taans and aakars, and gamaks, and sargams, and Warren’s and my voice blended in the recording as we followed our teacher’s guidance.
As the hour unrolled, the same old, blue pickup car-truck drove by, and the cheerful, young, bearded man from Friday waved to me, and took another picture for In League Press. [He posted on their FB page that I was out there again today – I knew, because he had tagged me (I was a little worried at being so named in an online journal, but realized that since I had given him my name last week, and had shared Warren’s Man with Sign page with them, it was inevitable that he would mention me.)]
I heard birdsong, but didn’t see birds today — no sudden uprush of geese, or wild chasing of cardinals, or flashes of bluejay. Grateful that we still have birds, and that they still sing.
No chick tracts today, thank goodness! There’s only so much I can take about the Last Day of Judgement and harsh pronouncements utterly lacking in grace or love about the wrath of God, and so on.
However, there’s a little disappointment one feels at having no opposition (or, is it just me? I don’t like arguing online, but I don’t mind a nice, crunchy debate in real life.) – no mouthy Tea-partiers? No Climate Deniers? No mean-spirited citizenry out to make my life a living hell?
Wait! I’m kidding! I like the waves, the smiles, the nods. The occasional thumbs-downs I can take. I’m an adult. I am woman. Hear me roar!
These are the signs I saw on passing vans:
EnviroTech Breathe Easier (Yup, we need one for our whole planet)
Belmont Springs Water Delivery (Wish they could just deliver some water springs without the plastic)Plymouth Rock.com Assurance (what kind of assurance?)
First Response Fire Response (These guys are heroes)
Fences Unlimited (That’s almost an oxymoron, isn’t it?)
Stump Grinding – All Aspects of Tree Service (Stump-grinding sounds obscene)
I could turn ANY of these, and ALL of these into poems. I won’t try now, however.
The hour ended. I picked up my effects, and turned my face homeward. There is a strange freedom in doing this. At such times, I think, perhaps, I don’t need anything. We need so little, truly. Just food, shelter, some intellectual stimulation, lots and lots of music, basic clothing, and lots of love and friendship. All else is immaterial.
Thank you, Warren, for starting this!
It’s been a LONG day, and I’ve been really tired. Sorry to write this post so late in the day. Still, it’s not quite 11:00 p.m., so it’s still today. Will try to do this earlier tomorrow.
Sorry for the rambling post, and thanks for reading, friends!
_____________________________________________________________
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #ClimateVigil, #Pandit Shreeram G. Devasthali, #Raga Bhatiyar, #Warren Senders
Mar 22, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life
Climate Change is Real: Day 4 of my Lone Vigil
©March 22nd, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
So, today:
Woke up at the sound of the alarm. Groaned. Hit the snooze. Woke up ten minutes later. Didn’t make coffee. Made chai instead. Let the dog out, then back in. Reached the Warren Intersection at 7:44. Not bad. Perhaps, I’ll actually make it there by 7:30 by the time Friday rolls around. All I have to do is stay up all night. Right! Oh, for the fashion-watchers out there, I wore old, baggy sweat pants over leggings, two pairs of old socks, purple T-Shirt, blue sweater, pale blue jacket, and an unnaturally bright purple beach hat. I even found a minute to slash on a smear of lipstick and streak some eye-black on. Got to give the commuters a little colour, at least!
The sun was a beautiful lemon, the sky shone a blazing blue, the clouds looked nonplussed by all this cheerfulness, and stayed away. The drivers drove by, looking stolidly ahead, unwilling to make eye-contact. I didn’t want to look at them, anyway, since I was fussing with ear-buds (I hate those things!), and adjusting them. Then, sipping my chai, I sang with our beloved teacher’s voice, an echo from 1994, when he was alive. Raga Bhatiyar was on today’s menu. I’ve adored Bhatiyar since the first time I heard it on a Ravi Shankar record, when I was a teenager, and studying the sitar. It’s a grand raga – I picture it as a Being dressed in deep gold-fringed purple raiment, moving solemnly on the horizon, lighting lamps. I love the leap from Sa to shuddha Ma, and the turnaround from Pa to Ga, and then that inevitable Pa Ga re Sa, and then that haunting, eerie Ma theevra taking us through Dha, Ni, and high re, misleading us into thinking we’re in wilds of Marwa land, then deftly taking us back to the paved roads of the Bilawal thaat.
Sargams, aakar, gamak taans, and then, Hari, Hari Nam, Le Tu Mana Mere, a beautiful composition urging the listener to “Say the name of God, and in so doing, cut away all the accumulated sins of a lifetime. While taking God’s name, cross the ocean of life. Tell your heart to take this advice.” Transliterated from Hindi, it reads:
Hari hari nama le tu mana mere
Ja su katata saba paapa ghanere
Nama leta bhava paara utarata
Yaha updesha kara hirade tere
Hearing my Guru (Shreeram G. Devasthali)’s voice steadied mine. It’s uncanny. I started out with a horrid, raspy voice, not much improved by a few weeks of poor sleep. By the time half an hour passed, my voice rang like a bell, and I could feel the restraints falling off. He’s still teaching me, though he’s been gone for fourteen years. Thank you, Guruji.
By now, the cars were slowing down, as more and more of them clogged the roads. Now, I got a few smiles, nods, waves. Nice. It’s nice to be acknowledged. I saw a small van go by which proclaimed that it was a “White Glove Domestic Services” vehicle. White Glove, indeed! If anyone worked at growing food, or cleaning up the mess of the world, they’d need millions of those. Instead, why not just get dirty while cleaning up, then wash up? I saw another small truck that said it was some sort of plumbing and drain company thingy. I’m afraid my morning mental fog hadn’t dissipated, and I read it as “dumbing and brain.”
I could relate for a brief moment.
Then, I’m embarrassed to say, a man drove by in an SUV, rolled down his window, and said something. At first, I didn’t catch it, because I was singing, then I realized that he’d asked, “What’s that for?” To my horror, I couldn’t explain it in the second or two I had, because he was still driving, so I said, “It’s hard to explain it now!” And he drove on. Damn! I lost the chance to say, “Look it up,” or “Our actions as humans are contributing to a climate catastrophe, and we need to change our way of life, and our habits as consumers,” or, “Do some research on Global Warming, and find out how scientists are predicting terrible consequences of our human activity not just a hundred years in the future, but in a few decades,” or …
But no, I stood there, and lost the chance to speak! (I hope he comes by tomorrow – I’ll have a response prepared. I’m still new at this. Wish Warren had been there!)
Another man drove by, gestured to me, rolled down his window, and tossed out … YES! A CHICK TRACT! Hurray! Having heard Warren’s account of this chap, I’d been hoping to see him, and lo, here he was! He was sent my way to prevent me from going to hell (snark!) Yay! I restrained myself from pouncing on it with unseemly eagerness, and picked it up after he’d driven off. I put it in my pocket, to read it later. Am going to take a look now. Hang on a moment …
… Wait! It’s GONE! Where did it go? I swear I put it in my pocket! Now, I’m doomed. (Sigh! I hope he throws me another one soon.)
Another fat car rolled by, with a large man chewing on, get this, a CIGAR! An apt analogy for our dying planet.
Okay, I’ll stop dreaming.
So, the cars went by, and I sang on at the top of my voice, and then, like a vision from a dream, two cardinals swooped around and around an oval space of trees, like flashes of scarlet, singing all the while. While it might have been young love, or lust in springtime, I’d like to think of them as hope. I continued to listen to the honey-and-gold voice of our teacher, and felt at peace.
It was time to go. Still singing, I picked up the sign, my travel mug, and my visions of the future at 8:44 precisely. I made my way back home, and then, the day’s work and my daughter’s schedule claimed me until now, at 6:40 in the evening.
This music, as Warren says, connects the past with the present. We’d love to make a bridge for it into the future. Music is not a luxury, even though it can be considered so, especially when we know that those who toil day and night can ill afford to spend it on practising music. But singing is for EVERYONE – no one should feel it’s the prerogative of a privileged few. Singing is breath. And breath should be free.
Thanks for reading! Peace out, as OPOL of DailyKos would say.
P.S. I FOUND my Chick Tract! Yay!
P.P.S. realized after my exchange with someone on FB that I must clarify that I actually DO know what a “White Glove Domestic” is – and the concept behind that (having encountered it for the first time my former school in some discussion that someone had about wanting to form a committee to ensure spotlessly clean classrooms, so clean that a white glove swiping at a counter would not pick up any dirt). I just wanted to put my own tangential interpretation on it in this piece.
____________________________________________________________________
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #ClimateVigil, #Hindustani classical vocal music, #Music as a bridge, #Pandit S.G.Devasthali, #Warren Senders
Mar 21, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life

©March 21st, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #ClimateVigil, #Recycling, #Saving the Planet, #using the Fibonacci series to create patterns Hindustani vocal music
Mar 18, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life, Ramblings and Musings
Climate Change is Real – Day 2 of my Vigil Alone
©March 18th, 2016
By Vijaya Sundaram
So, another late night followed by an even earlier morning (6:15) for me today – sigh!
I made coffee to take in my trusty travel mug, and a hot breakfast, and ginger tea for my daughter (who arose at 7:20 in order to get ready for our post-vigil haul all the way to Cohasset, MA, where she will be attending a once-a-week farming/harvesting/animal-care home-school class at Holly Hill Farm from now until mid-May). The dog was philosophical when left for my vigil. My daughter was sanguine. I love them both.
Despite awakening so early, I was STILL fifteen minutes behind the Warren-time on the vigil! Never mind. I made it, at least.
It’s been a beautiful, sunshiny day all day today, and it was cool (45 degrees), but sunny in the morning at my spot. Blue-jays flashed in blue streaks between the trees, and mid-way through, a sudden rush of wings divided the air near me. I saw, with wonder, two Canada geese arise from the boggy area of the Fells, which come close to the Warren Intersection (as I now call that part of Roosevelt Circle), and end right near where he/I stand at our vigil, and rise up, honking madly. It was quite arresting.
I was in low-energy mode, so I sang what I ALWAYS sing when I don’t know what to sing – namely, Bhairav – my default setting, possibly because I grew up learning South Indian music. Mayamalavagowla (with the same notes as Bhairav) is the first raga that all good little South Indian children learn if they learn Carnatic music. I made moaning aakars, and some paltas, and droned on, did some sargam (Indian solfege) work, and sang Jaago, Mohana Pyaare Tumha, as well as Jaago Brija Raja Kumara. My voice held up for a bit, then cracked on some of the not-so-high higher notes. (Sigh! I have a long, uphill climb to regain my skills in singing Hindustani music). In any case, I had a good time.
Cars went by, and I had several thumbs-ups – one from an older white-haired, man with a Bernie bumper-sticker, one from a grey-haired man with distinctly liberal features, several smiles and waves from younger men and women, and even one heavily bearded, long-haired young hippie-ish looking guy driving a low pick-up car-truck thing (I don’t know what to call those!) – who, having apparently being much taken by the sight of a woman standing with a protest sign, must have driven ahead, and parked his car somewhere, because I turned to see him walking up to me. He asked to take my picture, asked me my name, told me his name, and added that he worked for a magazine called In League Press, which published pictures and articles about people with protest signs, or something like that. I told him that it was really my husband’s sign, and that I was covering for him, and that he would probably see my husband in a couple of weeks. He told me I would probably see my picture on FB or Twitter in a few days (or, did he say, weeks), and then left. I was pleased by him, and warmed by our exchange.
A woman drove by, applying lipstick. Another drove by, elaborately applying mascara. How did she do that and not slam into the car in front of her? I admired her, in spite of myself. Mothers turning back to their children in the back drove by, and fathers with empty car seats in the back drove by, as well. So much potential for distraction when we have children! I remember having to carefully explain to my daughter when she was younger that I could not turn around and look every time she said, ” Mom, look! See what I’m doing!” She was put out at first, but understood when I explained some more. How much can one tell one’s young children about potential disaster (car accidents, Climate Change) without upsetting them, or making them into bundles of anxiety? I walk a fine line there. I think I do okay, but only time will tell.
Several plumber-type trucks and construction vehicles were out this morning, and I thought, not for the first time, about how plumbing and construction are some of the REAL jobs that would be nice to learn. At the same time, they signal the fact that we occupy space, and leave waste behind. Sometimes, when I feel pessimistic and misanthropic, I think that to be human is to create waste and denude the land of its natural beauty. Thinking this does not make me happy. (Quick! Think better thoughts! Yes, yes! We humans create beauty, yes, we create music, yes, we create art, yes, we create language … yes, we create entire dimensions of thought and being. Yes, we’re all right. Phew!)
Still, if I were to be reincarnated, I think I’ll opt to be a bird, or a frog. Or, better still, a dolphin. Birds sing, frogs sing, dolphins click – who wouldn’t want that?
More good things: A lovely black van drove by with this legend: Earth, Stone and Water. That was somehow soothing, even grand, in its way. I imagined the company to be concerned with environmental work. No doubt, if I Google it, I’ll find out something mundane. I do not want to know. It was followed by another van with this on its side: Plumbing / Heating / HVAC / Boilers. Good, but not as nice. Humpf! After a while, another van drove by, and its driver, a young man, gave me a thumbs-up and a big smile. The sign on the side and back said something about bee-keeping services. I felt an absurd upwelling of affection for him.
So, I droned in Bhairav, and felt freer by the second.
Fifty minutes passed. Suddenly, a nasty sour-faced SUV drove by, and a scowling man leaned out from the passenger seat, and snarled, “Oh, go get a job!”
If I had not heard from my husband about his routinely hearing such remarks every week, I might have stiffened and perhaps, gotten briefly upset. As it was, I just laughed, and said, well after the car had driven past, “Oh, go to hell!” Not the wittiest of retorts, but it was all I could muster in the moment.
I sang some more, finished my coffee, and trundled back home, and then raced around the house to get ready to take my daughter to Holly Hill Farm far, far away in Cohasset, and Warren’s student Thomas, showed up to dog-sit our Standard Poodle, Holly. Holly is crazy about Thomas, and I swear that if we were to vanish from the earth, Holly would live quite happily with him. It’s sweet to see her adore him so waggily and goofily. He must emanate the scent of goodness (He’s certainly a very kind and good person, from what I’ve seen!)
My daughter and I returned after a lovely few hours at the Farm, and now, I have written this post.
Contradictions exist – we all know that. I stood with a “Climate Change is Real” sign for an hour this morning, then got in my car, and drove several miles to have my daughter be in the midst of growing vegetables and animals in a beautiful area. I wish things could be less complicated, but nothing is.
What we can do is try to reduce our carbon footprint, grow more things, buy less stuff. We do what we can, and raise consciousness as we do it. Every conscious action leads others to conscious action. I hope this is true.
Thanks for reading!
Signing off,
Dreamer of Dreams
(Standing in for Man with Sign)
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #Contradictions, #Man with Sign, #Nature, #Waste, #Woman with Sign
Mar 17, 2016 Climate Change is Real!, Daily Life, Ramblings and Musings
By Vijaya Sundaram
It was a pearly-gray morning, and the moisture in the air was gentle, not threatening. The sky was rich with bird-song and Spring-tones.
I woke up duly at 7:00 (feeling a little sad about having to wake up so early after a later night than I’d intended), and got ready to keep Warren’s “Climate Change is Real” vigil – I’d promised him I would keep the flag aloft, so to speak, and I wanted to be good about it.
I don’t know how Warren gets ready in half an hour. I could not. Made the coffee, let the dog out, let her back in, dealt with this and that in the kitchen, and was finally out of the house around 7:48 or so.
The morning air was still damp, but promised sunshine, and many (but not all) of the bulbs I’d planted in the fall were poking their heads out in the front yard, but they looked still sleepy, as did I.
A sense of déjà vu, came over me. About nine months ago, I was still getting up at 6:15 in the morning, and getting ready for school, which I’d reach between 7:00 and 7:20, depending on the morning. And I’d envy, but not begrudge, my husband and child their sleep (the former began dropping me off at school, since we have but one car, and he needed it, but I’d wake him up just before I needed to leave, to allow him some snooze-time).
Nowadays, it’s Warren who gets up early, while I snooze. In any case, after seventeen years of not sleeping, I haven’t learned my lesson still. You’d think I’d have stopped being a night-bird, but alas! That was not to be.
So, here I was, climbing up the median hill-strip, to cross Roosevelt Circle, and take up position at what I like to think of as “Warren’s Intersection.”
I was a little nervous, never having done this on my own (the few times I did stand there in the fall of 2015, I’d been with him, so it had felt fine).
In any case, I didn’t have to worry. Nothing really happened. Great!
Cars drove by indifferently. I got a thumbs-up from a Bernie supporter, some smiles and waves from some YMCA girls in a YMCA car, a smile from some pretty young women in a sleek car, a couple of unintelligible shouts from young men in a truck, and curious or indifferent looks from others. Nothing much to report, thank goodness!
Drinking my steaming hot coffee in 45 degree weather, I found myself relaxing after a bit.
Singing is what we all do at home, so, inspired by Warren’s example, I began to recapture my Hindustani vocal musical self, harking back to the days in the 1990s, when he and I would sing together, and take lessons with our Guruji, Pt. Shreeram G. Devasthali who would teach us in his rich, mellifluous voice for hours on end.
I have to say this: I had sorely neglected this side of myself for the past seventeen or more years. Multi-tasking school work, house-work, writing, running a Drama Club, then a Poetry Club and an Environmental Green Team at my school, and bringing up our daughter, nurturing her fully, and home-schooling her when I got home from school – all these things took it out of me, and music suffered. Yes, I sing every night with my family, and used to play guitar and sitar quite a bit up until the time my daughter was a year old but even those took a back-seat as the years went on.
Now, music calls me back.
I remember our Guruji expressing some regret that I wasn’t practising in the few years before he died. He reminded me to sing, and reiterated that he was very happy that I was a teacher of English (as he had been a teacher of language in India), and that he approved. He was anxious that not just Warren, but I would keep the music he gave us alive.
I tried for a while, but could not keep it going during my school-teaching years.
Now, it’s time. I have to keep a promise to our Guruji and to myself.
Sohini is a beautiful, but simple raga in the Marwa thaat, full of soaring uttara-ang angst, full of inexpressible longing. I’ve always gravitated to it, even before I sang Hindustani khyal music (when I was a young teenager, I used to love singing the Hindi film song, “Kukoo, kukoo, bole koyaliya,” and later, I played it on my sitar. (I studied sitar in Chennai with Pt. Janardan Mitta, who is a disciple of the late great Pt. Ravi Shankar – and yes, I plan to practise my sitar again, now that I’m getting back into music. Thank you for teaching me sitar, dear Guruji – Pt. M. Janardan!).
So, I sang Jiya so lagi peeta tori, a beautiful Ektaal composition. I followed this with Guru charana sharana kara manu jaye, which exhorts the mind to surrender itself at the feet of the Guru (which was so apt and fitting at that moment that I felt tears welling up). After that, I sang Kaise beeti sari raina, piya bina, also in Sohini. Kaise beeti sari raina piya bina speaks, very aptly, about the lover saying, “How will I pass the night without my beloved? I sit here without rest, counting the stars.” (Come back safely home, Warren!) And as I listened to our vocal teacher teaching us, and hearing our voices blend together in this miraculous device, I was grateful for my semi-new i-Phone, in which I’ve stored some of our music-lessons that we recorded back in the nineties, and which Warren transferred to our computers (magic!). It’s at times like these that I am utterly grateful to technology in general. I ended with Rum Jhum Barase Meherwa, which is a romantic song about two lovers getting drenched in the rain.
This last moisture-steeped song seemed to match the damp morning, but thankfully, there was no rain. It was hard to believe on a morning like this, a perfect March morning, which is getting sunnier by the minute, that Climate Change IS Real, but Real it IS! Just check your Boston’s weekly weather forecasts going back a month. It’s scary. But I shall not dwell on that for now. Today was my first day out there (since the fall when I went a few times with Warren), and it was the music which dominated.
The cars crawled by at our overpass Intersection, and flashed by below on the Highway, and I was self-conscious and awkward at first, but soon found I didn’t care what people thought, or what they might say, or do. It’s extremely liberating, in case you’re thinking you might want to get out there with a sign of your own.
I propped up Warren’s sign, “Climate Change is Real,” and felt that I was contributing to the cause in my way. Warren’s idea of being the lone person out there since September of 2015, braving the elements, hammering away at his message is consistent with everything he does – which is with single-minded devotion, including his devotion to us, his family. He left for India last night, and we miss him.
After an hour or more had passed, I wended my way back home, and though I’d slept little, I felt refreshed. Spring was in the air, and a spring was in my step. It’s hard to feel gloomy when it’s beautiful outside, and the birds are in full-throated vocal mode.
And I refuse to give up hope. Call me Pollyanna. Yes, there is awful news about the planet every day. Yes, Climate Change is real. I still believe we can do something about it – not change it back to how it was, obviously, but do good work to impede its hurtling route towards disaster, and preserve our beautiful planet, its beautiful music, its beautiful creatures, and its beautiful (but not always so) people.
____________________________________________________________
Tags: #ClimateChangeisReal, #For the Planet, #Hindustani classical vocal music, #Keeping Vigil, #Man with Sign, #Singing, #Sitar, #Warren Senders, #Woman with Sign