Thursday, August 26, 2010

Kya Aap Mujhse jyada bolte hai???


"You must learn from the mistakes of others. You can't possibly live long enough to
make them all yourself"

Must have heard it many times, but in real life, you don't get many such
opportunities to learn from others unless you are as opportunistic as an Arbitrage
fund manager.

Well, let me come straight to point, else you might feel, I have taken a new job to
clarify all the famous quotes.

Actually, this is related with job only. Last week I noticed something at job through
another person in job and thought it would be useful to share with others in job. So
there came the idea of putting into this space.

चचा, हुआ कुछ यूँ था की एक बंदा, जो Hetch-1* पे था, अपनी existing cos को लात मारके निकल लिया.

Apart from typical IT lingo, I really have no vested interest in putting above line like
that. Even though, to some extend, these sounds like double meaning**, but considering the fact that among this blog's audience not many are family audience***, I am kind of safe in writing something like this.

Hmm, so the guy on Hetch-1 quits and sends a resignation mail without bothering
whether it would be accepted or not.
Further details are neither in legal and moral scope of this blog nor I am interested
in, but what I observed in there, actually became a support for me to the yesterday's
lunch time discussion that I had with few of my colleagues. And I was trying to
suggest the cons scenarios for the discussion - "pros and cons of contributing to VPF"

That Hetch-1 guy, on top of actual EPF, was contributing 4-5% to VPF monthly. And
now when practically, there won't be any proper settlement with company, he is
almost sure to loose track of those PF amount along with his added VPF.
So the thing is why block and risk extra through VPF when you are already blocking
24% (Employee and Employer contribution) of your basic for years with single digit
rate of interest.

By the way, this was not the actual example; I had some different example in mind
for 'other's mistake' when I had started.
Ahhh, I again forgot... ज्यादा बोलने से यही होता है.

Ummm... How often do you face this situation? Yeah, this one, the forgetting habit
because of too much speaking.

Actually, it seems to me as if I don't forget rather my thoughts within me starts
fighting among itself and which thoughts takes the priority mostly depends on
external temp, pressure and so many factors.

Which factors? Actually, I meant factors like..... Arrggghhh! I again forgot...

Hopefully, this was a better example and if I can't learn, at least you can learn from
this mistake of mine.



* आप ही बतायिए, Hetch को Hetch नहीं तो क्या बोलेंगे.

** In theory, something which is understood in every other way than it literally
      means.

*** The crowd consisting of one's who are responsible for increasing the family size
         and the one's resulted from increased family size. Or precisely, audience where
         elders start looking for a remote when suddenly an advertisement starts with a
         famous song "प्यार हुआ इकरार हुआ ..."

 

उद्घोसना: ऊपर लिखे गए विचार की सारी घटनाएं तथा पात्र काल्पनिक है. किसी भी जीवित जंतु से समानता पूरी तरह से संयोग है. इससे, किसी भी रूप में हुए हानि के जिम्मेदार हम नहीं होंगे.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Bassssss "2-Minute!"


I would love to declare myself a certified Maggi maniac. I have tasted Maggi in almost every hour of 24X7 cycles, whether it was at 3AM while working in night shift or at 5AM during semester exams.

Maggi Noodles! One of the most respected & trusted fast food item in India. In fact, if you play the jingle of Maggi anywhere anytime, 9/10 children and 10/10 grown up adults would recognize it without fail.

I am not surprised to know that apart from India, Maggi noodles is popular in many countries including South Africa, Brazil, New Zealand, Australia, Malaysia and Singapore.

25 years before, hardly anyone could think of the revolution brought by a simple food product in our lives. It is enormous. And even after these many years of dominating more than 90% share of market, there is virtually any competition.

Creating a fast food industry was never easy. No one could actually speculate it. Cooking something in just "2-minutes" without taking any outside ingredient except water could be easily compared to idea of all time innovations like Internet search Engine.

It won’t be an exaggeration to say, like Google made the "Search" word famous, Maggi made the "Noodle" famous.

It opened a totally unexplored market of pre-packaged food.

Maggi is not just a food product, it is original concept; it is lifestyle; it is a new food habit; it is a great idea; it is the most widely eaten food product among all class of people; it is omnipresent (from kitchen drawer to my office drawer); it is irreplaceable!

I don't remember when I tasted Maggi first time, but ever since I tasted it I have been an absolute Maggi lover. The best part of the recipe is that it takes a little time to cook and you can always make it more cosmetic with minimal effort.

Maggi has been there with me at every stage of life; from School, college to on-site days. Maggi is not just a food, its memory.

It reminds me of my niece, who almost close to a decade ago used to slurp Maggi with more interest than she used to play with newly bought Barbie dolls. And it continues. Back in this April, when I met my 18 month nephew (unfortunately, I have not been much with him since he was born, so I almost have account of every hour that I have spent with him), he is no less than an aficionado of Maggi. I kept watching him fighting with a 7-8 inch long Maggi noodle; he took approx 30-40sec before slurping the last inch of the noodle. It was absolutely treat to watch him flirting with Maggi noodles.

Maggi, the food beyond generations. Not surprising if I say, there would be very few kids who do not enjoy Maggi as much as they enjoy their toys.

I am sure Maggi Noodles are favourites of lot of people; at least people who lived in hostels during college days can vouch for this simple late night snack or rather light dinner, I guess. During engineering days, my hostel friends used to keep a box filled with these noodles packets.

Maggi is the smile for most of the not so fortunate people who have a room/flat mate with eating habit like one-way traffic and hates to cook; or even for a part-time-bachelor who forgets to cook or prefers not to cook after a stretched intake session of double digit ABV liquor.

Having said that, it also fits to our living of a fast pace life, we find Maggi more and more suitable to our pace. It is just synchronized to our life. That could be another reason of its immense popularity.

Now, having thought so much about Maggi, how come I not think of heading to kitchen. You can also try this. I just love it. Most of the time I had it at a Dhaaba outside my office:

Fry some sliced Onions, Carrot, green Pees and Tomatoes with red chilli.
Leave it, you already know it. Are not you?

And last but not the least, I bet every Indian of our generation would have a Maggi story to share. What’s your story?

Or do you remember anyone slurping Maggi insanely loud?

Friday, August 13, 2010

Rent-a-Womb


I could not really figure out a more polite caption than this. Though several terms crossed my mind including "reproductive tourism", "Outsourcing mothers", "reproduction re-defined", but in some way or the other, all sounded more offensive than this one.

Recently, I saw a NDTV talk show hosted by Barkha Dutt (don't remember if it was "Big Story" or "We the people" or something else). Among the panelists were several stakeholders including Doctors, Socialites and legal professionals.

It was nothing different than the usual talk show of Barkha Dutt where she sounds more important than the story itself and number of words she speaks are always greater than at least twice the sum of entire words spoken by all. This "all" includes the panelist, audience and guests over video conference.

Having said that, time and again, people like Barkha gives me confidence that there are thousands of people who speak more than I do. Oops, I again started. Well, actually you know, I don't write, I speak on papers too.

Before, I say anything on this; I offer my sincere apology, if it hurts your feeling in any manner. I want to offer apology not because I am afraid of taking the accountability of the words written, but for the simple reason, THE most respected relationship in this Universe remains the relationship between Mother and her child and I am trying to question this TRUST which are being diluted through a medical term - surrogacy.

Coming back to the caption, I started searching Google and read many articles on "Surrogacy, an Ethical/Moral dilemma", "Surrogacy, a substitute for parenthood", "Surrogacy in India..."

More I read, more I got exposed to disgusting facts. According to a site (http://www.marieclaire.com/world-reports/news/international/surrogate-mothers-india), Indian surrogacy is already a $445-million-a-year business. Some lines from this site:

"Surrogacy costs about $12,000 in India, including all medical expenses and the surrogate's fee. In the U.S., the same procedure can cost up to $70,000.

Another example of third-world exploitation? Globalization gone mad? The system certainly lends itself to the criticism that foreign women unwilling or unable to pay high Western fees happily exploit poor women at a 10th of the price it would cost back home. The system also avoids the legal red tape and ill-defined surrogacy laws women face in the U.S. (Not to mention that India, unlike some developing countries, has a fairly advanced medical system and doctors who speak English.) Or is it a mutually beneficial relationship?"

Further the site mention the history of Surrogacy as:

"How surrogacy came to be so popular in the choking backwater of Anand, a dairy community with a population of 150,000 in India's western state of Gujarat, is a long story. The short answer is Dr. Nayna Patel, 47, the clinic's director. A charismatic woman with flowing hair and a toothpaste-commercial smile, Patel single-handedly put Anand on the map when, in 2003, she orchestrated the surrogacy of a local woman who wanted to "lend" her womb to her U.K. based daughter.
The woman gave birth to test-tube twins, her own genetic grandchildren, and the event made headlines worldwide. Afterward, Patel was inundated with requests for surrogacy. She now has 45 surrogate mothers on her books, mostly impoverished women from nearby villages. Twenty-seven of them are currently pregnant, and each will be paid between $5000 and $7000, the equivalent to upwards of 10 years' salary for rural Indians. More than 50 babies have been born at the clinic in the past three years, half to Westerners or Indians living overseas."

Such topic always becomes contagious with thought process. It spawns more threads that further raise hundreds of moral and ethical questions. There are miles of lag in pragmatism while dealing with topic like surrogacy especially in country like ours, where infertility is considered more of a curse than anything else. And, emotional biasing only complicates the definition of terms like Need and Choice.

Commercial surrogacy is definitely not an answer for in-fertility or any other genuine cause, rather an easy and cheap way for economically rich parents to go for this option.

Just wondering is there any term called altruism surrogacy? How many real needy women get to use this bliss of medical science?

Practically, most of the beneficiaries are economically reach couple who want to enjoy the so called technical happiness of parenthood without going into the pain and responsibility of entire child-birth process?

Or is it path-breaking medical invention for gays and lesbians to continue their generations (I don't intend to hurt any kind of relationship, rather advocating for the most trusted relationship of Mother-child)?

I remember from the same article, where Patel admits there are dangers if the surrogacy business continues to grow in India. "There is little regulation by the Indian Medical Council, the body that oversees such practices," she says. "Rules need to be tighter to ensure women are not exploited."

Even if there comes some half boiled regulations, resulted child do not have any say on whether he/she want to come to this world as a hybrid product with different technical and biological parents.

There are thousands of debate and legal offering to protect the interest of the surrogate mother and beneficiary parents but what about the resulted child?
What about the trauma that child would go through? After all, parenthood is not a fundamental human right. This "fundamental human right" may sound weird, but I am sure, still it is more ethical then the entire commercialised concept of surrogacy.

There are people in the world who remains unmarried, some gets married but don't go for child, some want to have kids but have some real biological constraint so they can't help it any further.
From these kinds of people, I only understand one thing - "parenthood is not the fundamental rights of people" it remains a personal preference for "whatever..." reason it may be."

Why not adoption? Why can’t adoption be the answer for surrogacy?
Why don’t desire to help an orphaned child prevails over giving importance of a genetic relationship to the child.
Is not handing over a child after delivery for a fee “baby-selling”?

Parents should not put their own desire to be parents over the possible damage it might cause to the baby.

How come a women be granted the mother status who did not even bear the pain for 9 minutes; If $12000 is what it takes to be parents, then, possibly, all the rules of the Mother Nature need to be re-defined as per human needs; the-fucking-human-NEEDS.

On the other hand there is some logic to support the surrogacy. This is from same site,

"Vohra has no job but helps her husband in his scrap-metal business, for which they earn 50 to 60 rupees ($1.20 to $1.45) a day. If her pregnancy is successful, the $5500 she receives will, as she puts it, "give my children a future. This is not exploitation. Crushing glass for 15 hours a day is exploitation."

One of the beneficiary bristles at those who suggest that she chose India because it was hassle-free. "Some people made it out like we went grocery shopping and came back with a baby," she says. "But being in India was tough, the heat, the mosquitoes, worrying about biological mother and the baby's health. You have to want a baby real bad to deal with this kind of arrangement."

Well, can this be considered as a new way of giving employment to rural women? My apology to sound over board here, but can not understand the difference between a sex worker and commercial surrogates. Both use parts of her body to earn the livings. Or even for that matter why not organ selling is made legal. After all no one sale the organ for fun. They do so to fulfill the needs, even if it is drinking alcohols out of that. The same fucking-human-NEEDs.

The question is Need. Who is there to say what is morally right or wrong. For some, being parent is NEED for some drinking alcohols to survive is NEED.

Sometimes, it goes beyond the safe cocoon of understanding as to why, few times, capabilities of science only complicate the human NEEDs?

Thinking it in a little orthodox way now, these days science has literally made anything possible and medically enabling human to do everything their way. If there was any exception, then, undoubtedly it was entire birth process of a child.

If that too can be accomplished by hired womb, I can just pray for such parents that science invent some respect hormones too that can be put into the child’s brain, because in no theory of existence, any rented item can be excluded from commodity based thinking; respect is too far away a word.

With the historical records of the legal system in this country, surrogacy will eventually and inevitably become commercialized, with mothers “hiring out” their wombs to the highest bidder. Even if charges are standardized, the high level of such a fee will still enable that the rich are more likely to benefit than the poor, as they are more likely to be able to afford the cost. Parenthood would simply be decided by financial factors.

To my understanding, commercial surrogacy is bad for both the mother and the child, and is beset by emotional problems for all concerned. Parents should not put their own interests above their child.