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When an Iyer met an Iyengar

If you see my parents, they look like the quintessential arranged marriage couple. After nearly 35 years together, they still take care not to touch each other while posing for a photograph and my mother’s smile dangles precariously between a smile and a grimace. But this image discolours the truth a tad. Some 40 years back, they met at work, fell in love and got married. The talking point of the union being mom’s status as an iyengar and dad’s as an iyer. Simply put, the iyers and the iyengars are two castes of the Brahmin community, each, when given the chance, profess superiority to each other on all counts. If you listen closely, an Iyengar talking about an Iyer will say ‘Iyer a?’ in a condescending tone. And vice versa. Mom tells me that when she told her dad about the marriage, he vowed to stand by her at any cost. Dad never told me what happened, but allow me to hazard a guess. His mother (my grandmother), threatened to go on a fast unto death. My dad threatened to go ...

The lost joy of seeing a movie twice

Simple question - how many times have you seen Home Alone? I would assume more times than you can count. Actually, replace Home Alone with any of your favorite movies. You would have seen it repeatedly until you knew the dialogues by heart and what exactly was going to happen in the next scene. Still, you watched it. Sometimes out of boredom and sometimes because you actually enjoyed watching it more than once. Back in the day, life was a whole lot simpler. There was one television per home which everyone fought for. There existed only a handful of serials (as we called them back then before they metamorphosed into series). And you either saw a movie on theatre or HBO or Star Movies. Remember when the programming schedule of the week appeared in the Sunday newspaper and this allowed you to plan your TV watching time? And sometimes, if you didn’t find anything interesting, you would gladly resort to watching a movie you have already watched, ag...

Why there are no Iyer Bakeries

Note: This is a work of fiction and any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental. If you are still hell bent on taking offence, no one can help you. Happy reading. Cast of characters 1. Seshadri Iyengar - an ageing Iyengar with a penchant for cooking. 2. Vasu - Seshadri Iyengar's good for nothing son. 3. Mohini - Seshadri Iyengar's wife  3. Mani Iyer - Seshadri Iyengar's once-upon-time bosom buddy.  4. Kalyani - Mani Iyer's pretty daughter.  5. Leelavathi - Mani Iyer's wife 6. Muttal - the local astrologer  Old age and infirmity hadn't yet robbed Seshadri Iyengar of his independence, but his idiotic son Vasu Iyengar had robbed him of his peace of mind. Always claiming to be between jobs, Vasu was besotted by his neighbour's daughter, Kalyani. She was pretty, diminutive, and sang the raga  Sindhu Bhairavi  without missing a note. Named after her father's favourite raga, Kalyani, her idea of rebellion was to choose a...