Thursday, 20 December 2012

The Story Title: A Teenage Love— my entry to the Get Published contest’


The Idea Description:
  She’s been in love with the unreachable Football Star of the school since she was thirteen. But school is over now, but Priya still thinks that he was her soulmate.
  Nirav’s been in a relationship, if that’s what you want to call it. It did entail a particularly entertaining chat on MSN messenger and a very long phone call, in his defence.
   When Priya and Nirav are teased mercilessly by their friends so that they forget their past, will they succumb to the attraction building up between them?
  Or will they decide to cling on to their past?

What Makes This Story ‘Real’:
   This is a story of my best friend and I was a witness to her struggle to give up her infatuation and to enter a real relationship.
  Most teenagers believe in love at first sight and are quite dramatic about it, but they must realise that they don’t really know the person.

Extract from the story:
Priya, I kow thid is late at night. But I kuv you.
“He sounds drunk,” observes Sonal from where she is perched on my beige living room sofa.
  She breathes a sigh of relief. Surely he wouldn’t be serious about it then.
  “People say the truth when they’re drunk, Priya.”
  And the dread fills her again.
  “What time did he message?”
  “Around two. I think. I was sleeping,” she mumbles desolately.
  “Definitely drunk,” She says. “I don’t understand why you are so upset about this. He seems like such a nice guy.”
  “Yes but I am interested in—“
  “Don’t even say his name,” Sonal warns. “You’ve never even spoken to Ronak and you think you already think you’re in love— ”
  “I don’t think I’m in love with him. I know so.”
  “Shut up. Get to know this guy. He’s so nice and he looks good.”
  She stares at her vine coloured rug, “He is very nice to me,” she agrees.
  “Great! Now, about your reply to his message….”
This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs fromYashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

The Break-Up— my entry to the Get Published contest


The Idea Description:
  She keeps the wallpaper on her phone as DON’T CALL HIM to stop herself from calling him and asking him to patch up.
  He has deleted her from BBM but has asked his friend to send each and every picture she updates and each status she updates.
  Yes, he was the one to break her heart but he had a reason to. What she doesn’t understand is that he also has a plan to get her back.
  Only things aren’t going according to plan and the next thing he knows she is going on a date with some boy.
  Will he make her see truth?
 
What Makes This Story ‘Real’:
  Love these days isn’t the Happily Ever After kind. It takes a lot of work and a lot of experimentation.
  Relationships break up all the time but then there are also those who work through their issues.
  This story sheds light on wheat relationships are like in this generation.
Extract from the story:

 “Dude, her status has changed again,” says Ronak over the phone.
  “What is it this time?” I sigh, pinching the bridge of my nose. I know she’s hurting but does she have to bloody publicise it to the world and make me feel like a loser? I had my reasons for breaking up.
  “Um, well…”
  “Just spit it out, Ronak.”
  “It says, and I quote, ‘Waiting for tonight’ and her DP is showing a picture of a girl immersed in a pile of clothes with a caption HAVE A HOT DATE, TONIGHT.”
  I gasp.
  “I spoke to Ria,” continues Ronak, “and she says it’s some guy from—”
  “I don’t want to know,” I snap at Ronak and hang up.

My Best Friend’s Brother— my entry to the Get Published contest



 The Idea Description:
  Alya has always had a little thing for her best friend, Anita’s brother, Arjun. But to Arjun, Alya is nothing but his kid sister’s friend who runs around imitating him.
  He knows of her little crush from the way she stares at him and takes notice of all his moves and from the way she regards all his girlfriends with scorn but he tries not to encourage it.
  But things change when Arjun comes back from London after two long years and finds that Alya is not a fifteen- year-old with braces and socks that go up to her knees. He finds the transformation in her staggering.
  But why is she so cold to him all of a sudden?    

What Makes This Story ‘Real’:
   This story is of my brother. My best friend had a crush on him for ages before she gave up and decided to move on.
  But fate had other ideas.

Extract from the story:
She looks at him from under her eyelashes in the crowded dance floor. His pale skin is contrasting against his black shirt and pants and he has his hands shoved inside his pockets carelessly while leaning against the wall. Some girl is talking him up but his eyes are on her. He takes a small sip of his whisky before lowering the glass on the bar table and excusing himself from his companion.
  Shit, thinks Alya, he is walking up to me.
  The washroom is the safest and the quickest exit and so she makes a dash for it. Once inside the cubicle she calms down considerably.
  When she comes out he is standing there outside the bathroom and there is no escape for Alya. His hands are shoved inside his pant pockets once again and he leans over her, his lips brushing her ear and whispers, “Are you done running from me?”

This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs fromYashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

Love at First Sight? — my entry to the Get Published contest’


The Idea Description:
  She looks across the corridor and finds herself staring at a Greek God. His hair is wavy and black as night, starkly contrasting to his pale skin. She stares at him, stunned speechless by his looks.
  But what she thinks she lacks in beauty, she knows she makes up in courage and sass.
  Men aren’t the only ones making the first move these days.

What Makes This Story ‘Real’:
  This story is about a friend of mine who firmly believe that women are equal with men. So if she finds a man attractive, she is going to do something about it and not just hide her face and blush.
  Gone are the days where a woman waits for the man to make the first move. This story is about courage and confidence.

Extract from the story:
“You’ll look desperate if you go to him and speak to him.” says Tina, my best friend. She is holding a thick volume Marketing Research in front of her face so that I can only see her eyes.
  “What’s so desperate, dude? They don’t worry about looking desperate when they hit on us left, right and centre. We have the right to objectify them as well.” I shrug but my heart is thundering in my chest. I wonder how Tina can’t hear it. For all my talks on feminism, I think I should be able to walk up to a guy and ask for his number. “Look at him, Tina and tell me you don’t want him.”
   “I do want him. All I can think about is grasping that thick black hair of his and stroking his naked chest.” She sighs in a daze.
  “Ew! Keep the details of your dirty fantasies to yourself.”
  “Please,” she huffs, “as if you aren’t thinking of the same things.”
  “I am,” I say taking a deep breath. “And now I’m going to do something about it.” With that I make my way over to the Greek God I’ve had my eyes for all morning.

This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs fromYashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

Thursday, 13 December 2012

The Email Proposal– my entry to the Get Published contest’’



The Idea Description:
He proposed to her on a yatch under the moonlight. They popped some champagne and shared a sensual kiss.
  He proposed to her by hiding the ring in the cake. There were violinists playing in the background. His heart was beating wildly and there were tears in her eyes.
  He proposed to her by hiding the ring in the fortune cookie. She was stunned speechless and she slowly nodded her head, yes, yes, a million times yes. His face broke out into the most glorious smile.
  J didn’t propose to P in any of these ways.
  He was just a nervous engineer trying to make it in America.
  Mr. Techno-Savvy decides to fucking email.
  Does she reply?

Optional sections: Feel free to include anything else you’d like to include (within the word limit) about why your story deserves to be told.This can include –

What Makes This Story ‘Real’:
This is the story of my cousin. Almost a decade ago, he was striving very hard to make it in America and his wife’s condition was pretty much the same.
  What made me want to write this story was how things have changed because of innovation of the world wide web or the email.
  The use of technology and real emotion makes this story real. 

Extract from the story:

Dear P, I type on my old and battered laptop. No, this sounds too fucking formal. I back space.
Hi, P.
How are you?
We’ve been friends for how many years? Three? Four?
How many years have you been friends with her for, idiot? You want to flatter her, not sound nonchalant.
I  look back to the day I met her. She was in front of the computer typing codes swiftly. We were introduced to eachother and being the only Indians in an American office, our friendship was instantaneous.
Until she moved to Canada.
Getting back to the email, I delete the last line.
We’ve been friends for four years.We know eachother decently well. We are friendly. Well, most of the time we are friendly.
I was wondering if we could take it a step further.
You get what I mean?
Probably not since I sound like such an idiot right now.
I know I should be doing this in person, P. But, I just don’t have the balls. This isn’t romantic or anything and God knows you deserve better but this is just me. And I can’t help but give it a shot.
Will you marry me, P?

Thanks,
J.
 This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs fromYashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

‘’Growing Up’’: My entry for the Get Published contest




The Idea 
Anu and Aryan’s story, well, it isn’t all that special—just two kids playing and fighting, going through the motions of childhood. They're best friends until they're not. It’s all very innocent until it isn’t. One moment they are playing G I Joe’s Saves Barbie and the next thing they know, they’ve their falling in love. Not with eachother, of course. That would be absolutely ridiculous, wouldn’t it?  

What Makes This Story ‘Real’ 

The story walks you through your childhood, making you remember that special friend you had perhaps. Or maybe it is about those encounters when you realise that the person you were looking for all along has been right in front of you but you were too freakin’ blind or stubborn or, maybe just plain stupid to notice it. 
This story is inspired from my two friends, whose anonymity I wish to keep.

Extract 

“Mommy,” Anu sobbed as a woman with a heart shaped face and curly black hair just like her daughter’s, albeit neater, opened the door. She had an apron tied around her waist and her hands were white with flour. Anu hugged her around the legs and began to cry in her skirt.
  “Anu?” she said anxiously. “Are you hurt?”
  Anu’s sobs were the only response she got.
  She walked to the washbasin, which was a difficult task with a four-year-old hanging on to her legs for dear life. She quickly washed her hands and picked up her daughter.
  “What happened?” She asked as she walked to the sofa. She sat down with Anu on her lap. Anu’s head was on her shoulder.
  “A-a-ryan.”
  “What did he do?”
  “W-why am I only four years old?”
  “Because you were born four years ago.” She laughed.
  But Anu only cried harder.
  “What did Aryan do, baby?” She wiped Anu’s tears.
  “H-he s-said I was too young to play with him and his friends.”
  “What were they playing?”
  “G.I. Joe Saves Barbie.”
  “How about we play the same game right here?”
  “I want to play with him!”

This is my entry for the HarperCollins–IndiBlogger Get Published contest, which is run with inputs fromYashodhara Lal and HarperCollins India.

Monday, 10 September 2012

A Sister's Love


   “Will you bother to finish up with your beauty bath already, Sneha di?” I banged on the fragile bathroom door, “I have an exam in twenty minutes.”
   “I’ll take 5 more minutes, Naina. Deal. With. It.” Called out the princess from the magical land that was the bathroom. Well, it was a magical land to her since she spent so much bloody time in it. My sister was six years older than I was and the only thing that got in the way of us getting along. She was 6 years older and hence smarter. She was six years older and hence she knew better. She was 6 years older and so she had better clothes. Well, the last one wasn’t because she was 6 years older, it was because she studied fashion and was assisting a well-known fashion designer, Vikram Bhatt. But she could let me borrow her clothes, couldn’t she? But no she wouldn’t, what if I got a stain on them? What I tore them? What if I ruined them?
   “No you won’t. You have been there for the past half an hour doing God knows what. Get out right now!”
   “It’s called washing yourself. Which you clearly don’t.”
   “Maybe I don’t need to wash myself so thoroughly because I'm not as filthy as you are.”
   “Be nice to me, Naina or you’re not getting to wash yourself even a little bit.” That bitch sounded amused.
   You want to play dirty? Fine, dirty is what you will get. “Get out right now, Sneha di,” I said as threateningly as I could, “or else I’ll tell Dad what time you walked in last Saturday—or should I say Sunday? It was past midnight, after all—and in what state.” I opened the door to a very drunk Sneha di last Saturday at four in the morning. I made her change her clothes and put her to bed. Fortunately, she didn’t puke this time.
   There was silence for a moment and then I heard the water being turned off and mild shuffling. The door was wrenched open and I met the dark brown eyes of my now furious sister. She had a yellow Turkish towel tucked under her arms which my mom worked extra hard to keep it smelling nice and soft and she was dripping water on the mat outside the bathroom. She didn’t look one bit scary and I would’ve gloated if I didn’t have to give an exam in the next hour that would decide my fate.
   I pushed past her and closed the door behind me. By the time I came out of the bathroom, she had left. That bitch could’ve dropped me off to the station on her way to work.
   “All the best, baby,” my mom said with a hug. She asked me to open my mouth to put a sweet in it— her equivalent to sweet curd.
I looked outside the window as I put my umbrella in my bag. It was pouring hard. “Christ, I’m going to be soaked in no time,” I muttered.
   “Soaking? No need for soaking. New Surf Excel Matic has vibrating molecules that fights stains in the machine itself,” said my younger brother, Yash while munching on his toast. He had jam all over his mouth. He was four years younger than I was and has a penchant for quoting advertisements.
   “Stop watching so much TV,” I said, ruffling his hair.
   “All the best, di.”
   “Thanks, Yash. Bye.”
  “Bye.”
   My IELTs passed away in a blur. I was giving my IELTs because I wanted to go to London School of Economics for my Masters. That’s why this exam mattered so much to me. I wrote the answers that I knew first and then came back to the ones I wasn’t sure about in the end. All in all it wasn’t a bad exam but you could never be too sure until the results came out.
   I left the exam room with a sigh, glad that I was finally done with it. It was raining cats and dogs when I left the building.  I hadn’t noticed it because I was concentrating so much on my exams and now I had to travel all the way from Colaba to Santacruz. I opened my black umbrella with purple flowers on it and stepped out into the pouring rain. The wind whipped my hair with a ferocity and the rain hit me square in the face. The umbrella was of no use. I had barely stepped out and was already soaked.
   I walked to the main road and tried to hail a cab to Churchgate Station to no avail. I didn’t know which bus to take having used the cab, nonetheless I walked to the bus station and asked a a tall man with thinning hair, “Which bus will go to Churchgate Station?”
   His eyes went straight to my breasts. I followed his sight and saw that my T-shirt was completely soaked and was clinging to my wet body like second skin.
  “Excuse me?” I asked and made sure that my voice betrayed my irritation.             “Which bus will go to Churchgate Station?”
   He rattled off a bus number, still staring at that particular part of my anatomy. I turned away from him and waited for my bus to come.
   When my bus finally came, I couldn’t get on for the number of people competing to get in through the tiny doorway. I sighed and stood under the bus shelter to protect myself from the rain—not that it made even a slight difference. When my bus came the next time, I was prepared. I stood exactly where the bus stops, I pushed through the crowd and got on the bus. I didn’t get a place to sit but I did get to the station.
   At the station I faced a similar crisis. I had to miss two trains before I had a chance to get on the third one and even there I barely had a chance to breath. I was sandwiched between a really fat woman whose oily hair was in my face and a girl my age who kept stomping my foot and apologizing profusely.
   The compartment was wet and everyone was on the phone, either texting or trying to make calls. That’s when I realised that my phone was still switched off from the exam. I removed it from my bag and pressed the Power button. It wouldn’t switch.
   As if the day couldn’t get any worse, the train stopped working when it reached Khar Road.
I didn’t see the point in waiting for another train only to get off at the next station and so I got out of the station and started my long walk home.

   I checked my watch—which was waterproof—and saw that it was almost 7 30 pm. My exam got over at 3 pm. It had taken me more that 4 hours to make a journey that usually takes me half an hour to 45 minute.
   The electricity was out because of the rains so I had to bang the door to get someone to open.
   “Who is it?” Came a shrill voice from the other side.
   “Its me, Sneha di,” I said irritatedly, “open up.”
   The door opened and suddenly I was enveloped in a big hug. “Oh, thank God!”
   “Can’t. Breath.” My voice was muffled.
   “Where the hell have you been?” Sneha di pulled away from me and screeched. She shook me as she said each word.
   “Trying to get home.”
   “Where’s your fucking phone? Couldn’t you answer it?”
   “It got wet,” I defended.
   Sneha di suddenly sagged. “Oh, Naina. We were so worried. You have no idea. Why didn’t you at least make a call?”
   “Well, I was trying to get home and I didn’t think you would…” I gazed around warily.
   “What? That I would worry?”
   I shrugged helplessly.
   “I have been sick with worry, Naina. How could you think like that?”
   “OK, OK,” I said, embarrassed with all this emotion, “Can I at least come in? I'm soaking.”
   “Soak no more, Naina,” Sneha di sniffled. “Soak no more.”

   “So you really love me?” I joked as we all were having candlelight dinner on the dining table.
   “Of course, you idiot.”
   “So will you let me borrow your clothes?”
   “What if you stain them?”
   “Well, there is always Surf Excel Matic,” chimed in Yash, “The vibrating molecules can remove any stain and that too without soaking.”
   “See?” I asked Sneha di rhetorically, “there is a solution"

 Note: This post is for the Surf Excel Matic Challenge.