Hindustan Times - Brunch

REIMAGININ­G THE NOW

How one crashed phone led to a brighter future

- By Karuna Ezara Parikh is the author of The Heart Asks Pleasure First Where Stories Gather

IKaruna Ezara Parikh

recently experience­d a horrifying thing. As I departed for a vacation after two long, soggy, batshit years, my phone crashed. It capsized as I dashed hysterical­ly towards Majnu-KaTila to board a bus which would deposit me in that stoner-struck town that rhymes with the word “banally”. After that I’d trot off on a trek to Paradise. Now, I thought, as I vigorously stubbed a screen as viciously unalive as shark-eye, I would have no photos of Paradise. We arrived, tortured by a night of sleeping upright just for fun, and I immediatel­y dragged my exhausted husband off, not for a massage or momos or beers, or whatever the kids get high on these days, but to a phone repair store where the most interestin­g thing was a couple of dogs I suspect were carpets because they slept through everything, even the holiday revellers screeching

“I HOPE THIS BECOMES A DOCUMENTAR­Y SO MY HUSBAND CAN PLAY HIMSELF” —KARUNA PARIKH, POET & AUTHOR

behind bobbly children in lurid puffer jackets over a proliferat­ion of tights. We spent several hours waiting upon the miracle of jugaad-tech, our aching bums getting progressiv­ely icier on a metal bench as we watched honeymoone­rs, distinguis­hable by the brides’ heels in a town 98 per cent slanted, and spirals of blood-toned bangles wrestling with sweatshirt sleeves as sindoor-drenched selfieswer­etaken.Faroff,Ispotted the edge of a goddamn brilliant sunset, but first, a selfie. That night, over stiff whiskeys drunk beneaththe­soothingpa­toflive music, after many ghost-limbed dips into my empty pocket to record the guitarist for an imagined future here this video ould matter, I succumbed. My phone—each day’s first greeting—wasn’t going to make it. The next morning, valiantly, I set off over the hills, Decathlon’s blessings upon me. You know the end of this story already. There is no profundity in it, only a blazing common sense we seem to have lost, possibly the same day we took our first selfie, diving into some inability to ever truly look inward again. Of course, I adapted. Humans do. It’s how we’ve aligned to the insanity of the scroll, where our brains are stabbed every few seconds with glossy, jagged new informatio­n, all unrelated and somehow parading as necessary. Cheesecake/ Manmohan/ #prayfor/ Madonna’s nipple/ Scottish castle/ new book/ AI/ rape/ Dandan noodle/ Succession. This was my brain. Then, suddenly it was whalesong: moooooount­aaaaaaiiii­iinnnnn/ treeeeeeee­ee. It was slooowwwww­w and BIG and very gentle. It was amniotic. When I returned to “civilisati­on” post the dusty wilderness of the off-grid, I found nothing changed. I hadn’t missed a single thing. Everyone was still outraged or pouting, things had been launched and cancelled, government­s had not fallen or stooped further. The ouroboros status quo I had died from briefly, continued. When that electric tapping connection to the world spluttered off under offensive html, I had called it a faithless blindfolde­r, but in absentia it became a door to the ‘now’ I was desperatel­y missing by constantly watching. I’m aware of piling irony so high here (disconnect to connect/ plug out dive in/ stop watching start living) I risk becoming a luxury township advertisem­ent, but isn’t it precisely, that, when we reside outside the present to witness “real time”? Somewhere, we forgot that ‘post’, means after. Switched off, my device became a time machine, a pair of spectacles, maybe a tight smack—the kind mothers want to give our consistent­ly bowed heads. As for the trek—I have pictures. They are unphotosho­pped, full colour, 3D and profoundly indelible. (2020) and

(2021)

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 ?? ?? SWITCH OFF Smartphone­s are an unnoticed part of life, until you don’t have access to one
SWITCH OFF Smartphone­s are an unnoticed part of life, until you don’t have access to one

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