Monday, January 19, 2009

Only a Butterfly

This is a good summer for fun. Unfortunately as one of the many poor souls who opted for EC in the counselling, I cannot indulge myself as I would like to. I have never been one for much studies but you know when something called a year back is waiting with a mallet just around the corner ready to strike you unconcious for a year, you tend to 'take care' like they say when saying goodbye on chat.

The beaches beckon to me with open stretches of sand and cool blue waters and kingfisher premium, widely known as the king of good times. The open road calls to the traveller inside of me and it is with great regret that I turn away saying maybe another day. There is a great need welling up inside me to look for escape. The world is soo soo beautiful, you want to touch every tree, pick up fish swimming in the meandering rivers and toss them back in with a laugh, ride madly through the fields of wheat and feel the stalks brushing your face...

I feel like a strong hurricane that rushes through its brief life with amazing fury, lifting things up, examining them, feeling them and then throwing them away. I wonder if my life will be brief... I'm not afraid of many things but of death I am terrified. I used to talk to a girl once who told me she didn't care if she lived or died,but I could never relate to that. For me my life is everything I am. Not being blessed by a mind that believes in the unseen, I have nothing to look forward to after death, 'only oblivion' as my father once quoted from James Thurber. As long as one is alive the sun can reflect off his eyes, he can see it rise and set, and he can feel its rays upon his skin, the life giving warmth that invigours the planet. But my dear reader, once he is dead 'he' will no longer be... only a mouldering corpse on which someday new life may grow but for the time being is but a sad remnant of what once ran, played, laughed and sang.

We are born, for sometime we are unaware of death, and aren't those the happiest years of our life? Ignorance is truly bliss when we are toddlers just learning to reach out to the huge world which we're told is round but looks flat as far as the eye can see. Just walking with a friend could make us laugh then, and the other end of the world was no further than the end of the street. Making robots, from electricity meters, robots that could catch the little red men that came out of the manholes at night, climbed the electricity pole and blinking, flew into the starry night.

Making up stories is the forte of little children. If only we could retain that ablity as young adults...there would be some fine new books in the stores. I remember when I got the glimse of the adjoining mountain covered with mists, while on my way back from school in Ranikhet I thought about the wisps that might be hiding within, with lanterns to lure travellers away. I thought about the bear that must be very warm under his fur, sitting cosily near a bush. Thought about the women collecting wood to burn at night, thought about the sky and how white it looked with black rolling down from behind the mountain, and for many moments I was lost because I felt as if I had seen it all before, or was it just because the mountanis evoke nostalgia in everyone? But I was very sure I had, and carefully I rearranged my thought, and up came the image of a brass statue. A female, with braided hair, standing on a pedestal, dressed in the manner of the old days holding a spade shaped tray. We had that statue at home and I went back and stared and stared but now the images were leaving me, receding back into the foggy, unknown depths of the unconcious and I never saw them again till today...

As I said this is a good summer for fun. A good summer for phantom thoughts. A good summer for remembering what we were like before. A good summer to get in touch with

"Good friends we have now,
good friends we've lost...
along the way..."

because you know folks we may come and go, but the sun will shine forever, and the stardust that we are made of will be used again and again for all eternity and hence we shall always be there, if not quite alive then at least part of the splendour of this world.

"I will live again...if only as a butterfly"

A bad translation of the hindi saying "Aadmi mar sakta hai par aatma amar hai"

but there is comfort in that thought....and even if I die, I will live again...if only as a wolf...Girls can come back as butterflies.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

The Present and much Later

In one of the biggest modern medicine breakthroughs in recent times, a baby girl was born. Not a normal baby girl...not by a long way. For all the aeons past chance and inheritance alone decided the attributes of a new-born. This time however it was different, for a certain defect in the baby's genetic make-up was screened out by man. And where a 'jealous' God would have let the child be born with the spectre of breast cancer hovering over her head before she even became a woman...man chose mercy, and made sure she would not be subject to this blight.

Genetics would be such a powerful scientific tool for the future...if only it were given a free rein. Unfortunately with the US Govt. putting a ban on transgenics and stem cell research it will be some time before results start coming through. The main opposition to scientific progress has always been religion...Those who say science and religion complement each other and can co-exist are merely ignorant. Science while not outrightly denying the existence of God doesn't accept it, it believes in evolution as opposed to intelligent design, it constantly discovers new laws to govern the behaviour of matter instead of holding on to old ones , and in science most of the things are open to question, whereas in religion everything is to be done 'by the book'. Science and religion are mutually incompatible so one day the inferior will have to go, and in an educated world people will soon realize that it is the latter.

Man steps beyond the fog of ignorance, what will he find? The pioneer emerges into a future designed and purified by science. He goes into the oxygen rich fields of transpirating fauna, with the bright rays of the sun providing the catalyst for these lower organisms to create food for all of mankind and ask himself...what could lie ahead....

There will come a time when the world will be completely tamed and man's mechanical limbs and mental slaves will have abilities far beyond his own. When the parameters needed to control his environment will be far too many for his accidently designed brain to handle, he will turn to his machines. It is evident even today...machines carry out thousands of instructions in the time it takes us to blink and of course, physically, automatons are already far superior to human workers in all but the most skilled of jobs.

However there seems to be a limitation on the thinking ability of machines. Electronic brains though well-equipped to juggle millions of bytes of data for weather analysis and directing the course of a missile or an aeroplane still seem dull...incapable of higher thought. But then at that time, mothered by machines will we ask ourselves what is higher thought...thoughts of a God who doesn't exist?Our confusion?Our strange gamut of emotions that no one can satisfactorily explain? Maybe the machines pitying man's futility will create something vast that he can ponder upon. Maybe they will fill it with capabilities of billions of supercomputers.....maybe it shall know everything....maybe it shall be everywhere.....maybe it shall be capable of anything.....maybe after many years, our automatons will make us our God.