India Currents - February 2016

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february 2016 vol. 29, no .10 www. indiacurrents.com INDIA CURRENTS Celebrating 29 Years of Excellence D e c o d i n g M i n d f u l n e s s by Tamanna Raisinghani Exploring the science behind the art of living in the moment INDIA CURRENTS Indra Nooyi–Reinventing the Future By Scott S. Smith Embarrassed by My Indianness by Swathi Ramprasad On the Difficulty of Making Friends by Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan D e c o d i n g M i n d f u l n e s s a t t h n e a i G d r n a I m s m t a y h s ? W B y s P a r D iy a

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Transcript of India Currents - February 2016

Page 1: India Currents - February 2016

february 2016 • vol. 29 , no .10 • www. indiacurrents.com

INDIA CURRENTSCelebrating 29 Years of Excellence

Decoding Mindfulness

by Tamanna Raisinghani

Exploring the science behind the art of living in the moment

INDIA CURRENTSIndra Nooyi–Reinventing the Future

By Scott S. SmithEmbarrassed by My Indianness

by Swathi RamprasadOn the Difficulty of Making Friends

by Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan

Decoding Mindfulness

at thn eai Gd rn aI m s’ mt a yh ’s?W

By s P ar Diy a

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February 2016 | West Coast Edition | www.indiacurrents.com | 1

June 26-28

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2 | INDIA CURRENTS | West Coast Edition | February 2016

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February 2016 | West Coast Edition | www.indiacurrents.com | 3

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Do You Believe in Ghosts?

Last summer I encountered a ghost. It happened simply, unsuspectingly. Perhaps the stage had already been

set. I had been invited to stay for a month

at an artists’ residency in a French town called Marnay-sur-Seine. The setting was a 17th century priory next door to a 12th century church, which still carries the scars of war. Beneath my window, I could see the river Seine with its flowing gray-green scroll. I planned to spend my time writing about (and capturing the emotions of) those who were dead.

That first night, as I lay in my narrow bed, trying to acquaint myself to the voices of a starlit French night, I heard the wind whisper, the river murmur, and the stone walls echo with the sounds of strangers.

In a few days, I began to identify and sift through the nighttime noises. Those that came from outside my window—the hoot of an owl, the bark of a dog, the splash of a swimmer’s arms—and those that seemed to filter down directly from above me: the scrape of a chair, the heavy thud of footsteps, a cough, the clearing of a throat.

There were six other residents living in the three wings of the old priory. Anne Moses, a vivacious and talented artist, oc-cupied the room adjoining mine. We were the only two in our wing.

Our building was covered in ivy and had a door that led to a long narrow spiral staircase providing access to three floors and each level had empty, lonely looking rooms, with lonely looking furniture. The turret at the top had been converted into a classroom and a studio. Anne and I oc-cupied adjoining rooms on the second floor, and she used the studio upstairs for her work during the day. There were no beds on that level and we expected that the room was unoccupied at night.

One day, casually, as though it were not something of any great import, I asked Anne if she’d heard any movement com-ing from upstairs around midnight. She looked at me and, with something of a zombie look on her face, said yes, quickly, almost too quickly. I laughed to make light of it. But I could see that she was having none of it.

From the beginning, I toyed with the idea of a ghost. A notion so exciting as to

power my imagination. For the other pos-sibility, that of a man or woman creeping into the building while we slept seemed infinitely more ominous.

We decided to text each other as soon as we heard the sounds. And so we did, that night, and the next, and the next. Till the idea of texting seemed somehow point-less, merely a corroboration that it was not the figment of one person’s imagination. It had quite conclusively become more than that, maybe a figment of two people’s imaginations, for, after all, we were both artists engaged in free expression.

To my surprise, Anne refused to accept anything other than the idea of a vagrant, or a kid playing a prank.

So we set vigil one night. That night, too, we heard movement upstairs. We sent a text to the other residents who met us near our rooms and then, armed with our iPhones, we crept up single file to the tur-ret. Was it any surprise that there was no one there, and the furniture had not been moved?

I have never been afraid of the idea of

ghosts. That seems like an M. Night Shya-malan narrative. A little too expedient.

I would like to believe that a super-natural experience is a memory trapped in continuity or that ghosts are traces of the past making a presence in our present. Though, that does seem fanciful.

So how do we interpret a supernatural experience rationally?

In an article on BBC, Adam Waytz from Northwestern University explains paranormal experiences thus: “We create beliefs in ghosts, because we don’t like believing that the universe is random.” In other words it’s a matter of control. The mind, when taken out of its usual, conjures up the unusual.

Scientists spend lifetimes trying to ex-plain the mysteries of our universe. Still there is much we don’t know, including the wonderful enigma of “dark matter,” or matter that cannot be seen but has been proven to exist.

Sounds like my ghost.

Jaya Padmanabhan, Editor

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INDIA CURRENTSPERSPECTIVES West Coast Edition

www.indiacurrents.com

Find us on

February 2016 • vol 29 • no 10

3 | EDITORIALDo You Believe in Ghosts?By Jaya Padmanabhan

8 | WORDS AND THINGSOn the Difficulty of Making FriendsBy Ragini Tharoor Srinivasan

13 | BUSINESSIndia Deserves Better than Mark Zuckerberg’s Watered Down InternetBy Vivek Wadhwa

14 | VIEWPOINTPomegranates and PotatoesBy Usha Akella

24 | YOUTHEmbarassed By My IndiannessBy Swathi Ramprasad

28 | OPINIONNo Country for Gray PeopleBy Ranjani Iyer Mohanty

29 | PERSPECTIVEMagic from the MundaneBy Saraswathy Lakshmivaraham 74 | NEWS FEATUREAishwary Rai Talks Films, Cannes and More with French President Francois HollandeBy IANS

100 | ON INGLISHWatching Jugaad at WorkBy Kalpana Mohan

102 | THE LAST WORDUnfriendedBy Sarita Sarvate

LIFESTYLE

70 | SoCal Cultural Calendar

74 | NorCal Cultural Calendar

82 | NorCal Spiritual Calendar

91 | SoCal Spiritual Calendar

26 | RELATIONSHIP DIVA Five Signs to Alert Guys Their Approach is Not WorkingBy Jasbina Ahluwalia

36 | TAX TALKIs Your Pastime a Hobby or Business?By Khorshed Alam

44 | TRAVELMesmerizing MuscatBy Kavita Wadhwani

48 | BOOKSA Review of India Gray by Sujatha MasseyBy Jeanne E. Fredriksen

88 | HEALTHY LIFEHealth Myth BustedBy Nickhil Jakatdar

90 | DEAR DOCTOR Feeling Lost WithoutChildrenBy Alzak Amlani

94 | RECIPESRecipes for Dalma and Mastani the DrinkBy Jagruti Vedamati, Ritu Marwah

DEPARTMENTS6 | Letters to the Editor6 | Popular Articles

WHAT’S CURRENT

30 | Ask a Lawyer31 | Visa Dates

The practice of paying attention to the “now”

By Tamanna Raisinghani

16 | Decoding Mindfulness

Reviews of Bajirao Mastani and Wazir

By Aniruddh Chawda

64 | Music

What’s Indian at the Grammys?

By Priya Das

34 | Films

40 | ProfileIndra K. Nooyi–Reinventing the Future

By Scott S. Smith

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