August 02, 2012

RakshaBandhan And IWSG - The Connection


The first Wednesday of every month is officially Insecure Writer’s Support Group day for participating blog owners who may be professional or amateur writers. (All you need is the passion and output, published or not). Started by Alex Cavanaugh the author of the sci-fi space opera CassaStar and sequel CassaFire, it is a means for writers to talk about their fears big and small. It is also an opportunity to connect to other writers who may have conquered these or are sailing in the same insecure boat as you.

 Aug 2 2012 is Raksha Bandhan literally means bond of protection, a festival that celebrates the sacred bond between brothers and sisters - could be cousins even neighbours and friends for whom you feel a sibling like love.  It is famous in north and western India, the south has other names and rituals for the said concept. 
 The most famous of the origin stories that dates back to 1535 c.b.e is that of the Hindu widowed, Queen Karnavati of Chittor, who sent a silk, beaded thread to the Mughal Emperor Humayun, a Muslim, to save his "sister's" kingdom from the invasion of Bahadur Shah (ironically, another muslim ruler).  (I often wish that my right wing Indian brothers and sisters,  both majority Hindu and minority Muslim would look at the positive ascepts of our history and interactions). He  arrived a little late to save her life though he helped her son get back the throne, and that particular full moon day in August was celebrated as Raksha Bandhan. We even have a similar story of Alexandar's wife Roxanne and King Porus before the battle.

Growing up in Bombay, I first tied the thread to my brother's wrist as a 11 year old and then to my cousins living nearby. (Teenaged boys dread this day since the girl they like may end making them brothers, nipping the romance in the bud.) ;)

It's been 27 years that I have continued this practice and today, my IWSG post uses this aspect to show my heartfelt thanks for his support and encouragement.

To the one who had dreams and high hopes for his sister - personally and professionally,  
to one who sat in the balcony of our second floor flat in Bombay on a summer night, explaining to his (1.6 yrs younger) sister in layman terms why the sky we see is the past life of the Universe and why star trek is improbable if not outright impossible, 
to the elder brother who told his sis - it was ok for good Indian girls to be infatuated with their college mates - as long as it didn't affect her studies or she didn't act on it, 
to the then-recently married bro who accompanied her and attended all the meetings with her divorce lawyer, having been her confidant during the turbulent days of marriage, 
to one who encouraged her to get back to writing, who takes time out of his busy schedule as a management-software consultant to read and offer constructive feedback on every poem, story or non fictional writing she emails him, 
who reads her blog whenever he can, who dreams of seeing his sister as a published author, who hates her pessimistic and self doubting/pitying attitude...
thank you for the faith in me even though I have more failures and hardly any success in my tag sheet.
Happy Rakhi :)

Your motivation, support and confidence has rubbed on me, has made me stick to writing Your reward for now, this year:
A first draft of a 32000 word romance novella which I feel will be better as a short novel.
A free poetry and flash fiction book to be uploaded sometime in August/September. 
Creating my non-fiction writing pages at Squidoo and Hubpages.
Getting back to submitting to online mags from October onwards with fresh, better work.

Don't give up on me bro, I will try my very best to make the promise of treating you to a "veg meal" in the trendiest eating spot in Singapore or more likely Dubai (since it's one place you haven't visited yet) on my 45th bday, come true. :) (If my first book/collection ever gets traditionally published) 

* sorry for the saccharine sweetness of the post... :D
* my internet connection has been acting up, so I will be checking your blogs in the evening. :(

15 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Rek, that was a very sweet message to your brother!

Tomz said...

Happy Raksha Banchan day :)

TS Hendrik said...

A little saccharin is nice now and then I think. Very cool. And I can't wait to be able to read your books.

Ram Seshadri said...

Thanks for those kind words and kindling those distant memories of happy days. I wish I had a magic wand and could make all your dreams come true this special Rakhi.
Love,
Ram

Rawknrobyn.blogspot.com said...

Rek,

Your heart and soul shine through everything you write, offering the comfort of a cozy handmade quilt (added to a box fine chocolates). You really are gifted, and you're a gift to blogland and the world.

Raksha Banchan sounds like a wonderful tradition.

I too anxiously await to read your books. I am certain that day will be here sooner rather than later.

Blessings and faith, dear friend.
xoRobyn

Rahul Bhatia said...

A very sweet post:)

Pat Tillett said...

In today's world, a little sweetness is a nice thing to receive once in a while. Thanks!
I very much look forward to the day that I crack open one of your books. I KNOW it will be good. You are very talented and a sweetheart also...

Michael Offutt, Phantom Reader said...

Thank you for telling me about Raksha Banchan. I had no idea at the depth and tradition of this remarkable thing. Your culture is the kind of which the best stories are made, is rich in depth, and profound in spirit.

Use some of that and write us a story. I can't wait to read it.

Annalisa Crawford said...

That was such a lovely post, and a wonderful celebration. You're lucky to have such a close bond with your brother.

Goku shrestha said...

we nepalese too celebrate raksha bandhan equivalent , called "janai purnima " :)
happy rakhsa bandhan !

Denise Covey said...

Hello Rek. I've been reading about this lovely brother/sister ceremony here in Fiji with its 37% Indian population. I love the idea.
I also have a novel of 50,000 words -my first romantic novel- which I'm thinking might work as a 20,000 word novella. You have some of the same aims as myself.
All good wishes for everything Rek.

Denise

M Pax said...

What a great holiday, Rek. Wish we had something like that this way.

I look forward to your upcoming projects.

Anonymous said...

A heartfelt post and a lovely ceremony.

michelle said...

Such a wonderful tradition, dear Rek!
Your brother is blessed to have such a wonderful, sincere and sensitive sister like you...
I'm really looking forward to reading your stories...

A said...

So sweet... I wish I had a brother :-)

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Glad you made it this far...would love to hear your take on the words scribbled. A comment every now and then keeps the blues away. :D

Since, crazy Mr. Blogspot won't let me reply to the comments here (is upset with the water ladies ever since they refused to verify visitors)...will do the next best thing, drop in to your blog to say my Vanakkam/Namaste/Salaam/Hello.

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