Bring on the Botox... India at 62
This appeared in the Sunday times today...
How good are we looking at 62…??
If
one buys the theory “62 is the new 42” ( I do! I do!), then India is
definitely looking “hot’’ for her age. Of course, there are countless
giveaways like crow’s feet , an untoned butt and cellulite all over,but
compared to others dealing with age issues of a different kind, even
our worst critic would give the country a glowing certificate. As our
two beauty pageant contestants, Pooja and Ekta, vie for the
international crowns , the words of a former winner, Priyanka Chopra,
make sentimental sense. Advised Piggy Chops sagely, “We are blessed to
be born Indian…believe you are the chosen one.” Some of our
parliamentarians could benefit equally from similar advice. Though,
most believe they are indeed the Chosen Ones – which they are! We chose
them!!
It is fascinating to track the sea change that takes place
in the lives of beauty pageant contestants. The grueling grooming
sessions they endure often transform gawky, gauche youngsters into
soignée swans. By the time they are done with the multiple make- overs
( hair, skin, teeth, weight and personality development), they are
different creatures altogether – sleek, poised and ready to take on the
world. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could do the same with India and
its politicians?? Treat the country as a contestant and go for the
crown?? It’s not that hard to achieve if we get enough experts on
board. What we are suffering from at present is a serious image problem
– we are looking kinda dumb in the eyes of the world. Particularly,
S.M.Krishna and his team of naïve advisors.But theek hai… an efficient
Mr. Fix-it ( but who?? How soon?) can be quickly inducted to sort out
that mess.. Now , with the appointment of the erudite Dr. Shivshanker
as our ambassador to Beijing, perhaps the border talks with China will
proceed more constructively, minus bogus p.r. pronouncements that fool
nobody. Till then , it is important to look good!
Unlike popular
perception, it takes one hell of a lot to become an international
beauty pageant winner – discipline, for one.Attitude, for another. I’ve
watched those girls slog with single-minded determination. They have a
single point programme and just one agenda – to win. Imagine an India
where even ten members of the cabinet had the same level of commitment
.One has to be present during the tough elimination rounds at these
beauty contests to know just how exacting the selection process is.At
that early stage itself, it’s easy to predict who’ll make the short
list. Why not a similar format while allocating key ministries? India
has fantastic people at all levels. These fantastic people stay miles
away from politics. Why? For the same reason that thousands of
seriously good -looking, highly accomplished young women avoid entering
pageants – they believe the whole thing is fixed!
International
contests have reformatted pageants to remain more in tune with changing
times. The winners no longer talk exclusively about becoming Mother
Teresa and saving the world. New social realities demand fresher
responses, bolder stands. Same story with our ministerlog who need to
move beyond boring platitudes from a bygone era and discuss
contemporary deliverables.
Every country messes up . India has
made it almost mandatory to do so! This is tragic given that at this
very second, we are a whole lot better off than most of the world – at
least on the economic front. As one never tires of repeating, our
fundamentals are strong, our banking systems conservative and our
domestic economy robust enough to ride the meltdown. This is much more
than can be said about our nearest rivals. Despite these obvious
advantages, we choose to focus on the downside. Suggestion number one :
let’s roll in the experts. India at 62 needs a face-lift! Bring on the
botox. Get those silicon enhancements in place.Liposuction? Why not….
we can do with trimming ministerial flab. Going under the knife? That
too – starting with drastically cutting neta privileges, and reducing
the size of the bulging cabinet. Laser eye surgery is also recommended
for all those short- sighted leaders incapable of seeing beyond their
noses. Plus, a strict diet plan for the fat cats in public life who
gorge on the nation’s precious resources. Let’s not forget a punishing
work out regime for pot- bellied elected representatives abusing the
system. How about cosmetic dental treatment to polish up those fake
smiles?And rigourous skin care routines for the thick -skinned
rhino-politicos who don’t let anything get to them ? Once we get all
this in place, we can confidently compete against the best and come
back with the dazzling crown. Meanwhile, good luck Pooja Chopra and
Ekta Chowdhry – jhanda ooncha rahey hamara.
I am off to Alibag.... back on tuesday. No laptop. Zero connectivity - even my Vertu has died on me!! This is not supposed to happen, right?? Not to a Vertu!! I spoke to my Vertu man, Sachin Kulkarni. He said it was a virus problem!!! Whaaaattttt? In a cell phone?? Apparently so. But, he assured me the service centre in Mumbai had the software to fix it. Great. The phone came back after a few hours. It worked for a few minutes. I am back to square one. It's going to be a hectic weekend - and nobody can reach moi? Hmmmmmm...
My Shravan diet is suiting me. All that 'satvic' khana has calmed my nerves greatly. Why, I could even deal with a fire scare at 4 a.m. without getting hysterical. These days in Mumbai, one just has to hear a distant siren\fire alarm, to think, " Bomb". Plus, I had watched a violent, grisly and frankly lousy movie 'Public Enemies' and even that had not shaken me up much. I'd watched it for Johnny Depp - let's attribute my thanda response to the hottie to sabudana khichdi and cut fruits. The countdown has begun. Shravan ends on the 19th. I'll survive. Even thrive!!
|