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Resolutions, resolutions

 

A moment to remember
Designing our lives
Life doesn't stop at sixty
Viva la entertainment
A day in her life
Incredible India
People, ah people!
Lost in the melee
What’s wrong with us?
Sex education? Chee! Chee!
Fair enough
To kiss or not to kiss
Seeds of change
What's in a name?
Resolutions, resolutions
City life
Dressed to kill
Conspiracy of silence
Urban gutter
Body beautiful
It's that time of the year when we make resolutions, if not loudly at least mentally, fully aware that much as we hate to admit it, most of them will be broken by the first quarter of year . In fact, it has almost become a joke to talk about New Year resolutions brushed off as one of those things that inevitably comes to mind at the end the year, like planning for the 31st night bash.

Yet, it's perhaps not a bad idea to make some resolutions, simple enough to be able to keep that do not stretch mental resolve. And hopefully, make some difference, even if a tiny bit, to the quality of life.

Like, desisting from flicking the foil of the mint I am munching through the window of the vehicle while travelling. Plastics are hard to destroy and hundreds of discarded foils on the street from candies, savouries and 'pan-parag' type of fresheners do add to the load. During the monsoon, we moan a flooded street and curse the municipality for its tardy maintenance but prefer to ignore the fact that 'our' indifference also adds to the woe by clogging the drains. So I will hold onto the wrapper/ keep it in the ladies bag, till I come home or encounter a bin on the street. Too little to make a difference to the garbage on the street? Perhaps, but at least, my conscience will be clear.

Like, switching over to another channel when the 24 hour electronic media puts up yet another clipping of gory scenes of a man being hanged, and the like. For instance, the recent case of transmitting the last minutes of Saddam Hussein's almost-bungled hanging, even to the point of tightening the noose. It's been revealed now that those scenes were illegally shot and then passed off to channels (for a price?). Whatever be the truth, just because the clipping was available, did channels have to transmit it over and over again? It was worse than many of the mindless reality shows. A boy in Pakistan has already died imitating the act and a teenage girl in West Bengal, disturbed by the visuals, has committed suicide. Agreed, millions of people have witnessed the clipping and these deaths are rare cases, but who can keep track of how one has been affected? The impressionable young may carry these images even to adulthood creating psychological problems. In the dog-eats-dog competition among TV channels today, all norms of self-introspection and standards seem to get brushed off these days. Earlier, the hanging of Dhananjoy went to surreal lengths with local TV channels in Kolkata even going to the extent of ferreting out food preferences of the murder-convict. The print media jumped into the fray with equal gusto.

Currently, look at the projection of the Noida's killing field. While the horrendous act numbs the mind, what's the point- after the initial stage, of showing endlessly the digging for skeletons? You almost expect limbs spilling out from the sacks. Come on, there are better ways of drawing attention to the horrible criminal-duo and the inexcusable apathy of the law-keepers who were repeatedly approached by the parents of the missing children. Psychologists are already warning about the effect of these visuals on young minds. Necessary for the sake of reporting the truth? Personally, I don't agree and so I firmly switch to another channel if it see such insensitive presentation. And I feel, if this trend continues in the coming year , in case, God forbid! something equally gory happens, I will not find it difficult to keep second resolution of the year.

 

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