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Im filled with light. Cut me...I don't bleed, I shine

Gayatri Jayaraman - August 16, 2008

I-day came and went, but the euphoria lingers. Abhinav Bindra, all of 25 took the gold, and though as Indians we all feel proud and take credit for him, fact is we never took responsibility for his talent when it was being nurtured, we played no part as a nation in contributing to his success. Funded solely by his parents' substantial means, overcoming medical injury, seeking out confidence building classes in Germany, Abhinav is symbolic of a generation of young Indians who won't stop chasing their dreams just because of the odds. India's gen-next is a kick-ass bunch!

I spoke with Yuki Bhambhri over the phone the other day. This 15-year old (or is that 19) Indian tennis sensation is headed to Wimbledon entirely on his own steam. His funding is scarce, barely enough, and as a teenager, he dfeels deeply for the financial strain that he puts on his parents each time he's playing.

The question that many sports pages will ask many times over with far more expertise, is of course, what is the government doing for them? Why does the system fail potential talent time and again? When will it step up?

My questioning is down a different line - it is this: have you noticed what is happening? have you noticed the magic in the air? - whether it is education, sports, entrepreneurship even social enterprise - Indians in the age group 15-28 are finding ways to make a difference and live their dreams at the same time. It is a time of magic.

You, I or the much maligned 'system' can do all we want, or as little as we want. We can blunder, fail them, but this is a generation that has its aim firmly on the target and is finding its way there. Abhinav's composure or 'arrogance' as it has variously been called I feel has been much misunderstood. The generation is confident, and makes no excuses. Hence it also offers you no excuse for failing them. If Bindra has succeeded, he has struggled to succeed and hence he takes credit for his success too.

It is not a question of ego. It is a question of having assessed and assimilated fact.

Because of this attitude, there is nobody to blame or praise for one's success or failure. Each one is an individual and takes responsibility for his or her success or lack of it. hence, while bindra brings in gold, teenagers and 20-somethings across the country are each following their dreams.

It is a liberating attitude this one-mindedness. And the euphoria i feel about it is for this - yes india is at this stage strugglign with the ills of any rapidly developing society that is suddenly finding freedom, money, globalisation and success. Marriages are breaking up, families are disintegrating from joint into nuclear families, more and more couples are opting for career over kids, alcoholism is shooting up and infrastructure and inflation issues are affecting everyone bringing in obesity, stress etc etc. That list is endless but is mirrored in societies across the world.

But at its core, Indian youth have a strength. You can feelk it in the air in the rang de basanti generation. There is magically enough, very little negativity. The 20 somethings have little time for that. They are solution seekers, doers. There is a tough inner spiritual core, there is a strength of confidence, of the need to be meaningful as well as successful. Both have ceased to be mutually exclusive.

So you will find riuch medical practioner couples also doing their bit to society on the side, students doubling up at NGOs, intelligent entrepreneurs discovering ways to make money and profits out of a service that renders affordable meals to millions. Just lke Bindra found a way to make a gold for the nation off his passion and his dream.

Its not so much the gold, but that balance that i find amazing and that marks us out from any other nation. I DON'T have friends who are jaded, but I have plenty who have suffered life's knocks with a smile. I looka round me and I find people who smile, work hard, play hard, earn hard, spend hard. They may be divorced, serially dumped, injured and had to change careers for no fault of their, incapable of settling down already, financially inefficient, but they are all wonderfully positive people.

And that makes for a wonderful brand of patriotism. I stand next to people at the theatre when the National Anthem is playing, and I see and hear them SING in glee, proudly, happily. It's okay to feel that the odds aren't against you, that hey whaddya know the system not only works, or it may not, but it workrs because of ME, and people like ME. It's MY system, MY government, MY country, and Ill be damned if you try to sell me another.

My press is free and staid and capable of accomodating voices old and new. I can mock the Olympics relay on DD and then flip over to a private news channel. My political parties range from Communist Marxist to the voices of the marginalised-but-not-for-long Mayawati's BSP. My Right To Information Act works, and the moral police have as much of a voice as Vik Doc and his Queer Rights Parade. Karan Johar and RGV quibble now and then, but my cinemas have place for them AND Persepolis. Yes I have Coke in my supermarket but I prefer Thums Up when I drink. Yes I know I can choose to fall in love, but I would LIKE to have an arranged marriage. And like my friend Priya, it's No thank you, Im very flattered you'd offer me a fab job in San Fransisco, but I have my Madurai and Mumbai to choose from. I am a single woman and I drive, I earn, I have male friends and a loving husband and go on an all girls holiday when I want to because I choose to have the life I want to. I havce seen the world, I travel, I read, I perceive, I reject. I stay home cos the waft of biriyani from the khau gully is too tempting for me to leave. And this is the one part of the world where I can lick my fingers afterwards! This is the best of times and the best of times to be Indian.

Im stealing a line (and modifying it) from adrian mitchell when he said 'I am filled with light, cut me and I shine'.

This is my India today. The things I can find wrong with it, I know we can fix.

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Posted by Gayatri Jayaraman at August 16, 2008 06:35 AM

Comments

Gayatri,

Thanks for this song creating sound vibration / energy currents that ripple magically through the universe. Thanks for this uplifting news that you broadcast.

Dara Torres did something rather remarkable last night. She was in a leadership position to put time on hold while a team mate changed into a different swim suit. She had the inner composure and the outer body language that allowed this pivotal moment to transpire without a glitch. She was a team player.

This leadership example is probably one of many at the 2008 Olympics. I do hope they all get recognized. If not by the media at least by those who are present to witness the miracles of new team work that can teach us about whole system design.

Trish~~

I really don't understand why the Indian government does nothing about Olympics. It is a nation of a billion people like China, and there are so many talents, so much potential. China is going on the top with Golds right now...Its amazing coz just like Indians they're not the physically strongest race, but still winning the Olympics because they have a lot of people and the government spends on them, gets the best coaches, provides the best facilites...it could as easily have been India.

#2

"China is going on the top with Golds right now...Its amazing coz just like Indians they're not the physically strongest race, "

That's bullshit. You can argue that developing countries like India and China are not physically 'healthy' because of mal-nourishment. And that this narrows down the pool of possible performers. Or that they are not the tallest or the heaviest in body. China doesn't compete in heavy weight boxing, or in 100 metre sprinting. But in events like boxing and weight-lifting where physical attributes like body weight give an undue advantage you have categories for all weight ranges, starting from 40 kg for men and 30 or 35 kg for women.

You don't need sheer physical 'strength' in most events. In long distance running, people from tropical highlands like Kenya have an advantage due to their higher lung capacity, etc. But race as such is really so old an argument. Scientists tell you that there are as much differences in genetic material within the so-called races that there are between the populations of any two races.

"but still winning the Olympics because they have a lot of people...."

I am not so sure about "a lot of people." I don't have the figures, but I am sure a vast majority of Chinese (90% perhpas) are so under privileged or just disinterested in sports that they don't have the opportunity to showcase the talents of their children. (As opposed to developed nations in the West and Japan where perhpas about 90% have the edge.) This suggests that more economics growth and distribution of wealth can only increase the Chinese power in world sports. What you see in the recent years is just the beginning.)

".. and the government spends on them, gets the best coaches, provides the best facilites...it could as easily have been India."

China is a communists country and the govt. has a major role and they are doing good when it comes to sport. But capitalist countries in the West do just as better. Michael Phelps from Us, who is on the verge of winning 8 golds, has private sponsors for Olympics, not governmental grants on which he has to depend for. Abhinav Bindra had government support, but he also had support from his family wealth. He had the bests coaches and training available, and of course the talent, that made his medal possible. I don't think any Western or Chinese shooter would have had so much support as Bindra. It's not a high profile event that would enable a normal western sportsman to make his living. It seems Bindra's father had a present ready for his returning son; a 50 million dollar home.

Apart from economic and governance differences between India and china, I think there are many cultural differences which make India a long way to go before it can catch up with China. I wonder if India can even win another individual Olympic gold for another 10 years, in sports other than shooting and boxing (or weightlifting.) Most of India's top sportsmen come from either very rich families who can afford to allow their child have a career in sports, or from BC, SC or ST who cannot afford quality education and turn government sponsored sports more for economic reasons and perks than as a genuine interest. Therefore the pool of possible world talent that is tapped in India is very very less compared to China and certainly incomparable with the west.

Great post Gayatri. We should be proud of India and the lifestyle you describe might just lure some NRIs back! Gen-next is definitely more self-confident, and yes I would want to stay home for some Biriyani.

For those who believe India might not win a Gold medal in 10 years by some obscure philosophy - "I am filled with envy, cut me.. I don't bleed, you will see smoke" sounds just about right.

Mera bharat Mahan!

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