writing

The God of Reading, Writing & Other Things by Tara Kaushal

Ruminating on what my twenty-year relationship with The God of Small Things has taught me.

Photograph by Sahil Mane

Photograph by Sahil Mane

Ah, The God of Small Things. This iconic book and I, well, we have history.

It was 1997, and I was The Most Unpopular Girl in the country’s best girls’ boarding school. Arundhati Roy’s stepdaughter was a couple of years my senior and in my house. She was one of the few people who was kind to me, and I liked her then as much as I do now.

One afternoon, I walked into the dorm to find this girl and her best friend watching TV, outside the prescribed time. I guess they’d been given special permission to watch the news, because she turned to me and said, “My mom just won the Booker!”

“That’s great!” I replied, smiling, feeling many layers of awkward. The main reason being: I did not know what the Booker even was!

Over the next few days I found out, of course, what a big deal it was. I was now dying to read the book and, a few years later, at 17, when I was finally allowed to read this very adult novel, I finally did. Or, more accurately, I tried to. I didn’t understand it, laboured through each page, thought it was slow and boring, and didn’t finish it. Simply put, I hated it.

It was an impression I retained throughout my bachelor’s and master’s in English, getting into frequent battles with an array of professors about why it was overrated and undeserving of the accolades. Not only was it not great, it was positively awful, I insisted. I refused to revisit it, and nothing could change my mind.

Then, at 27, I read it again. I can’t remember why I chose to give it another shot. Was it by chance—a book I happened to encounter in a moment of boredom? Or was it by choice—to see if I thought differently about it? Whatever the reason might have been, I absolutely loved it. The words, the structure, the story—everything. Since then, my admiration for Roy has only increased manifold, as she has put her magic pen to political ethics with which I am completely aligned.

But, beyond the book, this fact—that my opinions had changed, diametrically and dramatically, in 10 years—held life-altering lessons for me, and are ones that I retain to this day. I learnt that you change. That you evolve. That you see things from the prism of your experiences and through your own palette. That first impressions need not be lasting. That you shouldn’t be too quick to judge. And that you should never say never.

As a reader, I have grown to love a book I hated, and also hate books I once loved. [I can no longer tolerate the neoliberal pop philosopher Ayn Rand and her anthems for angsty teens or the racist Enid Blyton; and I wouldn’t be caught dead with a Sidney Sheldon, Bridget Jones’ Diary or a Mills & Boon (ewww, basic).] If this is the case, what will I feel about my own writing over time? What would I feel about my own thoughts and actions? One must examine, re-examine, and do that again and again. Think about who you think you are, what you think you believe, what you think you want to be.

Outgrowing my own writing is a very real point of anxiety on the recent release of my first book. So, although I have wanted to be a writer for as long as I can remember (the earliest my mother remembers me saying it was when I was six!), I am glad I wrote my first book in my mid-thirties. It’s for the same reasons that I recommend marrying later in life—you know yourself, your voice, your ideologies better. Besides, if book writing (and long-distance running) is as Haruki Murakami says it is—a combination of talent, focus and endurance, where the latter two can be “acquired and sharpened through training” and can even stand in for a lack of talent—then a book at 37 has given me time to practice and train. I hope many readers feel about my book as early reviewers have. My fingers (toes and everything) are crossed.

A few days ago, when we lost the Internet (for 36 whole hours!) and I had to cancel all my meetings, I chose to reread The God of Small Things, a decade since I last read it, two decades since I first tried to. Some things, beliefs, goals, relationships, etc., withstand scrutiny and re-examination, others don’t. I raced through the book in a few hours and I loved it more than ever before.


 An edited version of this article appeared on Keeping Zen on 11.08.20.

Stream of Unconsciousness by Tara Kaushal

April 2007: Capturing the chaos and craziness of this moment in time with some fun stream-of-consciousness writing.

Friday.

Tired tired tired tired. Yawning in Yari road. Must leave for work. Will sleep in auto. Auto man will be tempted by mountainous tits. Will be driven to brothel and sold into sex trade. Will live for rest-of-life horrifying about unwashed chaddis left behind due to much postponement and lack-of-time, while having to practice chore-bazaar wala erotica-wale positions.

Ohh… I want Nirula’s Hot Chocolate Fudge now. Now. Well, technically cannot have saliva-inducing kill-with-calories Hot Chocolate Fudge now as am sitting on the pot. But will be in more socially acceptable and receptive position by the time it arrives from Delhi.

Must not fall asleep on pot. Must not fall asleep on pot. Will cause much embarrassment. Office day ahead. Sleep. College project on social impact of porn. Boyfriend. Ummm… boyfriend and pornography. Umm… sex. You know you can sleep when you’re underneath during missionary na? Oh temptation.

Man’s World article submission. College porn project. Regular pays-the-bills part-time job. Many deadlines loom. Much gloom blooms. Sleepless. Many days of much work.

Workday begun. Good morning sun. Eyes unprotected in spite of dark circles like sunglasses. Have glued contacts into protesting eyes. Watchman looked at me as though I’m Frankenstein’s monster. Have realised that my unconditional-love-giving strays are also afraid. Am in auto. Am being stared at as few red and bleary-eyed women work on laptops while in poor-man’s transport. Fear of autowala-selling-big-tits-along-with-me returns. I must stay awake. I must stay awake. Awake. Cake. Bake. Brake. Power Brakes says backside of truck ahead. Need to brake. Need a break. More than I can take. Multiple money-related activities. Literature MA Missing in Action from my Master of Arts. 

Workday is over. Deadline doom. Friday fun? No, none. MA assignment till 2 tonight. At least. With snatches of article writing. Both due Monday. Friday = Fry Day.

Saturday.

What? What? Oh-my-God! Saturday morning! Oh no! Saturday noon! Was meant to be a brief nap at 7 PM. Many alarms were set. Many friends were put on ‘wake-me-up’ duty. Horrible let-downing friends. Betrayals and true colours and all. Oh. Alarm rang. And rang. Many million missed calls. Multiple messages. Oh. Puddle of exhaustion-induced drool on my pillow. Must write MA project. 2500 words at least. Cannot fool brilliant lecturers by spinning a web of confusing words. Ooh. What can I do? ‘Pornography and Sex Studies and Their Impact on Women and the Concept of Female Identity’. Interesting topic. So interesting that my professors will actually read it. Shit.

Must avoid philosophical conversations (arguments/fights) with Catholic mother about the redundancy of religion, and the reasons for my interest in erotica and porn. Must not show her what I’ve written on this article so far (the words ‘mountainous tits’ didn’t go down too well) along with what I’ve written on my porn project so far. Must then learn to activate Super Woman-type protective shield to avoid those killer looks. Must certainly avoid these conversations-that-invariably-turn-into-fights when am sleep deprived, cranky and menopausal. No. Certainly meant PMSing, not menopausal, though don’t know whether there’s a difference. Okay. Back to work.

Am being badgered by mad friends to go out. MAD = Me Alcohol Dependent. Am aware that my popularity stems from being a teetotaller therefore a sober driver. Nonetheless, cannot go. Must stay and work. And I will sleep at the wheel anyway, so, sober or not, I can’t be driver tonight.

Am just wondering… when I die of exhaustion, will someone please put a disclaimer on my body saying, ‘Tara* didn’t really have dark circles that reached her chin.’ Please, please. Anyway, I’m going to bed now.

Sunday.

Surveying progress. Shit. Am done with only 1400 words. Have to spin more yarns to reach submittable 2500 word limit. Love my Mans’ World editor but hate that when he says ‘deadline’, he means he’ll kill me if I don’t deliver. Wonder whether this bit will be edited out. Back to porn project.

Surveying room. More junk food wrappers than you see outside McDonalds. Chips and chocolate and Coke and stuff. Oh weight problems. Also breath that smells like a dead cow. These things are not good for me. Coke-shoke and all. Will just make me fat and dissolve my teeth. Toothless tomorrow. Toothless before my 25th birthday. With dark circles. And overweight. Horribly, diabolically intelligent, but that’s before evil enzymes released from junk food will jelly-fy brain. Oh might as well not study for Masters and stuff as will not have brain to do anything with education. So can technically abandon this college project right now. Oh evil thought. Back to work.

Why? Why? Why is my life like this? Why must I have regular part-time job and freelance jobs and padhai to do? Why can’t all the unders and overs in my life be exchanged. Then I’ll be under-worked and over-paid and under-weight. Must rue over this great philosophical revelation with my eyes closed. Ummm….

I’m going to be repetitive here and say oh my God! Overslept yet again! Oh my God. Ever notice how nap is a short word, sleep is a longer word and oversleep is the longest out of the three. Okay, so I hit the longest one. Now what? Now what? Must focus on the fact that people say I work well under stress. Shanti, shanti, calm down. Okay Tara*, you have about 12 hours left to leave for work—which means 12 hours to sleep, write this article and finish porn project, which I have to print out at work, as it is due straight after. Aaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrgggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhh. Dead faint.

Monday.

Okay, it’s four am. 2400+ words done. Include name-shame and all of that and that 2500. Oh thank God. And other thing to do—finish this article. That’s done too. Now for the final thing on my check-off list—sleep. Goodnight.


An edited version of this article appeared in Man's World in April 2007.