Finally on stage

The little one, had figured out that doing any extracurricular activity like music, dance etc. is a lot of hard work and the rewards for going on stage are not proportional to the work. She could throw a tantrum for not being tall enough to get on the Harry Potter ride and get a game console. Compare that to working for a whole year and getting on some annual day program for which you get a new pencil or eraser.. it was no contest!

She pretty much said "No" without a second thought to any classes that invovled the word "practice". 

Recently though, her close friends were all roped in to do a school performance for the International festival. A fun looking Dandiya dance.. so we convinced her to go. In spite of missing many sessions with her flu, she made up for it by doing a nice job of dancing on stage. More than that, we now know the girl has moves. We did not know she could shake her hips like that or have such expressions.. 

Here is a picture taken by her teacher. We are truly blessed to live in a place where an International festival is organized where kids show culture and dancing from across the globe to their classmates. There were Kung fu demos by little kids that were simply amazing, Gangnam style dancing, Japanese dancing, Chinese dance, Persian songs, Bengali poetry.. it was refreshing to see this!

Now that she has been on stage, we told her "You are going to dance class" and before we finished the sentence the answer was "NO!".

USB stands for..

One of the new pre bedtime activities with the kids is "Playing" Snapcircuit!

When we were little, our favorite playing was a "mechano-set", which was a bunch of steel parts with screws, nuts and bolts and we could make mechanical models of automobiles, airplanes etc.

Somehow we never got introduced to the electronics plug and play games. Now that I get to relive my childhood with the girls, this is really fun for me as well as for them.

Trying to teach them I = V/R and forward vs. reverse bias on an LED is fun. They like to do more of the mechanical

follow the book

make the circuit look like the picture

turn on slide switch and see what happens

method while I insisted on making them read the instructions first, then build the circuit and read the explanations for what they just did. After figuring out that they were in a rush to finish "making" all 300 circuits, put the brakes on.

Now the bedtime quiz is not what we call "Tamil Mirugam and Ragam" (the bedtime quiz was a hodgepodge of questions that were either about Tamil-English and vice versa translations, animal trivia or Carnatic Music Raga identification) anymore. Every alternate day is Snapquiz!

Questions are like :

What is S1 and what does it do?

What is an IC?

What is the unit of measuring resistance?

If you increase the resistance in this circuit from 100 Ohms to 1000 Ohms, what happens?

etc.

Both the kids are now very receptive to the Snapquiz and are answering the usual questions very fast. Now the question bank is increasing slowly. 

Recently I asked them "What does USB stand for?" after the little one mentioned that "all power comes from USB's!". Guess she is used to charging all the devices she uses using an USB cable and she thinks the B in USB stands for some battery!

Jr.s' answer? "Use it. Succeed with it. Bring it everywhere!" . While that was the most creative BS way of saying "I don't know!" she did crack me up and got a lot of hugs and kisses for making us laugh.

Then when they heard the correct answer was "Universal Serial Bus" the little one goes "What does USB have to with Cheerios?"..

We have ways to go and there will be many more "snapquizzies" in the days to come to figure out the relationship between Cheerios and USB.

A star spangled tricolor..

This year marks a half way point in my life. I have spent exactly the same number of years in India as in the United States. Considering this blog has been going for years now, you know my views on India and the USA evolve over time, partly because of changes in the two countries and partly because of a change in my own perspective as I grow up and grow older. 

In spite of all the changes accompanies with a lot of continued soul searching, there are some basic truths about what my perception of right and wrong are which have not changed over time. Think of it as the BIOS program that is written into my Hard Drive. Could be running Windows for a few years and switching to Mac OS for a few years but my dislike of Powerpoint may not have changed.. again, may not be the best analogy and I do like Powerpoint, not that there is anything wrong with it!

It does feel every now and then, that India and the USA are going through some kind of role reversal between the late eighties and now, especially with respect to big social norms.

Right now the "guys" (guessing this is a majority guy thing) in Kansas are coming up with a severe restriction on abortions. The odds against a woman from a poor community are now stacked up even higher. If she gets raped or is forced into a pregnancy by her husband, she cannot do anything about it. The state is not going to support her well to raise that kid either or improve her day to day life in anyway. Looks like it is a question of time before the Christian version of Shariah laws get passed as bills in some mid western states.

There is no middle ground. Most of these states have middle aged white males running the show (sorry for the racial profiling here, but it happens to be a theme) who seem to either be really ignorant (anti science, blind faith folks who believe the earth was created 7000 years ago!) or evil (they know what they are doing.. keep the people stupid so they can continue to get votes.. just like the ROmans had the folks high on wine with cheap tickets to watch the gladiators while the State of the State was degrading) with some powerful backers and the overall population doesn't get it.

On the other extreme we also have gun control laws that are going through which everyone agrees is not going to solve anything. The one thing that everyone agrees is a check to see who gets the guns and a restriction to take away guns from folks who have mental health issues. In all the debates I have seen and participated in, be it conversations in person or on the new debating platform called Facebook, this is the only thing folks agree on. Not restricting the number of bullets, not putting armed gunmen in schools etc.

Background checks and periodic registration checks to make sure your gun is still with you! However, that seems to not get traction across the board. It makes sense to hire more people (especially gun knowledgeble Veterans) and put them to work to do background checks and cross checks against medical conditions. Get all guns registered just like we treat cars.There seems to be an extreme position taken by pro and anti gun supporters with no middle ground!

Women have a raw deal in India. Even the few women in power seem to start taking an anti-woman stance the minute they get to power. Indian women never band together as a group. Have seen this all through my life. The older women seem to have an attitude that says "I suffered all through my life. Why make it better for the next generation!". It is heartening to see some of that change in recent times where women are challenging a Male dominated system. 

Then again, a select subset of women seem to have it good. Thanks to female infanticide in the mid eighties in India when Ultrasounds came to India, there is a shortage of girls in a certain age group in certain communities and the guys outnumber girls 3-1 or 4-1. The girls in these communities get to do some kind of "natural selection" and are now demanding dowries before selecting a boy. So it gets interesting as this seems to be a demand and supply thing. However in other communities which are relatively poor, the same thing has led to frustrated male youth who cannot find a partner and resort to violence against women.

Then there is gay marriage. The hate and oppression against this segment of society in the US is mind boggling, now that it is out in the open. However, their fate seems to be a lot better here than in other countries. If gay folks in USA are living in a bedroom closet, in India they are in a closet that is located in an underground bunker. I do not forsee gay people in India having any rights or openly fight for their rights in my lifetime. Heterosexual widows are treated like outcasts to this day, so chances of gay rights? Slim to none.

Right now there is a belief system clash that is happening in both countries to the point where the average citizen has to take a one way or another stand on some of these issues.

The "American way of life" or the "American Dream", terms that meant something to me twenty years ago seem to have taken on muddled connotations. There seem to be two American ways of life and the dream seems to be taking on a bipolar character in itself.

All said and done, the only thing we can hope for is that there is constructive debate across the globe and people can resolve things with debates instead of extreme measures.

There is a lot of hate out there that needs to be changed to love.

Wish when our kids grow up to be our age, the world will be a better place, but my hopes of that keep dwindling, a little bit each day.