Friday, May 30, 2008

The untold story of Muthu..

Muthu was a small boy of 11, in the village town of Vettiyoor. You could see him wearing his pair of woefully oversized brown shorts and what he liked to believe was a baniyan, either sitting on the branches of the big jackfruit tree in the village or in the rich expanse of the glorious paddy fields. Muthu was the darling of the womenfolk, never thinking twice about running errands for them, whatever time of day, be it fetching their daughters from school or filling up the pots with the water from the fields.
The only time he got to himself, he played his favorite game of Catch-Catch. He liked playing with himself, in some sense loved the feeling of competing with himself, having mastered Catch-Catch beyond perfection!
The innocence in his little game of 'throw-the-stone-in-the-air-and-catch-it-till-the-world-gets-bored' was infectious and delightful. The game was in many ways a good reflection of his life. Easy, uncomplicated, and monotonous.

this was written on a lonely friday evening in office, even as yours truly was waiting for the wife to call.
Having just gotten that call, I shall duly leave, leaving Muthu at your mercy to blossom as you please! :)

10 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

whats up with the "baniyan" obsession! :D

8:56 PM  
Blogger Girish said...

I noted that too!
But being such (h)armless things, i decided to give them the benefit of doubt ;)

4:49 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

:D good one!!!!

2:47 AM  
Blogger Vijaya said...

Did muthu ever like bowling under-arms to a boy with kai-vecha baniyan :P ?

5:14 AM  
Blogger Aishwarya Rao said...

You must write. Give up whatever you are doing. Go to Kerala and write a book for me G!

8:22 PM  
Blogger Navneeth Sundar said...

Muthu bowls under-arms.
Muthu does a "G Chappel".
"G wears his Chappal" and goes out of his office to answer the "wife calling".
Muthu goes to the big jackfruit tree to answer "nature calling".
Muthu sings a song in the language of "GouNdamaNi".
G "counts the money" and gets into the "auto with the wife".
Muthu then dozes off and dreams about "Bhutto with no life".
Muthu does a "terrorist".
G then "turns a wrist" and looks at the time to see "how late he is".
Muthu is woken up by a cows's moo of distress, sees it run over by a car and realizes "cow's fate it is".
Muthu is now "enlightened".
G terrified "and frightened" rushes to "unlock his house".
Muthu now decides to "undock his blouse" but realizes he does not wear a blouse but a baniyan.
Muthu now realizes the "joy of a baniyan".
Muthu was a small "boy of eleven".

And so goes the recursion...

12:50 PM  
Blogger Navneeth Sundar said...

I now leave G at your mercy to blossom as you please! :)

1:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You must write. Give up whatever you are doing. Go to Kerala and write a book for me G!

2:27 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oru 'Sultans of Kabul' feel iruke !

11:14 PM  
Blogger Arun Sundar said...

lol at Navneeth!

11:06 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home