2022 Week 41 Update

Singapore has been seeing an upsurge in COVID cases, with the reinfection rate climbing due to the XBB Omicron subvariant. Since the end of September, the number of new locally transmitted cases has hovered around 3,000 to 4,000 a day. But on October 11, new local infections spiked to 11,399, the highest in almost three months, sparking concern. The weekly infection ratio also increased to 1.74 as of Oct 10. There is a fear of a new wave here and this is especially worrying because mask mandates are off except for in medical settings and in the public transport system.

Today’s quote is from someone famous throughout the planet – Oprah Winfrey. She reminds us that the more we praise and celebrate our life, the more there is in life to celebrate. This is a good example of being positive and seeing a glass as half full as opposed to it being half empty. When we start to focus on the good things in our life and start and end each day with gratitude, we will be grateful and happy. Conversely, when we start and end each day with negative thoughts and negativity, we become resentful, angry and sad at life which in turn becomes a neverending loop of negative energy in our lives.

And that’s all from me this week. Please do not become complacent and remain safe wherever you are.

2022 Week 40 Update

Now that Navaratri has ended, it’s time to start thinking about one of India’s biggest festivals – the festival of lights aka Diwali or Deepavali. I usually tend to go big for this festival with the making of sweets and savouries and so I now need to put on my thinking hat and work out what my menu for this year’s Diwali will be.

Today’s quote does not have a known author but is beautiful in its simplicity. What we are waiting and hoping for will come at unexpected moments. This means that we should not wait for something, when the time is right, the universe knows it and sends what we are waiting for at just the right time.

BB is enjoying his project work and GG is all set for school which will resume very soon. She is also busy working on her university applications and her personal and purpose statements. I hope she gets admission to the university and course of her choice.

But amid all the festivities, according to some of the world’s top business leaders and economic minds, a recession is forthcoming. Central banks around the world have aggressively hiked interest rates in recent months trying to slow down sky-high inflation. While these policies are intended to cool down the economy, they also elevate the risk of a recession. On Tuesday, the United Nations warned of an impending global slowdown that may likely be worse than the financial crisis in 2008 and the COVID-19 shock in 2020. The world’s largest economies, including Europe, China and the United States, were now slowing down, which was dampening demand for exports from emerging and developing countries, already hit hard by high food and energy prices.

So let’s all hunker down and prepare for the world’s recession that is imminent soon and stay safe and happy. See you next week!

2022 Week 39 Update

Success is the sum of small efforts repeated day in and day out. This quote is from American self-help author, Robert Collier. According to Collier, success isn’t handed to anyone. It’s achieved by hard work and what one does every day to reach their goals. The efforts need not Your efforts have to be big leaps and in huge bounds, but if one takes a realistic approach and takes small but incremental steps regularly, success will automatically come.

In my walking quest, I crossed the state of Bihar and reached one of India’s largest states, Uttar Pradesh and am about 100 km north of Varanasi and about 5000 km into my journey. I have about 1700 km to reach my home in Mumbai, which I doubt I will be able to finish this year, but one can always hope.

My reading is going strong and I have read 56 books to date this year, which is about 75% of my target for the year. I read 8 books this month and am on track to meet my reading goals for the year.

There is a shortage of wheat flour in Singapore due to the ban on exports of flour to insulate the Indian market from the global wheat crisis. India is the world’s second-largest producer of wheat.  The heatwave during the summer months parched crops and affected wheat supply domestically which has led to this crisis. And those who rely on wheat-based products like rotis and chapatis as their main carb intake are finding it very hard and rush to buy wheat flour when they hear any store has stocks of wheat flour. Hopefully, this crisis ends soon and we are back to eating the rotis and chapatis as usual.

And this is all for this week. Take care folks!

2022 Week 38 Update

According to entrepreneur, author, and business coach, Brad Sugars, words can inspire, thoughts can provoke, but only action truly brings us closer to our dreams. What this means is that while we can read inspirational quotes and messages and even think of doing good, unless we get up and take action, all the thoughts and words in the world are useless.

BB is enjoying his project work and we hope he can do his best this semester. GG is enjoying her break and is also busy with her CCA activities. She is also busy working on her university applications and I hope that she gets admission to the course of her choice at the university she wants to go to.

The festival of Navaratri starts tomorrow and for the next 10 days, we will spend time in prayer and contemplation of the female power. May the feminine energy bring you the blessings, luck and joy you deserve.

Memories: Grandmother Tales 4 – The Travel Edition

I guess I get my love for travel from my paternal grandmother, my ammama. She used to take off as the urge struck her and has travelled the length and breadth of the country. There are three such stories which I remember even today, two in which I star in and one which I remember.

When my sister was born, I was about less than a year and a half and because my mother could not handle a newborn and a toddler, my grandparents took off to New Delhi with me. Her daughter lived there with her husband, who worked in the Indian Air Force and they must have lived in airforce quarters. This would a when India’s then Prime Minister, Mrs Indira Gandhi imposed a state of emergency in the country. I was barely eighteen months at that time, so don’t have many memories of that period, but I remember the name Indira Gandhi used to be used to evoke fear, especially among children. So when I refused to do something, say eat my food, or drink my milk, I would be threatened by Mrs Gandhi. It’s a wonder that I didn’t develop any irrational fear of the government and especially Mrs Gandhi. But kudos to my grandmother, who at that age, (she must have been in her late forties or early fifties) took a toddler with her and looked after her for a few months. We returned to Bombay about three months or so later and by this time, my mum and sister were back home from my maternal grandmother’s house where she had gone for her delivery.

The next story is also from my childhood. I must have been around 7 or 8 and we were travelling by train to our ancestral village in the Tirunelveli district in the Tamil heartland. We were travelling with my father’s cousin for his wedding. My grandparents were also travelling with us but in a different compartment. After we reached Chennai, my parents, uncle and we children were supposed to take an overnight train to reach the district headquarters of Tirunelveli and my grandparents were to take the overnight train to the same destination. My sister and I threw a tantrum at the station and insisted we travel with my grandparents and not our parents. They had to give in, my grandparents giving in to us was a huge reason, and so we took the train. We were ticketless and had nothing with us, which was with our parents. I remember my grandfather talking to the ticket checker to buy tickets in the train and scrambling to find space for us to sleep in. They found space and we managed to get to Tirunelveli in one piece.

The last story does not have either my sister or me in a starring role. Around the time I was around 6, after my grandfather retired, my grandparents decided to go on an all-India pilgrimage. I don’t remember the specifics after all these years, but I do know it was led by a tour leader and was aimed at mostly senior citizens. They would take the train and maybe also travel by road and visit many of the important places of worship. The tour also included a trip to Kathmandu in Nepal to visit the Pashupatinath temple and other places of worship in that city. I do know they visited the temples of Badrinath and Kedarnath and from the north went all the way down south to Kanyakumari. I remember them making a stop in Mumbai during the trip and we went to the station to meet them. I have a memory of my uncle taking me with him to the station and then because I was so upset of meeting my ammama and then getting separated from her, he took me out and we came home quite late, after eating ice creams and chocolates. I remember this was during our summer holidays and because we reached home so late, I overslept the next day and was still asleep when my friends came to call me to play in the morning. From Kathmandu, my grandparents got me and my sister a beautiful chain with a butterfly pendant which I treasured for many years.

I hope you enjoyed this edition of my grandmother’s tales. If you want to read more about my memories of my ammama, here’s part 1, part 2, part 3 and one about my maternal grandmother.