- Walked across the brooklyn bridge, waited for pizza at Grimaldi's, had icecream from brooklyn ice factory in the meantime, admired the manhattan skyline from the other side and walked back in perfect weather. Better description here and here.
- Had burgers at Shake shack in Madison square park (I love these!) and ambled over to listen to a brazilian jazz performance. Great weather, good company and excellent background music. Wrote about it here.
- Spent girl time - this is a big deal for me as it has been really really long since I have had a close girl friend living in the same city. But one of my closest friends moved to NYC last year and this summer I went shopping with her, we met up for brunch and went for Mama Mia, very girly day and I had a fantastic time! There is something very freeing about talking to a person who already knows you so well that nothing is out of bounds.
- Dark Knight - I know it is just a movie and I saw countless others over the summer but I have to document this one. I absolutely loved it and it is something since I usually don't like superhero or 'violent' movies but as I try to explain to everyone - it hardly falls into any of those categories. The psychological aspect on which the movie works is far above most of the movies I have seen (admittedly haven't seen Silence of the Lambs - too scared) and the dialogues are phenomenal. " Either you die a hero....or u live long enough to see yourself turn into a Villan... " - oh totally cool!
- Went for Pilobolus - S' university gave us free tickets for a show and to be honest we had no idea what it was. Somehow none of us got time to read much about it either so we went a little anxious after our Burlesque experience. The first act was weird - less dance and more facial expressions by which they were trying to convey something which I totally didn't get and told S that we will leave after act 2 if it doesn't get better. But boy, did it get better. The gravity defying dance that the link talks about started and we were pretty much spell bound for rest of the show. How do they do it!
- Attended a wedding in Breckenridge, which is a ski resort in Denver. It was beautiful - the wedding was outside and the backdrop was snow covered peaks. Met up with with old school friends, went for long drives in the mountains, did a mini trek. Managed to pack in quite a bit in the 3-day memorial day weekend! The town itself was beautiful and very European with cobbled streets (I love these!) and small cafes. Our room was like a ski lodge with a fireplace and heavy wood furniture. We had crepes for breakfast in one of the cafes down the road from our hotel. One evening as we set out to explore town, we discovered these tiny stands selling waffles and crepes with a small fire lit around which you could gather and eat those choc dripping delicacies. It was perfect!
- Tried new restaurants - ilili, Himalayan café, Angon, Indian Bread co., Popover café, Hudson hotel bar, ayurveda café, Barrio Chino, Grimaldis, Supper. Ideally, I should have posted the reviews of all these places here but have been too lazy. If I had to recommend one, it'll probably be Ilili - we went here for restaurant week and rarely have I found such an excellent combination of food, ambience and service. The place is quite big by manahattan standards so you are not jostling for room with your next door neighbour. I still remember the fresh from the oven pita. While it is too expensive for me to go here outside of restaurant week - I would definitely recommend you to make reservations early for the winter restaurant week. Oh - for anyone missing the Delhi University momos - Himalyan café is the place for you.
- La Bayadere Ballet performance - One of my friends booked the tickets for this perfromance at the Lincoln center and I just went along. I am glad I did. La Bayadere which means Temple Dancer is a Russian ballet based on an Indian story. It seemed like a hindi movie with colourful costumes, melodrama n all just that everyone was doing ballet - it was beautiful!
- Went to Bahamas - while this in no way is a ranked list, Bahamas still comes relatively low in the list as we realized that we are done with beach-y vacations. There were 2 lessons learnt from this trip - one, there is only so much lying on the beach doing nothing I can take. I started craving activity after day 2 and there weren't many walking spots in this country and two, I don't have the palate to appreciate fresh seafood if it is served without much seasoning. We found a local joint famous for Bahamian dishes and as fresh as it can get seafood. My bong husband gobbled up the steamed fish they served while I craved for more salt, more pepper, possibly even chili powder and garam masala on mine! :)
- Walked - I know I am ashamed that I am scrambling to put down 10 things but there are so many small things which I had fun doing which I am not sure count for one whole point in this list. Like the time we went to a friends house for dinner on the upper east time and had a great time. Anyway, I digress - so I love walking and given how lazy S is I usually have to drag him even to walk 2 blocks. However, this summer we walked all over the city - maybe because it didn't get oppressively hot and the intermittent rains kept the weather just perfect. We had plenty of after dinner walks, after brunch walks, evening walks and no purpose walks! NYC is one of the best places for people watching and the city comes to life in the summer. Every bit of sidewalk gets converted to 'outdoor seating' for restaurants and you can get to know what is the in-thing this summer by simple people watching around the park. Of course - this summer it was dresses (just when I managed to complete my skirt collection!) and gladiator sandals.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
10 Things I did this summer
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Bachelor Night out
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Friendships
The first memory of making friends I have is in our colony, simply because they were my age group and lived in the same building so we spent evenings playing all kind of silly games, running all over the colony, learning cycling together, climbing one tree and fighting for which branch we will lie on, trying to eat shahtoot (don't know the english for this!) fallen off a huge tree. During summer vacations we would spent the whole day together trying to build brick bridges on puddles of water accumulated from rain, playing ghar-ghar, climbing atop car garages, choreographing various hindi movie songs (don't know why!), enacting out plays and fairy tales (I remember acting out Rapunzel quite clearly). As we grew, we studied for boards together, discussed our first crush, first kiss..all the juicy details! These are the friends I still am most comfortable with - even if we meet after long, there are no awkward silences and we can start off where we left. Recently during one of the said friends visit, I was surprised how quickly we were discussing intimate details of our lives...it is just so easy to open my heart with them.
My later school years and college friends seem kind of fleeting now - we were close then and had some great times together, however, I haven't been able to keep in touch with them. I also felt since we were all preparing for CAT, somehow a sense of competition kind of took away the closeness we shared. I also realized that if I feel betrayed by a friend, I don't forgive easily, something which I am still working on. In college, I found out that a person who I considered very close had taken offence at something I had said and instead of confronting me about it, she sort of bitched about it to someone else. I have never been really able to pick up threads from tha friendship again, which I really regret.
Business school friends hold a special place in my heart as one of the reason I survived staying away from home, dealing with the growing distance I felt with my family was them. We stayed up nights working together or just chatting, shared in the stress and misery and the exhilaration of each others achievements. I met people completely different from me and still got along. I had bitter fights with one of my friends such that he wouldn't talk to me for days, both of us completely did not and still do not get each other, however, still deeply cared for each other. This friend would drop me home in the middle of the night when we were later working in London just so I am safe even if he had to crash at a friends house and sleep on the floor. Another friend flew in to Delhi from Bombay just for my wedding even though we almost hadn't been in touch for a year. Another guy who I barely knew in b-school went on to become one of the closest friends in London. He would come over whenever I was feeling lonely and blue telling me he was only there because I cook well! He is a father now to a handsome young boy.
Which gets me to New York and how it has been difficult to make close friends. I have tons of friends here and hang out every weekend with a different set of people. However, there is none I would call if I am sad - maybe because S fullfills my emotional needs or maybe because it is difficult to develop those kinds of bonds once you are out of school. I have also realized I look for people who are fun, sport to do anything, can hold an intellectual conversation and feel there are very few people who fit that - maybe says a lot about the company I keep! I feel I now have less tolerance for people who are not courteous or don't have basic manners - am done putting up with rudeness or childish politics.
Luckily, communication across continents is easier now and I have friends sprinkled around the world from various stages of my life who are just a phone call away and talking to them always leaves me with a warm, fuzzy feeling even if it after six months or a year.
Monday, May 19, 2008
Running in the rain
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
42 Mile Bike Tour - we did it!!
The surprising part was that though we did it with minimal training, my legs didn't hurt as much the next day....maybe am in not such a bad shape after all...
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Uncertainty and Confusion
Btw I am still thinking about the glass ceiling issue and one thing that came to me was just because we don't see something in our immediate surrounding doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I think thats where most of my (guy) friends are coming from when they declare glass ceiling doesn't exist.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
The glass ceiling - thinking clearly
Issue 1: The first time I felt I was being treated differently because I was a girl was in management school where there was almost a pre-conceived notion that girls there were mainly to fill the "quota" rather than their ability. Some guys were told by seniors not to take girls in their group as "girls don't work". These subtle notions used to (and still do) irritate the hell out of me. It is also sad that such judgements were made by educated adults about to enter and be leaders in corporate India.
This issue is interesting as I also met some great, intelligent people at the b-school who went on to become close friends and I can never imagine them being so small-minded or sexist. Maybe these were thoughts of only a handful and I generalized then as I was so mad when I heard these comments for the first time.
Issue 2: When I was interviewing with my current boss, he knew that I was going to get married and that was one of the reasons I wanted to move to New York. I heard from one of my colleagues later that he thought that I may slack off after I get married or may want to have kids and then may not work etc etc.
Obviously when I first heard it, it again surprised me that people think like this in the 21st century (yeah, I do live in my own ideal world). But then I guess first, he gave me the job and second, he has been a great boss and I have never felt any glass ceiling (maybe I am too junior to feel this anyway).
Issue 3: maternity leave - my rationalist friends put forward the argument that women should not expect the usual compensation and promotion when they are absent from work for 3 months in a particular year for maternity leave as someone else is doing their work and therefore, from an employers perspective it is totally justified to divide the proceeds according to the work done so to say.
I have issue with this thinking on many levels. I believe thinking about this issue in pure economic terms is simplifying the issue a lot and here is why -
- Talent retention: Assuming the women has been a good worker before she decided to have a baby, it is in company's interest to retain her. Measuring her purely on the basis of the contribution she made in that particular year when she had to take maternity leave and somehow reflecting this in either lower pay or delay in her promotion is discouraging her. This also assumes that she will not be contributing enough in the following year when she is back and reflects a very short term view from the employers perspective. This is ultimately not sustainable as some other firm will recognize that talent in this competitive world we live in today. I don't think those 3 months or that particular year should be the basis for judging her competence or contribution at all - remember in economics, value is always sum of future cash flows.
- I feel firms/companies/employers don't exist in an island by themselves. They are a part of the society and as a result they have some social responsibility. If somehow nature has decided it is a women who is supposed to procreate and is responsible for adding additional members to the society, then it is the company's social responsibility to help this. By creating disincentives, you are creating too much disparity between women who choose to have a baby and those who don't and this is not sustainable from a society's perspective. My friends argued that women can choose not to have a baby if they are ambitious. My point is that this shouldn't be a choice. If a man takes a months leave to look after a sick wife, could you argue that he shouldn't have married because some or the other kind of responsibility always comes with marriage??
- This is really a continuation of the previous point, but why else do employers organize family picnics, or sponsor a family holiday etc. Or even at a basic level, provide health care, in some cases housing. Because they realize that happy employees are necessary for the success of the company and firms cannot run cut and dry like machines purely on economic principles. Family responsibility is a very real part of life and though child rearing is fully the responsibility of the parents, the employers have some contribution too. Why do you have emergency daycare at work otherwise??
Issue 4: Glass ceiling - now this was interesting as most of my guy friends refused to acknowledge it exists!
I discussed this with my mother and since she is a senior manager in Railways, she has seen workplace for women change over the last 20 years. Her first response was "how do they know?"! Get me one working women to say it doesn't exists. However, this is again not a black and white issue -
- It doesn't exist everywhere obviously and it is changing. My mother told me women weren't considered for DRM (Divisional Railway Manager) earlier and that has changed completely now. It may not exist in Pepsi who has a woman CEO but it may exist elsewhere.
- I think we all talk from our immediate perspectives - at my level in my firm I feel it is absolute meritocracy and I have never felt I was being denied anything because of my gender. However, I have been to meetings where senior women complain about how my firm has the least % of women managing directors on wall street.
- The selection bias may not exist in research where I work but it may exist in trading as there are barely any women there.
- I think in most of these discussions, my point was not that glass ceiling exists everywhere but I think it is important for us to acknowledge that is does exist even if we haven't seen it in our immediate surroundings . We can hope it is now shrinking and be aware of any sub-conscious biases/stereotypes we may have. A classic example of this sub-conscious bias is when sales people call research and a women answers the phone, they assume it is an assistant!!!