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Hunting for a living

Hunting for a living hasn't changed much over the millennia. Stalking, sniffing the air, staying alert to danger in the vicinity, and finally moving in for the kill, paying the security deposit with a swift slash of the dominant arm.

What a spirit-sapping, emotionally rending thing house-hunting is. Especially in a city like Los Angeles, where even lifelong Angelenos regularly write about how they still haven't come to terms with this confounding conurbation. It was with the greatest reluctance that we began investigating LA neighbourhoods and found, to our surprise, that many parts of LA are so non-LA you wonder why LA is even thought of as LA. There are East Los Angeles areas that are proper neighbourhoods: people walking dogs, sitting at sidewalk cafes or simply strolling around the tree-lined streets.

But once we started visiting apartments in Pasadena, we found anything but the bejewelled palaces we expected in return for the exorbitant rents. Considering that high prices are the premium people pay to live in the California sun, it was funny that most places were dark and gloomy. There are few things that depress us more than houses in which you need the lights while the sun is up.

One apartment complex had a beautiful lobby, soft lighting, plush sofas… but once in the courtyard, it looked a movie set of the Warsaw Ghetto. Another promised us loft spaces but had apartments and balconies so close to each other, it was like walking inside a pile of kindling. And then we were shown The Loft. That's not what it was called, but I shall call it that. The Loft. It was in a brand-new building as plush as anything you'd find in Dubai. Keiko, our leasing consultant, led us to a nondescript door and walked us into a flat that looked normal for the first ten feet, after which the ceiling just flew away. It was at least 40 feet high with a window almost as tall. I've never seen 30-foot-long blinds in my life. The light and space in there was lovely; the rent made our eyes water.

So now, we're considering an apartment in an area called Arcadia which sounds to me like the title of an 8-bit video game. It seems like a lovely place, but the flat looks like something out of a 1970s television show with its old appliances and shiny wood panelling. The good thing is that it's close to the San Gabriel mountains, most of LA's nicer neighbourhoods, and the Asian adventure that's the San Gabriel Valley.

Still, it's a lot of faith to lift up and put down at one time. The one thing going for our current apartment, small though it is, is that it's bright and airy. When there was a lunar eclipse last August, I could watch the whole thing from our balcony. So on a whim, as we did our research, I decided to see what the reviews were like for our current community.

"Avoid this place by all means!!" said one. "Welcome to hell" went another. Yet another complained about "creepy people" wandering about the property at night and hearing gunshots from the neighbourhood. What power the written word has. Though we've lived here happily and peacefully for over a year, I was struck by fear. Suddenly my head was filled with thoughts of burglaries, shootings and muggings--in short, the baggage that many people new to the country come with, and are (usually) divested of. Not feeling safe in your home is a horrible thing, but at least that makes going out and hunting for another a whole lot easier.

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Archives

Anywhere between super-fit and super-fat
One of the biggest lessons I'm learning as I get older is that I'm not 17 anymore. Considering I'm double that age, this should be blindingly obvious, but the trouble is that I still feel 17, at least until I do anything out of the ordinary.

The revenge of the meek
As if it isn't bad enough that the non-shy see the quiet person at the end of the table and assume he or she is a snotty little git, shy people make that mistake all the time.

California's free (to moisturise)
The other day, I was out on my bicycle on a sweltering spring day. This happens now and then in Southern California--the other weekend it was 25°C on Friday, 38 on Saturday, and 25 again on Sunday.

The mammoth sugar reflex
When humans immerse their faces in water, their heart rates decrease. The colder the water, the more pronounced the effect, and the longer they can remain without breathing.

Darling, it's over between us
The most useful and heartbreaking advice I've read about writing is a quote attributed to writer Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch that goes: "Murder your darlings".

Blogging for life
Of all the hobbies I've had a go at, blogging is one that actually repels me, even as I fall for its sly charms.

High-def war: the end ...?
Consider just some of the formats, extant, dying or defunct, of the little silver disc: CD, VCD, HDCD, SACD, CD-R, CD-RW, CD-ROM, DVD, DVD-A, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD-ROM.

Everybody's an expert now
Okay, now I have officially been to one too many social occasions where somebody is really "into" something. It's not so much the word, but the way in which it's stressed that sets my teeth on edge.

Putting mettle to pedal
The last time I wanted a cycle, my choice was easy. Two wheels, pedals. No child could ask for more. This time, I'm considering joining a PhD programme in bicycle buying...

The trouble with people
Jean Paul Sartre's play No Exit has a famous premise and line that's now so overused by journalists, it's probably on the cliché-list of several stylebooks.

Questions of taste
The problem with having an even half-functional imagination is that reality has a terrible time keeping up. This has been my undoing all my life.

Hunting for a living
Hunting for a living hasn't changed much over the millennia. Stalking, sniffing the air, staying alert to danger in the vicinity, and finally moving in for the kill, paying the security deposit with a swift slash of the dominant arm.

Come join my cult
It was my first Saturday-evening outing in a while, and I was accompanying a dubious couple to a five-hour-long cult meeting.

Strike while the fire is hot
First the fires, now the writers' strike... Southern California just keeps burning. It's flippant of me to associate a disaster with a relative non-event, but both are so very Californian I can't resist.

Face-off on Facebook
There's a story from the early days of the cellular telephone that tells of a man pacing the lobby of a five-star hotel, talking loudly into his mobile. Then, as he asked for empires to be bought and sold, his purportedly engaged phone rang.

LA's underground movement
My favourite big-city experience is the moment you crest the escalator of an underground station and step into a new neighbourhood.

The emptiness of choice
India, for all its grotesquerie and occasional rapaciousness, has a redeeming innocence. It is the honesty of the child (who knows no other way to be), rather than that of the adult who knows honesty is merely a part one must play.

Making the most of jams
The English have the weather, Bangaloreans have traffic. It won't be long before, in the style of the Inuit, Bangaloreans have 40 different words for "traffic jam"; to describe everything from a light sprinkling of vehicles to impassable drifts.

An endearing naïveté
Ronnie Chan has egg on his face. The Hong-Kong businessman, who drops statements such as, 'I bought 40 companies in France' into speeches, is not shy about the potential greatness of China.

Our inner OC
It has taken us a year to get used to it, and when there are hints that we may have to move out of Orange County, we realise with surprise that we’ll miss it.

A modern-day witchhunt
It gets hot inside, so the writer often takes his laptop to the balcony. There’s always a cool breeze there, and it overlooks the happy bustle of the swimming pool.

Disorder at the border
I recently did one of the most foolish things I've done in many years. I attempted to leave the US with only a driving licence as identification.

Cutting through the clutter
Clutter. Some people see it, others don't. And as life would have it, the ones who do, end up marrying the ones who don't.

Wrong on many levels
I've discovered an eerie phenomenon here in the US. Friendly Indian couples skulk in public places waiting to pounce on other Indian couples and offer them jobs.

The stress on accent
Many of us Indians for whom English is a first, or near-first, language, fondly imagine we have a "neutral accent".

Do as the roamers do
In India, the phrase "foreign returned" carries almost as much baggage as the people it refers to.

Giving in to the network ratings
My sister-in-law tried long and hard to get my wife and I to sign up, but both of us instinctively flinched from the concept. A networking site that puts you in touch with hundreds (or thousands, or millions) of people?

Ring, ring. It's your ear calling
One day, I did something very out of character. I handed my wife a box of matches, stuck a hollow candle into my ear, and asked her to light it.

The baby boy blues
Last time, I wrote about the dangers of being less than one hour late for my neighbour's baby-naming ceremony, but didn't touch upon the other big danger that evening: the baby.

Punctual is the new premature
I'm the sort of person who's 10 minutes early to everything, except social occasions where I'm either on time, or unfashionably, five minutes late. My wife is less pathological and knows the value of a good 30-minute social margin.

Kitchen knives don't cut people
Through a series of events too convoluted to recount here, we have the use of a friend's sports car. We're guilty about the yeti-like carbon footprint of its 4.6L engine, but when you don't have a car and somebody tosses you the keys to theirs, you catch.

Keeping them off the streets
Every so often our doorbell rings, and I open the door to a hulk carrying a clipboard. The hulk's story usually goes that he is in school and is selling newspaper subscriptions to help with his fees.

The his and hers of shopping
Whenever the wife says we need to go to the shops, I immediately ask: "What are we going for?" If the answer is either "clothes" or "shoes", I run away screaming, and am not seen again for days.

A living history
One of our longest-standing family friends lives in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, in a dwelling called The Old Farmhouse. This being England, it's not the twee name of a faux-country house built ten years ago.

Seeing into the future
I've often seen people standing outside the local cinema with a sign saying, "Free movie". I've wondered what the catch is: for if there's no free lunch, there's hardly likely to be a free movie.

The breath of a wok
Guacamole has been in the American news recently… or rather, Kraft's version of the avocado-based dip. A woman from Los Angeles is suing Kraft Foods Inc. because its guacamole is less than two per cent avocado...

Living in pop-culture central
When a New Yorker sees the subway train to Harlem, it's unlikely that the jazz standard 'Take the A Train' comes to mind every time. Similarly, a Californian on the Santa Monica Boulevard is probably not humming 'All I Wanna Do' by Sheryl Crow, the way I do whenever I see the sign.

There's plenty in a name
Bangalore recently enjoyed a festival of Kannada plays in English. There was excitement in the theatre community because, for the first time, the Karnataka government, specifically the Karnataka Nataka Academy, was sponsoring English theatre.

The future's on a roll
It's amazing how easy it is to forget. After a busy week of photographing a festival of plays in Bangalore, I packed away my gear and spotted something in my camera bag that I haven't used in a very long time. A film picker.

House husbands unite!
She pitched her voice loud enough for everybody to hear, feigned embarrassment at having to ask, and said, "So what's it like being a house husband?" I cringed, but not for myself. I was embarrassed for her.

Give food a chance
I thought I'd never make a negative cuisine generalisation, but I really don't like Mexican food. This troubles me because Southern California is probably the best place in the world, after Mexico, for Mexican food.

Sofa beds, big cities, old friends
In the Museum of Modern Art in New York is a work called The Lights Going On and Off by Martin Creed. It is an empty gallery with bare walls in which the lights are set on a continuous timer to turn on for five seconds and off for five seconds.

Beetle dressing
As I dutifully ate my salad, a tiny brown beetle crawled out of it, heading quickly for the side of my plate. It seemed unfazed by the balsamic vinaigrette and kept up a good pace, almost escaping over the edge.

The borderline cases
As I stood in line, a man who'd been sitting to one side was called up to the counter. To my disbelief, after a few questions from the officer, a guard came up behind and handcuffed him, even as the officer asked: "Have you been arrested in the US before?"

Taking life at 33.33rpm
I was going to attend a record fair for the first time and was burning with curiosity. Would it be full of dusty old men in anoraks looking for LPs of obscure Tchaikovsky concerts?

Summers to remember
When we tropical types visit Western countries, we expect--no, demand--that the weather always be lovely and cool. We feel cheated if we so much as break a sweat.

Too much of a good thing?
A pretty woman in white stood in a spotlight just off the front of the stage. I assumed she was an announcer or an extra dancer, or even - this being a faux Beatles concert - someone playing a crazed fan.

Beware of biting vegetable
It was the first time I'd seen cactus do anything but stick out of the ground. There on the vegetable shelf of a supermarket, between the leeks and the jalapenos, was a small pile of cactus pads, spines still on.

Shiver me timber!
The first and only time in my life I have had to throw away an ice cream was on my first trip to the US. I quickly learned that when in America and presented with the food choice of 'small, regular or large', to always go for 'small', even if half starved.

Travelling light
The last six years have gone by so fast that I feel I haven't been in one place long enough to put down a bag - leave alone roots.

There's electricity in the air
In the Silicon Valley of India, as soon as there is the hint of a rainstorm, they turn off the power.

Scintillating cut and paste
As a writer, internalisation is my worst nightmare. I have, without a qualm, watched my plays being rehearsed for weeks, and then halfway through opening night, I undergo a Moment.

Browsers take a bruising
When Mr T.S. Shanbhag's phone rings, he invariably has to move a heap of books to get to it. As he writes out a bill at his desk, he does so on a stack of periodicals two feet high.

Will work for words
There were 12 of us in our high school class. Now, 16 years after school, many of us live outside India - mainly in the US. Every so often, someone visits Bangalore, and the class gathers again.

The mirrors that walk
At a recent party, once all the revelry was done, a small group of us sat down and did something I haven't done at an outing for a long time. We had meaningful discussion.

Different strokes
When I finish my swim, I often linger by the pool, people watching. As with waterholes in the wild, the variety of characters drawn to the average swimming pool is astounding.

The chicken run
Recently in this column, I wrote how being a non-vegetarian wasn't the best idea on this crowded planet. And now, chickens are hammering this home in waves around the world.

Light on the subject
I think lighting is the most exciting of all of theatre's "backstage arts". It offers a combination of art and science that perhaps only architecture can rival.

Feeding on guilt
Many people define their city experience by the entertainment; my group of friends defines it by the food. But not just any food. We are excessively proud of the fact that we know the best, cheap meals in town.

Blinkers by the bagful
Brown skin, Indian accent, broken English. If you think the three necessarily go together, I've met you several times in Dubai.

Dangerous puffed-up pigeons
What is it about theatre that attracts people of little learning made dangerous because they think they know everything? Writers, directors, lighting designers, stage managers: the average theatre in Bangalore is filled with a cast of giant walking egos.

The great cycle of life
It's been over 15 years since I got on a cycle that actually moves when I pedal. And over 15 years since I've hit the back roads around my home; roads I've clattered across thousands of times as a child.

Height of torture in the sky
I've been lucky with my neighbouring airline passengers in that I've never been unlucky. I've had quiet successes: people without babies; people who say nothing after "hello".

Thank you for the music CDs
My name is Gautam and I buy CDs. There, I've said it. When feeling depressed, some people go to a fast-food place, some eat chocolate, some buy shoes. I go to a music store.

Keeping it alive and singing
I recently went to a concert by a group of musicians in their sixties. It was a senior citizens' evening at a retirement home and the group played to a warm crowd of about 10 people. I lie. Actually, the sexagenarians were The Rolling Stones...

Between the past and the future
One of my favourite analogies is the one that has the entire lifetime of the earth reduced to one year. You know it the one in which the earth begins on January 1, dinosaurs rule around Christmas time and recorded human history starts in the last seconds before midnight.

Over to the mute channels
With marriage, there is much doubling up of household items. And therefore, with marriage, comes redundancy.

The magic of the movies
Recently, my wife and I visited that centrepiece of American kitsch: the theme park. The idea hadn't appealed to her at all, so she had to be dragged there--not quite by her hair--but certainly against her will.

The city that went bang...
I have finally visited one of the dens of infamy that dot my city. I got there as an insider, picked up by a fly-by-night taxi and driven through back roads in a tearing rush to be there before the show started.

O for those languid 2MHz days
One day, after playing the latest near-reality shoot-'em-up computer game, I had a nostalgia attack.

A war between two worlds
Hollywood makes us intolerant. We learn to expect every image to have an explanation, every character to have a motive, every question to have an answer.

Jockeying for position
Disc jockeying is not, as one would expect, a profession gawky boys have mastered in bedrooms as the only way to enter parties too cool for them.

By air to India
The man next to me is pecking at a device he can use to take photos, write emails, make phone calls and control nations. The plane is hot.

Don't shoot the jazz messengers
If music is a universal language, why do the saxophones sometimes play Greek and the pianos comp Latin?

I wish him mosquitoes
The Man With the Loudest Laugh in the World is my neighbour. He shares his studio flat with--as life would have it--The Man Who Says Funny Things Into the Night.