Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Magical Evenings

It’s that time of the day

5, 6 or 8 pm depending on whether it’s January or July;

It’s that time of the day

When the sun decides to take leave of the sky.

A time for reflection, to smile about the day’s jokes

A time to think about the ones we love

A thousand ideas race through our heads,

Swifter than the colours above;

Temperatures dip, half of the color spectrum opens up,

The sun, in a final goodbye, becomes a glowing red ball

Just before it dips below,

We stop and stare to behold it all.

The sun is gone, yet the transition continues,

In the sky, in our lives, in our minds.

Even if a man does nothing, in the evening,

His brain is whirring, you will find.

And then there are those, for whom evenings mean sorrow,

A longing perhaps for the days gone by

Some whose twilights remind them of their lives’ confusion,

An unanswered tangle of what, how and why.

Whatever the mood, tis true

That a change above gives food for thought,

Perhaps, on a grander scale, making us aware

Of the changes our lives have wrought.

I pity most the ones who walk into walls in the day

And walk out in the night;

For them it is nothing but a passage of time

And a sudden absence of light.

Centre Island




I want a boat.
While on the ferry to Centre Island, we saw quite a few of these, and their motor powered cousins. One even came right at us while we were canoeing. We did well, to get out of its way, but the trio of two Architecture students and one mechanical engineer just managed to miss it. Why I specify their education is that they spent most part of the hour turning with both paddlers working in the same direction, hence marking a bank-to-bank zigzag pattern in front of us. :D



I know I'm putting these up a bit late, but more shall follow :)











Touchdown

So, miracles do occur, and one can get decent food on an airplane. It's true.

After quite a long but not particularly arduous journey (thankfully), I reached the Glendon Campus of York University at 2275 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, assuming the rest of the VIT "contingent" had reached. Apparently I was wrong. Jet lag caused most of the exchange people to fall asleep before 8 pm, leaving the un-jet lagged to forage for food. As it was summertime and no full-time students were on campus, the campus cafeteria was closed, and downtown was a 25 minute walk away. And we were really hungry!

A hospital came to our rescue. We walked to Sunnybrook Medical Center, about 7 minutes away, where our princely meal of soup awaited us. Rohit was smart enough to buy a sandwich, come back to our Residence and heat it up, while I was happy with my hot chocolate. Canada is chilly, even in the summer, just so you know. Shivering in the cold, holding onto my extremely sweet hot chocolate, I had my first meal of this trip. Well, atleast on land.

What you should expect

Frankly, nothing. At this point of time I have no fixed idea about what the next semester holds. Under the pretext of a better study experience (compared to Vishwakarma Institute of Technology, Pune), I'm going to be at the University of Western Ontario, London for the Fall semester, and am hoping to have a whole lot of fun. And get educated too. But mostly, fun :D
So this blog is going to try and tell you what I'm doing in the country of polite people and Tim Hortons. I'm hoping this'll be like those famous semesters abroad that seem to change people's lives and they become extremely successful. Or atleast a good time, eh?*




*Eh is apparently what Canadians say a lot. Kind of like the Indian "na". I have never heard it used yet though.