Solitary Meanderer

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Urgent Funding for LSE

I have finally decided that no matter what I am going to LSE.

I want MONEY to study at LSE!

And one more thing, I am going to erase the LINE however thin it is (refer to
The Thin Line).

Au Revoir

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Life at Crossroads

A few years from now if I’d have to pick the most horrific one-year of my life, without any hesitation I’d say 2007 or the year when I was 25. I am going crazy with every passing day and the anxiety is just killing me. Before this I never knew that I could ever have a headache also and that too a throbbing please-shut-your-brain-or-go-kill-yourself headache.

The foremost reason is of course my inability to decide a certain career path for myself and believe me I’d rather go solve a problem of relativity than ponder over this. Well, let me list down all the possible options for me.

GoMAD option 1

I have an admission offer from
LSE (London School of Economics and Political Science) for its two-year program MSc in Economics. I had this admission offer for the session starting in September 2007. Due to insufficient or rather absolute lack of funding I have gotten it deferred for the next session i.e. September 2008. This is a super expensive program and for someone like me it’s outright unthinkable to attend LSE. I am doing all I can to secure scholarships/grants but again even that seems not to be in my favor. 90% of scholarships are for one-year taught masters only and the remaining ones will announce the selected candidates only in July/August. This is again problematic as I am required to attend the summer school at LSE for introductory courses in Economics owing to my non-economics background, and the summer school starts on 1st July. Another thing which could deter any scholarship agency to consider my application is that I have a conditional offer i.e. I need to get at least B+ in the two courses taught at the summer school. So, any scholarship agency would bet its money on someone who holds an unconditional offer of admission than on me, no matter even I am 110% confident of getting straight A’s.

GoMAD option 2

I have an experience of 2 years and 4 months in the Analytics industry. As such, I am capable of getting a very good paying job any time I decide to. And this is again killing me for I don’t know if this is really what I want. Of course I want the money but I want a break from the corporate world. I want to be a student for sometime now.

GoMAD option 3

MSc (Economics or any related field) vs. MBA – Now, this is crucial as known everywhere that the earning power of an MBA is much more than an MSc or for that matter an MSc would take 3-4 years to reach where an MBA gets to right from the start. To add to this confusion, I have no valid reasons why would I want to pursue an MBA, say, in a year or two, apart from the obvious monetary reasons. Again, to go for GoMAD option 3 would require me to opt for GoMAD option 2.

So, if any potential employer or member of the scholarship granting committee happens to be reading this let me take this opportunity to welcome you all in sponsoring/hiring me.

The win-win situation would be: Hire me – I will work for 6 months – Sponsor me – After 2 years, I will come back from LSE and work exclusively for you for at least 5 years.

By the way, I am an engineer specializing in Electronics & Communication, having been graduated from Delhi College of Engineering (Delhi University) in 2005. I have been working since then in the Analytics industry. I can be contacted through email at
ankur_shanker@yahoo.com and I would be fun to speak with at +91 9810 111 418.

Au Revoir

Friday, October 19, 2007

The Thin Line

In my office, we have a large LCD TV in the cafeteria which keeps on showing some useless pre-fed programs. Intermittently it also keeps on flashing two-three lines of advice for your would-be week/month on the basis of your sun sign. I never pay attention to these but yesterday I happened to notice one such advice for people who are Capricorn, which is my sun-sign also. The two-liner was,

Concentrate on your career. There is a thin line between friendship and romance.

I don’t believe in astrology nor do I care about horoscope, but this was just too much.

BLOODY HELL!

Au Revoir

Thursday, October 18, 2007

New Round of Book Ratings

Well it’s time to rate the last four books I have read.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold – SMBR: 3.5
Author: Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Category: Fiction

The Undercover Economist – SMBR: 5
Author: Tim Harford
Category: Non-fiction

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy – SMBR: 5
Author: Douglas Adams
Category: Fiction

The Great Gatsby – SMBR: 4
Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald
Category: Fiction

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Chronicle of a Death Foretold

This is the story of Santiago Nasar who gets murdered by two brothers, Pablo Vicario and Pedro Vicario. It is narrated in the form of reconstructed events that must have taken place 27 years ago on the fateful day of the murder. The basis of the plot is that Angela Vicario is found not be a virgin on her wedding night, and after much interrogation by her brothers names Santiago Nasar to be her violator. So, to save the family honor the Vicario brothers decide to kill Santiago the next morning. The whole story is a sequence of events building up to the final murder and is narrated in a journalistic tone, and until the end of the book it is still unclear as to who took Angela’s virginity.

This was my fourth novel by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, after
One Hundred Years of Solitude, Living to Tell the Tale, and Love in the Time of Cholera, and now I am convinced that one can find events happened in one book mentioned in any of the other three also. For example, Colonel Aureliano Buendia, a character in One Hundred Years of Solitude, is mentioned in Chronicle of a Death Foretold, and the very plot of Chronicle of a Death Foretold is mentioned as just one of many events in One Hundred Years of Solitude. Similarly, the source of many events in One Hundred Years of Solitude has actually come from the author’s own life, which you come to know by reading his autobiography, Living to Tell the Tale.

Another thing which I have noticed in all these four books is the way the protagonist has been portrayed and to a certain extent all the characters as well. First of all, the protagonist would always lead an un-normal or a very eventful life, which would sometimes border on eccentricity, and this very eccentricity is what would add an air of solitariness about him. He would be some kind of an idealistic living in a world of his own though promiscuous yet vulnerable, and this vulnerability being most prominent than ever when he would die in the end.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold did not turn out to be as good a read as his other novels did but anyways, I still enjoyed reading it.

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The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy is a five book series with the first book having the same name and the next four are:

The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
Life, the Universe and Everything
So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
Mostly Harmless

The entire book revolves around basically five characters: Arthur Dent, an Englishman; Ford Prefect, an alien from a small planet somewhere in the vicinity of Betelgeuse, who is the roving researcher for the book ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’, and who escapes with Arthur the demolition of Earth by the Vogons; Zaphod Beeblebrox, the president of the Galaxy, who unknowingly saves Ford and Arthur from certain death by taking them aboard his stolen spaceship, the Heart of Gold; Trillan, Zaphod’s partner on the spaceship; and Marvin, the one-man crew of the spaceship, and who is always in a depression thinking that his great and unmatched mental powers are never put to the right use.

This is a science-fiction comedy about the adventures of these five characters all through the galaxy in and out of time and space.

In short, a thoroughly enjoyable and a refreshing read.

Au Revoir

P.S. For more information on SMBR, visit
Blink

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Traveling Tips for Valley of Flowers

Here is some useful information which you will need to plan your trip to Valley of Flowers.

Traveling around in Uttaranchal
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The first 24 hrs of your trip are going to be spent in just traveling, and at the end you will have just reached either Joshimath or Govindghat. Now, there are two ways to reach Joshimath.

Route 1: New Delhi - Haridwar - Joshimath

New Delhi to Haridwar is a 5 hrs bus journey and around 4/4.5 hrs train journey. Plan to reach Haridwar early in the morning around 0400/0500 hrs. From here, you can decide to travel either in a shared taxi or by bus. You can get a shared taxi from as early as 0400 hrs until anytime of the day, and it will move as soon as there are at least 9 paid-for passengers in it, and it takes only 8-9 hrs to reach Joshimath. The flip side is that if there are less than 9 paid-for passengers it will not move even if that meant not moving at all the entire day, and secondly, there are direct taxis only until Karnaprayag or Chamoli. From there you will have to look for another shared taxi.

If you decide to travel by bus, get to the bus station. It is only 2 kms from the Haridwar railway station, and any rickshaw waala would take you there for just Rs 10. The first bus for Joshimath leaves at 0330 hrs, the second one at 0600 hrs and there is no bus after 0900 hrs. It’s a 10-11 hrs journey and the ticket would cost you Rs 220.

The important towns and distances en route Joshimath are given as below:

Haridwar – Rishikesh: 24 kms
Rishikesh – Devprayag – Srinagar: 103 kms
Srinagar – Rudraprayag – Karnaprayag: 69 kms
Karnaprayag – Nandaprayag – Chamoli – Pipalkoti: 59 kms
Pipalkoti – Joshimath: 34 kms

Route 2: New Delhi - Ramnagar - Joshimath

The best way to reach Ramnagar is by train.

Ranikhet Express: Delhi (Dep @ 2240 hrs) – Ramnagar (Arr @ 0500 hrs)

From Ramnagar, travel in a bus to Karnaprayag, and from there board another bus to Joshimath.

The important towns and distances en route Joshimath are given as below:

Ramnagar – Ranikhet: 105 kms
Ranikhet – Dwarahat – Chaukhutia – Karnaprayag: 111 kms
Karnaprayag – Nandaprayag – Chamoli – Pipalkoti: 59 kms
Pipalkoti – Joshimath: 34 kms

When to visit?
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Both Valley of Flowers and Hemkunt Sahib are open to tourists for just 4 months in a year from 5th June to 5th October. Due to monsoons in July/August, the valley is in full bloom from mid-August to mid-September and this is also the best time to visit Valley of Flowers.

However, the optimum window to go there is 2nd week of September. Land slides are a common phenomenon during monsoons and sometimes also block sections of highway, which is very irritating especially if you are hard pressed for time. Moreover, since Hemkunt Sahib is a pilgrimage spot for sardars, the first three months witness a very high volume of tourists. So, if you want to avoid land slides and also the rush of pilgrims, plan your trip sometime around 2nd or 3rd week of September.

As September is also the lean season, you will be able to negotiate cheaper deals for hotel accommodation.

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You will spend considerable time in Ghangharia (10,000 ft) which is a very small town and also the base camp for both Valley of Flowers and Hemkunt Sahib. The only place worth eating at is Himalaya Restaurant.

Suggested Itinerary
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The following is the suggested itinerary:

Day 1: Reach Haridwar early morning. Get on to a bus or a shared taxi for Joshimath. Reach Joshimath in the evening. Stay overnight at Joshimath.
Day 2: Take the first bus out of Joshimath for Govindghat at 0630 hrs. It will take an hour to reach Govindghat. Start the 13 km trek to Ghangharia. Reach Ghangharia sometime in the afternoon and spend the rest of the day relaxing.
Day 3: Start the 6 km trek to Hemkunt Sahib early morning around 0530/0600 hrs. Come back to Ghangharia sometime in the afternoon and again spend the rest of the day relaxing.
Day 4: Visit Valley of Flowers. Again start early around 0600 hrs and come back to Ghangharia sometime in the afternoon/late afternoon. Pack your bags, settle your hotel bill and start the return 13 km trek to Govindghat. Stay overnight at Govindghat.
Day 5: Get on to a bus or a shared taxi for Haridwar at around 0700/0730 hrs. Reach Haridwar in the evening. Board a bus or a train for New Delhi. Reach New Delhi early morning around 0300/0400 hrs.

If you have a day more at your disposal, you can squeeze in a visit to Badrinath also as it is only an hour’s ride away from Govindghat.

I went to Valley of Flowers and Hemkunt Sahib in the second week of August 2007. You can read the travelogue
here and take a look at the pics here.

Note: This post has been written for a budget traveler. All the necessary care has been taken in reporting the figures used in this post but still any deviation from them is possible and readers are advised to check those before planning their trip.

Au Revoir

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