
Part 3 – The English Problem
I gave up too soon. The new skills I was trying to pursue were very demanding. I went crazy trying to connect events, etching characters and writing a fable.
But providence did not let me go. My commute time to the office became agonizingly slow. The traffic crawled in knee-deep water. Looking out of the car window at the deluge, my mind drifted back to Kedarnath. The three hours of travel every day became my ideating time.
I put on my consultants’ hat and told myself, ‘Simplify the problem; break it down bit by bit.’
Soon a routine got established. The thoughts congregated during the travel in the daytime were penned in the night. Transmission of my thoughts became the only goal.
In two months, I had an outline of the story. I was happy that I had achieved my goal. It was easy to get back to my lazy self. Sadly, I struggled to comprehend the document I had prepared. It looked disjointed and random. My English writing and grammar were exposed.
From story writing, I moved to polish my English. As a student, I always felt grammar was boring and realized that my childhood feelings had not left me. All my corporate life, my shortfall in English was masked by graphs, data tables and photographs. How I missed them in my writing!
…to be continued
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