Sunday, October 10, 2010

Can i just sit in 1 place for sometime!

Verkaufsoffener Sonntag Mannheim; den  10.10.10! 15:06

11 a.m. is when I woke up finally! It is now 3 p.m. and I am thinking I should take stock of what I did these 4 hours!
 
1. Breakfast of leftover sabji (yum!), corn bread, milk and a banana
2. A face-pack of about-to-expire-banana, parachute coconut oil, besan-haldi and sandalwood powder
[strange, the things I have brought along with me, no potato-peeler, but sandalwood powder ;)]
3. Washed clothes of the week gone by
4. Forced cleaning of the bathroom floor, courtesy, spilling of tonnes of soap-water; lol.
5. Lunch preparations; dal, rice and potato sabji
6. Sorting out the papers, notes and arranging them folder/subject-wise.
7. Made myself a cup of fruit-tea; basically tea in a tea-bag and a cuppa hot water; so 'make' is stretching it a tad far :D

And now, am trying to get myself to concentrate and study 3 chapters of Financial accounting by 16.30 so that I can take a walk, shop a bit and enjoy 18 degrees of uninterrupted sunshine and shopping! On this very special Sunday, when Mannheim gets to shop on a sunny Sunday!

Bon chance Anya, if you don't study, you don't shop :P

Ciao,
moi

Friday, October 8, 2010

The world of books, my world :)

This week, as part of a group-project, we had to perform Market Research to identify the 'Reasons for choice'  why consumers prefer a particular brand / company over others in the same category.

My group, we selected book-stores; Thalia.de vs. Buecher Bender. Think of Thalia as a Landmark/Crossword (the bookstore chain, organized retail, books 70% non-books 30%, cafe, lounge area, sitting area, carpeted floors, the works!). Now, think of Buecher Bender as a Strand; been here for ages (since 1775 to be precise). A quick check on Wikipedia tells me that the printing press has been around since 1440, so 300 years later, God's gift to Mannheim was born.. Anyways, in this store, they make it a point to greet you, with a smile that reaches their eyes. The proprietor is a grey-haired man in his 50s or 60s, with glasses and a twinkle in his eyes. The book-shelves reach the ceiling, almost and there are little nooks and crannies, where you could lose yourself in. There is a basement section which I am yet to discover, but am kind of saving it for a rainy day. I feel like if I discover everything about the store in a day, it'd be a bit like unwrapping the presents before Christmas.
We spoke to several 2 customers from Buecher Bender, all of whom professed their undying love for the store, its personalized touch, its knowledgeable sales-personnel (who themselves were a fan of the written word), its service in terms of out-of-stock books, its tie-up with the University and its nostalgia-factor. 

Initially, the proprietor was curious about us questioning his customers, once they stepped out of the store. We did not question any customers in-store, since its rather small and wouldn't be appropriate. The proprietor, he approached us cautiously, asked us our purpose, read through the questionnaire and pretty much gave us his OK :) Yay! this was in the afternoon, around 3.30 p.m. Since the walk-ins were low at that time, we asked one of the sales-personnel an appropriate time to step-in and she said around 5.30. So, we were back at 5.30 and the proprietor remembered us and checked in on us. SO.VERY.NICE! We ended up with 6 respondents, around 1/2 our target for the day. The rest, we'll cover on Sunday. Before leaving the store, I made it a point to thank them and told them that I'll be back soon as a customer.

This Sunday is going to be very, very special, since its a 'Verkaufsoffener Sonntag Mannheim', which means' A Sunday open for selling!'. They do this around thrice a year, for me, I can't wait! Its been 6 weeks since I have shopped and since I did study well and had a good week (7.5/10) studies-wise, I can afford to shop; rather window-shop :D

Zara or not, H&M or not, Body Shop or not, Buecher Bender it will be am Sonntag, den 10. Oktober 2010.

SO SO GLAD that books are a part of my life; one way or the other.

Thank you to my parents for encouraging me and my sis to read!

XOXO,
Anya

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Tuesday, den 05.10.10

6.44 p.m. 

Home at 6 p.m. is rare and must be treasured. So treasure it, I did. I just made myself a delicious omlette with tomatoes, onions, salt 'n' pepper; piled it high on corn-bread and topped it off with junk-chips and garnished it with Heinz ketchup :) Now, refreshed, I just had to drop a few lines before I forget.

Its cloudy, 18 degrees and there is a slight drizzle in the air. The few raindrops I caught on the way back added a spring to my step, since I wanted to reach home before it started to rain more. Then I realized that, here, when it rains, it does just that; rain :) It hardly ever pours, so I settled back to enjoying the walk home, along with a lovely brown dog, a cute fella cycling home and a tiny kid asleep on her dad's shoulder. And no, the dad wasn't riding the bike ;)

Then, today was the 1st group assignment submission of Financial accounting. Although it was an uphill climb initially, the clouds got cleared up; not magically, but after at least 8 hours of joint-reading. Am slowly getting the hang of work here; complete it the very same day and ask questions if something is not clear. I think, back home, we aren't trained to ask questions and hesitate quite a bit; but slowly and steadily am turning into Ms. Doubtfire.

Yesterday morning, was German class at 7 .15 a.m. I just about managed to reach by 7.25. On the way to class, I had half a mind to stay home, since I had not prepared for class. This cost me 40 seconds!!! Anyways, I am SO glad I took the right decision and went ahead to class. Since I did,

1. I got the chance to talk to the Prof post-class; topic in question being the Frankfurt book fair. Bookie-topics make me speak German, you see :) So do, music- / food- / shopping-, etc. :)

2. I spoke more than 2 words in class; since it was a topic whose vocabulary my German teacher had made sure we remember via her rigorous coaching. The topic was indicators in an economy and yay! I got 3 'Sehr guts' from the Prof.

3. I was able to experience reaching home at 10 a.m. post class, etc. to listen to the noisy chatter of the creche below my apartment. I also managed to cook, clean and generally feel good about life :) This pretty much set the pace for the rest of the day; I headed back to class for group-work and was done by 8 p.m;. 

4. Post which, a classmate and I walked about for almost an hour; we are so similar its not funny. We both get each other when we say ' we want to clear our head' lol. 

5. And finally, I paid a visit to 'Penny'; the neighbourhood grocery store, that stays open until 10 p.m. I trekked back home with tomatoes, onions, cheese, junk-chips, apples and a 20 pence saving (courtesy the cloth bag I take along :D)

Thus, if I had not decided to go to class, a lot of the above events may not have transpired. Ooh, plus I kept smiling to myself for some reason, am yet to figure out why but don't think it matters :)

What matters, is going for it and making it happen, prepared or not.

tc,
moi

Monday, October 4, 2010

Montag, den 4.10.2010

Its 1 a.m. this Monday morning; and I am 'dreaming my life away' with the Everly brothers playing on AOL Live. Web-radio is a life-saviour! Makes me wonder why I never discovered it before.

Oh yes, that was since I had 107.1 FM in Mumbai, with my 3-4 hours quota of Western music, Malishka bajaoing on 93.5 Red FM, Jaggu and Tarana; the awesome twosome keeping me company on 94.3 Radio One and endless television. Now, AOL Live, Radio regenbogen (Local German radio- has the double advantage of music + German practice) and Live TV are my saviors in a world with no television.

I noticed last night, that the advertising via web-radio is smartly targeted towards people like me, who have no TV / radio and for whom, the Internet is almost EVERYTHING :) So, you have ads for slashcontrol.com,  where viewers in the United States can watch TV-episodes and movies for free! And when I say, viewers in the US, I mean those with an IP linked to the US. There are apparently ways to bypass this check, via proxy-servers, but I am not sure I want to do all those 'semi-weird' things. Plus I have abc.com that let me watch Castle - Season 3, episode 1, the next day of its season-premiere (20th Sept 2010) in the US. So, as long as I have Castle, I am good to go :)

This has been THE MOST HECTIC week, so far, and it promises to get better; read EVEN MORE HECTIC. My 2-pence from the week gone past:

1. Group-work means just that- group-work. So, don't obsess over correcting/ reviewing everyone else's piece of work. Do your bit, review your bit and let everyone pitch in.
2. It has to be all in a day's work- not sure if I have used the expression the correct way. But what I mean, is I simply MUST not let work for a day spill-over to the next. Try as might, some of it does; but reducing it is a MUST. and one way of doing it is to read for the next day's class a day before,quickly browse through the same day's class once home and wash the day's vessels the very same day. :)
3. Since I save a LOT of travel-time; I walk 7 minutes to school, I have to utilize the time spent better. Less FB and more FA (financial accounting). :)
4. Little treats always help stay motivated; so if I stick to my plan for this week, I get to shop or at least, window shop the next weekend. Cant believe I am the very same person, who knew all of AND's and REmANiKa's collections by-heart and here, I am yet to visit a trial-room :)

I sure, am dreaming my life away, in a good way :)

ciao,
me

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Cloudy days and Mondays don't get me down :)

Monday, Sept 27, 2010

30 minutes to the next day; its 12 degrees, Wavin' Flag on the radio and a potato-sandwich (its potatoes 3rd day in a row) thanks to the 2.5 kilos purchased last week. Haha. Plus I have just gotten back from watching 'Eat pray Love' with some girls from school.

Its a whole new business model out here multiplex-wise. There are the highest rates for normal people; read, those who are neither students nor aged. There are special rates for students only on Mondays; like they thought we'd be free Monday evenings? :) Then, if the movie is longer than an average German movie; which is perhaps 1.5 hours, they charge you around a couple of Euros more. And if you want to watch the long movie on any other row apart from the 1st 2, please pay an euro more. Having said all this, I like the clarity that is offered to a customer. For me to compare that with a show at PVR-Phoenix Mills and pay almost the same rate and not know why I was charged so much, its interesting.

Its been a great start to the week, so far. First, I managed to complete a presentation due today at 1 p.m. by 12 p.m. Close but not too close :) Honestly, a 1-year course is rather intense, to say the least. And right now, we have just 1 subject at a time. Tomorrow is when the sparks will fly; its 2 and then 3 subjects at 1 go. Plus an assignment from the previous one that is due. Also, German classes begin Wednesday mornings at 7 a.m.! Oh my God!

Today, our professor of Financial Accounting gave me a lot of insights into life. For one, he demonstrated the power of a great teacher; there's just 1 pre-requisite- lots of patience and listening skills; Ok 2 pre-requisites. The way he handles us is just amazing; for one he just addresses questions to us at random. Although a tad unnerving initially, it is a lot of fun later, coz it ensures you pay attention and you want to not look stupid in front of the class. Fun, in a different way :) However, he is an amazing teacher, with immense knowledge in his field. He went so far, as to state that 'He is in love with Accounting and that Accounting is sexy' . :) He hopes that we fall in love with accounting as well; I think we just might.

In preparing for my 1st submission over the weekend, I learnt that Nothing beats intense preparation; except a walk in 12 degrees through the streets, when its all getting too much. You come back refreshed and with a lot more ideas than before.

Today was also the day, I carried dabba to class :D Basically class was in the afternoon, giving me time to make the potatoes into something edible. So potato-sandwich it was. Plus, the day ended with the movie; I'd give it a 2.5 / 5, but it was still worth it somehow.

Since I am into a bit of writing now, let me recap my weekend quickly. It started on Friday evening; the last day of our 'Decision Analysis' class. Decision Analysis was a 4.5 day course that is intended to help us take better decisions in future. Initially it was a lot of theory, however things became progressively clearer, with cases and examples and group-work. Friday evening, on the way home, I popped into the city-library to stock up a bit. Sure, I love my decisions and finances, but a little Nora Robers always helps. So, there I was, in my idea of heaven where I could stay for a year at a price of 6 euros, take with me 50 servings of good-reads, browse/ read all day long, so browse I did, although for just about 30 minutes. Too bad, since the library was closing; but 30 is better than none. These servings are all mine for the next 30 days. The check-out process, by the way, is totally automated via a kiosk. However, I felt the urge to converse with the librarian, so I clarified the returns-process and  asked her for some recommendations. Ja, ja, auf Deutsch :)

There are 2 large shelves devoted to English fiction; yes HP, LOTR, Rohinton Mistry, Georgette Heyer, Salman Rushdie, Patricia Cornwall, Nora Roberts, and some others. Basically, this should last me awhile :) Plus, around25 shelves of German fiction; of which I picked up the tiniest possible one by Thomas Mann (recommended by a friend), then 1 shelf each of Russian, French and Greek literature. Then shelves devoted to Fach-literature (subject-matter literature) by category- sports, theatre, pedagogy, history, geography, science and a row dedicated to travel!!! I could live here!!!

So, I moved from shelf to shelf; met a very cute person (tried to act intelligent, yet charmant) lol, continued to browse  lovingly through the shelves and reached home with the following:

Bed of roses by Nora Roberts
The black moth by Georgette Heyer
The farmer wants a wife by Maeve Haran
Meine gruene Wiese by Guenter Grass,
Joseph und seine Brueder by Thomas Mann, and
A German grammar-practice book :)

On the way back, I kept smiling unaccountably for some reason; maybe it was the 'charmant' effect or just the effect of my idea of heaven. A warm croissant later, I was back in my other idea of heaven; home, settled in and looking forward to 2 days of bliss.

Now, I simply MUST get back to poring over my books, so more soon!

Till then, read some, its lovely :)

Bis bald,
Anya

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Mein ersten Montag in Mannheim- My 1st Monday in Mannheim

13th September 2010

The dress-code for Monday was business; so very business-like, I took out my lovely new black skirt from Park Avenue, my green top and my black jacket. The jacket, incidentally was bought from Deutschland itself a few years ago and has it stood the test of time! Some yoga, a glass of milk, a certain amount of hair-adjustments and Catwalk shoes-on-feet later, I was ready to go!

And go I did; the orientation from the day-before helped and I was there at 8.45 a.m. We were all  warmly welcomed into the fold, so to say by the program coordinators and wore our name-tags and found our places in the 'MBS Lecture Hall'. Now, The University of Mannheim and the Mannheim business school are run out of 'Der Schloss'; i,e. the Castle of Mannheim, which also has the unique distinction of being the 2nd largest baroque castle in the world. As I type this, I realize I don't quite know what 'Baroque' means... So here it is, courtesy our friends Page et Brinn! 'The term baroque can be applied to an artistic style from the early 18th century. It is usually art or decor that is very ornate or ostentatious with contrasting objects. Sort of an overkill on decorating ideas.' Well, once I post the pictures of the castle and its surrounding areas, you can decide for yourself. Baroque or not, I believe all rulers of the days gone by, the world over, were into major overkill in terms of creating their palaces/ castles/ homes.

We are a class of 58, and all 58 of us were in our respective seats a little before 9. I guess, the German efficiency rubbed off on us a little bit :) The day began with an introduction to the program by our Academic director. Around an hour and a half later, we spread out into the coffee-area; where I couldn't wait to have my favorite 'Heisse Schokoloade' (hot Chocolate). Trust me, hot chocolate, like you find in Europe, cannot be found anywhere else in the world! We also introduced ourselves to one another and started the process of getting to know each other a bit better. Then we were taken around the campus and were shown the various facilities; the administration offices, the library, the MENSA (Cafeteria), etc.

Lunch was on the house, and we dug into open-face sandwiches and coffee. Oh wait, just before lunch, was the all-important 'honor code signing ceremony' and the address by our President. It was a nice thing to do; we basically promised to abide by the basic rules of life; courtesy, honesty, integrity and respect. Quite a profound way to start one of the most important journeys of life. We also had other presentations; career services, alumni, the student association, etc. and finally, a joint dinner at a local restaurant. Here, we continued to meet other classmates and get to know one another. The day ended for me at around 10 p.m. and somehow it never felt like I had to look at the watch too many times.

Things that will stay with me:
1. The coming year is a window of opportunity, open it wide.
2. The school has taken great pains to recruit the kind of people, who know how to take care of people. (This surely reflected during the entire admissions process; in terms of clarity and responsiveness to our queries.)
3. This school, while it pays attention to its ranking in various forums/ magazines, does not believe in doing just about anything to improve its rankings. Its a lot more important for it to get there by quality and long-lasting quality at that.

I was feeling a lot better by the end of the day; my pangs of anxiety at starting over, in a way, reduced significantly. It is people that make all the difference all the time.

I MUST: Get to know my classmates a lot more; the target is to speak to all 58 of us by the end of the week.
I WISH: that I had brought along some ready-to-eat; it kinda slipped my mind, but never mind. The additional 100 grams may have prompted the AI-personnel (Read my previous post) to have charged me 4000 rupees and 50 paisa; lol

Bis morgen,  Viel Spass!
Anya

Eine Woche lange in Mannheim!

As I write this, it is Sunday, 19th Sept 2010, 11.19 a.m. Mannheim time. It’s also officially 1 week down at the Mannheim business school for me. It’s been long enough for me to think of 'M' as in 'Mannheim'; previously it used to be 'M' for 'Monkey'. :)

So, here then, is Anya reporting from Mannheim. Since I continue to be quite the lazy-person, most of these posts are back-dated. However, I really hope to do a better job of posting on time; there's nothing like the first impression.

So, here goes:
My journey to Mannheim started off on Saturday, 11th Sept; 18.30 hours IST in Mumbai. My family, Sriram (my cousin) and Kshama (my friend) came to see me off at the airport. I had 33 kgs of check-in baggage, 1 hand-luggage of 9 kgs and a laptop bag of around 6 kgs. (Including the charger, CD pouch, etc.)
This was a Mumbai-Frankfurt flight on its way to Chicago. I was among the first 5 to check-in, just so that the baggage should not be an issue. However, the AI-personnel tried to throw his weight around; Check out the below conversation, post-weighing of the 2 check-in baggage, totalling to 33 kgs. The allowable weight was 30 kilos.
AI: So, your baggage is 3 kilos above the allowed limit.
Moi: Hmm, yes, actually I am a student, so there are some books etc.
AI: Hmmm, (major pregnant pause, as if he is about to decide a significant part of my future.) See, we already have given you 10 kgs extra as student, now you want 3 more kilos. Let me weigh the hand-baggage.
Moi: OK, sure.
AI: this is 16 kilos! I cannot allow it. You do know, that you are allowed only 8 kilos including the laptop?
(This was when I knew for sure, that he was just trying to rile me. So, in my best professional voice, I go…)
Moi: I was told that I could carry a hand-bag of 8 kilos + a laptop separately.
(Now, he realizes that I may be a student, but I know my rules. So he scans through my passport and probably looks at my other visas).
AI: Yes, but that still means only 12 kgs. You have 16 kgs in hand-baggage.
(At this point, I had to betray the love of my life; Dell and say the following)
Moi: You see, sir, this is a DELL and itself weighs about 4.5 kilos.
AI: (Still trying to rile me) Well, so what do we do now? I will allow the excess hand baggage. But what about the excess check in-baggage?
Moi: (in my best ‘I have travelled quite a bit, haven’t you heard of excess-baggage payment?’ voice) I could pay the excess baggage allowance.
AI: So, you are willing to pay 4 thousand rupees?
Moi: hmm, Duh, Ya
AI: hmmm, (Still trying to decide my fate) OK, don’t tell anyone my name, but I’ll let you go.
Moi: Oh, thank you Sir. ( I mean, I didn't even check his name!!! )
Jeez, this is SO annoying. The AI-personnel sure need training. All he had to do, in this case, was tell me the excess baggage charge, let me pay and go, without all this unnecessary talk.

Now, contrast this with my non-conversation at German-immigration at Frankfurt airport. People prior to me had to answer at least 2-3 questions. When my turn came, I showed the officer (very, very cute) my visa. He took a look at it, at me and let me pass with no questions asked. This, then, is the power of a student here. Or so, I’d like to believe. Either ways, it felt good to be acknowledged as a student and with respect.
Anyways, back to my journey to Mannheim. I breezed through immigration, security and then reached my favourite coffee shop in Mumbai airport while waiting to board; The Coffee bean and Tea Leaf Company. There is something deliciously sweet about waiting at the duty-free area, waiting to board your flight; just sipping a sinful ‘double-loaded chocolate’ with skimmed-milk (no fat-free pour moi) and watching the world go by. 
Which, in this case, was a very cute Russian family; 2-year old in tow, several IT-looking-people (TCS/ Wipro is my guess) en route to Chicago, tonnes of Singaporeans (there was a flight to Singapore at the same time), many single-person tables (both men and women) looking very very cool (am hoping I looked cool too; lol) and a certain travel-buzz in the air. While I messaged and chatted quite a bit, most of my time was spent just chilling. Am glad I didn’t eat anything; nothing can quite compare to a double-loaded chocolate :D

Boarding was fun as always; AI trie to bring about the process of boarding aisle-by-aisle. So, they announce ‘Rows 40-52 please come up for boarding. Others please remain seated’. Of course, my good ol’ friends in rows 1-30 have not much patience, so almost everyone is standing. Lol. There was also an excessive amount of security. My boarding pass and passport got checked by 3 different people before boarding the flight; senior AI officials, airport security and the Indian police. Did not like the way the direction our world is taking one bit :(

Anyways, once inside, I was more than pleasantly surprised. For one, I was able to place my cabin baggage on my own, very confidently, as if I do it for a living :D And 2, both the seats next to me were empty. And 3, ooh, AI now has personal in-flight entertainment! Yay! As I was settling in myself, and hoping the seats next to me stayed empty/ some very interesting people sit there, the passenger in the rear seat looks up to me and asks me whether the seats next to me were empty. I said ‘Yes, I suppose so’. He then goes, ‘Great, So I just might join you’. Oh well, I wasn’t exactly jumping for joy: D The flight took off at around 01.30 a.m. , a bit delayed but it was all right in the end, I ate some, watched some TV [ Date night, no FRIENDS :( ], slept tonnes and we reached Frankfurt well in time; around 6 a.m. on 12th September.

I collected my check-in baggage, breezed through entry-into-Germany and now had to take the train to Mannheim. Now, here, I realized the importance of listening to instructions. Based on my discussion with the information desk (In German, of course ;)), I was told to go 2 flights (of stairs) up. I entered the lift to reach the 3rd floor, and another couple did too; I somehow followed their lead and went 1 flight down instead of 2 flights-up. Where, there was a reasonable amount of chaos; a long line of 30 people at the DB-Reise Zentrum (Train reservation desk) and travellers from various places with baggage of all sizes and assortments. There were also 2 kiosks to buy tickets from; 1 for local and the other for inter-state. I tried them both, for about a ½ hour, also tried using my Citibank credit card which got rejected. Now, why would they not allow cash-based transactions, crazy and how!

Finally, after an hour or so of trying to complete a self-service transaction, I gave up and went 3 flights up to the original platform, as told to me by the Info-desk. Over there, I paid cash across the counter, and got myself 1 2nd class ticket to Mannheim, in less than 5 minutes. Yay! A croissant and bottle of water later, I waited for the train am Gleis 5 (Platform 5). Now, I had 5 baggages and only 1 me. And thankfully 1 helpful co-passenger who helped me move the baggage inside the train in the 3 minutes it waited on the station. Point to note: I did not have to reserve a seat. In European trains, when you purchase a ticket, you don’t book a seat. You only book yourself a place on the train. Reserving a seat is usually 5 euros extra. Now, since the total journey time from FFM to Mannheim was just an hour, I did not have to reserve a seat; that way, I could have got into any of the 2nd class compartments and sat on any of the spare seats. They usually are :) The only journeys where seat-reservation is mandatory is on night-trains. Anyways, since I had reserved a seat, I had to run a bit trying to find my coach/ seat. Thank God for friendly co-passengers.

I reached Mannheim train station at around 10 a.m., and had quite the scene trying to carry my luggage on my own via the escalator to the main entrance. Imagine a little person with a laptop bag on her shoulders, walking with a 4-wheeler baggage combined with a handbag. Then dragging a 2 wheeler baggage combined with an overall on its pulley. Quite the scene! Anyways, I called up the janitor of my apartment, who thankfully reached on time and, check-in formalities completed; I was officially home at 10.45 a.m. 

Now, first impressions first. My room is slightly larger than my bedroom back in Mumbai, a wardrobe to the right, an open cupboard to the left, a little further down- a bed right by the window. Next to the bed is my study-table, Then a slight partition that neatly divides the kitchen-area from the rest of room. Here, a little dining table facing the window [This is where I have my tea :)] and a mini-fridge and the cooking range. A little to the right is the bathroom. The walls are bare, the flooring rather basic, but once I unpacked and got out my magnets, 3 extra kilos of books, cards, knick-knacks, my trusty Dell and the coconut-barfi from home, it felt a lot more homey :) 

A hot water bath later, I made myself some Maggi, got the internet set-up done, logged on to the virtual world and was ready to settle in. A walk around the town made me realize it was a Sunday, so all stores were closed. I walked down to my college, just to get myself oriented, called home, walked to the station to get milk/ bread/ eggs, met an alumnus in the evening and made myself a very strange omelette/ scrambled eggs. The original idea was to make a boiled egg, which didn’t boil very well, so I scrambled it into an omelette with ginger-garlic paste. I packed my bags for day1 at college and slept off around 11 p.m.

Mannheim, I am home.