Monday, February 08, 2010

National Highway 45

If you wanted to take the road from Chennai to Trichy, Tamil Nadu, India, you would take NH45. Until a few years ago, though, if you had wanted to do that, I would have thought you were nuts.

But upon being suggested this very thing by my brother, and seconded by couple of others, I braved it. The new highway lived up to the hype. Our taxi guy was able to consistently clock the Toyota Innova 90-100 kmph in bursts along the divided, well paved, toll road. The ride was smooth and the early morning weather was nice, though a bit too foggy to be scenic.

Well, scenery is not something you should be concerning yourself with, if you desire reaching the destination as well. For, you see, these lorry drivers like to fly a tight formation - they are flying fighter jets in their minds anyway. It's quite a trick getting ahead of one of these formations, not unlike getting through a Sicilian Defense in chess, I'd imagine.

And oh, did I mention that now we have lanes clearly marked, with reflectors and what not?! Advisories are posted all along, in English, to "Follow Lane Discipline". They seem to be mostly heeded, but you'd be doing your life expectancy a favor if you didn't assume that any vehicle ahead of you in your lane if moving along in the same direction as you! Because, some special drivers, though observant of the lane discipline, sometimes seem to ignore small details like the direction of the lane. During our 4 hour ride, we encountered a police car, a fully loaded lorry, a bus and a couple of motor bikes, all headed straight at us in our lane (on our side of the divider). The cop car and the lorry I can understand: they are the kings of the road. I don't understand what the bikers were thinking.

One thing that struck me was the amount of heavy machinery on the roads. Seeing even a single bulldozer in these places in the deep south is startling. But I saw dozens of them, not just near the big city, but all over. I saw huge cranes at work at construction sites. This is all like seeing an elephant when go on a drive on California Hwy 1.

Speaking of elephants, the customary sighting happened within 24 hours of landing here. It was my 3yr old's turn to be astonished: beyond the "huuuuuuuuuuugeeeee....!!!", he was lost for words upon seeing the local temple mammoth taking a stroll in front of our house. Surprises huge and small are around the corner all the time. Imagine the delight when a bunch of goats showed up at our door step at the appointed hour to devour the vegetable waste my mom saves for them. Not all surprises are pleasant though; especially not those huge "flying spiders" - i.e. mosquitoes!

Apart from mosquitoes, the other thing in abundance is human resources. You kind of notice this at the numerous toll stations along the NH45. Not only are the booths manned by humans at any hour, there are additional persons doing stuff like waving the incoming vehicle to a particular lane (even though there are functioning red/green lights to do that job), writing down the license place numbers, acting as a go-between between the booth guy and the driver, etc.

All said and done, we made it safe and sound out of NH45 and got home. Looking forward to 4 more weeks of India, especially as seen though the eyes of our 3 year old.

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Fingerprints of God - but look suspiciously like the author's own

Fingerprints of God: The Search for the Science of Spirituality - Barbara Bradley Hagerty

Full disclosure first: I am big Dawkins fan. But unlike Dawkins, I don't dismiss God, so my review of this book is not unfair.

It was good read: I learned about a few interesting science experiments and advances, that blur the lines between traditional science and faith. I appreciate the authors effort in doing all the research, and her openness in terms of sharing points of view she doesn't subscribe to. However I found her coming to conclusions (often slight variations of the same thing) that she wants to believe in, rather than what one would arrive at if one were to think critically. I also found her tone a bit arrogant, especially when she presumes she knows better than the scientists on how to interpret their results. It's also a very self-centered book, but she does admit it up front.

In summary: a good review of the state of the subject, but could be better presented if not for the authors bias.