I had it all planned at 25 ... but the more you plan, the more Gods laugh! I'm 32.8 now, and till today, this is what I ended up doing ...
Studied Graduated from IIT Bombay, made VoIP softwares, swept floors in the UK for a living, waited on snacking people to get some tips, worked at the Coventry University call centre, seen an ODI from the Lords Pavilion (with Shri RajSingh Dungarpurji), spoke with Shri Rajsinghji about his love interest Lata Mangeshkar (that was super-awesome!), analysed Chelsea's Stamford Bridge to carry out an ROI assessment, met the grandson of a Titanic survivor (oh boy!), worked as customer service guy at William Hill's Sports Betting shops, played in the MDFA (Bombay's football league), in BHA (Bombay's field-hockey league), studied a Sport-MBA from the UK, am representing Bombay in national and international Ultimate Frisbee tournaments with Bombay's Storm Chasers, worked as a data-entry guy, earned food-money an assignment-writer for b-school students, volunteered at the Hockey World Cup in Monchengladbach, Germany (2006), am now a professional football referee, and also doing this weird and very-Americanish idea of making tee shirts ... and selling them!
So much for all the planning! I ended up making almost no money in life - but I now believe I do not need much of it (sour grapes?!!) My stupid passion will carry me through! Well, money is needed, but you know what I mean, right?!
(Still, I have a 1000 more things to do - like run a taxi in Bbay atleast for a week, write a book on IIT Bombay's trivia, act in Prithvi atleast once in this lifetime, do some RJ-giri etc. etc., work towards 'community sports', go to Brazil for WC14)
May be it's difficult to believe, but at IITB, I flunked in 22 courses - and took an extra year to graduate. Ironically, that one year was one of the best years of my life!
Why flunked? Well, almost all the time in the class was spent scribbling and drawing something or the other, and all the time in the hostel/playground was spent farting around and taking pride in being witty.
In 2008, my dad happened to mention some Gitagyaan, "If you can do something well, and you choose not to do it, then you are committing a big sin." So I resumed my drawing, and my farting around ... and Toubé Bäs was born. I thought t-shirt designing would be a nice thing to do - but it turned out to be an incredibly fascinating experience in the industry of 'expression'.
The true concept of "tshirts" is yet to 'arrive' in this country. There are so many people doing t-shirts, but I sometimes feel that the 'essence' of t-shirts is half-lost with them. Usually, t-shirts not only provide a strong platform for 'individual expression' ... but if managed suitably, t-shirts have the power to bring about a bottom-to-top ripple in the society too. I have begun with the former hoping that the latter will turn out to be a by-product.
Today, it's just the youth (at heart) that prides in wearing witty and unique tshirts. The poppa-kinds are happy wearing their kurtas and polos and shirts, while the bachcha-party are too kiddish to appreciate most of the wit! In the Western parts of this world, t-shirts are the primary street/campus/lounge casual wear - meant for you to flash your attitude while the (slightly) lesser mortals take notice of you and your beliefs/attitudes!
I am hoping this would happen in India soon. With the trendy youth that we boast of - it will! There's zero doubt in my head, at least!