
Drawing is a good way to channel frustration
Like I said the other day, I just have to keep up with the scenius. Keep drawing daily, find opportunities to study the form, and keep trying, good or not, as Lynda Barry has said.



One thing we forget with digital media is the material properties of the materials…the organic flow or the way the materials shape the outcomes.
I haven’t any experience with watercolours and so pushing myself out of the comfort zone of flat colors which is what you need in comics but – my friend Raj always complains my drawings look a bit flat.
So tried a bit of depth in last night’s sketch – coloured this on Procreate where inks don’t bleed haha.

Austin Kleon often talks about gathering a scenius, and I have to say – for me that’s @pacificleo @royalbengal @whackonondo & @the_legend_of_raj. We have a group called Wider than the sky. What is great is that my scenius is not just talking, but also doing. They’re constantly making things, churning out ideas, art, films, explorations – so I have no option but to do, and keep up my end!
There’s no way to escape, @the_legend_of_raj even sent me that handy little @sennelier1887 watercolour box!
These drawings are from the weekend, drawing at a street corner outside our little tornado’s karate class.



I work from home, and often my only social life is to have a conversation with myself in drawing. Here’s a typical one:

Life’s been a whirlwind, reader. So much to do, and so many things inspiring me. Grateful for the days when energy and good health can keep up with my intentions! Here are some drawings from the past few months –

A sunrise walk with the brown boy, who tells me that I steamroll across life with my overblown sense of purpose. Good to know that I guess. Anyway, who can be mad at him for long? At breakfast we caught up on gossip we couldn’t share in front of the little tornado (who was in school).
Font: Cantoni Pro
I’m always more prolific in April, maybe because I’m an April girl? And looking through old posts, found some of my favorites
Me meets me (2012)
Paris Cafe (2012)

The Body Rebels (2009)
Here are the original drawings on our wall. I sometimes catch the little tornado showing them to his friends and giggling. And my heart is full.

In April I always posted holiday sketches. Here’s
Rajasthan – Part 1: The Bikaner diaries – Part 2: Jaisalmer (2008)
Rishikesh, lord of the senses (2014)
Sri Lanka (2017) – Part 1 – Part 2

and even, Space Travel (2011)
Birthday posts, of course –
Turning thirty which was my mid-life crisis and I decided to leave my very well-paying job and the lovely brown boy and go study in a remote country for two years.

Top 5 Best Birthday Gifts of All Time (2007) after I had just read High Fidelity.
Age Appropriate (2016)
Milestone posts, like
Our Labour Story (actually 2015 but posted in 2018)
Olinda App (2013), which is one of my favorite pieces of my own work and for which I got my first US patent
Masters Thesis (2010)
Noseburn (2009), when Ananya and Jedi rode off across India
and some other cute stuff
Getting Fed by chefs in Swedish cafes (2010)
Reasons to Live (2008)
Twitter’s taking over (2009) when I was OD’ing on it
and some inspiration (2019)

And this drawing from January – is there anything as wonderful as looking back on old journals? Austin Kleon agrees with me too.
For me they are a portal to return myself back to me.

When the world is hostile it’s wonderful to be welcomed back to myself.
One of the things of being a parent is that you have to spend time with your kids. Lucky for you if they are entertaining. As in years past, our tornado still takes forever to eat a meal so I use the time to draw. It’s great to have a living breathing human being at close quarters to draw from! Between mouthfuls, we chat.





Sometime in August I was making notes for my DesignUp talk, and thinking about “belonging” when Orin chimed in:
“You belong to your parents, but you live with us!”


“Do you know centipedes lived in the time of dinosaurs?”


“Do you know what a sundial is?”
I don’t know what he thinks of us…
Here they are watching the FIFA World Cup, and the brown boy thinks this is the best drawing of him that I’ve done since 2003. That drawing is actually hanging on my MIL’s fridge I think.

Here we were discussing our best movies/TV shows of 2022. The brown boy chose Better Call Saul, while mine was Dune, and the tornado chose Sonic the Hedgehog 2.

At least one of you drew me!
We’ve created a monster, I say…
Balancing introvert needs with the work that needs to be done is a common challenge in some of our lives…


Middle age! Time to get serious about life.
But me, I worry about my short arms and the brown boy wants to grow his hair.


A typical week in my life, pretty sure so many millions of women across the world have these exact same days…
I’ve been thinking, I haven’t seen myself or people of my demographic reflected in mainstream media for nearly a decade now. While that frees us up to define who / what we want to be, that’s one reason I keep on documenting my life.
A century later there might be no record of what Indian middle class urban working women did, in all their diversity.
Luckily I’m not the only one – Women at Leisure is a great record, our friend Smriti is a prolific blogger too, and there are probably more such personal documentation out there that I don’t know of.
Good thing that women have always journaled, at least for the past few centuries. It’s probably because they have always been silenced officially and have had to seek out a way to express themselves somewhere.
My own great great grandmother Rasasundari Devi was the first Bengali woman to write her autobiography.
This was at a time, around 1810-1830, when even basic literacy was denied to women in Bengal, so she had to teach herself to read, and after nearly twenty years, to write. She started writing her autobiography in her fifties when her children were grown. Around the same time, social reform in Bengal had barely started in Calcutta, but she lived in a village away from all this, and so was completely self-taught.
With such precedents, we would be throwing away our privilege if we did not use a bit of it to bring about a collective voice for those not represented in the mainstream. I know we can do more, and I’m speaking from my very entitled perspective, but it’s a start. It’s a purpose – to stop whiling away time and channel it towards expression.
Title re-purposed from a poem by Jim Moore, American poet.