Accept My Apologies
The moment when I blamed you,
It won't come back dressed in new,
A five letter serpent is my worry,
How am I gonna tell you I am Sorry!
Monday is the day of expectations, and the beginning of an adventurous week. You depart quite jaded on Fridays, but arrive invigorated on Mondays. If you are following TV shows, you pick-up the remote control gleefully, expecting a happening episode. And, if the episode ends on an eye-locking scene, it turns a pacifist into a girl holding a baseball bat looking for the head of the director and the creative.
It did not take long for the bearded man to figure out that the wallet is exactly where he kept it. I do not blame him for jumping the gun. We all have the tendency to jump to the conclusion without looking left and right, and inside our brain. Minni did not expect that Ayesha is innocent; Raj believed that she is innocent, and for Veer, it was the reputation of the hotel that was at stake. What do you do when the so called culprit turns out to be innocent? Apologise.
Sorry is an easy to pronounce word, but when the time comes to say it, we just shrug our shoulders and walk away from a room. And, even if we end up saying it, most of the time we do not mean it. Like Minni, we say the words as a formality because we have been asked to do that.
The man Veer walked all the distance as if he is going to make a scary declaration, looked into the eyes of Ayesha and said sorry, hands fisted. The girl has indeed affected him. He wears a mask in front of everyone, and appears to be calm, but when alone -- a tormented and angry soul.
Before I wrap-up this sorry business, like to add, there is one more kind of sorry that comes with a reward. In addition to a note of sorry, the bearded man also solved the picnic money problem.
Parminder wants the kid out because she wants to keep her job, and we cannot blame her for that. And, the acting wonder kid has a one way conversation with his parents via the stars, and promises to be a good kid. Is there a limit to being good or there is no boundary when it comes to being good. I am wondering: What the kid has in mind when he says, he won't trouble his aunt and be a good boy.
The director failed today to deliver a tight episode, everything looked so scattered. Ayesha has gone easy on her expressions. Raj is better off smiling than giving a serious look. And, Veer ... he is ... and needs a haircut.
Let me finish my blabbering with this quote: "Your audience gives you everything you need. They tell you. There is no director who can direct you like an audience." -- Fanny Brice.
Have a Happening Week. 😊
Enjoy!
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,