Mumbai is to India what New York is to the world. Often more sentiment than merely just a city, it has something for everyone! A land so rich in history and immersed in the culture, inspiration finds you at every nook and corner, especially when you aren’t looking for it – best, when you least expect it.
At the age of 24, Mumbai is what I call home. Born into a family that’s always encouraged the arts, I’ve grown to love it – in all its forms.
It allows me to express what is otherwise inexpressible. I feel I lay a piece of me, in everything I create. Every stroke, every word, I physically feel myself investing a part of who I am – in it. It’s like a shield, making it easier for me to breathe. I realized earlier on, as I entangle myself in my creation allowing myself to undo the tangles of existence, I find peace.
It all started when I was around nine, when I wrote poetry and pieces of prose, in secrecy. It was only two years ago, that I opened up about it. Up until then writing for me was deeply personal, a catharsis. Now, over a decade later, it’s surreal to be called a writer. And there’s no better feeling in the world than having someone tell me, that they relate to a piece I etched where I was unabashedly raw.
For the past two years, I’ve been a part of the Creative Team at Roy Kapur Films (RKF), a Film and Digital Production House founded by the eminent Indian Producer – Siddharth Roy Kapur, President of the Producer’s Guild of India and the former Managing Director of the Walt Disney Company India and UTV – Studios.
My every day entails reviewing screenplays, pitching ideas, etching out stories amidst sitting in for narrations, internal meetings – the works. I’m amazed at how the process of executing that which is on the paper and finally of course, how the end-product is packaged and presented to the world only keeps getting more interesting to me as the days roll by. While it’s technically just a job and I’ve got to clock in x-number of hours to get done with the tasks at hand, it doesn’t feel like one – it’s so much more to me than just a 9-to-5.
Hailing from a country that’s been largely patriarchal for the most part, it’s encouraging to see the facets of the game, slowly but surely, change. With women beginning to claim what’s rightfully ours, from across the board – on camera and off, it’s a bright and exciting time for young, passionate, and ambitious women to be a part of the glorious creative industries, even on this side of the world. And that’s precisely what I intend to bring to the fore and highlight and thereby hopefully, in my little way, inspire more women to follow their dreams and stop at nothing (but traffic lights)! [February 2020; as etched for Debut Magazine. Read the original article here.]
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