Vinita Sidhartha

Ripples Of Life and Time


A Printing we will go…

Blog 6 of 30

Getting the first client is one thing… doing a good job and keeping that client happy is a completely different story altogether. In the excitement of looking for clients and finally finding one, I had forgotten a lot of little things. I could compile the information and lay it out on the computer, but how would I show it to the client?

Sitting here today, in the era of email and WhatsApp and smart phones and collaborative tools like Teams and Zoom, it seems incongruous that there was no way to get the file to my client from my computer unless I printed it.

That led to the next big question… how would I print it? Printers were a rare and special commodity those days. I could not afford a printer. A 600-dpi laser printer cost more than a lakh of rupees. Compare this to a similar printer today, with a scanner and copier which costs barely Rs. 20,000/-

But back in the 1990s I could not afford one lakh for the printer and was unwilling to take the risk of investing with barely one client. So, I decided to use a printing service and the one closest to my home was a good six kilometres away.  So, I would take one son by hand, and put the other in the car seat and load them into the car and drive all the way each time I needed a printout.

It was situated on a narrow cul-de-sac and parking was a nightmare. They knew I was a young mother and more often than not would give me priority in printing. The kids would wait in the locked car with the windows cracked open for a few minutes while I ran up and got the printout and the security guard kept an eye on the car. The challenge was that sometimes I did not find parking, I had to keep circling till I did, as it was unsafe to leave the children alone in the car at a distance from the office.  All this became easier when I had Sundararajan come on to drive me around.  

Another huge challenge I faced is that they never had the latest software. So, no matter what I did, when I gave it to them, there would always be glitches in the printout. Now I knew these would not be a problem when it went to the press which did have the latest software, but clients never understood that.

So, every file had two versions – one corrected for the older software at the printer for client approval and a final version in the latest software for the press. I would often have to go home, correct the file for this software version, proofread it and come back again, each time painstakingly moving the children in and out of the car.

I did eventually invest in a laser printer after getting a few clients. In addition to the price of the printer I spent Rs. ₹25,000 for its warranty. I remember the pain of having to invest so much of money to get printouts. It made life easier as I did not have to run around so much, but every rupee of it hurt.

The worst was that barely a month after the warranty ended my printer failed. The cost of repair was more than it was worth, and I had to invest in another one again.  Those were tough times financially. I remember being heartbroken and crying myself to sleep, wondering if I would just have to shut down my fledgling business because investing another one lakh was such a struggle True, income was coming in,  but no matter, in those times it was a lot of money.

How simple some of these things are today… and how much we take for granted. And yet, in small challenges, I learned so much.

One response to “A Printing we will go…”

  1. Vinitha, I’m reminded of the Joan Didion lines, “ I think we are well advised to keep on nodding terms with the people we used to be….otherwise they turn up unannounced and surprise us…”. You certainly have not forgotten your younger self! So important that we don’t forget who we were! By narrating how you got started and the folks who helped you along the way this is both a great gratitude journal and a lovely warm look back at lessons learned along the way! Congratulations on this incredible milestone – you should feel very proud.

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Why Ripples of Life?

There is something magical about being on the water.
You are floating, subject to the vagaries of the current.
Somehow there is a sense of being alone with yourself.
And as you look at the ripples, the sun scatters its rays…
And the water infused with light, the droplets shining like diamonds.
In the shade are the shadows— beautiful in their own way.
To me this is very like life itself
With bright highlights — with highs and lows —
Truly the Ripples of Life.


Books by Vinita Sidhartha

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Newspaper Articles by Vinita Sidhartha

The New Indian Express – Just Play column
The lost game of cowrie shells from Kashmir
Poetics of playfulness
The lost game of cowrie shells from Kashmir
Back to the basics
Turning back time to learn about royal games
The treasure in our trees
Shells and the various games we played
The New Indian Express – Memories and Madras
Games inscribed in the past
Street side stories
Through the lens of childhood memories
Through the eyes of a child

In Conversation on YouTube – Memories and Madras

YouTube Links
Indira Parthasarathy – Memories and Madras
Ramesh Krishnan and Ramanathan Krishnan – Memories and Madras
Sriram Venkatakrishnan – Memories and Madras
Prabha Sridevan and Sita Sundar Ram – Memories and Madras
Sikkil Gurucharan – Memories and Madras
Padma Srinath – Memories and Madras
R U Srinivas – Memories and Madras
Sabita Radhakrishna – Memories and Madras
Pradeep Chakravarthy – Memories and Madras
Ranga Kumar – Memories and Madras
Priya Murle – Memories and Madras
Viswanathan Anand – Memories and Madras
Shylaja Chetlur – Memories and Madras
Amar Ramesh – Memories and Madras
Vidya Gajapathi Raju Singh – Memories and Madras
Timeri N. Murari – Memories and Madras
(15) C. D. Gopinath – Memories and Madras – YouTube
S. Sowmya – Memories and Madras
Letika Saran – Memories and Madras
M. V. Subbiah – Memories and Madras
Anita Ratnam – Memories and Madras
Dr B Krishna Rau – Memories and Madras
MCTP Chidambaram – Memories and Madras
Rakesh Ragunathan – Memories and Madras
Krishnamachari Srikkanth – Memories and Madras
Anil Srinivasan – Memories and Madras
Meyyammai Murugappan – Memories and Madras
Sivasankari – Memories and Madras
Mohan Raman – Memories and Madras
Lakshmi Krishnamurthy – Memories and Madras
Thota Tharani – Memories and Madras
Chithra Madhavan – Memories and Madras