Thursday, 16 July 2026

Tasting Our Words | “Expensive Emotions Ever”

“Tasting Our Words” | “Linguistic Accountability” 


Expensive Emotions Ever

Authored by Ms. Swarna Rekha | II MA English

Book Review

Swarna Rekha’s first publication titled, Expensive Emotions Ever makes a very engaging and unputdownable read for any many reasons.

Firstly, the book doubles up as a moral compass and an ethical guide for modern society, by diagnosing the ‘ethical shortcomings’ of our society - especially in the digital age - and suggests that the remedies for these shortcomings can be found only in our traditional values.

Secondly, the author highlights the ‘normalisation of cruelty’ in modern internet culture. In her chapter titled, “Kindness,” she points to “memes, reels, trolls, and trends” as platforms where people routinely exploit the insecurities of others for their cheap entertainment.

Moreover, she vehemently condemns the modern habit of “spilling the tea” (gossiping) and urges readers to refuse to sit at tables where people are being judged without empathy.

Thirdly, the book provides a sharp critique of contemporary dating cultures. Swarna argues that modern love has become a “trend” characterised by competition, comparison, and materialism. She further notes that “Gen Z considers love to be materialistic and lustful,” lacking true emotional connection.

As a corrective measure, she offers a possible solution from her own standpoint, stating that, a return to a pre-Gen Z standard of love is the need of the hour, a love that requires non-materialistic effort, healthy communication, and the willingness to support a partner through imperfections rather than demanding perfection.

Fourthly, Swarna highlights the harmful consequences of embracing a ‘throwaway culture’. She observes that, the modern era has somehow embraced the throwaway culture - a tendency to abandon difficult situations or relationships rather than work through them.

The chapter titled, “Dont replace; instead, repair,” directly tackles this ‘throwaway culture’ mentality, by beseeching the reader to look out for effortless replacements when a relationship faces friction. The author argues that constantly replacing people leads to a loss of loyalty and recurring guilt. Instead, she positions the effort to “repair and reunite” as an essential ethical duty that builds stronger, more permanent human bonds.

Fifthly, a strong “ethical orientation” forms the golden thread that weaves the book together into a harmonious whole. A significant portion of the book is dedicated to outlining core human values like honesty, respect, compassion, responsibility, and perseverance. In addition, she also ensures that these are not treated as obscure or idealistic theories, but as practical, daily requirements.

Sixthly, one particular concept that I personally liked very much was her emphasis on linguistic accountability. The book holds her readers strictly accountable for their communication. Hence, the author urges her readers to “Taste your words before you spill them out,” thereby addressing the impulsive tendency for reactive, careless speech. She also emphasises that negative words can cause deep psychological harm and hence insists that any verbal promises must be consistently backed by tangible actions, asserting that this alignment of word and deed reflects the “truest version of yourself”.

Seventhly, the book abounds with a lot of engaging Acronym-based definitions, to define standard emotions. For example, she frames LOVE as “Longing for Opportunities where Venture meets Empathy” and FEAR is characterised as a “Furious Enemy who Admits Risk to Your Confidence”. Again, she personifies Anger as an ‘Alien Invader’, by defining it as “an Alien that Nurtures your Grudge”, thereby foregrounding the fact that, these negative emotions are not a natural biological response, but a parasitic force that needs to be nipped in the bud.

Eighthly, the author has employed a lot of highly engaging literary devices to convey her message across to her readers. For example, in the piece titled, Flowers are personified, the author uses a garden as an allegory for the human psyche. By assigning specific emotional states to flora - daffodils for happiness, tulips for sadness, daisies for envy - the author creates a microcosm where emotions must learn to coexist.

Again, in her poem titled, ‘Emptiness into Fulfillment’, the internal struggle so beautifully connects with physical sensation. Phrases like “the darkest room without a light” and “wet, cold hands that shivered” effectively foreground the isolating nature of grief, which finally transitions to fulfilling joy when there is a focus on the self! (self-focus).

Finally, to conclude - in an age where human connection is frequently ‘replaced’ rather than ‘repaired’, our deepest emotions remain the most luxurious jewels that we possess! In this regard, Swarna Rekha’s book beautifully reminds us that our deepest emotions are not enemies to be feared, but a delicate garden to be cultivated and celebrated!

The vibrant cover design my Ms. Rakshaya (Ms. Swarna’s classmate) deserves special appreciation. One interesting feature that I observed about the cover design is the central heart, which is represented - not as a solid shape, but constructed from three distinct, petal-like forms, thereby visually representing how different emotions blend to create complex emotions aka expensive emotions.

In that way, the design of the cover beautifully mirrors the content of the book!

Wednesday, 15 July 2026

“So that was a lesson for me, always keep knocking! Never stop!” ❤️

A Rendezvous with Dr. Merlin Franco on Biocultural Diversity and Global Academia


Council Room, MCC
Wednesday, 15th July 2026
#mccinternationalprogrammes

Dr. Merlin Franco, Senior Assistant Professor, University of Darussalam, Brunei, [MSc Botany, MCC, 2001-2003] was here with us today, Wednesday, 15th July 2026, as part of our Global Alumni Engagement Series, from 3 – 4 pm in the Council Room.


In his hour-long interactions with our deans, faculty members and students, Dr. Franco had a lot of highly engaging anecdotes, interesting reminiscences of his days in MCC, and invaluable insights for students aspiring to study abroad.


So happy to note that many of our Interns and students had very insightful questions for Dr. Franco.

Here goes a few interesting excerpts from the Interview –

Sir, how did you get into this famous public University in Brunei?

Well, it wasn’t that difficult. Educational institutions all over the world we tend to operate in similar ways. So it is just a matter of cultural adjustment. For me, personally, I look upon every day as a great learning opportunity.


I found this fellowship opportunity in Curtin University, Australia – a public research university based in Bentley, Perth, and I pitched in a proposal, saying that I wanted to work with indigenous communities, studying the relationship between culture, indigenous languages and nature, which comes under a paradigm called biocultural diversity. So i applied for that, then I got selected, and everything happened so quickly. And from there I applied to Brunei, and that’s how it happened.

On possible areas for research abroad…

Southeast Asia is in the crosswinds of two major super powers - China and the United States. Biodiversity is one field where you will never have a dearth of job opportunities. It also comes with certain requirements – like relocating, travelling all around the world, etc.

One of the most important challenges facing academia today is - how can you bridge the natural sciences and social sciences? Strangely, they don’t seem to talk to each other except like a few of us, we are doing our best to engage across disciplines. Otherwise, we hardly talk to each other now, although all of us of nature lovers!


You have English Literature professionals, you have psychologists, you have geography specialists, you have environmental scientists, and we all work on biodiversity and environmental studies like a field, and as we go ahead, we realise that we are all talking about the same thing! Sadly, we don’t work together.

Now, the future is going to be for those people who understand both of these and bring these two together.

So the policy interface is going to be very important if you can understand how human beings relate to biodiversity. There’s going to be a huge scope for application in the field of sustainability.

In the sciences, we learn about how habitat heterogeneity contributes to language diversity.

In Borneo, you can see it happening right before you ask now. You have languages that have all originated in the last 100 years. And it is so beautiful - you could be in a landscape surrounded by four different settlements.

You know, when we live in a hugely populated country you see hundreds of people per day. As you walk in Ranganathan Street, you see at least a thousand people per minute. The pitfall of that is that - we take human resources for granted - we step on a person, and we don’t even say sorry, but in Brunei, they give a lot of importance to human life and human emotions. So when they realise you have been hurt, people can go out of their way to ensure that they your grievances are redressed.

On how a letter to MCC, and a proposal to a University Abroad were turning points in his life…

Sometimes when you are in your lowest point in your life, you become bold enough to do the unthinkable. So I haven’t been to MCC before that, but I have known about MCC a lot, its quality of teaching, etc. But I was also disappointed that I couldn’t get in, and it was already one month past the admission and then one fine morning, I woke up and I thought I should write to Dr. Livingston, the then HoD, Dept of Botany.

In my letter I wrote, why I was attracted to MCC. Because institutions are very keen to know how you would make use of their resources, and also because we also don’t want to ruin somebody else’s chance, right?

Imagine if MCC had invested on me, and after three months I had discontinued the course and gone? That’s hence institutions are very keen to know why you wish to join them. Secondly, I remember having mentioned in my letter, ‘How’ it would be helpful for me.

We never think about that, especially when we are young, we just assume that the door is closed.


Maybe somebody left the job or left the seat and there was a vacancy, and you’re approaching at the right time. So that was a lesson for me, always keep knocking! Never stop!

As regards the proposal –

The proposal is very important! It’s the same as your research interest! I laugh at myself when I think back upon the time when I wrote a proposal for the famous ethnobotanist Hunt –

Hunt was quite famous and he was very much interested in my research that I was doing with indigenous people. He sent me a long list of emails, and finally he had asked me to send him my research interest.

I just wrote him back a sentence – I am interested in so-and-so and so!

Well, that’s because I didn't know that when people ask for your research interest, they are asking for your research statement. So a research statement is a highly researched, meticulously developed research argument. And that’s where you shine.

That’s where you show that you have done your homework, and you have clearly thought where your research career is going to be. You have all your hypothesis in mind, the trends that you have picked up or whatever you want, and then you defend it, and then you say that you are the right person to do this, and that you’re really passionate about this. This complements your research proposal.

A research proposal can be fluid. As for me, there was this opportunity on studying the relationship between language, nature and culture, and I wondered what would a botanist do with that?

How could I contribute?

That’s where my learning experience from the English department and social sciences came in. We have an interface field of inquiry called folk nomenclature or folk taxonomy, like, for instance, when English professionals study about first language acquisition and L1 and L2, and then we ask people, can you please give us 10 words in L1 and then you compare them with L2.

So when I was working with the indigenous community, I realised that you could do the same things with plants. Replace words with the folk names of plants. Now, these folk names of plants are highly condensed forms of local knowledge.

So I argued that I’d be using folk taxonomy and folk nomenclature as an interface between native languages and biodiversity. So much of my literature review was coming from folk classification, Indigenous language studies, and language diversity theories.


And so I was able to combine ethnobiology and language diversity theories, and so that was my proposal,

said Dr. Franco.


And guess what? Dr. Franco is also an accomplished author with Springer, Taylor & Francis, and an acclaimed novelist as well. He has written the much-popular novel titled, A Dowryless Wedding. The novel is a satirical comedy of manners, that follows Franklin, an eco-socialist researcher in Kerala, who faces family chaos and societal backlash when he bravely refuses to accept a dowry for his arranged marriage with Nisha. The book explores the bitter realism and cultural clashes surrounding the patriarchal tradition of dowry in India. You may want to order a copy of the book for yourself HERE on Amazon.

Coming back -

The rendezvous was facilitated by the Deanery of International Programmes, MCC, in association with the Deanery of Research and Development, MCC.

Our vibrant interns with the Office of International Programmes – Ms. Irin Reji Thomas, Mr. Mathew Alex, Ms. Meera Hari, Ms. Rakshaya, and Ms. Vishnupriya coordinated the logistics and the smooth conduct of the event in the Council Room.

Sunday, 12 July 2026

The Black Drongo on a "Mission" 💚

Checking the fridge for the fifth time in an hour, 
hoping new snacks magically appear in the stacks! 😉

Saturday, 4 July 2026

The "Art" of A Rewarding Day | The Secret in the Routine❤️

Hostel Life in the early 1990s

4th July 1994

#MCCSchool #HostelYears


On this particular day, we had our first Assembly in the grand Dr. Clement J. Felix Auditorium – the Pride of MCC School.

On an aside, I would like to give out some interesting facts about this great auditorium. Giving us all snippets with due acknowledgements to the MCC School’s Official Website –

The auditorium has an interesting history. An old building already existed when Mr. Kuruvilla Jacob purchased the land in 1946. This building housed the junior hostel and also the Headmaster’s residence. This historic building was brought down and an auditorium was built to commemorate the 150th year celebration. The foundation stone was laid by the former Prime Minister Shri Rajiv Gandhi on 5th October 1985 and was inaugurated by the former chief minister of Tamil Nadu Dr. M. Karunanidhi on 31st October 1990.

Coming back –

After having washed “a whole lot” of clothes and doing “Botany” classwork, (I had joined the Maths Bio group you see!) 😊 we had an 8:00 pm break where we literally devoured six bajjies, two coffees etc. (the famed South Indian bajjis).

“With great freedom comes great responsibility”, goes the good-old adage. I should admit that my hostel life has taught me how to make use of this great freedom with alacrity - how to fit into a routine, how to plan my day, how to schedule my agendas for the day, and how to act with a sense of responsibility! As a first baby step towards taking up responsibility, I learnt to wash my clothes, using washing powder, for the very first time in my life! 😉

A whole lot of things seem to have happened on this day for us newbie hostelers.

From 5.40 am when the warden (Mr. Parthiban Sir) was quite busy waking us all up with a loud clinking bell on him, to 9.40 pm when we went to bed, it was an exciting day filled with new routines and new responsibilities. (the exact phrasing I used today to wish one of our sweetest kids on her new programme!)




Be it our early morning jogging and chores, or attending our regular classes, or doing own laundry, or studying, or doing “Hostel drama practice in the Miller Hall” it really was a rewarding day by all means!

And yes! in all my life, it was the year that life in the hostel had taught us for the very first time - how to live a life of routines and responsibilities! 😊

Whenever students wish me a ‘good day’, I cheerfully respond to them with an optative expression, ‘Have a rewarding day’.

Yes! A rewarding day doesn’t happen by accident! It means to move away from passive consumption to active creation!

It could be learning a new skill, or dedicating time each day to write a new post for a blog, taking time to write a research paper, taking up a new hobby, cultivating a new habit for life, etc.

In this regard, I would like to end this blogpost in the words of eminent critic Scupin Richards –

The secret of a rewarding life is hidden in our daily routine!

How true!

Wednesday, 1 July 2026

The Day My Hostel Life Began | Tuning to a Rigid Institutional Routine! 😊

Living Life “By” the Clock | The Day My Hostel Life Began

#HSCDays #MCCSchool #HostelYears


[This day, 32 years ago, from my personal diary entry]

#memoriesfromdiaries

1st July 1994

This particular day in my life proved to be a monumental day for me!

A day when I experienced a massive life transition – from home life to hostel life!

The very first day of my 11th grade in MCC School, Chetpet, Madras, oops Chennai! 😊

Today even as I look back on this diary entry of almost 32 years ago, I am totally in awe!

Little had I realised back then, that one day, I will be sharing from my diary entry on the ‘Internet’ on a ‘Blog’ging platform, three decades later in time!

Be it getting a pair of sportshoes and some “good day” biscuits, or getting a few friends on the very first day - the anxieties, the curiosities, and the excitement of the day were of the highest order, you see!

There are two particular things that I wish to highlight from this diary entry as takeaways from this blogpost –

First is the sense of time-consciousness that my hostel life has taught me bigtime!

Even my personal diary entries from then on, have (I noticed it only quite late) have recorded the day by these timestamps - 10:30, 12:45, 4:00, 7:25, and finally sleeping by 8:50 p.m.

I am especially pleasantly surprised at my repeated use of the word ‘by’ to denote time.

It makes me compare our lives to a train journey, where each station arrives by – for example – by 10.30 am, by 12.45 pm, by 4 pm, by 7.25 pm and finally by 8.50 pm.

It also makes me realise how the concept of time had assumed for the first time, a lot of significance - once I had enrolled myself into a “rigid institutional routine”.

As a Professor of English today – I sure feel slightly embarrassed to see the typos and the spelling mistakes that I had innocuously made in the diary entry – which is again, a very personal one you see - 😊

Secondly, let me highlight some of my pretty “structural nativism” quirks in this entry, which are replete with the regional flavour! 😊

For example, expressions like “Today morning” (instead of this morning), “I and mummy,” and “fellow guys” etc., make this diary entry get its authentic vibes I guess!

I also noticed a few minor spelling errors like “tiffen” and “bye me” (buy me) that add to its teenage authenticity. 😊

Here’s to the little boy of 16, who “took the time” to write down his impressions - way back in 1994 – as a teenager - albeit with helluva typos, lotsa regional flavour, and anxieties of all hues writ large on him, and what not! 😊

Because, without him, I wouldn’t have been the person that I am, today!

Global Footprints | From Campus to South Korea ❤️

SKY Programme | First Edition

A Report | 1st July 2026


Today we had the first SKY Programme of the new Academic Year at 12.30 pm, in the Chemistry Seminar Hall. 15 Students who had spent their One-Semester Abroad in South Korea narrated their experiences to the assembled audience comprising of the Deans, Heads of Departments, Professors and students.


Our Principal Dr. Paul Wilson in his inaugural address highlighted the role played by the Office of International Programmes in facilitating student mobility to universities across the world. He also spoke on the visit of more than 54 renowned Universities from across the world who had come down to MCC to explore collaborations with our Institution and the resultant 12 MoUs that had happened in the last academic year. He exhorted students to finetune their portfolios with their skillsets, and make themselves employment-ready.




Dr. Rufus, Dean of International Programmes welcomed the gathering. Dr. Nirmala Mohan, Head, Dept of Commerce (SFS), Dr. Annet Pearl, Warden of Martin Hall, Prof. Livingstone, Professor of German, participated. Our newly recruited Interns did a highly commendable job. Ms. Irin from II MA Pol Science did the MC, while Shweta Vamsi (III BBA), Mathew Alex (II MA Pol Science), among others facilitated in the logistics for the programme. Dr. Serena, Associate Dean of International Programmes, proposed the Vote of Thanks. 

The programme ended at 1.20 pm, followed by a fellowship lunch at the Staff Tiffin Room.

What I personally liked about the programme was the way in which the Interns were particularly conscious of time management. All 15 students spoke, and still, we ended the Programme 10 minutes ahead of lunch time. Awesome work, dear Interns. Keep it up! 

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Tasting Our Words | “Expensive Emotions Ever”

“Tasting Our Words” | “Linguistic Accountability”  Expensive Emotions Ever Authored by Ms. Swarna Rekha | II MA English Book Review Swarna...