Ticketless It’s been over two decades since I completed my masters. The turn of the millennium was a time when students were still submitting handwritten assignments, reference work was carried out on gloomy afternoons after class in the musty library of the university, and the internet and desktops had just about started to mark their arrival in the now-redundant cyber cafes and at homes of the privileged few. I wasn’t in it for the love of academics but because, after graduation, I did not know where else to be and what more to do. The two years of masters was a borrowed time to push back expedient decisions on career and deflect the incipient murmurs of “what about marriage” at home. It was distractions I was after, and in those days, you sought them through the physical enterprise of checking newspaper listings and going to the box office of the cinema or theatre in “advance” or minutes before the show hoping the tickets hadn’t been sold out. There were distractions galo...