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Thursday, December 18, 2014

India Diary - A Long Road Home



The only part that can be appropriately labelled as ‘excruciating’ in a 3.5 week vacation home (India), is perhaps the 20+ hours spent cooped up in an air-plane or counting crows during layovers. An 8 hour flight from Detroit to Amsterdam, wandering aimlessly through the occluded corridors of Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport before boarding the next 8 hour flight to New Delhi, landing in New Delhi hours before the first blush of dawn, napping fitfully on the rock hard benches at the terminal and finally embarking on the last leg of the journey, a 1.5 hour flight to Bhopal – post all this, it wasn’t surprising that I was mere inches away from collapsing in a pitiful heap of cramped muscles and sore bones, yesterday.

Regardless though, the moment I stepped out of the airport at Bhopal, it was as if the familiar smells, sounds and sights of this much-loved city breathed new life into a travel-weary me. Soon enough my jet lagged eyes popped wide open in excitement as Papa meandered through the narrow by-lanes burgeoning with life and past the quiescent ‘bada talaab’ (big lake) over which a translucent curtain of mist hung low, adding manifold to the acute sense of nostalgia that was slowly setting in. The moribund yet charming pink arches of Gauhar Mahal and the quaint minarets of Tajul Masjid seemed to break into wide smiles as they welcomed me back. Even the stern looking Raja Bhoj carved in stone looked pretty pleased to see me. What accentuated the hilarity of the situation was me grinning foolishly back at all of them. This is what happens when one has an imagination that gallops faster than wild horses.

For the first few days everything feels surreal. It is as if I have stepped out of a Skype session with my parents, right into their living room. The transition from miniature 2 dimensional images on my computer screen to real flesh and blood 3 dimensional versions has left me momentarily dazed and I constantly feel the need to reach out and touch everything and everyone around to make sure that this is not a dream. Even the city pretends to unfold slowly and dramatically in front of me, making me believe that I am seeing it in a fresh perspective today.

Small town India peeks cheekily from around every nook and corner – a posse of students crowding a tin shanty, from within the charcoal walls of which a delectable breakfast of ‘poha-jalebi’ materializes on square pieces of newspaper, mothers balancing their cubs on two-wheelers while on their way to drop them at the school bus-stops and old men in monkey-caps and thick wool sweaters, emitting bursts of loud belly-laughs in the park early in the morning. Neither do I have to try too hard to hear the sounds of small town India, as they filter in seamlessly through meshed windows and make their way to my eager ears – the loud whistle of a train zipping on its tracks somewhere in the vicinity, the strains of Hindi movie songs trickling in as they play on someone’s radio-set in the neighbourhood, the cacophony of competitive honking on the roads and the constant hum of life as it goes by.

Picture this - I am sitting cross-legged in the living room, with a blanket of golden sunlight warming my legs and the sound of Ashoka trees rustling merrily in a mild winter breeze. From the corner of my eye I can see Ma shuffling from one room to another, carrying out her ritualistic morning chores. Papa is lounging on a chair in front of me with a cup of tea. He has his nose buried in today’s newspaper. On my left, my brother, Pranay is lying supine on the couch, his eyes glued to the television set on which an India-Australia cricket match is on. This is my very own paradise. None of the harshness associated with life as a grown-up touches me here. With me are those who love me unconditionally, a bookcase that groans under the weight of books from all around the world and crisp mooli/methi/gobhi paranthas that turn golden brown in Ma’s kitchen. I can speak in Hindi all day long without having to see even a hint of incomprehension on the faces of those whom I am speaking to. If this isn’t pure joy, then what is?