Sunday, June 6, 2010

BLUNDER NO# INFINITY……

I do not really recall the occasion, but here was my oh-so-religious mom pulling me up from my dreamy slumber, admonishing me for not keeping my word to visit the local temple in the wee hours of the morning. In order to escape the nonstop nagging from my mom, I scrambled out of bed, rushed to the restroom for a hurried bath, changed in to dry- cleaned clothes, and was very soon on my way to the temple, which was situated at a distance of about 10 km from my residence. Keeping with my new-found preference for austerity (courtesy our union finance minister), I decided to avail the services of the state transport bus to reach my destination.

The bus stop almost presented a scene from a battleground. It was a week day, and the bus stand was swarming with school children loaded with the much-debated rucksacks on their backs, and then of course, the rest of the paraphernalia of umbrellas, raincoats, lunch bags etc.; then there were the college students, the regular office goers, and last but not the least, the vegetable vendors and fisher women with their baskets, all of their necks straining toward the direction in which they anticipated the eagerly-awaited bus to come. To add to all this, was the constant honking of the vehicles passing by splashing dirty water collected in puddles and pot holes from the bout of the heavy downpour that had just stopped. It was now just drizzling, but enough damage to have all buses run annoyingly late had already been done. Wrist watches played mischief by attracting the attention of their owners every other minute. Tempers were slowly beginning to rise.

The crowd grew in size in the twinkling of an eye, and the prospect of me getting into an approaching bus seemed to be more than a Herculean task. Nevertheless, I stood my ground, reminding myself of my resolve for austere measures. "When the going gets tough, the tough get going", kept ringing in my ears, and decided that my mode of transport to the temple will not change, and would be the local bus itself.

Someone from the crowd spotted the bus afar, and alerted one and all. For a flash of a second, I was sure that we were in “Kurukshetra” or the battleground, and we were the army of the Pandavas waiting for our commander to yell out an "AKRAMANN" meaning ATTACK," the enemy being the innocent red bus approaching us. The next few moments witnessed a scurry of activity, people shutting their umbrellas,(some of the umbrellas stubbornly refusing to obey their masters) the vendors hurrying to adjust their baskets on their heads, each and every one jostling and rushing to place themselves in vantage positions to not only enter the bus, but to also grab a seat depending on their respective expertise, an ideal example of the theory of the origin of species, i.e. survival of the fittest!!!!

Interestingly, I for one, did not need to do much, thanks to my small size, I guess. Amidst all the commotion, I found myself pushed and pulled, some falling child even grabbed my hair, I suppose, but there was no time to retaliate or to even feel the pain, as in a jiffy, I was lifted into the bus by unknown hands and bodies, and for a few breathtaking moments, even held suspended in mid air ....I thought the wait would never end…when THUD…All of s sudden, I crash-landed violently, but miraculously on a seat, wherein by the time I could gather my wits, I found myself being loaded with heavy sack like school bags one after another, the kids not even bothering to politely request me to hold it for them while they struggled to maintain at least a decent standing position. Good manners? Save it for some other time lady, was the look they gave me.. A minute later I found myself to be the custodian of God alone knows how many bags, wet and dripping umbrellas, raincoats, T-scales of the Engineering college students, so much so the only portion of my body visible to the outside world were my pair of eyes, which begged and pleaded to those closing in on me to have pity on the human life underneath this huge pile. The chaos and commotion continued. People were screaming and shouting at each other. The bus conductor looked like he had just come out of World War II with all his hair standing out in all 4 directions. He seemed genuinely thankful that he still had his clothes on his torso. The drizzle did little to cool tempers, which refused to stop rising.

Someone accidentally hit the bell, and fortunately for me the driver took it as a cue from the conductor to resume the journey. Phew!!!...so we were finally moving. I told myself another 15 minutes and I would probably be out of danger from death out of suffocation. The roads were all slippery due to the rains, and it was traffic jams galore. The bus moved at a snail's pace, brakes were pressed after every 5 minutes, and I was now beginning to shiver under this pile of wet umbrellas and raincoats. My head kept banging against the seat every time the brakes were pulled and my poor little nose, I could give the Japanese some real tough competition!!! But I desperately tried to think positive ..,I consoled myself, may be I would be in a position to match Himesh Reshammiya with my nasal droony voice.and yeah…do a duet with him!!!!WOW…how wild can imaginations fly….well, blame it on the circumstances 

Anyways, the junction adjacent to the school was approaching, so I gathered from the banter of the children. Thanked God for gifting us with ‘ears” to hear, my eyes were denied its ability to actually function even though they were wide open. Anyways, I knew relief was not very far. Almost three-fourths of the crowd comprised of school children, all of them now in readiness to alight at the next stop. As the bus screeched to a halt, there was another scramble….this time, to unload the stuff on me….Some grabbed the bags, the others their umbrellas, the T-scales, some of which got entangled…and then the struggle to disentangle them. When the last item on my lap was finally retrieved and most of the crowd had gotten off, I straightened myself and readjusted my hair, which resembled that of a ruffled bird's nest, and began to make myself comfortable. Yes I also smacked my nose back to position, hmm, the damage was not irreversible. It was then that I noticed one more umbrella on my lap. Some little child had forgotten her/his umbrella….it was raining…the bus had begun to move…I looked out of the window and saw this puny school girl in uniform looking up at me…Without any hesitation, and with the confidence of a seasoned cricketer, I lifted the umbrella and threw it out of the window to the little girl, all in lightning speed.…..I am sure even Jonty Rhodes could not have made such a precise throw ever in his cricketing career ….the bus had by now picked up speed and was well on its way….the last I saw of that girl was her running to pick the umbrella with this very confused look in her face oscillating between me and the umbrella. I sat back once again in my seat so content with the world….This was my good deed for the day….I had returned an umbrella to a child who otherwise would have been punished by parents at home for losing it, or by the school authorities for coming in soaking wet. I was so pleased and proud of myself…Poor girl…she would have been so miserable, but for me…I had something good to jot down in my diary tonight.

As the bus meandered its way through the busy road once again, an uncomfortable feeling of something amiss crept into me….Am I missing the crowd or the sweet heaviness of all those stuff on me?. Or am I just euphoric because of the good deed accomplished?. The place where I needed to alight was nearing, there was no time to ruminate, and now it was my turn to prepare myself to alight, but there definitely was something missing…I had my purse in hand….but there was an additional item in my hand I remembered vividly while leaving home.….Yes…it flashed back…mom had hurriedly pushed an umbrella into my hand while leaving… It was missing now…..I frantically looked for it, around me, behind my seat, in front of my seat, underneath my seat, went down in all fours....but could not find it…..GOSH!!!!!Realization only then dawned on me.... I HAD THROWN OFF MY OWN UMBRELLA TO THE LITTLE GIRL IN ALL THE COMMOTION ….and that explained the confused look in the child's face and who had no way to reach out to me as the bus had already moved away….

My co-passengers very kindly enquired as to what I was looking for….Surely, I could not explain that I had foolishly thrown off my own umbrella out of the window!!!... I could not afford to present myself as such a dumb nitwit, could I?…So I just sheepishly smiled, shrugged my shoulders and mumbled "Oh, I am alright, just checking whether I have all my belongings intact". The bus stopped near the temple and I got off it minus umbrella plus anxiety as to what explanation I was to give my mom….The first thing I asked God when I entered the temple was " Oh Lord, why me????

Dedicated to my very dear friends, Sowmini, Deepa, Molly, Reena,Sankar, Manish ,:)

2 comments:

  1. i can very much relate to the early morning temple visits. Even my mom did the same every weekend. There was no escape to that..And the histronics which you had to suffer in the bus was hilarious!! Couldnt help laughing.

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  2. Thanks so much for stopping by , priya....Any my saga continues....every such temple visit is turning out to be quite adventurous for me..Glad it did tickle ur funny bone somewhere though.:))

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