Travel

Thursday, August 27, 2015

On People and Stories

I’ve been an avid user of Facebook for many years now (8 to be exact), and I can look back and see how my relationship with this site has changed. It started at the end of my teen years, where the initial source of pleasure resided in the increasing number of ‘friends’ that you had. Over the college years, it moved to witty status updates, the ones that you felt strongly about, and yet also enjoyed seeing the number of likes go up. In the last few years, it’s become more about engaging in fleeting dialogues about social issues around the world – a way to shout out against the injustices and appreciate the nicer events.

But recently, it’s changed again. Now, it’s no longer about national or global issues. It’s not about political or social change. It’s about something that I’ve come to realize is so much more important to me.

It’s about individuals. And their stories.

*************

It started with a simple ‘like’ of the Humans of New York (HONY) page after having read a few of the anecdotes that were shared on it. A few months later, I came across of Humans of Bombay page, and decided to like it too. And then a Humans of Bangalore. And then, one day, I decided to search for ‘Humans of’ on Facebook, and decided to follow almost every page I came across: Humans of Vizag, India, Karachi, Dilli, Delhi, Singapore, Toronto, and probably a few others.

And every day, I found myself waking up to stories of friendship, love, inspiration, tears, struggles, death, smiles, passion – stories that resonated with me no matter which part of the world they belonged to. And each time I read and shared one of those stories (and trust me, there were a lot), I’d find myself thinking – why isn’t this stuff used in classrooms? Why do we read stories that have been created especially for the purpose of education, but ignore the stories where the real education is found?

I mean, imagine a classroom where one such story is shared with students on a daily basis – how much would they open their minds to the diversity that begins in their home and cuts all borders? And imagine the students themselves going out and talking to people and getting such stories – how could they not learn from such a direct and raw experience?

See, the thing is – stories have a power. And I don’t know if this is more true for me than for others, but stories are the only way I’ve ever learnt. The only way I could understand the digestive system was to think about what happens to the morsel of food from the moment it enters our mouth. Ask me to relay any sociological or development theory that I’ve learnt in the last two years, and I’ll draw up blank. But tell me the story of the worker who is forced into slavery by working in the brick kilns of Pakistan (Humans of New York), and I’ll never forget it. I’ve never been able to remember the structure or function of the government that we learnt in civics despite numerous attempts (my dad will attest to that), but the story of the old woman in Vizag who travels daily to the city to sell eggs because her entire family deserted her leaving her with no other source of income – I think I’ll always remember that. 

Increasing research is now suggesting that stories are the best way for a person to learn, because that's how our brains are wired. Think about it - HONY, in a single trip to Pakistan, has probably been able to tell the world more about this country than any history book or media coverage ever could!

And I've been trying to figure out what it is about stories that appeals to me that I can't find through information and data or even my favourite Wikipedia. And I think it boils down to stories being about people. About individuals. They may tell tales of political upheavels and social change; they may be about large events in history; they may be about complicated concepts; but they are still stories of individuals. And crazily enough, as violent and disruptive and thoughtless as we humans seem to be when we act as a group or a mob or a nation, as individuals, we’re very different. We become people who care, people who struggle, people who learn – people who feel. The concept of slavery in the states doesn't hit you as hard until you hear about the stories of individuals who suffered. Why did The Kite Runner become so popular? Not because it had a great plot (which it probably did), but because it gave us all a glimpse into life in Afghanistan from a single person, a glimpse that the media never could give.

And it doesn't matter if it' fiction or non-fiction - it's the story told through the eyes of the person that matters - a story that draws you in, makes you feel the fear and the hope of the protagonist to the extent that you know it'll never completely leave you. I mean, imagine if the Harry Potter books were just a series of events describing the magical world into which this new person has entered to fight the Dark Lord, without us ever experiencing it through Harry's eyes, and feeling his wonder, his confusion, his doubt, his determination?! (Okay, don't imagine that. It's shudder-worthy).

So where does this leave me?

It leaves me with a firm belief in the power of stories, and yet surrounded by textbooks that emphasize historical events and scientific concepts over stories. Sure, the NCERT has attempted to move in the direction of stories, but these stories are still limited, because they focus on creating a fictional story whose sole purpose is to introduce the topic of addition or fractions. They are stories created for a purpose - a purpose of teaching something (a whole other blog post needed on that topic). Whereas the stories that stay with us - the stories of HONY and Harry Potter and The Kite Runner - these are stories that were told just because someone wanted to tell them.

And those are the best kind.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

The Clouded Mirror


There’s this object I own
An artefact, of sorts
Rather plain to look at
But the envy of lots
Don’t be fooled by its name
It’s not just a mirror, you see
Because it only shows
The very best version of me
The kind I want to be
The kind I want to look
The kind for which in my dreams
I am often, mistook.
And it’s not just me
My friends feel it too
One feels fairer, another, thinner
And one swears her breasts even grew.
And we stare at it for hours
Lost in a state of bliss
Because without that image
Everything feels amiss
Try and make us step aside
And you’ll see a state of despair
Because how we dream to look
Is all that of which we’re aware
We were told, after all
Since our very first birthday
That we want to look beautiful
And beauty only looks a certain way
So why would we bother
To even try to look otherwise
To be happy with ourselves
And treasure our bodies – what a vice!
To actually listen to that murmur
That’s coming from deep inside
Urging us to step away
And actually open our eyes wide
And see that what’s in the mirror
Is actually just a trick of a cloud
Blurring the image that is real
Of the one we should’ve been proud
But our response is outrage
Calling out the murmur on its lies
And we continue to gaze happily
While we drown it out with our cries
Because there’s a small secret, you see
That I haven’t shared with you as yet
We actually know all about the cloud
It’s kind of like our safety net
We put it there ourselves
To bring our ideals nearer
So we wouldn’t have to cringe each time
We decided to look at the mirror
Because each time we step away
Is a reminder of who we are
That we’re not good enough this way
That the journey ahead is far
And so we keep going back
To gaze and gaze all day
Because in that clouded image
We feel like we’re okay
Because the mirror doesn’t just show
The very best version of me
But the version the world’s convinced me
That shows how I ought to be.




I entered a writing challenge this week, wherein I was given a word that I had to weave into my writing. But the thing is, I knew what I wanted to write about long before I saw the word, because it’s something that’s been nagging me for a few weeks [*cough* years *cough*] now.

Acne.

Yea, I know. In an age where we’re faced with countless global problems encompassing humanity and our planet, the thing that’s been bugging me lately is the little pimple on my face. Okay, fine, it’s not really little. And neither is it singular. More like a break out. The kind that’s in [on?] your face. And a little hard to ignore. Because of the incessant pain. And also because it…you know…doesn’t look so nice.

So, for a little context – I’ve had acne problems well since my teenage years. It’s the kind of phase you realize isn’t actually a phase in your case – more like, a perpetual state of being. A partner in crime, if you like. A shadow. An incessant pest. The kind of friend you just can’t get away from. Okay, you get the picture.

And an occasional hazard of having such visible pimples on your face is that it comes up a lot in random conversations:

Me: Hi! How have you been? It’s been so long!
Other: Oh you poor thing. What happened to you?

Or

Me: Alright, let’s order some food?
Other: You’re getting a lot of pimples, you know?

While a lot of people limit themselves to random exclamations of pity combined with a look of being in pain themselves, some others feel that it’s their duty to give you advice on how to deal with acne: like that kind gentleman in Bhopal who stopped his scooter to ask me for directions, before sprouting advice on how to deal with the scarring; or the taxi driver in Mumbai who made me take off my ear phones so I could hear his remedy; or the fellow customer of a grocery store waiting at the counter line who thought it would be a nice way of passing time to hand out advice to strangers.

Hey, I’m not complaining. I live for this stuff – it keeps me laughing for hours afterwards. 

But see, the thing that a lot of people don’t realize is – telling someone a remedy for getting rid of the acne is also, in a way, telling them that they should strive for skin that is acne-free.

No, wait! Before you go all ‘duhh!’ on me, think about it. Yes, people should try to have clean skin, but most people who are prone to acne actually wash their faces far more often than others to strive for that cleanliness, which kind of takes away from the whole 'healthy skin' line of argument. So when you tell someone they should try everything possible to get rid of their acne, you’re really telling them – you’re not good enough the way you are.

Have you tried this product? It works really well. You’re not good enough the way you are. You’re going for a wedding? Make sure you put on some foundation and concealer. You’re not good enough the way you are. Hey did I tell you about this friend who managed to get rid of all their marks in just a few months? You’re not good enough the way you are.

And somewhere down the line, the person starts believing you. They stop looking at mirrors. They avoid posing for photographs. They’re afraid of drawing any kind of attention to themselves, because they think that the first thing others would notice about them is how hideous they look. Eventually, they’re even hesitant to be seen.

Basically, you can be sure that their self-confidence takes a major hit.

All because of bloody pimples.

Sounds a little ridiculous.

But it hit me these last few weeks, when I had the worst break out of acne I’ve ever had, and I reached a point where I cringed if I saw a picture of myself, and even considered backing out of a sports tournament because I didn’t want people seeing me. That was next level. That, and a question my friend posed to me: “Well, as long as the pain goes down, that’s all that matters, right?” And I couldn’t respond – couldn’t say out loud that while it should stop mattering beyond that, the fact is, it doesn’t.

And that’s kind of when I realized how messed up it is to live like this.

Granted, sometimes I myself go around asking people for advice, or seeking sympathy for my condition, but unfortunately, I'm a product of this bloody world too. But these last few weeks have convinced me that at least now I know that this isn't what I need in my life. I need to not care about the marks. I need to be okay with how I look. I need to stop striving for an ideal of how I’m supposed to be. I need to just start being happy with who I am.

Okay, that one really does sound ridiculous. It’s ridiculous that being happy with yourself should be anything but a perpetual state of being.

But I’ve been having a lot of conversations with friends lately about physical looks, and whether it’s possible for us to not care about them. Fact is, I don’t think I’ve ever come across someone who isn’t conscious about some aspect of their body, or else doesn’t care at all about how others look. But I’ve met enough people to inspire the hope that it’s possible to get closer to that ideal. And that’s a place I know I want to strive towards – the place where I’m beyond caring about how I look, or how others look at me; the place where my confidence isn’t controlled by every little dot on my face, or flab on my thighs, or the tan on my skin.

Basically, the place where I don’t care.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

The Creators

Hey you...yes you. The so-called creator. You think you're so great, sitting there, smugly, in all that glory, staring down at your handiwork? 

Well, let me tell you. You've got competition, buddy. That's right, there's a new player in town. And anything that you can create...I'll match and raze.


You created land...
I created boundaries

You created water...
I created dams

You created animals...
I created arrows, spears and knives

You created plants...
I created chemicals

You created air...
I created smoke

You created the forests...
I created the axe

You created bodies...
I created clothes to cover the shameful work

You created blood...
I created ways to burst it from its vessels

You created voice...
I created words to use and misuse

You created eyes...
I created the prejudice

You created death...
I created carnage

You created me...
I created you.



Friday, December 19, 2014

The Train


I couldn’t really think of a better title than this. You see, the train is a bit of a foreign object to me, the kind that you know you were once acquainted with, but which you struggle to connect with now. Until the age of 12, I travelled across the country by trains. Living in the south, and having relatives in the north gave my family enough of a reason to spend days and nights on this fascinating object. In the early years, I remember we used to travel by sleeper. I don’t remember much about those days, except that the moment we started travelling in the AC coaches, I remember missing the wind. So even though travel in the AC coaches was supposed to be a step up, to me, it meant giving up one thing that I had loved longer than I realized I did so.

In any case, that’s not to say I didn’t enjoy the train rides. Looking back, what I can remember is a multitude of random images and videos that are burned into my memory – learning to play and acing the art of playing rummy and other card games with the family; walking to the pantry car clutching tightly on to the cup of cup-o-noodles and asking for hot water; mami coming to drop us off at the Delhi station, and always with some delicious dinner to go; bhai and a friend of his lying down on the top berths eating moomphali (peanuts) by removing the outer shells, which they discreetly placed on top of the heads of unsuspecting passer-bys; crouching on the toilet and waiting to do my business while watching fascinatedly as the ground raced by underneath; mamma neatly laying out the bedding at night only for it to be a complete mess by the morning (or a few minutes); worrying every time pa stepped off on to the platform that he may not be able to get back on the train in time; jumping up and down the berths excitedly from different places; watching the rail tracks criss-cross as though they were moving with us; feeling extremely proud each time we successfully crossed that point where the two coaches are joined; watching pa stand at the doorway and hesitantly approaching him, only to be pleasantly surprised when he’d let me stand by his legs near the edge of the doorway, feeling like a daredevil.

And then suddenly, just like that, the travels stopped. We moved countries, and subsequently, also our mode of travel. At the age of 15 I took my first solo flight, and from then onwards, it seemed I never stopped. Travelling across countries, trains were hardly the most feasible option; yet somehow, we stopped travelling by them even when we came to India. I mean, yes, we could afford flights now, so it just made more sense to take those, but coupled with the limited time we always had, travel now became more about getting to the destination than the journey in between. Everyone was so busy with their lives that it never even occurred to us (or to me) that I could travel by train from one city to another.

And so, here I was, a 25-year-old girl who had not only not been on a train for 13 years, but had also never done so alone. Basically, when the opportunity to change this cropped up, I jumped at it – both in fear and a determination to set things right. My first journey last month was about 28 hours, and I was travelling with a friend who resolutely refused to travel by AC, so after all those years, I found myself in a familiar and not-so-familiar bogie. The wind – it was just as I remembered it; the toilets – even more so; the hijra who lifted up her skirt when a passenger refused to hand out money – not so much. But over all, the journey was fun. I spent it in parts sleeping, looking out the window, reading a book and sitting on the doorway (which was a first!) with my friend as we chatted into the night.

But I knew that this was still the relatively easy part. I’ve spent the last year hearing a lot of friends recount what an amazing experience it is to travel by train, particularly alone. So I was determined to give it a shot. In an attempt to control my parents’ already rising heart rates, I decided to travel by AC instead of sleeper. I kept a book handy, charged up my laptop, picked the side lower berth so as to get the best window view, and made my way to the station. The train was, of course, delayed. And the station is hardly the same as an airport where you could just plop yourself on to an empty seat and read your book as you wait. Firstly, there isn’t anything that qualifies as a seat. Secondly, it was just so damn crowded! And everyone looked absorbed in conversations with either every single member of their family who had decided to drop them to the station, or busy with a phone. Option number two was closed to me since I had recently lost my phone. So, steeling myself, I found the place where my coach would stop, took out my book and tried to look as nonchalant as I could while standing in the middle of the crowd and reading.

When the train arrived, I’m proud to say that I was one of the first inside (no, I didn’t push anyone out of the way, thank you very much). It turns out that the fear of missing your train during the few minutes that it stops for can really pump your adrenaline. That and the huge family with over a dozen suitcases I saw making their way towards the coach. Inside, there was no place to put my suitcase, since the Indian railways seems to have an unofficial rule that each passenger must carry at least three suitcases as big as themselves. That was sorted after a few minutes of moving things around. Next, I settled in on my seat to look out the window, and instantly I knew something was wrong. I couldn’t see anything. Granted, it was dark, and the laws of physics would dictate that the window of an AC coach does not allow for gazing out at night, but even the few lights that passed by looked messed up. The doubt was confirmed in the morning, when I realized that my window was the one window on the coach (or the train) that was too messed up to see anything through. All you can see is glass. And tiny water droplets. To top off the journey, the berths next to mine (in the next cabin, if that’s what it’s called) were filled with a family consisting of seven children. That’s right – seven, and the oldest of the lot didn’t look older than six years old. Basically, when one started crying, the rest took it as their cue to follow. So the night was certainly musical.

But more than anything, I think the part that’s disappointing is that – I’m bored. I mean, sure, I exchange a few sentences with my other passengers occasionally (mostly to complain about how late the train is getting), and the rest of the time I’m trying to pass time with my book or my laptop. But still, the time is passing so slowly. I really don’t know what my friends were going on about when it comes to travelling alone by train. I suppose if you’re the more talkative type, then this grants you opportunities to start lifelong conversations with random people. But that’s really unlike me. So here I am, sitting on my berth, staring out at glass, missing the company – with my parents, with my brother, with my friend. Because, I really do have some great memories on the train, but most of them involved other people. Alone, all I care about is reaching home. All I want right now is the destination.

On a side note, I found that the one spot that has remained my favourite across these 25 years and sleeper / AC trains is the doorway, and standing there by myself, all I could think of were those times the much tinier version of myself would carefully sneak around pa’s legs, hoping I could stand there for as long as I liked.


Well, I suppose I can. The way this train is going, Bangalore isn’t getting here any time soon. 

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

The End of May

It's that time of the year again, with June and school just around the corner. A new year. New teachers. New books. A rush to the bookstore. Carefully going over the required booklist for bhaiya, and then the same for me. Counting the number of sheets we'd need to cover the books. Oh wait, they come in already cut up smaller sheets now. And they look different. More...orangy than brown. Why'd they have to change it? Oh but....this might make covering the books much easier. And we need to decide our stickers. Uff there are so many options. I don't know which one to take. I pick some at random. I don't like making decisions. And we need some pens. Yes, this is the second year my class will be writing with pens. That means I can buy the micro-tip pens like bhaiya. No more of those ink pens. Thank god, they used to be such a mess. Back home, the four of us get together. We have a big job ahead. I hate doing this, because it means school is starting. But it's also so much fun to do this every year, and the books smell so nice. I don't know whether I actually enjoy this or not. Mamma is in charge. She begins by taking a book and placing it over one of the sheets. The sheet is a bit too big, but mamma says she'll just fold it. No point cutting so much. I remember in the earlier years mamma had to spend so much time cutting those big brown sheets. She aligns the book carefully, then opens the front cover. Folds the side. Then opens the back cover. Folds the side again. She closes the book and holds it with her left hand, picking up the scissors with her right. She quickly cuts off all the corners in a neat diagonal shape. Next she cuts the inner side, but this is a little harder. I know. I tried last year but kept doing it wrong. After cutting it, she passes it to us. Pa has gone out of the room because of a phone call. I let bhaiya take the book, because I don't like folding the edges. Somehow they always get bent at the wrong places. I watch him carefully fold the inner flaps between the outside cover, and then breathe in relief as the hard part is over. Now he just has to fold all the outer remaining flaps inside. That part is easy. Even I can do it. But I cut tape and hand it over to him so that he can stick the flaps. Mamma has already started on the next book. She tells me that I could try to do the fist part - placing the book on a single sheet and folding the sides. This will help her go faster. I try to do that. The book keeps slipping every time I fold it from one end. I stick my tongue out in the side while trying to concentrate on the task. I had just finished folding one side before mamma takes it from me. She had finished her part already. Disappointed, I take the next book, trying to g a little faster. This time, I'm able to finish my job before mamma. But bhaiya is having difficulty cutting tapes by himself. So we decide to leave that part for later. Pa comes in, but seeing the big pile of books we have already finished, goes out again. Finally the pile grows larger, and then there are no more textbooks or notebooks left. Mamma looks tired. She says the rest is for bhaiya and me. I don't mind. The remaining part is fun. We break for lunch, and then the two of us come back to finish the job. I cut the tapes, he sticks them on the books. When that is done, we separate our stack of books. He takes his stickers, and I take mine, and both of us quietly try to put the stickers clearly in the centre of each book, without letting it tilt on any end. And finally, only one thing is left. Bhaiya picks up a pen, and offers one to me. This year mamma won't be filling in the stickers for me. I take the pen and carefully start writing my name in capital letters, silently admiring my own handwriting. It feels strange to write the class and section - it makes me feel so much older than I am. We check the lists before writing the titles on the notebooks. All the writing takes a long time, but finally, we both are done. We stack up the books neatly, and pick up all the pieces of paper lying around, throwing them in the bin. The bed looks clear. And the books look so nice sitting on the table. Oh but school is starting. I wish it wouldn't. I wish we could just do this ritual every year and not have to actually go to school afterwards. 

Low

There’s a feeling. Of something heavy weighing you down. Of a thick suffocating cloud that refuses to allow any light. You know you’ve done something wrong. Idiotic, actually. The kind you never thought you would do, or at least, hoped you wouldn’t, though in all fairness, you probably never even considered the possibility of the situation before. You’re disappointed, angry, upset, and to top it off, dreading making the call telling your dad what you did. Knowing he’s going to be all of the above, and more so. It doesn’t matter if you’re 18 years old and have missed an exam because you saw the wrong schedule, or if you’re 25 and have left a ridiculously expensive phone in a cab while roaming around in a different city by yourself. In both situations, you can’t help but going over the past, second by second, thinking of every little thing that you could have done differently, but didn’t. Or looking towards the future, wondering if there’s the slightest chance that you might luck out, and your mistake might be made up for. Hell, the rational side of you knows it’s not the gravest of situations – in hindsight, it might even make a good story to tell. But in this moment, when all you have is the heaviness and the thick clouds, the only thing that sounds even remotely tempting is burying your head into a pillow and hoping to wake up to a better scenario.

Friday, December 5, 2014

The Happy Place


It was cold, not such that it had you shivering from head to toe, but enough for the three-year-old girl to be bundled into a knitted, pink sweater. She picked at it uncomfortably, as she gazed out at the big lake around her. Boats dotted her vision, moving slowly across the water as the grown-ups who sat in them huffed as they pedalled.

On her own boat, her parents sat across her, pedalling the boat with an unhurried ease, while her dad kept one hand on the long stick behind. On her right, her older brother chatted away excitedly. The four of them were on their way to Mussourie, a few hours away from home, and had stopped for boating on the lake that had become customary to these trips.

As she listened to her brother going on and on about his own skill with pedalling the boat (he had done it for a minute at the max), she tried unsuccessfully to enjoy the wind and the water. Finally, feeling that enough was enough, the girl decided that it was time to speak up for herself. Plastering a frown on her puffed-up cheeks, she folded her arms for extra effect, and heaved in annoyance.

“Even I want to pedal,” she said.

Her parents looked at her in surprise. “But you’re too small for this,” said her mother, while her brother sniggered on the side.

“You let bhaiya do it!” she persevered. “Even I want to try.”

“But – “

“Sure,” her father said, cutting off her mom’s objection. Her mother looked surprised, and was about to say something again when her dad gave one of those grown-up looks that she seemed to understand.

“Really?!” the little girl asked, trying to mask her nervousness in excitement.

“Yes. But you’ll have to switch seats with me,” her father said, and proceeded to show her where to place her footing as the two of them carefully switched seats with each other.

As she plopped down on to the seat of power, she suddenly wasn’t too sure about what to do. Her mother, who was now sitting next to her, spoke up.

“Okay, now put your feet on the pedals. And start moving them forward, like this,” she said, as she continued pedalling calmly.

Following instructions, she put each of her buckled shoes on the pedals, and then pushed.

And pushed some more.

And a little more.

But the pedals wouldn’t move. Not even when she scrunched up her face from the effort, and put out her tongue in the unconscious way she always did when trying to concentrate on something.

The pedals just wouldn’t move.

Trying to ignore her brother’s snigger, she glumly looked up at her dad. Thankfully, he wasn’t laughing. “It’s okay,” he said gently. “It takes a lot of strength. You’ll be able to do it when you’re a little older.”

And with that, he took over the pedals from his own seat, and motioned for her brother to take over from her mom, and the two started pedalling the boat in reverse.

Turning to her side, she pretended to look at the lake as she fought off the urge to cry, as the feeling of uselessness spread all over her, ringing deafeningly in her ears. In fact, it took her a couple of seconds to realize her father was talking to her.

“What?” she asked, turning in front.

“Can you turn us a little to the left?” her father said. “We’re getting a little close to the edge.”

Confused, she asked him how.

“That stick,” he said, motioning to the stick behind her that she had noticed earlier. “It’s for navigation. Turn it towards you.”

Turning sideways, she put her hand on the navigation stick and pulled it towards her, half expecting it to stay where it was. To her surprise, it moved easily, and slowly, the boat also started to turn.

“You mean I can control where we’re going with this?” she asked, as the smile slowly started to find its way back on her face.

Her father nodded, explaining how the direction of the turn would depend on which side they were pedalling from.

The three-year-old nodded as she listened. “So, you mean that if mamma and I were pedalling, I would have to move it in the opposite direction? Hmm…that makes sense.”

Then, as though suddenly remembering her own age, she turned to her mother and asked her if she wanted to navigate. Smiling, her mom shook her head slowly. “Why don’t you be the navigator today?”

The words seemed to drop a load of responsibility on her, but for once, instead of feeling like shirking away, she sat up straight. Now this, I can do. With a big smile on her face, she turned to the other three passengers. “Alright, I’m going to get us to there,” she said, pointing to the far end of the lake with one hand, while the other firmly moved the navigation bar in the proper direction.

“And after that, pa you tell me where you want to go, and I’ll take you there. And bhaiya, you tell me where you want to go, and I’ll take you there. And mamma you too,” she rambled along.

“I’m the navigator,” she said proudly, oblivious to the tired looks exchanged by the others. This was going to be a long day of pedalling.


**************



A friend of mine once told me, maps were my happy place. Looking at maps, figuring out directions, and navigating from one point to another – these are all things I love doing. Sure, the most I’ve ever put this in practice is at amusement parks and the occasional (alright, once in a lifetime) walking tour of Montreal city with a friend. But the simple fact is, I like knowing my bearings, and the best way for me to do that is by looking at maps. Even when going on road trips, I love being the navigator, which is why I was very annoyed when the GPS came out. [Of course, it might be worth mentioning here that I have major motion sickness issues, so technically I can’t even look at a map while in the car, making the whole navigator role quite pointless.] Although, I have to accept now that the GPS allows me to understand maps in an entirely new way, which is exhilarating in its own way.

I remember telling a cousin once that I first need an aerial understanding of my whereabouts before I can figure out the street level directions. A frequent hazard of operating in this way is that I often talk in north-south-east-west while others talk in left-right. It’s made me realize how few people really understand directions in this manner. A friend once told me that wherever we face is north, and east, west, and south change accordingly [I swear I felt like throttling the friend at this point]. I find myself surprised that most people don't actually look at the sun to figure out which direction they're heading in on a regular basis (yes yes, I do that. Get over it). 

I'm not sure why I suddenly chose to write about the incident above. I think it might have something with constantly being met with incredulous expressions from people saying 'You mean you actually know directions?!' Or it might have a little something to do with a friend recently asking me to talk about something that I'm actually good at for a change. Or it might have something to do with gazing out at a lake here in Bhopal and the many pedal boats floating around on it.