These
are the times of big things and big issues. If you ride a little vehicle like
scooty then you have to accept your humble position and agree to whatever
inches of the road by the edges that may be granted to you by the bigger,
faster vehicles. A car parked by the side will suddenly take a turn and deprive
you of even the thin line of your travel along the road’s margin. A window may
suddenly pop open giving you the scare of life.
I am
going to the town and a liquor lover is asking for a lift. He is standing right
in the middle of the road. When he found that I am crossing him without paying
heed to his orders, he takes a swipe at my helmeted head. I duck and give
myself credit for being alert enough to avoid going dusting at his feet.
Further on, you have a non-confident dog looking to cross the road. It almost
did what the drunkard had failed to do. Well, there are confident dogs as well,
who just step back wisely as you press the horn. By the way, the very same are
the categories of the humans crossing the road.
A
woman is getting down from the bus with her face backwards and the helpless
conductor shouting, ‘Look saamne, saamne!’ She tumbles down as the bus is
still in a snaily motion. Luckily, there is no harm done and she gives a
sheepish, embarrassed grin. A few people gather around and give her a nice
lecture about how to properly get down from a slowly moving bus.
The
most challenging task is to avoid a little school boy from scoring a goal.
Bored with school after two years of Covid-forced holidays, and not in the
habit of attending classes anymore and hence in a terrible mood, he tries to
beat his boredom by kicking a coconut shell. He is all for playing football
with an empty coconut. My vehicle is surely the goal. I turn sharply at the
last moment and he misses it. Misses a goal and kicks dust with a dejected
face.
Then
I have to overtake a tractor discotheque. The tractor itself makes so much of
noise and coupled with huge woofers and speakers it unleashes a tornado. The
main beneficiaries of the music, if at all, are those at least a mile off. I
cross it with much trepidation. It’s almost like getting across a fighter jet.
Randhir,
the farmer, is coming back from the town. He feels best while plying his
tractor, so in good mood he waves at me. His BP has been recorded to fluctuate
between 40 and 240 and he passes off almost every fortnight. But he feels safe
while driving his tractor. ‘The bumps and jerks keep the body shaking and I am at
my best!’ he explains the reason for loving tractor riding. So he doesn’t miss
an opportunity to go plying his tractor.
In
the town, the banjaras have pitched
tents along the road. They have a nice way out to handle the civic body
officials. They too want to settle down now after those centuries of
wanderings. They have national flags flying from their huts and tents. A few
have cows also tethered in front. It stops the civic authorities from treating
them merely as stateless ruffians. Nationalism sells well these days and they
have as much a right to affirm their credentials as any other internet patriot.
A
policeman has parked his car on the road and there is a traffic jam. Many people
mutter their grumbling dissent under their breath only. You have to respect
police even if they park their private vehicles right in the middle of the
road. Small vehicles carry advantages also and I somehow squeeze through.
In
the grain market, a merchant shares his philosophy. His servant is busy in
cleaning his master’s brand new car. The business is slack and there is no work
for the servant so the Lala has got
him to the task of cleaning his already shining car. ‘Never leave a servant
free!’ he tells me the mantra of his success. I get a few moments for a talk
with the car-cleaning servant. ‘Haan ji
ki naukri, Na ji ka ghar!’ he shares his philosophy. Well, both credos seem
complementary to each other in the world of business.
If
you are lazy to go visiting your town regularly and instead club your multiple
tasks in a single visit, you will return at twilight only. There are shrieks
and screeching of the noisy spotted owlets as I open the gate. They love
jumping out while it’s still some minutes left for the fading light of the day and
scare the people with their hideous shrieks and squeaks. It sounds like they
are condemning my returning in one piece on a little vehicle, riding on a road
that has been hijacked by the bigger ones.
Never
commit the mistake of being absent for the entire day, especially if there are
monkeys around. The garden is vandalized. The banana frond is decimated. It
seems an intentional ravage. They are showing the best population growth rate
at the moment. There are monkeys-monkeys everywhere. Does nature have a
counter? Younger lithe males are trying to break into the established harems of
the old rascals. Short on love, a young rascal settled for a very old, shrunk,
tailless monkey lady. He was earlier thoroughly bashed up by the huge alpha
male so the beaten Romeo settled for a harem discard. If they are off the scene
even for an hour, you come to understand what peace really means.
A
bat hovers around. The twilight is preponed slightly as it’s overcast. It loves
to suck juice from the big dark scarlet cone of the banana flower. It seems to
love doing shirashana as it hangs
upside down from the pointed end of the cone. It’s miraculous that the cone is
still dangling intact after the monkey’s free play in the garden.
The
kittens are waiting for their milk. They are both males by the way. They now
have a cheeky girlfriend. She is very clever. They love her company and their
priorities seem to have shifted quite a bit. They have given her an
unrestricted access to their milk bowl. They no longer sleep together curled up
in a brotherly ball. There is a girl in the equation now. Maybe they are
jealous of each other and are looking for some private space.