Monday, February 12, 2007

Delhi, mine and meandering

I can recall being asked if and why I liked Delhi. However much or little I like this place is probably for a variety of personal and insignificant reasons that just mount up to a weakness.
There's Mother Dairy here. I like that, and I'm amused by the difference in logos to tell apart one kind of Mother Dairy from the other: big blue drop and big green drop; blue for milk, and its products, and green -- ingeniously enough -- for veggies.
Simply brilliant, I think to myself while looking out of rattly windows of killer buses -- the Can't Be Helped parts of Delhi.
Mental checklist of buses and routes though, that deserve credit for sorting out my sense of direction-
The U specials: DTCs that covered any or all parts of Vasant Kunj, Purvanchal, Mehrauli and a now defunct Vinay Marg Special.
The God-awful Mudrikas -- plus and minus -- both, for either directions of the ring roads, causing much confusion in the first three days of college, that which was all the up way up in North Campus.
Bus routes numbered 621: ISBT connects South Delhi
764: Vasant Vihar to GK side,
100: CP-Campus madness.
And of course, my much preferred, routes 604, and 620 -- mostly for my love of all things in Connaught Place, even in the pre-metro era.

I like that when the weather is gorgeous like it has been recently, Delhi transforms. There are suddenly better songs on FM.
Maybe it's just rain induced optimism, or the spirit that comes with the benefit of youth, but where else are there these many university campuses, one being a second-home for nearing five years, and another that has as many rocks as there are possibilities for romance.

Delhi is memories of school-days coming to an end, and with it the trees around the Dhaula Kuan flyover. Off went the seasonal pink blooms.

Board exams gave way to summer heat and the unparalleled smell of cooler khus.
College. And with it, the advent of walky-talky like cell phones, and smooth-talking boys. Night conversations that carried on for hours, till first light, to when the cooler needed a refill.

Monsoons implied the inclusion and acceptability of floaters in dress codes. Newspapers would be steam-ironed on damp mornings to soak some of the moisture away.

The rains brought with them bhutta crackles. Toothpicks were employed to rid the residual bits stuck in contrasting teeth.

Car windscreens fogged up easily. The patter on roofs echoed louder and some nights the heat inside would be keen like the chowkidar's slumber.

Tuition classes were full of uproarious antics. The bonds made back then endure still. German classes in following summers remain assocated with bitter-smelling yellow fruit lying squashed underneath it's parent Neem.

Nelson Mandela road drives..breaking journey at the outdoor Cafe Coffee Day where the marble chips have become mucky. Shortcuts taken, via the The Grand that is no more with The Hyatt.

Gymkhana lunches, Sundays, and dust storms; swimming and jholas; kajal, literature and backpacks: all still a part of the factory look of 19-year olds. Jejune hip hop lyrics in carpools, and we as Fabindia's adopted children.

The days of overrated build-ups to concerts, Big Chill vices, and the liberties that being finally allowed to drive a car afforded. Parking lot attendants wearing sleeveless orange MCD jackets, presumptuously awaiting chai-paani fare even when it is free parking.

Khan Market, where people smell good when they past. Fresh memories of being adventurous in trying unfamiliar kathi rolls at 5 bucks a roll cheaper than the normal guy. Then being squirted with desi sauces as we learn our lesson to stick to the norm.
The associations and routines evolved; school to college, and from there to work. Steady progressions with undeniable constants of place. Memories stacked up, and continue to. Hopefully there is no loosing out, just pushing back; like those once new-age funky pencils with plastic nib holders and sharp leads that came forward on a rotation basis.

Childhood existed elsewhere, in beautiful places with simpler memories. But Delhi lent itself to impress and cement personalities. And just maybe, the place that hosted me from mid-teenage to early adulthood is a slightly harder habit to kick.

9 comments:

First Rain said...

Delhi is home. And I can't say more than that :)

Nice post.

Nimpipi said...

hellew first rain:), and thank you, first rain. In case you come back will you please let me know if the picture on your blog banner is wildflower hall, Shimla? Nice name, first rain :)

Caladrius said...

Delhi sure is a fabulous place to be , specially in one's youth. There's something in the air here that tells me to try for more, bigger things.
Nice one.
And this was the first time I didn't need the research tool to check for word meanings while reading your posts. It was meant to be for the masses I guess :)

Nimpipi said...

hey Sushant, you came back, posted a comment, and said nice things even -- thanks. Although, masses? MEE?! shock, horror!;) Oh i get the hint, will keep it simple:)

chitgo said...

nice:) glad you mentioned the tuitions..i often wondered why my parents would keep sending me for those even though they knew i wasn't learning squat.

"and just maybe the place that hosted me from mid-teenage to early adulthood is a slightly harder habit to kick"

:)i like.

IR said...

that dhaula kuan bit is so true,thoug my school was on the other side of the roundabout :)

Nimpipi said...

hey Chitgo, danke, feels good to know I wasn't the only one blowing up money attending those wretched tuition classes. I even had a private tutor towards the end. Parents never learn, do they;D
--
IR: you came back:)
Yea you know traffic has obviously improved near DK, but nostalgia hits me sometimes when i drive on that flyover now; to think one used to be able to cut across that killer roundabout on foot. Sheesh. (hating progress momentarily)

BLogographos said...

Excellent. I think I'm going to try to do a little jugalbandi with this post on my blog, perhaps even in the not unforseeably distant future.

Nimpipi said...

blogo.: thank you, not quite sure what the jugalbandi implies but whatever makes you happy!:)