I Walk Alone And How
I found my ‘me’ time and it’s just so beautiful.
So I walk a good 2 to 2.5 kilometres
every day (no not every day, but most of the days) to office with a million
good thoughts. As the cold morning breeze touches my face, I realize how
beautiful the world is. The birds, the tress and the vegetable vendors. How
nice everything is!
The walk is pretty much delightful.
I smile. I often spot known faces on the way, sharing a smile. It feels good to
know people. It feels good to smile at them. Butterflies fluttering by. The sun
shining at me. Cows chewing on grass. Cute little dogs running here and there.
Aww, everything is just so adorable.
OKAY NO WAIT!
The walk is not as rosy as it
seems.
At times I feel like a warrior
from those Hollywood Sci-Fi movies. I encounter cows. Huge big black cows. They
stare at me. They stare at my lunch bag. They advance towards me with their horns
facing right at my eyes. I duck and jump and do all the Kung Fu I have seen in the
movie Karate Kid. If the cow will eat my lunch, what will I eat?
The dogs look at me and I can see
a speaking bubble over their head saying, ‘I am gonna bite you. If not today,
someday. BEWARE!’ They run towards me and then I run to escape and then they go
somewhere else, leaving me behind, embarrassed. ‘Why was I running? Hope no one
saw me,’ I tell myself.
To my horror, I spotted a HUGE
number of monkeys on my way. They were swinging on the trees, breaking flower
pots, picking on each other’s hair and what not! I told myself, “You are
strong. You are a woman and you can do everything you wish to. You can come out
of a difficult situation very easily. No one can ever bring you down. Nothing
in the world can stop you. These monkeys can never harm you.” After talking to
myself, I took a U-turn and took the long root to office. Okay I am a woman,
but the monkey might not know how serious woman empowerment is these days. So couldn't
risk it.
Spare me the horror when it comes
to rickshawalas. They hover on my head. No matter how much I ignore them, they
will still look at me, honk at me, slow down near me and ask if I need a lift.
The other day I thought I’ll tell a rickshawala before he follows me that I don’t
need an auto. STILL. He had to come follow me. Once, I was too tired to walk
and decided to take an auto mid-way. Surprise! Couldn’t spot a single auto.
When needed, they are nowhere to be found.
Last but not the least, traffic!
Ahmedabad is a slow city, said someone. Really? Not with traffic. Everyone is
in a hurry. Everyone wants to go first. And yes, nobody wants to follow rules.
Wrong side se jane ka mazza he kuch aur hai. Poor pedestrians. I fear Salman
Khan would appear from nowhere and ride his car over me someday. I sometimes
feel like I am dancing in the middle of the streets. Go forward, step back, put
one leg on the left and stop. Stop for the biker to pass and repeat. We were
taught to look right, left and right before crossing roads. Now we have to look
right, left, right, forward, behind, right, forward, left, behind and then
cross. If you cross safely, you have achieved something big today. I sometimes
look up too. Who knows if a drone is passing by or something!
My daily life with a
twist (shrugging shoulder).