This was probably my first visit to my native village and
its vicinity during raining season. Why is it so special? Well, the
climate and the topography is completely different in rainy season compared to
the scorching heat, the perspiring sweat, the humid climate and the dry barren
farmlands with light brownish mud and dry golden leaves in the Summer.
Rainy season makes the land cooler with a breathtaking scenery of lush green rice fields
and a cool breeze which is on the verge of turning chilly.
The last I visited my native was in June this year. Before
that it has been random
visits in a gap of 5 years or so. A striking observation was that the villages
have developed drastically in terms of technology and economy however the small
districts and towns have more or less remained the same. Almost seems like they
are waiting for the villages to catch up with them.
One major factor for this development is the rapid
infrastructure, more specifically the road networks and the consequent transportation
access. Ironically, in the process, these villages have lost the old
world charm of muddy roads, narrow lanes and the quaint pollution less abode.
There is hardly any difference between the villages and the small towns. Its
only when you move deeper inside the villages into the farm fields that
you connect to the village of your childhood.
The people seemed to have accepted the change, rather have
ensured that they brought about this change which can be seen from the pride on
their faces when they talk about the easy accessibility to their villages. I
guess only the Cows, Sheep and other domestic animals are finding it difficult
to come to terms with these developments. They sit cozily on the tar roads and
hardly bother about the vehicular traffic around them. The vehicles
sometimes have to slide out of the roads to move ahead unable to argue with
these confused creatures which might be wondering why the roads seems so hotter
and clean compared to the previous cooler and dusty roads.
Buses are the lifeline of these villages as the train is to
Mumbai. The bus transportation system runs in a co-operational alliance
between state government and the private bus operators. Strangely, the State Transport
Bus charges are comparatively higher than the Private Bus Operators. Wonder why
the State Government is finding it difficult to further subsidize the bus fares
when it can afford to distribute free laptops, Gas stoves, Grinders and other
goodies. No one's complaining. I guess it’s a marriage of convenience
between the people and the Government.
The Food schedules/patterns here have been completely
overhauled. I have experienced this on my previous visits but every time it
baffles me. Nobody has a proper dinner at home. (Though didn't check this
out this time). They have snacks like Idlis and Dosas at night- they call it
Tiffin here. Even the Restaurants do not serve proper dinner offering the
Tiffins at night. Don't know the origin of this trend, but seems logical
health wise as a light meal is good for digestion compared to the heavy loaded
rice sambar combination. But for other visitors like me it seems like shifting
from a day job to a graveyard shift job. Your eating pattern goes for a toss.
Apart from Bus transport, the other public mode of transport
is the Auto-rickshaws. Amusingly, everyone in the village/small town has 3 - 5
Rickshaw wallas contacts in their mobile contacts living in their vicinity.
Almost as if it was mandatory to produce a Rickshaw walla in each village like
having one soldier in Army from each village in Punjab. Most of the
times, these Rickshaw wallas are either school mates/childhood friends or
relatives or friends of relatives. The Journey is never quiet. The
Rickshaw walla will start a conversation enquiring about your village and end
up discussing about the rainfall, politics, Amma and Karunanidhi.
Ironically, my hunger for having a moment of solitude
and time for myself was in dilemma when I was faced with the abundance of
time which seems to be moving in a snail's pace. The night life here is over
once the sun sets in for the day. The social night life is negligent unless you
are in the better part of the town where the markets and shopping zones are. In
the darkness of the Village inside the house, in the absence of street lights,
the only lights you catch a glimpse of outside is of the passing vehicles. By 8
pm you are done with your dinner and if you are short of gossips and idle
chats, you end up on your bed waiting for the sun to rise next morning. It
takes a lot of convincing to relax your mind to accept the new sleep schedule
but then you wake up fresh at 4.30 am in the morning without the drowsy,
dragging-yourself-out-of-the-bed routine in Mumbai.
Four things brings happiness in the lives of the people in
these villages. The fall in the Gold Rates, the increase in the rainfall
filling up the lakes, the Discounts on Clothing and Sarees during Festivals and
purchase of fertile lands. Besides these, they are happy in their space
and do not stress themselves out.
For me, the drive through the narrow roads lined on
either sides with patches of red mud path disappearing into the lush green
shrubs and trees providing shade to the hot tar roads cooling the pathway for a
breezy journey was a blissful moment ...a brief pause over the frenzy jet speed
life in my cherished Mumbai.....It led me to day dream of a life in the quiet
serene surroundings where life moves on a pace of its own.
Like all journey that ends at the place you call your home, this journey too
ends there.
Home is where your Heart is. And My Heart is in Mumbai….
flawed it maybe...but I breathe the life in its polluted air, the crazy rush
hour crowd, the race to catch up with time and the search for a moment of
solitude and happiness in the fast paced maddening routine.
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