Incredible people is what makes india incredible!
Engineer by profession, writer by heart, great thinker by mind, Here's a small story she wrote that touches your heart!
Engineer by profession, writer by heart, great thinker by mind, Here's a small story she wrote that touches your heart!
The truck driver
‘Nights are beautiful.
They are rayless and echoing a profound peace in the atmosphere.’, wrote
Mohan in his beloved diary. “mohan bhai..
kaka is calling you for unloading the truck.. come fast..”, said Raju.
Mohan’s life is entrapped in this dark pitched time of the day. He sometimes
imagines how it is to be living off in the days albeit he never regrets the
timings of his work.
Mohan is a truck
driver. Nobody from his village ever imagined him to take up this profession.
This was due to his outstanding performance in matriculation. Mohan was a man
of few words. He neither talked much nor did he interact with many people. His capability
to earn a respectable life was as if subdued by an overpowering desire.
Mohan climbed the truck to unload the liquor cartons. He
himself is not a frequent drinker but he drinks sometimes, sometimes when his
shell in which he actually resides is harmed.
After unloading he sat near the pond. The pond was full of
dirt and blood sucking creatures but he doesn’t mind sitting amidst them. After
all, we too have our baggage of setbacks. The light of the motor’s bobbing,
illuminate the pond dwellers and one can see the traces of zig zag (browning)
motion. The uphill road takes one near to sky and makes one in vicinity of the
clouds and stars. Perhaps this was one of the reason for him to take control of
the pedals, gears and steering.
Sometimes when he has to roll down through the cities, he
keeps his eyes more on the other chauffer and passengers than the road. His
high pedestal gives him the opportunity to scan the people with devour. The
speed of the truck falters time and again owing to the traffic signals,
round-about’s and traffic jammed roads.
But he peeps out of his finger stamped glass window to see the things his life
is devoid of. He watches the school kids waving to him as the school bus drives
past him. He scornfully watches the two wheelers showing off their driving
skills which turns his scorn into admiration. He watches couple, timid girls
and tamer boys. Our society has mutely given the right of expression to males.
Some are giggling and tickling as if there’s no one else to see their budding
sprouting attractions.
Not a very spectacular built with fairly charming face and a
decent qualification leading to a handsome salary at hand is all that was
needed in mohan’s village for a bachelor to fetch a pretty girl with heavy
dowry. Mohan did not qualify these conditions. Instead he surpassed every single
one of them with distinction. His parents precariously talked about their son.
They were proud of owing an appurtenance as valuable as mohan. Everybody was
keen to see the laurels this lad of theirs would bring home once he attains the
socially accepted age for marriage. Mohan did his graduation and qualified the
examination for junior engineer. Everybody in his family and village was
groping for a suitable girl for mohan. Girl was found and marriage was fixed.
Cousins, relatives, relations, all came, some from different lands and some
from the same land. Females of the family started the days with native songs
relating to marriage, of which no word could be understood by either the
bride-groom or the other family members. The day ended with the males of the
family drinking cheap, expensive liquor and making uncomfortable jokes about
their marriage leading to embarrassment and hesitation on their faces the next
morning. Mohan would be present in all the ceremonies, physically present.
Mohan was not happy. He barely knew what he wanted from his
life but he knew exactly what he didn’t. His marriage fell in the latter. He
wanted to roam around, walk every unknown, forgotten road.. he wanted to travel
to new places and meet new people. And then pen down his weird, scary, funny
encounters in a diary..which he planned to read (maybe to his grandchildren..
or just some children) when he got old. Marriage would bring inexorable circumstances
to his wishes.. today marriage was inexorable.. heart roaming in a different
land.. mind dawdling to accept the reality in front of him. Eyes helplessly
wandering around.. searching for someone like him.. he looked at his right, his aunts were busy
discussing their daughter-in-laws dowry, to his left, his uncles talking about the
prospects of establishment of private ventures in and around their village. He
looked ahead, he saw young boys and girls giggling and kids playing.. who
amongst them can answer his mind boggling question..
Indian marriage ceremonies infact every marriage ceremony is
more than just the marriage of the couple. If you observe keenly, out of the
total mass attending the ceremony only a few, seriously very few people apart
from the family who come there, are truly there to bless and wish the married
couple from their heart. Ceremonies such as these were ‘show-off-your-status’ thing.
And the people invited got chances to try out new attires and pamper their
taste-buds.
Mohan was a learned man although he never understood a thing
about the traditions his family and the people of his village boasted off. For
him life was simple- ‘live a simple, worry-less, free life.’ Neither did he
expect anything from others nor did he want others expectations to hover over
him. But now the world around him was changing. Mohan studied because he
thought that only education could help him untangle the knots of the reason of
his yearning which accentuated everyday with the ascent of the sun. He had been
told that education was a gift which had the power to transmute. As a kid he
always imagined himself being transmuted by a black-masked conjurer to a land
of ultimate-contentment. He had smiled and then paid whole attention to his
studies thinking it as a step towards his search. Time passed by, old ones dead,
new ones born. Draughts, famine, rain.. all came and gone. Heavy, monster
looking contraptions made the bullock-carts idle. New set of people were seen
around chunni-lal paan shop, chewing
and hitting the spittoon, bleeding the earth.. Mohan read books, studied
them..learned them. but never experienced them. He cleared his junior engineer
exam. He would now go to a different land. A land he read about in books. A land
which bore different people. Earlier his yearning was just banter between his
books and him but now it had become impregnable. ‘In no time I am going to live and write about my experiences. Then you
too will bore my signature and my name in the creased, yellow stained pages of
yours..’ said mohan gesticulating towards his book shelf.
Time tests you..and keeps on testing you.. ‘mohan you have done us all very proud,
but…’ said mohan’s father while placing his hand on his son’s shoulder.
Mohan skipped a beat. His desperation was blabbering in his mind ‘what is
it now.. isn’t it enough.. haven’t I reached the point I had to before I
could..i could..’ mohan was himself in a dilemma. He didn’t know what came
after ‘I could..’ even if he wanted
to ask his father, what would he say. Would he say that ‘I want to experience the world. Or I want to see new places. Or that I
want to live alone for a while..’ He had no answer and so he decided to
remain mute. His father continued.. ’son,
you are our eldest one. And you are going to go to some foreign land to earn off
a living. You have been obedient. Me and your mother care about you a lot. You
staying in a distant land.. would worry us about your health and well-being. So
monu we wanted to..’ father hesitated, looked back to have a glance of an
old wrinkled lady whom he had married about 24 years ago. She passed a quick
sharp signal which could only be comprehended by the man standing in front of
mohan. ‘monu, we want you to get married
before leaving this village.’ Mohan’s mouth turned sour. His face turned
pale as if his face has been drained of blood. His mind boggled with
questions.. ‘isn’t it the right time? Do
I have to wait more..?’. ‘see mohan,
you are our eldest son. We have your 2 sisters to marry off. We are not well
off enough to spend much on these weddings. If your wife could bring some
presents and blessings..it would do us all good.’ His father’s voice
deepened as he carried on his tale of grief. Is that how life is lived..?
cutting, bleeding, pillaging of peace from someone so dear to you, someone who
dwells inside. This curse is ineffable.
Rains arrived late this year skipping half a month. First
rains bring smiles on the farmers but scorn and worry on those who are
‘entrepreneurs’ because the rains ceases movement of customers. Children start
screaming with joy begging their mothers to let them drench in the rain. The
barrow owners cover the good with polythene to save it from being a waste. Mohan
is sitting by the window sill, watching the diamond like droplets shedding from
the sun getting their heads splashed on the rough ground. Plop, plop..plop, the
pearls coalesce. the vat starts overflowing and one wonders on the enigmatic
ways of the one who has loosened the hold on the pearls.
‘if it keeps on
raining like this, I tell you mami ji.. we have to postpone monu’s marriage..
God knows why it isn’t ceasing.’, said
a cousin to mohan’s mother. ‘don’t say
like this.! It’s my monu’s marriage.. nothing will go wrong.’, retorted his
mother and smiled back at mohan. Though mohan took it more as a grin than a
smile. The rain hampered his mobility, arresting him amidst faces and more
faces. The only place he found himself without being surrounding by faces was
on his terrace. He sat under the shelter of an old rusty corrugated tin sheet.
Matchbox was damp enough to light the matchstick, anticipating the cigarette
from burning into ashes. Lightning and the thunder reverberated, clamoring for
attention. The winds blew..blew harder..the trees undulating under it’s spell.
Waters making their own way down the slope..the nearby things wafting along
with the stream.. harder the rain poured..harder the streams wafted. Suddenly
the rain stopped and the sunrays shined through the perforated clouds. He rose
and the rays lighted his face.. Mohan smiled and felt the warmth and life
running again under his flesh.
‘I am sorry…’.
Words drafted on a page shattered the hopes and dreams of his family. Marriage
was called off. They tried to contact him in his office, but he wasn’t there.
They searched for him..but he was nowhere to be found.
The sun rays flashed an expressionless face. Face bore by a
man carrying diary, pen, few clothes, some money in a small bag. ‘bhaisaab ticket..where do you want to go?
’umm..shimla..’.

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