(Working Title: Chugga Chugga Bugga Bugga)
Having heard so much about trains in Mumbai, I thought neglecting this experience would be akin to not committing suicide at Suicide Point. And this decision of mine had nothing to do with the fact that the taxi drivers were starting to resemble Bank robbers. Now, I am not naïve. I know that it is very tough to get onto a train in peak hour traffic. You compete with roughly a million other souls for those 2 square inches of space which you might mistakenly assume are yours when you buy the ticket. So with due wariness you look for the Ladies Compartment of the train and practice you sprints and push-ups, warming up for the ordeal of getting on to one.
A sudden surge of the crowd towards some specific places makes it plain when and where the door is anticipated. When the train stops and you try to get on, you suddenly feel around 15 elbows somewhere in the vicinity of your guts and ribs. This is the first time you notice the funny ostrich like walk most women here have developed here in order to make sure that any competitor has a tough time getting to breathe let alone get on to the train. Once you get over the pain you realize all your worry was useless. All you had to do was stand on the platform and the wave of humanity will carry you onto the train. Now since the train is packed like a tin of sardines, you don’t even have to hold on to anything. All the meritorious features of train travel which no one ever talks about suddenly come true in front of your eyes.
But then finally you get a seat next to a woman who looks like she could scare away the various chintu rajans and his brothers and various associates with one sidelong glance. But then she smiles encouragingly baring dental equipment which seems to be entirely made of rotting wood. You also notice that she is wearing the enticing scent of fresh garlic with a hint of 2 day old fish. And obviously you cannot express you compliments because the 2 aunties standing next to you have decided to start a shouting match on who touched whom first and how exactly the touch should be interpreted now that section 377 has been repealed and all else has been drowned in those decibels. I have a feeling that a mirror may put their fears to rest, but I am not sure I like wearing headgear made out of mirror shards. That could hurt the baby who was busy kicking my head with all the might in his tiny little body. He’s going to grow up and become the next Khali.
This is where some lady who resembles Mayawati comes to you and authoritatively asks you,” Kuthe?” (roughly translated to “Where?”) She wants to know where you will get off so that she can take your place after you. Now somehow I resist the urge to say, “Here” Or “Wherever you want me to.” or “I could jump off the train now if you want,” and say “Umm… Dadar.” Now note, when I get up I have to make sure, that she takes my place, or else she will throw a tantrum of epic proportions, matched only by her lookalike.
(To be continued…)
P.S. On a separate note, before I forget let me also remind the reader that during the rainy season the Indian Railways also has special Break your Neck on the Stairs Today offers going on. In this their over bridges are amply aided by the monsoons. Do not forget to try at a station near you.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Train Travails
Posted by Jetsam at 11:02 PM 0 comments
Labels: mumbai
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Mumbai: Maximum Shitty.
Dream city : The oxymoron used for the worlds largest sewage system. I mean come on, how can anyone call a place where the majority lives in matchboxes, a dream city? And no, by that I do not refer to the matchbox like apartments in which majority of the human population of Mumbai s human populace lives in. I meant that the mice are the majority stakeholders of this city. It is no wonder then that filth seems to form an integral part of the social fabric here. Which is why when a broker( now apparently called Consultants – I cannot decide if Mckinzey employees should be sad or happy about that) calls a house earth-shatteringly good, you can expect a hellhole with an asbestos sheet for a roof, built sometime in the Mughal era and last cleaned before the British left India.
Let us not dwell on filth, let us turn instead to rain. For filth brings us invariably to rains. Or at least in Mumbai it does. Trudging through all the filth of Mumbai, conveniently dissolved in rainwater so that the absorption by your skin and clothes is facilitated, is the richest experience this city can boast of. What can be more fun than getting stuck in office, because you do not feel like stepping into diluted imported dog shit, and playing antakshari with your Boss? Also, just FYI- it rains horizontally here. So just crossing a road with an umbrella in hand meant that I was soaked from shoe sole to spectacle frames. And by now that has happened so many times that I fully expect to find fish living in my shoes. So when in the city in Monsoon season, be sure to look up the Met predictions before you leave for anywhere( And I mean anywhere. Even that panwalas place next door) If it says Heavy to very Heavy( Oh how I miss the “Habby” pronunciation of Calcutta(No, not really)), you are safe. All trace of moisture will be wiped out by the sun. But if the prediction says Sunny climate expected, it will rain enough to bring the trains of the city and hence the city itself to a standstill.
Everything in the nightmare realm called Mumbai is 5 minutes away. Stand somewhere near Colaba( the southern most tip of Mumbai) and ask how to far off Borivali(the northern most tip) is, the average friendly Mumabikar will tell you,” Borivali? Bas 5 minutes. Walking.”(You’ve got to get the tone right.) OK so I am exaggerating. But seriously, if someone in Mumbai tells you that you have to walk 5 minutes to get somewhere, TAKE A CAB. Otherwise you will walk for half an hour and spot the building where they asked you to make the first of 5 left and 3 right turns.
But then you convince yourself that this is only because the people here walk fast. Really fast. Infact they seem to scramble like ants. And essentially, Mumbai is a city of worker ants. For I doubt the travel leaves much time for anything except work. This shouldn’t really bother me since I don’t really have a life, but what troubles me is that now I don’t even have a chance to have a life.
Posted by Jetsam at 11:14 PM 1 comments
Friday, May 15, 2009
Khadi Khichdi
People call it the greatest exercise of democracy. I really don't understand why we emphasize so much on the d-word and feel proud of it. In a sense it is not really an achievement to be a democracy. To me democracy or no democracy makes no difference when you do not know the value of it. You miss being a democracy only when you lose it and there is some helpless person at the top. There are people who feel that parties should not be in the control of a particular family. But if for years you have been a doormat and can't see yourself rising beyond it or willing to take up bigger responsibilities, it is fair that someone who has been a prince all his life and knows the pressures take over. Moreover the other members only seem too willing.
In a democracy where a huge chunk of the voters are aged between 18 and 36, this election ought to be eexciting. But are all of them going to vote? A sad no. There are quite a few reasons. The foremost one is that most of them are displaced. There are not living in the area of their voter registration. When people (read as software engineers) find it difficult to go to the doctor for their ailments, it's only fair enough that they skip elections for that important project. Another reason is lack of choice, which according to me is the most stupid reason for not voting. You are dying of thirst, you hate colas and you are offered a pepsi or a coke. Would you die of thirst rather? There is no such thing as the best choice. It is only the best available choice. We look up online dictionaries a million times to formulate an email for a client a dozen thousand miles away which probably begets only a cursory glance, but we would not even find out who are the choices available for our constituency.
Here again, I am not generalising and am definitely not saying that this apathy is intentional. It is just the way we have been conditioned. We have all those movies that wouldn't have run for a single day without showing the politicians in a bad light. And even if there was a good politician , he wouldn't survive a day without the hero. What are we making of a nation that is blessed with everything under the sun? Or the neighboring nation that has our brothers suffering from the lack of that we are blessed with in abundance? What are we doing of our children who ought to have a good chance at improving things? What do we teach them? Hate? Apathy? Greed?
We teach our children not to fight with their friends. Do we tell them to give a chance for their enemies? We teach our children that we should not beg but we praise them when they get things free on purchase. Apathy is not punished in our country, it is celebrated as a sign of intellect. Rarely do we realise that politics and government is a part of our being. It is a super employer that employs all of us.
Posted by Flotsam at 7:59 PM 0 comments