WPC: In Anticipation

This little fella at the Kolkata zoo one early winter morning, spotted us from the corner of his beady little eye.

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Long term resident of the zoo and experienced in the ways of man, he didn’t waste any  any time taking up his place in anticipation of what was to come.

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We wondered what was up but not for long. Despite warnings to the contrary, eager visitors willingly shared their goodies – oranges seemed to be a hot favorite. Using his nose, he deftly twitched the segments away from the orange peel and stuffed them in his mouth. Clearly a discerning foodie rather than a mere glutton.

Another time, at a temple, I met Lakshmi the elephant who accepted ‘offerings’ from her fans. If they were coins she would promptly pass them on to her trainer and in return she would ‘bless’ the giver by placing her trunk on their head. But if someone gave her a coconut, she would crack it on the stone floor like a nut. From the broken pieces, she would delicately sniff out the coconut flesh and gobble it up in a jiffy. Her dexterity and expertise was a mesmerizing watch and has remained with me despite not having any photos.

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As for me, I too live in anticipation. Invoking Sri Ganesha, the elephant headed-God, the One who is prayed first and is the Remover of all obstacles, in the coming New Year I hope that:

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Clouded visions clear
Overcome barriers
Real or imagined
 
Stride fearlessly
Upon destined paths
Vibrant yet tranquil

Thank you for reading and apologies for foisting my feeble attempts at poetry (if it can be called that!) upon you 😶

In anticipation of a note from you  🙂

Two Trees

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The tree in front is the Champa or the Plumeria tree. The most common variety that I have seen are with white flowers but this one is pink and there is one right across the street that is blood red. I believe the flowers are used to make perfumes. In winter, the Champa tree sheds all its leaves and I find that version equally if not more eye-catching.

The tree at the back is what is locally known as the Gulmohar or the Krishnachura (in Bengali)  – Delonix regia. It comes in a range of brilliant colors and when in full bloom the lush green vanishes in a flame of red, yellow and on occasion I have also seen pink and purple blooms. I wonder which color this Gulmohar is?

For Becca’s Sunday Trees – 266

Thanks for visiting – anything you would like to share?

FFfAW # 93: Deja Vu

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Deja Vu

Words 174

She had been about 6 years old.

They said a war was on.

They pasted brown paper on windows.

When the siren went off, ights were switched off.

They huddled in the darkness and spoke in whispers.

She thought it was a game.

Until the day the siren went off and Father wasn’t home.

“Where is Father?”

“Switch of the lights quick. He will be home soon.”

There was darkness all around.

She peered out of the window. But she couldn’t see a thing.

Father! Come home quick. What if a bomb falls on you?

Unable to control herself, she slipped out into the deserted street.

A shadow moved.

Was it Father?

God, please let it be Father.

Her first prayer ever.

The shadow coughed – a familiar beloved cough.

Her heart leaped. Delighted, she skipped back home before he could scold her.

Father was coming. He was safe.

She stood looking out into the dark deserted street.

If she stood long enough, prayed hard enough, would Father again emerge from the shadows?

***

Written for Flash Fiction for Aspiring Writers – a story in 175 words or less. Thanks to Priceless Joy for hosting and Maria for the photo prompt. To read the other stories on this prompt click here

Thank you for reading, please don’t forget to let me know you were here 🙂

Which Way?

I scurried, dodged and twisted through milling chaotic crowd at the New Delhi railway station. My entire focus was on the porter bent on doing the disappearing trick with my luggage.

I could have done without the porter but this was the first time I was traveling alone from Delhi to Mumbai (then Bombay) for my summer vacations.

I was about 19 years of age and until now, I had had the privilege of being picked and dropped like the Kohinoor diamond by my father, brother and even uncle on occasion. Being slightly (okay, very) zoned off, I had never really bothered with the nitty-gritties of travel schemes, preferring to focus on the book in my hand.

Besides, nobody listened to me anyways.

When I had first joined college in Delhi, my big brother and I decided to watch a movie that was running at a theater near his office.

“No problem,” I said, “just tell me the bus number and I will come over to your office and we can catch the 6 pm show.”

“Okay.” He agreed. “No.” He immediately backtracked. “I will come and pick you up and then we will go and see the movie.”

“Why? We’ll be late for the movie. Your office gets over by 6 pm and if you come all the way…”

“No I will come.”

“But why?” I stamped my foot.

“Because you will have to cross 3 major roads.”

I tore my hair out but to no avail – we missed most of the first half of the movie. It is of course an entirely different matter that I actually had never crossed such a busy road before but I digress.

So here I was entirely alone in Delhi – my father had recently been transferred to Bombay and my local guardian (big bro) had also legged it to B-town in search of greener pastures.

But did I care? Was I scared?

Nope.

I was young and confident – what was there in travel? Go to the station and sit in the train. The rest would take care of itself.

But instructions from higher ups demanded that I hire a porter to ensure that I sat in the right train and in the right coach. Thankfully there were no mobile phones those days so I was not constrained to give minute-by-minute updates of my travel progress.

Luckily I got a classmate’s company till the railway station, we split the fare and parted ways after hiring a porter each. Actually I don’t really remember doing anything actively with regard to porter hiring – a red clad man appeared, he muttered, I mumbled, he heaved my luggage and was off before I could blink.

So here I was almost running to keep up with the porter – thankfully I had a bright blue case, which he had placed on his head. I fixed my eyes on the beacon and gave up all pretense of walking. Good thing too, for he made an abrupt turn and vanished inside a train coach.

“Here we are.” The porter stowed my luggage and showed me my seat, collected his dues and disappeared.

Though slightly out of breath, I sank down on my seat feeling victorious. I was early and most seats were still empty. I dug out my book specially arranged for the journey and vanished into an entirely different world.

I emerged a little while later as the train blew its whistle. I looked out of the window. We were off! Excitement curled in the pit of my stomach.

I frowned. Was our train moving or the one on the opposite platform?

Oh it was the other train! I laughed at my foolishness. That was the train going to Kolkata and mine was going to Bombay. I remembered Dad telling me they left within 30 minutes of each other.

A sudden misgiving struck me.

Was the Bombay train supposed to leave first or the Kolkata train?

Was I on the Bombay train or the Kolkata train?

What if the porter had made a mistake?

What if…

Despite the AC, I began sweating. I hadn’t even checked the train number. Oh what if I was on the wrong train? What if somebody else claimed my seat? What if I was thrown off the train? What if they put me in jail?

I glanced wildly around hoping for some clue, some indication whether the train was going east or west.

But nothing.

Nada.

Zilch.

Close to hysteria, I fumbled for my ticket considering my options. Perhaps I could get down and check…

The train lurched and we were off.

I panicked. Images from Bollywood movies flashed. Could I do what they did?

Could I poke my head out of the coach? Would I be able to read the train number?

Or should I ask a co-passenger?

But what could I ask my co-passenger?

Excuse me, is this train going to Bombay?”

I would rather die.

But would I rather go to jail?

I searched wildly for ways to ask without revealing my utter naivety not to mention idiocy.

Sweating yet cold I sat chewing my nails grappling this tricky issue when the coach attendant came to note our dinner plans.

“Veg or non-veg?”

Nauseated, I mumbled indistinctly.

“What?”

I had a brainwave.

“Non-veg.” I cleared my throat. “What’s the next stop?” I asked casually, feeling terribly clever.

“Ratlam.”

My heart plummeted to the bottom of my shoes.

Ratlam? Where the hell was that? Did that fall on the Bombay route or the Kolkata route?

I could have cried.

But the coach attendant was still rattling on at top speed and through rising roar in my head, I dimly registered him hurtling past Baroda, Surat, Bombay.

I passed out in sheer relief.

Home sweet home.

***

 

Written for the Daily Post’s Weekly Discover Challenge –  Finding Your Place

Thanks for reading – do let me know you were here 🙂

 

SPF: Practical Lessons in Desensitization

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Practical Lessons in Desensitization

Words 191

“Congratulations on making it to medical college. Let’s begin with a quick tour of the departments.

Heads held high, the new batch of fresh young budding doctors took the first steps of their journey to ease human suffering and save lives.

Eyes watering from the noxious fumes, they trooped out of the dissection hall muttering to each other.

“That was a real body?

“I thought it was a wooden model!”

“When he cut open the skin and flicked the flecks of fat, I nearly threw up.”

“When the professor made me hold and feel the nerve, I almost fainted.”

“Yuck!”

“I didn’t know Medical College was going to be so gross.”

“Duh. You can’t avoid human anatomy in medical college.”

“Nothing could be worse.”

“Yeah? Read this.”

Catch a frog from the tank.

Use the hammer to give a blow to its head.

Use a scalpel to sever the brain from the spinal cord.

Insert a pithing needle into the brain to destroy it.

Frog may squirm in your hand but don’t let go. It doesn’t feel a thing.

Now you may begin to learn physiological functions without cerebral control.

***

Note: The frog experiments have since been discontinued.

Written for the Sunday Photo Fiction – a story in 200 words or less. For the other stories on this prompt click here.

 Thank you for dropping by – have a great day 🙂

 

APWC: Green Gardens

Green is an all time favorite color and Nancy’s photo challenge this week is a Green feature – Dark Green. So without any further ado, here goes:

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Isn’t it nice and green? Even the water is green 🙂

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Some light greens along with darker shades of green. These photos were taken at Botanical Garden at Shibpur, Howrah near Kolkata, India.

Thanks for visiting – hope you liked. Have a great day. 🙂

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CB&W: Hand Made

Cee’s Black and White photo challenge is all about things made by human beings. Interesting topic and quite spoiled for choice – for once 😉

Let me start by shedding some light on it:

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Got your cup of tea? Okay let’s move on to the next one

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A replica of the Taj Mahal at the Delhi Airport – gift wrapped for Christmas 😀

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And that’s the Taj Mahal Hotel at Mumbai – pretty imposing isnt it?

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Just next to it is the Gateway of India, a monument which overlooks the Arabian Sea.

How did you like the collection? Too many structures right? Hmm even I think so – how about if I sneak in a tree?

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Relax! I am not breaking any rules – this too is man made by the one and only Nek Chand, at the Rock Gardens, Chandigarh. I was quite fooled by it and took me quite a while to accept it wasn’t real or alive. What about you?

Thanks for visiting and don’t forget to leave me a note.

CFFC: Rock On

Rock, Paper Scissors – Yep believe it or not that’s what this week’s err last week’s Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge theme was!

Hmm, lemme see…rocks I can manage 😉

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Too literal huh? Okay one more – something different

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Like? Now for the tough one – Scissors

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At a wedding venue, I caught sight of several decorators with scissors but it was tough to catch them in the act. And I am not even thinking of what the others thought of me clicking the behinds of unknown guys 😨😝

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Ahh finally caught one in the act and those are paper roses! 😅

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A bonus picture of the final finished decor. Not bad huh? Err I am not really sure if those are paper roses or plastic ones – but that’s my story and I am sticking to it 😉 😀

For readers of Moonshine, here's Chapter 104 and Calvin and Hobbes

 

WPC: Unlearn & Relearn

I wish I was like Mark Twain who said, “I never let my schooling interfere with my education”. But since I wasn’t as smart, I will settle for his other quote:

“Education consists mainly in what we have unlearned.

The theme for the Daily Post Weekly Photo challenge is New Horizons. We are challenged to think ahead, perhaps make resolutions, or just express our future goals and targets.

As this year draws to a close and I complete just over a year of blogging, all I want to do is to be able to see things in a way I have never seen before and be able to give voice to unheeded thoughts and emotions that lie just below the surface, hover over the edges but are resolutely ignored or overlooked just because of a deeply ingrained need to conform to perceived expectations.

And also, write shorter sentences.

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A view of the diamond studded mighty Ganga as she makes her way sedately to her destination – the Bay of Bengal. Quite a change from the whooshing gushing tumultuous rapids of the Ganga where I grew up.

“The only thing that interferes with my learning is my education.” ~ Albert Einstein

“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn and relearn.” – Alvin Toffler

“To develop a complete mind: study the science of art; study the art of science. Learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.’ – Leonardo da Vinci

Thanks for visiting – have a great day 🙂