It makes me sad when people ask me “where are you from?” It’s
a simple question, which more often than not occurs on first conversations
almost every time I have one. By the normal tone it carries, it appears to be
straight-forward, a two plus two four, with a singular statement known to
someone by-heart. The problem is – it is anything, but that. I take it
sportingly, though the whole messy situation where I have to admit that I don’t
know where I belong to is sad. There is no city that is mine, no town that I
own or is from. No Street that I can associate family legacy with or no set of
surroundings from where I can link a cross web of my roots to. It can now be
officially said – I belong to the place called “nowhere”.
The nowhere is not like a complete blank page. It is a result
of chaos that comes when scribbles with no pointers clutter a book and one find
difficulty to read lines out of it. It is a result of a line written somewhere
but now lost between pages of a thick journal. This “nowhere” is probably a
clement-town of memories. It has a picture in my mind. A picture with no name…
something that I understand but can’t give a social nomenclature to; It is
difficult to point it out singularly on a map of some over populated
politically messed up state, but on a globe of emotional turbulence it finds a
path, completely unique and melancholically traceable.
It has a set of neighbors, a group of friends and enemies ranged
across time and phases of life, miraculously living in the same society all-together.
It has a school where I go, having the best and worst teachers that I have met
all these years in different schools that I had to go to every New Year. It has
a park – the one that I played football in during high school. It has a Paan
shop whose owner greets me and smiles to me, every time I do an evening stroll
to grab an unapologetic cigarette after bunking college. It has the house of
the girl who has beautiful long hairs and walks on her terrace reading the
poetry book, after taking a bath, smelling all fruity and allowing her hairs to
be left loose so that they can dry in playful sunshine and flirt with nature.
It has a window of her room where I can see her dance in the evening while I
try to scribble about the way she looks on a 2006 diary back cover. College buses run everywhere in it, songs are
played on loud mobile handsets in them. There is a square where lovers meet.
They fear their parents and meet secretly for short duration which includes
mostly seeing into each other’s eyes practicing songs of love recited as
incommunicado. It is a place where children chase each other on bicycles. They
race around otherwise but also have mannerism to greet old-age people taking
doctor recommended walks in the same park. It is a town where breakfast outlets
are hangout joints. People eat the most unhygienic good with utter delight and
never fall ill. It’s a town that stands for the world I saw, as a child.
I find myself scratching my head with utter confusion when it
comes to filling of tabs in online forms that says “permanent address” or
“temporary address”. It is even more confusing, when a side check box asks me
“if these both are same for me or not”. Down the pedagogy on the same page –
things like pin codes, landline numbers and others of same category makes me go
blank. I have no idea to any of this. Twenty two years down the line, a million
forms filled, I still make calls to ask my father asking “what is to be
filled”, depending on time in which this form shall hold relevance and where
everything shall be during that whole span. I hate and love the fact that my
father had a transferrable job. We moved places, we moved on and on – till a
time came when addresses were changed so often that they lost meanings or
permanence associated with them. We moved on and on – till a time came when
parental homes and villages were visited so often that they gradually lost
identity and feeling of warmth under a pile of time sand. We moved on – and on
– till a time came, when as a teen, I forgot who I was. In midst of an age
where identity crisis are suffered by everyone, I probably had the worst of
that because destiny as they call it – gave me enough opportunities to meet new
people and lie about me, till a time came when I forgot who I actually was or
who I actually am.
This is meaningless. It is also sad. I don’t know how to
explain the mixed set of wasted effort that follows every time I think about
it. It is not an adventure to not belong to any place. It’s kind of “is being
an orphan feeling”, only difference being that Orphans has an excuse of not
belonging to any place. They have fate to blame; I wonder how blasphemous it
would be to say the same for me. I need
to apply for passport tonight. I have been planning to do that for over a year
now. I get lazy in between, lazy to make a call to someone – to ask what to
fill – in the question that asks – where is my permanent home, where is the
city that I belong to?
3 comments:
post direct from heart touched my heart...reading ur posts always give me pleasure n an urge to read more posts of you..i like ur writing so much !!
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Keep the good work up!!
u write pretty good...GOD<3U
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