Monday 23 January 2017

Memoirs from a Sunday gone by...

There were unending plans he would make and write about them on sticky notes and orange coloured diaries.

In his neat and impressive writing, he painstakingly jots downa the list of things that had to get done when his favourite Sunday would arrive. 

Bits of handwritten notes get shoved into his trouser pockets, and they lie there ignorant without a care; By the time he reaches home he forgets all about them, the trouser 
going in for a wash along with the rest of his clothing.
Next morning, after a run in the dryer, 
when a bucket full of clothes is pulled out for drying, scraps of paper fall out, 
the writing now hopelessly unintelligible.
The words are all jumbled, tumbling over one another, big blobs of ink having blotted them out; like a giant wave swooshing away the sand castles built the previous evening.

A host of other paraphernalia also pops out.
A half smoked cigarette bud; the grey ash still quivering at the tip, a 50 p coin now emerging with a slight dent and a ticket to the opera, all lie there silently in a slush. He blames his absent-mindedness for the mess, offers a careless shrug and starts writing his plans all over again.

For the coming Sunday, there were things to get done, errands to be run,

An overgrown toenail that had to be clipped,
An unsettled bill that had to be paid,
A musical opera that he had purchased a ticket for, but then he remembers of forgetting it in the trouser pocket and how it had got washed away. No regrets he tells himself and proceeds to write some more.

He makes plans of visiting his great grand aunt, who was all of ninety, ramrod straight and who would cook Chingri Malai Curry for him, that was not adapted from any cookbook.
This time he was careful enough to tuck the notes in the second partition of his frayed wallet.

But come Sunday, the notes, lie untouched and unread; He has forgotten all about them; 
except about making a visit to his aunt.

He goes for a walk, finds an unattended phone booth, drops a coin, dials a number and counts exactly till ten rings. On the eleventh she answers, letting out a delightful shriek, on hearing his voice. In slow halting tones, she tells him that nothing in this world would give her greater joy than cooking his favourite prawn curry and feeding him. 

She informs him that she is in a rush to get things done and hangs up the phone without telling him a proper goodbye.
He carefully replaces the receiver, a smile leaving his face as he sets out for his walk again. 

On the way, he finds a lone bench that had creepers growing from beneath it. He sits and stares at the clouds above that are gathered in a huddle, hiding the sun behind them.

As the clear winter air fills his senses, he looks around to find a pair of orange hued butterflies chasing each other and the trees shedding their browned leaves.
A one eyed horse passes by that has a skittish walk.

These sights please him, bringing in a joy from within.
He leaves from there, wanting to make new purchases at the grocery store. Weekly shopping done, he winks at the blue-eyed cashier for tendering him the exact change.

The notes that were carefully written in his impressive handwriting are long forgotten except what occupies his senses now is the taste of Chingri Malai Curry that he would soon be experiencing.

Another week would begin tomorrow,
and he would encounter the same rush, 
the same throng of people he would be surrounded with, the empty faces that would stare back at him. But for now, he is happy revelling in the Sunday, that he calls his own, the sunlight filtering inside the rickety bus that was taking him to his great grand aunt’s house…


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