The sound of isolated birds chirping is the first signal
that a “night out” is about to be completed. It is to this familiar noise that
I walk down the C-D catwalk to fill up my water-bottle. I decide to sit on the wall and stare at the
ever-brightening eastern sky, something’s always look beautiful, no matter how
many times you see them. It’s well into the summer break, D-block is empty, no
one to spot me being “hallu”. When I was
little someone very wise told me, “ to feel another person’s sorrow is one of
the great joys of being human”. Right
now this funda seems very stupid, why would anyone want part in this absolute
anguish I feel right now. These surrounding blocks staring down at me, so
soothing in their familiarity, yet there is no solace in their eyes. They have
seen far too many like me, to feel any sorrow or attachment. I remember the
first room I walked into in Azad. It was a small room, freshly white-washed,
staring back at me blank and impassionate. Then I think about Koley’s room, me
and Ramiz sitting on the sofa, Koley deep on the bed, Pagla in front of the
lappy, the disco ball spinning behind him, the bed sheet beneath dotted with
cig burns, left behind from half a decade of parties, the 5.1 speaker system,
the curtains which used to be a single bed sheet in our first year. I can
imagine all these layers being removed over two weeks leaving behind just a
white room, staring back disinterestedly, bearing no signs of having ever been
personalized. I see my life poised to be changed forever and I find that the
world doesn't give a fuck, at that moment I feel like the loneliest person on
planet earth. Another surge of anguish
burns through me, I cannot accept all this, I want to see a silver-lining, I want
to believe that to kgp we were not just passers by, that I was a part of this
world and not just a guest, that our rooms underneath their blankness remember
all the epic nights from previous owners, I want to hear those stories, I want
to feel that our lives here mattered.
To be honest, right now I am venting. Usually when I write I
want to develop and show an idea, or try to describe a situation in manner that
seems pleasing. Here, I am writing
because it makes me feel better. I am trying to cope, I must say I am failing
miserably. The only thing that’s keeping this sea of anguish at bay is the
prospect of still having one more week left with my friends. To see a few more
sunsets, to hear a lil more Floyd on our 5.1, to have some more Tinku’s for
breakfast. After that how will I cope? I
wish I was young and just had to hear
mom say, “It’ll be all right” to feel better. I curse this stupid thing called
rationality that makes you sceptical even after mother says it’ll be fine.
Mathematics is another thing I can do to escape. I guess mathematics is what I
do/ want to do professionally. It is an engaging exercise, when you are in the
middle of a proof or finally beginning to realize where the whole chapter has
been leading to, you are totally immersed and have little interest for the
pains of the real world. Mathematics can
bring it’s own pains, the frustration
when you are scrapping to sharpen your bound
just a little bit, so that your entire “beautiful” proof pushes through, then the agony of
finding your last bound was tight, the complete darkness of starting all over
again etc. But these are familiar pains
and they have the possibility of a silver lining at the end.
And so the final week is up as well. Time seems to have
taken offence at the mere fact I could
try keeping my pains at bay with the thought of one week worth’s happiness.
What was one week to time, who has seen off mighty emperors and great
civilizations, at whose feet stars and galaxies have been born and fallen. It’s
the morning when Sourav Roy is leaving, I leave the day after. The last week
has been one of saying goodbyes to people. People I loved, people I liked,
people I got along with, people I just knew, the girl I had a crush on. “Kab ja
rahe ho?”, “8th /11th / chowda”. These were not distant dates on which they had
reservations, these were today and tomorrow. I wish I could take time mourn
them one by one , but things just seem to whizz by, you wind up saying, “ See
you”, like you are leaving the mess table after dinner. Roy is packing furiously; his granson guitar
is staring at me. I look at all the marks and stuff we wrote on it in five
years, the picture of a stranger’s face Koley drew on it in second year, even
it seems sad at this hour of farewell. A part of me hopes when I come back
tomorrow, Roy
will still be here, having missed his train by over-sleeping as he has done so
many times before. But I don’t really want that, I don’t want to challenge time
with one more day, I do not want to enjoy another wild night, if it means
having to feel this pain afresh tomorrow morning. Here is the last truth I
learnt in kgp, if you make something beautiful, it doesn’t mean it will last
forever. You shouldn’t resent time for this, she washes away all evil things as
well, she wants to give humanity a fresh slate to start over. You should be
happy that what you made was beautiful. When time destroys something really
beautiful, you can almost sense her sorrow as she takes it away. Finally I feel
a little sensible, giving some “wise” funda as the great “junta” of kgp would
put it. I want to say goodbye, goodbye to the vanilla skies above kgp, to the
monsoon winds down lallu-way, to the beautiful summer nights, to the great
trees of 2.2. And my friends, do not feel bitter this little
world that we, you and I made is about to be washed away, about to become a
memory, growing ever more distant, be glad that it existed and we were so
happy(for the most part) in it. As I like you all have done or will do stand
here trying to muster up the courage to say goodbye to a world of such incredible
familiarity, I would like to thank you for making me feel so loved and I hope I
have made you feel the same.
You missed the "Ship" and the mountains and the tunnel that we stared upon from the ship, u missed the red sky and the playing clouds, u missed the train paradox, u missed a lot....
ReplyDeletewell put together though... :)
:) :'(
:)
No paradox!!!!
ReplyDeleteask Md. Ramiz Khan....
ReplyDeletelol , the guy can't see right sober. ask roy , much more reliable.
ReplyDelete