Showing posts with label Silchar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silchar. Show all posts
4
Silchar:
An early morning text from a fuckingawesomebitch. I
qualified the Delhi University entrance test for B.A. English Honours. Yay.
“Respected parents, as much as
I love Architecture, I want to do this instead.”
Drama.
Drama.
Tickets booked for New
Delhi.
Bye bye, pleasant summer
sky.
New Delhi:
The sun burns patterns onto my skin.
Midnight strikes. First cut off. Delhi College of Arts and
Commerce, otherwise known as the college with the depressing, ugly buildings.
And inefficient, rude office staff.
Traveling from one table to another with more papers, forms,
certificates and photocopies of those certificates than two mortal hands can
carry. Frustrated people. Slowly moving fans. After going around for two days for a simple
admission procedure: Aaj aur nahin, kal aye. A girl tears off her forms in
teary anger. Somewhere a parent threatens to go to his old friend, the
principal – or was it the chairperson?
Yours truly is now a DCAC student.
Three days, the second cutoff and a few more annoying hours
at DCAC later, yours truly is a student at Kirori Mal College.
*insert happy theme music*
Red Fort. Jama Masjid. Humayun Tomb. Dargah Nizammudin Auliya. Qutub Minar.
No rain here. People dying because of floods back in Assam.
Haridwar:
4 am wakeup call. Sleepwalk to the car. Short
weekend-in-the-middle-of-the-week weekend. Plug in the earphone. Fiona Apple.
Sleep. Wake up. Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh. Breakfast at fancy resort. Shekar
Kapur’s The Sadhu. Sleep again. Wake up. Pine trees and milder weather. UK.
Uttarakhand, not United Kingdom. Kilometres long traffic jam. Haridwar. Humanity at its
worst. Humanity at its best. Bhajans set to the tunes of item numbers. Bells
ringing. “Uttarakhand police aapko Devbhoomi mein swagat karti hain.” Gushing
Ganga. Dirty Ganga. People drinking Ganga, bathing in Ganga, washing in Ganga.
Guru poornima. Crowd on crowd. Lodge room opening out to terrace looming over
the ghat. Monkeys on the roof. Monkeys on the terrace. Monkeys on the light
posts. Monkeys on the temple shires, above the gods. Evening aarti.
Synchronised fireworks. An reddish tinge over the scene. Devotees crying and chanting.
This unbelieving heart quivers. Reason returns in a while. Night falls. Tiny
specks of blessed fire floating over the river. Jai Ganga Maiya. Jai Bhole
Nath. Jai – watch where you’re stepping. Beads and shawls. ‘Off season rebate,
madam!”. Studying the ghat from the terrace under the pale shadow of the full moon. Midnight walkers of the ghat. Naked bodies on show. Slowly sleep
comes.
Rishkesh:
It’s raining in Haridwar as we leave it for its cleaner,
less famous sibling, Rishikesh. A giant Shiva bids us farewell. Never see you
again. Porcupine Tree on the earbuds. Sleeps comes again. “Bhaiya, aa gaye.”
It’s raining hard. A crowded parking lot. 10 rupees worth plastic, green
raincoats. With hoods. A guide from Calcutta. We get mistaken as Calcuttans.Temples built where the Pandavas
had prayed. A suspended bridge named after the flawed god-king of Ayodhya. Temples
built for the ficklest of reasons. A government approved museum cum jewellery
shop. White stones from the icy mountains sparking fire. A ek mukhi rudraksh. "Not for sale, saar, only watching." Sriyantra to maintain the vastu of the ghar, for the surakhsha of the parivar
and sukh shanti of all. A navratna necklace. “Action with phasion, madam!”
Rains? Where's the rain? Raincoats gifted to the driver. Bye bye, Rishikesh. The giant
Shiva passes again. As does the Ganga, muddy with soil washed from the
mountains. Lunch at the yoga baba’s humble 5 star medical cum yoga cum
whateverelse centre. Shanti shanti shanti hi. Bye Uttarakhand. Bye Uttar
Pradesh. Oh hello again, burning Delhi.
2
0
The bus jerks and my eyes open in a flash. Before me lay a wide expanse of unspoilt natural beauty. Now, 'unspoilt natural beauty' is the to go description of any and every natural landscape bereft of a mobile phone tower, but the scene that lies before me, stationary while I'm moving with the bus, is that rare sight of gorgeousness that never fails to take your breath away. And in the region that I'm passing through while I travel to my sleepy small town hometown, such rare sights're not that rare after all.
If you've to travel by road from the state capital of Assam, Guwahati, in its norther part to the southern part of the same state, where my hometown figures, you've to pass several hours in transist in a whole different state altogether; Meghalaya. And though Assam and Meghalaya're neighbours, Assam being the only fellow Indian state touching its borders, the topography couldn't be more different. There's a marked departure from the plain and then semi-plain areas of Assam to the more hilly and colder areas of Meghalaya and then again you feel the surrounding landscape change as you again leave Meghalaya behind and enter southern Assam.
By now, I'm already half asleep again, the pills I took for my travel sickness (clarification: yours truely *had* road travel sickness as a child and continues the medication only as a habit, okay, only as a precaution :|) before the journey has strong effects, aided along by the soothing music that is the whole 'The Suburbs' album by Arcade Fire and the rolling 'unspoilt natural beauty' outside my plastic window.
Umiam Lake, photo taken from here
Umiam Lake, photo taken from here
The Guwahati-Shillong route is one of the most beautiful routes ever. The sheer pureness and rawness of the countryside on view is a good introduction to Northeastern wilderness on offer in the rest of the region. The good roads help too.
The bus takes a particularly Physical-Laws-breaking turn and my wakefullness returns again. And this time, it is the famed Umiam Lake, also known as the Barapani Lake, outside. Now, everyone who knows will tell you how the lake is the perfect welcome to Shillong and how it is truely a sight to behold, but you don't really get it till you experience it for yourself. Imagine a wide expanse of silvery, or emerald depending upon the time you visit it, water surrounded by forests of pine and fir on all sides, revealing itself as the mist of clouds unveils its layers. And as you continue staring at the scene, you suddenly notice that you're crossing the dam and there's a 1000 meters (probably) deep gauge a few inches from the wheels of the bus and all your mind registers is the untamedness of everything.
The pleasantness of the drive continues as you cross that charmer of a town; Shillong, as you travel through the state, the hill ranges named after the different tribes, its million waterfalls, churches, graveyards, quaint little village-towns. The wise one'd stop his descriptions now and put a flowery end here. But since we've screwed wisdom long back with a burning sickle, we'd rather go on.
Somewhere between Shillong and Silchar
The bus takes a particularly Physical-Laws-breaking turn and my wakefullness returns again. And this time, it is the famed Umiam Lake, also known as the Barapani Lake, outside. Now, everyone who knows will tell you how the lake is the perfect welcome to Shillong and how it is truely a sight to behold, but you don't really get it till you experience it for yourself. Imagine a wide expanse of silvery, or emerald depending upon the time you visit it, water surrounded by forests of pine and fir on all sides, revealing itself as the mist of clouds unveils its layers. And as you continue staring at the scene, you suddenly notice that you're crossing the dam and there's a 1000 meters (probably) deep gauge a few inches from the wheels of the bus and all your mind registers is the untamedness of everything.
The pleasantness of the drive continues as you cross that charmer of a town; Shillong, as you travel through the state, the hill ranges named after the different tribes, its million waterfalls, churches, graveyards, quaint little village-towns. The wise one'd stop his descriptions now and put a flowery end here. But since we've screwed wisdom long back with a burning sickle, we'd rather go on.
Somewhere between Shillong and Silchar
Now I'm passing through a jungle and the leaves on the trees shading the road're hanging down with the weight of the dust. And you ask how so? Well, whether it was some decades or some months back that the forementioned road was last a hard solid road , it can't really be said. There're holes bigger than the whole of the bus throughout the road and at times, the road positively disappears. This state of the road starts appearing sometime after you cross the Jaintia Hills(hence, the last touristy tourist spot in the state) and continues deep into Assam. The road may become a road again at times, but halt your optimism, comrade, that is the rainforest version of a mirage.
If you reach your destination at a humane hour after facing the numerous jams (yes, on a highway) and the non-existent road, then congratulations and celebrations! You're a survivor! When the world ends and the brave ascent to Valhalla, there'd a whole contingent of people who had travelled Shillong to Silchar (yes, that's the hometown) atleast once in their lifetimes. And so, the moral of the story in 2 words for the naive, if ever the wind brings you this way: AIR TRAVEL.
Thursday, 29 December 2011
Labels:
Assam,
Meghalaya,
North-East,
Silchar,
Travel