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Happy feet |
The coffee maker had turned on the whistle, she yawned,
hurried back to her soft satin blanket, eyes could not be generous, frugal,
shadowed and then there were the fast forward settings of an urban life stint.
The perfect blend of her hand pressed handloom “salwar kameez” went well with
her motherly aura, the lunch box smiled - finely tucked mushroom chicken sandwich
for the kids, the husband was trained enough to read the alarm signals on time,
he had revised his office timing last month, the drop at the bus stop, the maid
stood there perfectly in her imperfect style- that’s it, undoubtedly the urban
upper middle class women worked hard-a long day but life showered better perks every
time she toiled hard.
But here in my blog I
am not counting the perks of those familiar faces rather I would count on the splashes
of sweat dropped on hot sunny afternoons by familiar strangers, wet monsoons
too cannot deter their smiles-maybe they had worn spirits in their sleeves. We
have seen such faces everywhere; around the corner, behind our lane, on the foot path, at my house, on a trip, in the clingy railway station and just on the road. They all had expressions, unique each of them in their own special way.
Walking along the himalayan trail for a livlihood
|
One monsoon afternoon @India Gate |
Sitting around the foot path selling “hot cakes” every day, I see such faces.
She dabs extra lemon
juice on the last make. “Makki” “Challi” “Bhutta” she spends the whole day
sprinkling lemon and salt, heating those yellow pearls on golden light. She is
happy; she makes a round figure of Rs 300 that was more than enough for the
day.
Welcome to another sect – my blog is not about glorification of their struggles through my words but it’s a capture of their invincible spirit. They work hard, harsher sometimes; apathetic conditions of livelihood but colours still flutter from their tattered sacks, everyday those wrinkled paper notes head on to the market to buy household stuffs. She giggled, the last customer bargained for 5 rupees “Sahib 5 rupaya ki to baat hai, kyun kum de rahein ho?” She had thought he would happily depart with that note, colours ran strong around her. She straps her basket, leaves her happy trail and catches the next local at 10-45 pm.
She sat there in the busy haat, every night she carved a niche through those artefacts. “Boutique”
“woh kya hota hai?” She knew the harmony of colours and rhythm of designs. She
was the sole earning member. She sold her designs in the nearby busy market.
Last year “Brinda” had bought a beautiful lamp shade, she designed a new corner
in her French villa where she unfolded exquisite artefacts from different
corners of the world “Foreign tourists
don’t bargain.”
These women galloped
their way, everyday to new destinations; they might not have reached pinnacles
of glory but who cares about glorious memoirs. They paint a perfect odyssey of
life. My salute to the ordinary yet extra ordinary women of India. They leave
their own foot prints. Welcome to the “New breed of fire wagons”.
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