A Wasted Attempt

by

in

I have friends, and they can all be counted using my two hands. So when one of the few flies off to a different country, it brings out a strange nostalgia. It also gives me a chance to pen a letter, go to the post office and buy a stamp. All rare things, I can tell you. 

So here is a first attempt to a very old friend, one who has been an enthusiastic mate and shared many a crazed & fanatic fandom. 

***

Dear Vinay,

What you are now reading is a culmination of a vague idea seeded many months ago, when it first started sinking that we would no longer share the same city as our home. I wish I could be there when you first slit the envelope, see the first expressions which flit across your face when you begin reading. Or am I being arrogant in assuming that a written letter is welcome? As you know, words and writings are an almost forgotten art, and if people who profess a love towards it do not try and create, we deserve lost legacies, don’t you think?
Actually, you might not and I might be presuming too much. But I am determined that you should be bombarded with letters from your homeland, in my handwriting, flaying you with the bourgeois details of my life . If you deign to reply in kind, I wonder whose letters will be better. Knowing you, you over-talented bastard, it would in all probability be yours. But at least I can say that I tried.

I have a picture in my mind, a cliched one with soft sunlight. You are sitting under a tree (or if it is more practical, I suppose you are allowed to find a balcony with an impossibly comfortable couch and tea in your hand), a blissful smile and this letter in your hand, college backpack strewn carelessly across the grass. So, if you are reading this anywhere which isn’t remotely similar, I command you at once to do your part and go find yourself a cozy nook to fulfill my impractical imaginings. Because that is what a letter should be. Deliciously rambling and long winded. Unhurried with long, beautiful sentences which bring comfort from a familiar voice. (I am indomitably convinced that mine is all that)

Now that I have begun putting ink on paper, I begin to see why so few people write anymore. Well, intentions and all are fine, I suppose, but what do I write about? The number of times I hit the snooze button this morning? The white strand of hair that I spotted while brushing my teeth and the maddening panic attack which ensued? Or perhaps how the 13 kadabus I ate that day (No, you did not make a mistake in reading that. I really ate 13 kadabus in a single day and didn’t stop until the next) have now firmly lodged in my ass, thighs and legs and point blankly refuse to melt? No, no. I am being unfair. You are my friend, not my diary and should be spared the emotional turmoil which PMS entails. That’s absolutely right. I blame PMS.

Oh dear God, Vinay, this is actually turning into a diary and doesn’t even resemble the letter I had in mind. You know the one I spoke about. Beautiful sentences and comfort and all that.

Yes, right. I’ll get on with that. Which now brings me back to the original question before the embarrassing detour. What do I write about? Maybe I should tell you about the book that I am reading now (Because, as you know, there is no other more worthwhile thing I do than read. I am still unemployed, if you are wondering).

Its a book called Gerald’s Game, by Stephen King. And what a book it is.
A married couple is about to embark on a little bondage, all in an attempt to revive the husband’s waning interest in the wife and performing after more than a decade of marriage. So the book opens with the wife tied to the bed with handcuffs and the husband approaching her, all eager. She has second thoughts at the last minute and cries off the whole kinky thing. The husband pretends he doesn’t understand her refusal, and continues his gradual approach, with the proverbial leer in his eyes. The wife, realizing what her husband intends to do, kicks him in the you-know-what. Which in turn sets off a heart attack (He is middle aged, aroused and over weight), which in turn leads to his falling and hitting his head. He is dead in a matter of minutes. And while all this happens, the wife is still hand cuffed to the bed, unclothed, with a centre seat view to her husband’s chain reaction death. What follows is a literary fest of conversations by voices in the wife’s head which reveals a childhood trauma previously ignored by the wife (Hence the voices in her head). Oh, in an interesting aside, a starved dog comes into their bedroom after smelling the blood and starts eating parts of the husband. Yeah, the wife is still in the bed, what she only needs is popcorn which she can’t eat due to being handcuffed. Ah! The beauty of gore. I am still reading, and I advise you to hold on and not be too desperate to know how it all ends. I promise most ardently that I will reveal all in my next letter.

Before I end, I am obligated to ask how you are. You are setting up a new home and having never done that, I am insatiably curious. How did you feel when you saw the land of your home fade away from the plane’s window? How did you feel when you landed in a strange country and saw only unfamiliar and different faces? Is the air different? What did you do when you first open your new door? Are you missing India? Is it all you thought it would be? Or something more and less at the same time? What was your first meal there? Did you cook? Did you find it difficult to understand them at first, to decipher their accent? Have you made friends and if yes, who are they?

Well, I think you got the general idea. I want to know even the tiniest of things and the mightiest of tidings from your new life. I am thinking that it is a pity that men do not have PMS.
I am signing off Vinay, with a warning that you will be getting more of these, and it will not matter if you do not write back yourself. I enjoy this and am already rethinking my decision that you should not be my diary. There is some merit in the idea.

Wait, do you think this is good enough to be published as a blog?

Till the next time I see a new white hair,

Your friend from a previous home,

Deepthi.

***

Note: This was actually written as is and posted to Indiana, USA. But it seems that I overestimated India Post’s capabilities rather drastically, and as it happens, it became a lost letter. A sad, unfulfilled and unread letter, never to reach its destination. And since I am absolutely determined to not waste my letter-writing efforts, I am posting it here. After-all, I would not want Vinay to miss my dry wit.


2 responses to “A Wasted Attempt”

  1. Vinay Sundar Rajan Avatar

    A written letter is always welcome. Not just because of the words that flow out of it, but because the letter itself speaks to you in lieu of its writer. From the creases, folds and many imperfections to the paper’s scent, the pleasure of its perusal eclipses that of a typed word. Unlike a backspace, there is no better means to properly mask an unwilling or unwitting line than a strike, which too, reveals its intention. Simply put, aside from the words that make it up, a written word to a typed one is as much a human to metaphorical robot.

    That said, it is our duty (as you rightly pointed out) as passionate penmen to sustain the art of letter writing for it is undeniably a legacy but not yet a lost one. I mean to do my duty. I shall not deign but rise to reply in kind as it should be so honourable.

    Anyway, your picture perfect supposition of the cliché is apt to say the least, and not in any way impractical. And it might not surprise you that that picture is real in every word (only that it hasn’t been realised yet). The backpack, grass and tea in the soft sunlight is only a prelude to an orchestra of sceneries that are literally in my backyard. Enviable yes. Add in the FLOCKS of chirping sparrows vying to dip themselves in the meagre puddles of rain water that decorate the parkway, the pair of hares that constantly bounce with such haste in the lush green of the lawn, and the complete lack of crows and their cacophonies, and you have a reader’s paradise. All in my backyard. Why then would I not wish to obey your command?

    Why then has it not even been chanced upon? Well, where time gives way from the everyday droll of academia and routine, lethargy wound its poisonous arms around me. But I’ll not let it consume me so. I promise to realise that picture and in time I’ll send you an actual one to see it drown in green envy. Your ramblings were well suited for your PMS precondition is all I’m going to say. Not to mention, having Stephen King’s book’s content to proxy for your bordering predilection for gore. Or maybe that too is a bloody seasonal pattern.

    As for your inquiries about the new land, I’d be happy to shine some light. The plane was the start. Where once I entered its door, I felt an eerie feeling of excitement and relief, as though I was carrying the onus of the country. Don’t judge me yet. The long and arduous journey made it a glaring buzz of newness every instance after. Once I landed, the sight of faces of a plethora of races gave way to two very strong feelings – I am now in the open, unprotected by the homely laws and lawlessness of the country I left behind, and I am a guest to the entire world that is not India.

    The comfort was knowing that this somehow gave a challenging feel unlike the facades of some my peers which displayed disarrayed, nervous, biased looks even. The transition was both smooth and filled with a crescendo of anxious expectations. The first thought after exiting the plane door (twice in my case since I changed flights), was to somehow contact Preethika as was promised. And that’s when it dawned on me how far I was to her and everyone else back home.

    The first meal I had was a McD double cheeseburger, which was not worth its hype. The air certainly seemed different to the then alien. It is certainly all that I thought it would be, owing to the fact that my view stemmed from the countless hours of binging on series and movies. It actually is all that Deeps, except for the constant alien invasion target of a New York. One feeling remains unchanged. I feel more like a cog in a machine than a cell in a living being. Everything being so hyper clean and organized compared to India is not exactly soothing. There’s so much more to describe but I’ll leave that for another tale.

    For now, a not so home sick person misses the nuances of the Indian streets, sounds and of course, her food. Indian restaurants here only remind me of what I was supposed to have gotten, rather than what I used to get. But I’ll live, as I always have. Well-adjusted and with no dearth of Indians here, comfortably in my own skin. I’ve adopted the accent reasonably well. Neither an achievement nor a requirement if you ask me. I have made plenty of Indian friends. Birds of the same feather flock together. But circumstances led me to team up with a Chinese and a South Korean for my projects and I was able to learn about their cultures a little too. Purdue undoubtedly is filled with big minds as I’m constantly made aware during classes, seminars and exams. Humbling to say that I’m just an averager here.

    I’ll save a lot more content for later. For now, my diet and classes beckon. Till the next time I see another one of your white hair tales.

    Your friend from home in a new house,
    Vinay.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. deepthiraghuram Avatar

      I was right. You are over accomplished. This is beautiful. And my favourite sentence of all:
      I am now in the open, unprotected by the homely laws and lawlessness of the country I left behind, and I am a guest to the entire world that is not India.

      Like

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