Skip to main content

The Man Across the Street

There is something about observing random strangers that I really enjoy...I can't exactly put my finger on what it is, but I could spend an entire day at an Airport lounge just looking at people. A certain consuming interest in these people in transit grips me, as I draw my imaginary conclusions and build a fictional story around them. The nervous middle aged woman travelling alone, the confident teenager with neon coloured headphones plugged in her ear, the toddler glued to his fathers cellphone games, the young man speaking in a low tone on his phone, the elderly couple clutching at their bags...all of these and many many more have served as protagonists in my make believe world.

But sometimes, a few of these faces just tend to stay with you. I find it difficult to shake off the memory of few faces, and I can't help but wonder about the real stories these people's lives hold. One such face was that of an elderly man who lived across the street from me in Delhi.

It would be a blatant lie if I ventured out to call him handsome, and neither was he the suave old gentleman that always sets womens' heart into a flutter, irrespective of their age. He was a tall, thin man with wheatish complexion...bald except for a scruffy white rim of curly hair, which used to look shabbier because of his constant scratching. He had small stern eyes and a large nose, and although he didn't go about with a scowl or frown, there was something grumpy about him...so much so that I childishly nicknamed him "Cranky Uncle" in my head.

Cranky Uncle had the weirdest sense of dressing himself up. Infact, he would hardly ever be fully dressed. He would come out of his ground floor flat in the morning dressed in pinstriped boxer shorts and a baniyaan, and for some unfathomable reason, he would always, always have his watch strapped to his wrist. A broken down old sofa stood outside his door, the sight of its springs through the wide hole in it enough to discourage any passerby to rest his posterior upon it. Cranky Uncle would come out thus in the morning and take his seat of pride on his sofa, and spend the day just staring down the road impassively.

Was he waiting for someone? Children, grandchildren, perhaps? He lived with his wife, and I never saw anybody visit the couple, nor did they call on anybody. He would spend the day on his sofa, looking up and down the street and sometimes walk to the grocery store at the corner to get groceries. He used to be up and about around afternoon, around the time the children of the neighbourhood got back from school. I never saw him smiling or playing with these children, on the contrary, he would often be seen talking to them authoratatively, and children would just timidly answer him and scamper away.

Any kind of activity on the street used to interest him immensely. It was a neighbourhood full of students and professionals living in rented out flats, and there would always be someone moving in or moving out of the colony. The movers and packers loading stuff into the trucks and tempos would invariably draw Cranky Uncle to the scene. He would observe the men heaving cupboards and refrigerators onto the truck, and he would pitch in with his own suggestions, however unwanted, and insist that they listen to him. Political parties would hold small rallies in the colony during Assembly Elections, and he would collect all the pamphlets and peruse them with keen interest. He would be the first person to go and sit in the first row at these rallies and would take his seat well before the speaker actually arrived.

It was evident that he wasn't very well off. On Diwali, when the entire street came to life and fairy lights adorned homes all around, his house remained dark for quite some time...until he came out and lit a single, solitary candle on his windowsill. He kept staring at the people bursting crackers with their children as brilliant fireworks lit up the sky, but he didn't for once participate in the festivities.

His poverty didn't affect me as much as his solitude did. He was alone, for sure, but whether he was lonely or not only he could tell. I never found out the reason for his silence and I hardly ever saw him smiling. He could be a man once well off and now on hard times...or he could very well be the eccentric grumpy old man... He could even be the one with nothing to hold on to except his sense of pride...he could have been any of these or none of these, but I would never know. He wore the same grumpy look when I boarded my luggage into the cab that would take me away from this neighbourhood forever, and as I gently nodded towards him and gave him a weak smile, he just stared right back at me and then looked away.

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Sisterhood of Medicine

"Sister, when will the Doctor be here?", asked a middle aged man. I turned from my examination table, where I was examining a six year old boy, and replied, " I am the doctor, how can I help you?". The man looked at me doubtfully - I was in a salwar kameez with my stethoscope around my neck - and repeated - " No but Sister, I need my child to be seen by a Doctor  Sir".   This is only one of the many incidents that I- as well as most of my young female colleagues at work- go through on a daily basis. Young female doctors get mistaken for nurses all the time, although the nursing staff always has a specific uniform. The young male doctors, however, do not encounter any such confusion. I have no idea whether I can label this as casual sexism or pure ignorance, but people across social and economic spectrums tend to address female doctors as "Sister" as opposed to "Madam". The men, however, get to be "Sir" throughout.  S

The Matter of the Root.

In a country where your name (more importantly, your surname) is more or less a reflection of your identity- from where you belong down to your caste and religion- imagine having a name that doesn't pin you down to a certain state or territory or region, even. Given that situation, I have now come to simply laugh off the surprised reactions I get when people realise I am Assamese. I have had colleagues who simply assumed I was Bengali for years,friends of friends enquiring which part of Delhi or Punjab I am from and even random aunties at weddings judging me for gorging on chicken because apparently, I am a Marwari! I usually laugh the whole thing off, sometimes even playing a guessing game with the people who seem hellbent on decoding where I actually am from. But somewhere at the back of my mind, over the years, a nagging question has kept building up in my mind--a question I have tried to answer very many times, although not very satisfactorily--- What does being an Assamese

The Saree and its Excess Baggage

As a lanky young girl in her late teens who first stepped into Medical School, I gawked in horror when I was told that I was supposed to wear sarees to classes for a month or so as part of the college tradition for all Freshers. That the whole saree thing was to be accompanied by drippingly oiled hair parted in the middle and braided with the ends tied with fluorescent orange and green ribbons is another story in itself, of course. But for the eighteen year old me, who didn't really care how she looked, the oiled hair wasn't an issue as much as the saree was - simply because I had absolutely no clue how to drape one.  Cut to a little over a decade later, as a newly married woman, the women of my husband's family and extended family are pleasantly surprised as to just how comfortably I drape my sarees, not requiring the help that was very generously offered by a bevy of aunts and sisters in law. Somewhere in these past few years, I fell in love with this quintessential