The Signs Were Always There
The speed was around 50 km/h, and the slope might have
pushed it further up by 10 km/h. Then, all of a sudden, a hairpin bend came. I
tried to turn the handle in the right direction, but to my horror, the upper
body of the scooter was stuck. I frantically tried braking, but to add salt to
my wounds, the brakes had failed too. A sense of panic struck like lightning
through my entire being, and chaos took hold of my mind. A nervous breakdown
began unfolding the valley was right in front of me, no safety railings in
sight, and I was marching towards my doom on Helios's Chariot.
Then, out of nowhere, a calming sensation came over me. In
that moment, I thought of the most absurd thing any sane person in my shoes
would never think of the lyrics of Space Oddity, and how audaciously comical
Bowie looked in it. The moment my mind wavered towards that absurdist thought,
something struck me a second time: what if I try to create some sort of
imbalance? A last attempt to survive. If it succeeded, well and good and if it
didn't, I might go into oblivion thinking of something hilarious, with a slight
smile on my face. The gamble did work. With a loud clash, I was on the ground
alive, but bruised and the damned vehicle pinning my right leg. I was losing
consciousness, and it was happening quite slowly. And then…
Looking back, the signs were there from the beginning.
Day 1 had ended on such a high note (reference to my
previous blog) that I slept like a baby and woke up like one too, because for
some reason I was extremely irritable and in no mood to strike a conversation
with anyone. There was a certain uneasiness in my being that I couldn't shove
away. Still, I convinced myself: this is a place I've been looking forward to
visiting for quite some time now, I can't just lie around, no matter how I
feel.
Once I took the first step outside, there was a new energy
in my being all of a sudden. The valley was looking magnificent, covered in
clouds like draped curtains, and I was coming to terms with why Mussoorie is
regarded as the "Queen of Hills." I dialled the number of the first
guy who had approached me for a rental scooter, and he dropped the vehicle off
at my hostel in about fifteen minutes. The moment I saw it, I thought maybe
this was a piece of work the colonial rulers had left behind for their precious
hill station as a parting gift. It was literally in shambles. The brakes were
really hard, there was some sound coming from the engine, but due to a mixture
of two overwhelming emotions the eagerness to discover this land and the
uneasiness that still hadn't gone away, I ignored those glaring problems and
off I drove towards my first destination, Dalai Hills.
The ride to Dalai Hills was mesmerising. The moment I crossed the chaotic Mall Road, I was surrounded by Deodar Cedar the majestic trees, often embodiments of their Sanskrit translation, The Timber of the Gods. The forest is home to various fauna, and I was lucky enough to spot pheasants, woodpeckers, Black-headed Jays, as well as the notorious menace of the valley Langurs. I believe the only thing a person must do in the valley is drive at a negligible speed and observe nature in its rawest form. My mood had lightened considerably by the time I reached the gate of Dalai Hills. The nature had cleared my conscience in such a way that I was feeling at peace, and on top of that, I had spotted one of the most scenic tennis courts I've ever seen in my entire life at the Officers' Club, en route to my destination.
But to my absolute horror, the place was crowded
Instagrammers, casual tourists, and ruckus-causing non-valley migrants had all
descended upon it. I had been looking forward to visiting this place for some
time, primarily because it was where the Dalai Lama addressed the international
media after the toppling of Tibet's sovereignty by the Chinese invasion. The
14th Lama, who migrated here at only twenty-three years of age, was able to
establish the initial headquarters of the Tibetan government-in-exile at Happy
Valley in Mussoorie, with the support of the Indian government, while Shedup
Choephelling Temple became the first religious site for Tibetans in India.
The sacred place looked far from peaceful, but it was still
quite an experience to understand the depth of Tibetan Buddhism through its
various religious artefacts. The one I felt most connected to was the Wheel of
Prayer, representing the pillars of the entire religion, a manifestation of
Buddha's compassionate speech: "Om Mani Padme Hum." The vibrant
artwork depicting various mythologies on the walls of the temple provided a
serene quality to the blessed site.
The hike took me thirty minutes to be precise, and what
awaited me was a sight I cannot forget ever. The meadows in front were lush
green, a light drizzle of rain was falling, clouds and fog were covering the
ranges and forests of Deodar and Pine far in the distance and at the centre of
all of it, a mythical statue of Lord Buddha. I was just beginning to come to
terms with what I was witnessing when a certain intolerant and rowdy simpleton
spoiled the entire ambiance of the place. He stated, in a high-pitched voice,
to some of his friends in a language I won't mention in this blog that it
would've been far better if a statue of Lord Shiva had been placed here
instead, and that he didn't even know who this figure in the statue was.
On the way back down, I noticed a shop that looked like the
valley itself had quietly swallowed it whole. Tree roots had surfaced through
the ground, cutting across the floor, and the middle and upper sections of the
trunk were visible right through the tin roof. Behind a small counter, a girl
roughly my age was preparing tea, alone, managing the entire structure by
herself. Fair-skinned, slight, dressed in a traditional kurta, with the easy
unhurried manner of someone who had grown up with these hills as her backyard.
She welcomed me with a warm smile. I took a table facing the hills and a few
shrubs, ordered an omelette with a bun, and without much preamble, we just
started talking.
It began with the crowd. She told me what this place used to
be like a decade ago, living in this exact spot. Only a handful of
sophisticated tourists would make their way here the kind genuinely hungry for
local interaction, curious about Tibetan culture, willing to sit with a monk
over tea and listen. A real harmony had existed between the visitors and the
community, she said, and it had made this place deeply soulful. Then the travel
bloggers came. Then Instagram. Then everyone who had no context, no curiosity,
but simply wanted the photograph. She said the deterioration in the quality of
people became unreal after the COVID lockdowns as if two years of being locked
up had taken away whatever sensitivity people had left.
Then the conversation drifted. She told me about the places
she wishes she could travel to someday the landscapes she has only seen in
photographs, the vast beauty of her own country that she hasn't been able to
witness firsthand. I sat with that for a moment. Here I was, a guy who had
taken a month off to wander through Uttarakhand on a whim, and sitting across
from me was someone who lived inside the very landscape people like me travel
thousands of kilometres to visit and yet the rest of the country, the rest of
the world, remained entirely out of reach for her.
We talked about the haves and have-nots, but not in any
pitiful or performative way. There was no charity in the conversation, no
condescension on either side. It was just two people with genuinely different
lives, mutually curious about the other's. She had scored well enough in her
Class 12th to pursue medicine, she told me but the decision had been made for
her. I didn't press further. I didn't need to. The omelette was long finished
by then, but neither of us moved to end the conversation.
I left without knowing her name. I don't know why I didn't
ask maybe because the conversation had that rare quality of feeling complete in
itself, without the formality of introductions. Or maybe I was already slipping
back into the self-absorbed rhythm of a traveller moving on to the next thing.
I walked back to the scooter thinking about her, and I was still thinking about
her when everything went wrong on that hill.
When I reached back at the main gate of the temple, I
noticed a food stall selling a snack I had never heard of Laphing, a Tibetan
delicacy with a soft outer layer and a crushed, firm filling with a tangy sauce
inside. It had a really unique texture, and I liked it.
As I reached my scooter after that hearty meal, I found out
that my key wasn't going into the ignition point. I tried for half an hour, but
to no avail. A lady from a nearby store came over and tried to guide me in some
way as she also ran a rental service. A couple of guys passing by tried their
luck as well, but nothing worked. Finally, I called the owner. He came with a
couple of tools, and after an excruciating hour, the vehicle finally started.
Anyone in their sane mind would have left the scooter right there. Not me. I
wanted to learn my lesson the hard way.
Off I went to my second destination the famous Company
Garden, a beautiful botanical garden with a lake at its very centre, a man-made
waterfall, a nursery for seasonal plants, and a wax museum tucked to the side.
I grabbed a couple of photos with the poorly made wax statues at the overpriced
museum. The only resemblance that truly existed was to a failed painter from
Austria who had given most of his intentions away in his early works such as
the untitled painting now commonly known as " The Melancholy Soul " and
another decent likeness was of the person famous for hilariously caricaturising
the former.
By about 5 in the evening, I was exhausted. I had covered
almost everything there was to cover, but I had this impulsive idea of
squeezing in one more offbeat place a temple dedicated to Lord Balrama, the
Bhadraj Temple, sitting in the middle of nowhere.
The route to the temple was lush green, like any other road
through the hills, and the rain had grown a bit heavier, making the surrounding
forest look dark, gloomy, and hauntingly beautiful all at once. As the route
grew steeper, it was becoming really hard to control the scooter. I kept going,
until suddenly the front tyre got stuck in a pothole while the rear one started
sliding towards the cliff. I began calculating that this affordable backpacking
trip was going to cost me roughly as much as a generous one to Thailand or
Bali. After a moment of paranoia, I decided to lay the scooter down
horizontally.
At that exact moment, I encountered a few engineering
students from Dehradun who were there to film drone footage of the valley and
the holy shrine. They helped me out and tempted me further with descriptions of
the landscapes they had just witnessed from the temple premises. I kept a stone
on my heart and decided to turn back, I had a horrid picture painted in my mind
of what would happen if I went even further up and the scooter got stuck again,
alone in the dark of night with no human presence anywhere nearby. It had
already passed six in the evening.
So, on my way back, everything described in the first
paragraph of this blog transpired. On the verge of losing consciousness, I had
my second encounter with those “Riders on the Storm” who saved me from climbing
the “Stairway to Heaven”. But poorly written puns aside, I was indeed saved by those same
students. They helped me up, gave me some water, and asked me to stand but my
legs were completely sore, and I had somehow scraped my entire right arm raw,
bleeding quite badly. They sat with me for half an hour, helped me to my feet,
and drove that piece of crap delivered by Satan himself down the doomed road
while I sat behind one of their bikes.
Still in considerable pain, I convinced myself to make small
talk. I got to know that these guys were preparing for government exams, and
one of them had already cracked the SSB and was about to join the naval forces
as an officer. In their free time, they filmed various picturesque locations
through drones and cameras, posting the videos on a YouTube channel as a
passion project so that when they eventually did drift apart, they would at
least have a digital footprint of the good times.
I don't remember most of the ride back to downtown
Mussoorie. The nausea was considerable, the pain in my leg was making itself
loudly known, and the small talk I was attempting from the pillion seat was
coming out as something between half-baked sentences and delirious mumbling.
But I remember the sunset. I remember it with a clarity that surprises me even
now.
The entire range of hills was bathed in orange and yellow
not the soft, gradient kind you photograph and forget, but the overwhelming,
almost aggressive kind that makes you feel like the light is happening at you
rather than in front of you. The clouds that had been heavy and grey all day
broke apart just enough to let it through. It looked, genuinely, like someone
had taken a decision about it.
I felt everything at once sitting on that seat relief so
physical it felt like something leaving my body, guilt about those students who
owed me absolutely nothing and gave me everything, a kind of smallness that
wasn't unpleasant, and underneath all of it, something that I can only describe
as gratitude without a clear recipient. Not quite directed at God, not quite at
those boys, not quite at the absurdist instinct that made me think of Bowie at
the worst possible moment just gratitude, floating free, attaching itself to
the hills and the light and the fact that I was still there to see it.
I regret, to this day, that I never thanked my saviours
enough or even had the courtesy of asking their names. You read that right. I
don't even know their names. But I am eternally grateful for their gesture of
kindness, because of which I made it back to my hostel safely.
The dinner was, obviously, a bagel with scrambled eggs and
cream cheese, as well as Pav Bhaji overpriced, and the bhaji was in liquid form
but no complaints. Everything was hand-delivered to me, and I was pampered as
if I were the most important person in that hostel. I genuinely enjoyed it.
Would have liked it even more if my leg hadn't been killing me.
I notified my parents and received the scolding of a
lifetime. My father wanted me to cut the trip short and grab the next vehicle
back to Ahmedabad immediately. After an excruciating amount of convincing, they
allowed me to continue on the condition that I lose the scooter immediately and
consult a doctor first thing the next morning.
I ended the day watching Forrest Gump, and two dialogues
stayed with me, describing me and my day rather conclusively:
"Stupid is as stupid does."
And "I don't know if we each have a destiny, or if
we're all just floatin' around accidental-like on a breeze, but I, I think
maybe it's both."
And yeah most importantly -- "That's all I have to say
about that."
Thank you for reading.



What you went through is something I can barely put into words. I felt a wave of fear just reading it. I am happy you made it back safely then ! But most of it all you got an experience for life !
ReplyDeletelovely :)
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