The evening rain
“I hope it’s not raining”, said I to my colleague Shilpa. She
flickered her eyes and smiled. Her warm smile soothed my burning eyes. I had
had a long day. I shut my laptop, stuffed it into my bag , slung it onto my
shoulders and ran towards the lift. The heels of my shoes make a crackling sound
against the stone floor. I reprimanded myself for wearing stilettoes to office. I work at a pharma company situated at one of the fancy
business parks in Bangalore. My building is situated at the end of the park. The
end of the world as I always call it. I need to walk for almost a kilometre to
reach the front gate to catch the bus which ferries us, the corporate cattle to
our sheds.
Now, coming back to the lift: It wasn’t working. It wasn’t working
because life had decided to be hard on me. Life and I were in a relationship
where we both knew it won’t work. It was a relationship where we both had trust
issues. I didn’t trust life and it seemed to hate me. I raced down the stairs and reached the door. And, no
surprises: it was raining. Disheartened, I fumbled through my bag for an
umbrella, only to realise that I did not have one.
“It’s just drizzling”, I thought. Using the permutation and
combination skills that I had acquired while studying for B-school entrance
examinations, I calculated the time that I would take to reach the front gate
and concluded that if I jogged towards the gate, I would be able to catch the
bus without getting much drenched. So, slowly and steadily, I started running.
The heels of my stilettoes threatened to break any moment. But the challenge was
accepted, failure wasn’t an option. Just
as I crossed my building, the drizzle began to turn into a downpour. Clearly,
there was a reason for my failure of all those B-school admissions: My permutation
and combination skills were really poor.
I ran faster. The rain
water seeped through my clothes and soaked my skin. I looked like a helpless
chicken wading through the rain. There was a thunder and some lightning. The rain
Gods seemed to mock at my helplessness and also click a picture of my misery. “I
won’t let you put me down", I said to the Kohl coloured clouds with my eyes full of
tears. I ran faster, while trying hard not to let my bag slip off my shoulder.
As I reached closer to the gate, I could see the bus waiting. Victory was near
but little did I know that there were few more hurdles to clear. As I sprinted
towards the bus, I failed to notice the maze of puddle what awaited me. Splash!
And I fell into one of them. I looked like one of the buffaloes bathing in the
lake at my grandfather’s village.
I picked myself up, while recording from the corner of my
eyes, the number of spectators of this royal fall. Marching into the bus, I was
relieved to see an empty seat next to my friend Indu, aptly named after a rain
God. As I sank into the seat, I was about to start lamenting about the trouble
that I went through, when he chirped, “Lucky you! You got to run in the rain!”
I stared at him, dumbfounded. I had been cursing the rains
throughout. I had been complaining about life, the clouds and the rain Gods
while the rain had been trying to play with me, trying to wash away all my
worries. I realised that it was not the rain, but the negativity that had
clouded my mind and that was responsible for my misery. The cloud in my head
seemed to clear. I smiled and said to myself, “Lucky me! I got to run in the
rain!”



Nice one Megha!! Emotionally touched.
ReplyDeleteNice one Megha!!! Emotionally touched..
ReplyDeleteLovely!!
ReplyDeleteVery Nice Megha !!!!!
ReplyDelete