I guess it has  something to do with this time of the year. Willy-nilly, I turn back and  take stock. It's a feeling I'm now familiar with...the warmth of my  palms ensconced safely in the pockets of my sweatshirt, the chill  playing with my breath each time I exhale, my mind a whirl of thoughts.  I've found myself doing this curled up on windowsills on Main Corr, on  the terrace as I gaze out over a sleeping city, on long walks to Gwyer  Hall and back, and on sleepless nights here in Bhubaneswar, watching  winter raindrops trickling off palm fronds just outside my window. That  palm frond was just sprouting when I got here...now, it's close enough  to touch.
I shake hands goodnight with it. :)
It's  been a year I will never forget. I've done things I've always wanted  to, and some things I never thought I would. I've had wishes granted.  The impossible practically happened. Enough said.
Somewhere, though, there's a slight tinge of disillusionment and a little sadness.
Don't  get me wrong - heaven forbid that I should feel or even sound like an  ingrate. I'm thinking aloud...let's see if we can sort this out.
(So is this where I should insert the Rambling Alert? Methinks it is.)
It  began wonderfully enough - my first New Year's Eve home in five years.  It was a very happy girl who made her way back to Delhi for her fourth  semester. February was important - I re-discovered an old love, thanks  to a new friend. I had the most amazing evening of my life on March 15. I  didn't know this then...but March was also the month of another  beginning. More about that later. 
Let's  see...April was laid back. Quiet and lazy and fun. I do remember  presenting my dissertation one afternoon. I've never been as poorly  prepared for anything, ever...and I've never had so much fun. May...ah,  now we're talking. :)
May  was crazy. There were exams I was unprepared for out of sheer disinclination, and there was a growing realization that  if what I had with Delhi couldn't be classified as a with-or-without-you  relationship, nothing could. May 15, again, was one of those days. I  went from ecstatic to flabbergasted to plain low in 30 seconds flat.  Even for someone as mercurial as I am, that's a quick transition. And  that's all the more reason May 16 was such a surprise. May 17  was...difficult. Packing six years into sixteen bags and boxes is not  easy...and I'm not talking logistics here. The next day, I left Delhi.
I'll  never forget the night leading up to my departure, or the last hour at  the airport. Other memories will come and go, this one's going to stay.  Till the plane actually took off the runway, I was practically numb. I  didn't realise I was crying till much later. Then I felt embarrassed, then stupid...and then I stopped caring about everything but the fact that I was leaving behind something I loved, and cried harder.
And  that's why the week that followed was so difficult. It was my last four  days with my family before I entered a set-up that measures personal  time and space in privilege leaves. There were a million things to be  done, scores of things to run around for. Mornings and evenings came and  went, marking time with merciless regularity. The one thing that was  constant, whether I was at the doctor's or the bank or the temple, was  this thought sitting in a corner of my mind. "When you leave now",  it kept repeating, "you are not going back to Delhi. Not now, not any time soon.  There's no Delhi to go back to, the way you've known going back to it. What you've  left behind is over."
I'm no good at handling endings, so that hurt.
The last week was full of new experiences. Outside BKC on the 23rd, I began a new chapter. Of more than one story, though I didn't know about the other.
May  ended with three clueless ER Managers landing in Calcutta, dining on  Maggi and saying goodnight in the hall before proceeding to Rooms 1 and 3  (I got one all to myself. The guys shared the other. Oh, the privileges  of being a woman :)
June. Hmm...June.
Here are my discoveries for June: 
1.Recruitment can be as boring in practice as it is in theory. The thrill wears off  in no time, especially when logistics demand attention.
2. A good team is half the job done.
3. Laugh a lot. Be goofy. Play silly games. It's good for you. :)
4. Delhi is a lover and a friend. Calcutta is your friendly old neighbour next door.
5. And Calcutta is beautiful at midnight.
6. Long work hours are more irritating in reality than they are horrifying in concept.
7. Homesickness sometimes gets accentuated in a hotel room.
8. You can do - or not do - what you like. If it's meant to happen, it pretty much will.
9. Airtel has lousy customer care for its prepaid services.
10. Six weeks is a long time to spend with a bag packed only with a five-day trip in mind.
11. Following from #10, being in a new place every third day is a lot more fun when you don't have to worry about laundry.
12. Let. Go. It's important.
July  was another revelation. Bhubaneswar and I happened to each other. We're still trying to figure our way around each other, this city and I. The end of the  month was especially tough, on several fronts...which is why the trip to  Khandala, which happened in the beginning of August, was a much-needed and very soothing break. Hills, mist, rain, lakes, highway, moonlit nights, golden afternoons. Perfection, in other words.
August,  September, October, November...the months just melted away. Little bits  and pieces of life held together by a fibre I couldn't identify. I  learned something about myself these last four months. I learned that I am  capable of feeling lonely, that I have walls I need to reconsider, and  that I may have to rethink thoughts I've already rethought. I learned  that I am allowed my mistakes. I learned to be comfortable with  acknowledging that sometimes, things weren't all okay, and that it was  alright for them to not be okay once in a while. I learned to face facts  and deal with them. And above all, I learned that being honest with  yourself and telling yourself the truth are sometimes two different  things - and both are equally important.
Well,  then...it's been a year I'll never forget. I'll remember it because it  fulfilled a  long-cherished wish and because it taught me something I'd never have  learned, left to myself. I'd always wished for a job I could travel madly as part of. That happened alright. The lesson? I'll tell you later. :)
Disillusionment,  yes. I guess that's part of the deal. It happens to me sometimes as  part of my job...and it happens on the personal front too. But, you know  what, in the larger scheme of things, it's okay. It really is. You know  what they say about fixing the blues...count your blessings, they say.  Thank your lucky stars.
Either that, or blog about the year gone by, say I. :)
p.s. Still got some stock-taking left. Later, maybe.
Actually, I'll definitely come back and finish this. 
 
3 comments:
yeah its been a year of revelations and soul-searching, for me as well. I wish I could tell you about it. I think you will understand. Will probably send along an email once I get done with exams.
Hey there :)Many thanks. And I like your style of writing! A nice post to wrap up the year..closing but always ready to look back at. Cheers! hope you have a great 2011!
Absolute Chemystic:
I'm still waiting!
Gitanjali:
Thank you :) I'm waiting for more on your blog. :)
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