Page 34 - You Only Live Once [BooksLD]
P. 34

I rest my head against the window to see the beautiful countryside pass
                by. Although it’s night, the moon is at its brightest best. A train journey is
                like no other. If you’re on-board with your family, it’s about deeply bonding

                with them as the train whistles across the country; if you’re on-board alone,
                it’s about deeply bonding with strangers and knowing their story. They say
                time travel isn’t possible yet. Physically, yes. However, the moment I step
                into a train, it takes me back to my childhood. If you’re a 90s kid, you know
                what  I’m  talking  about.  Everything—the  soup  being  served  with
                breadsticks, the chaiwallah s roaring amidst the hustle, the cutlets, relishing
                Parle-G  dipped  in  tea,  and  reading  Champak  bought  from  the  railway

                platform of some on route station— it all takes me back to the time of my
                life that I cherish the most.
                   After flying for miles in the economy class of various aircrafts, where I
                feel  like  a  stranger  amidst  so  many  sophisticated  passengers  who  would

                hardly look at each other, a train journey is where I come back home to.
                   When my day ends, everything fades away, and there is only one thought
                left, Tara.

                   Some relationships have a closure. You meet for one last time and end
                things with a conversation. In my case, it was so abrupt that I never knew
                when we met last that it was actually going to be our last.

                   Have you ever stood at the end of a relationship not knowing what went
                wrong?
                   Was it their fault? Was it yours?

                   The older the pyjamas get, the cozier they become. But sometimes you
                feel like slipping on a pair of jeans. If you stick to the pyjamas for long,
                you’d never know what breathing in the fresh air feels like. I have put on
                my favorite pair of jeans, certainly.

                   I sip my cup of tea and reach out for my pen and scribble in my diary:

                   I kept shifting apartments
                   changing cities
                   in search of a home.
                   And then,

                   I found home.
                   In her.
                   She didn’t.
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