Each city has its own specialties and spoilers. Chennai’s
buses are great, but autorickshaws ask for a share in you ancestral home.
Calcutta Metro is cool, but the buses seem like matchboxes on wheels. Delhi has
good Metro service, nice and clean bus service, but you have our netas roaming
around here and there threatening our security in the already unsecure city.
But, what makes Mumbai special? Local trains will be the obvious answer. It’s
like waking up a physicist in the middle of a deep sleep and asking how much ‘e’
equals to. Like a flash in the pan comes the answer “mc2”.
But, there are a few other good things about Mumbai.
Autorichshaws and Taxis run on meter. Although their meter conversion sheets
may be fudged, an extra ten rupees won’t do much harm to your pockets. Mumbai’s
bus service is also fair enough. But there must always be a reason that can
pull a city back and for Mumbai, that is – too many people. Just too many
people in the city. Wherever you see, there are lots of people. On a torrential
rainy day, Andheri station will be as flooded with people as it is with rainwater.
One begins to wonder if the rains brought down water or people!
I travel 60 km every day and I use the services of buses,
autos, trains and taxis to cover the distance. My office is in the vicinity of
Antilla, Haji Ali and Mahalaxmi temple. Burkha-clad women visiting Haji Ali
with their families, day-in and day-out while Hindu families enjoying their
worship at Mahalaxmi temple. 27-storied bread loaf Antilla on one side, while
settlements on the seaside on the other. I work near this place where India’s
classification’s culmination is at its best!
I usually take a train from Kanjur Marg station. I can
do bungee jumping everyday of my life rather than fight with strangers to get
into the local train. The biggest problem being, you really don’t know which
one of the guy you are fighting with is the HR head of which conglomerate. But,
being taller with a hefty build has its own advantage and I make sure that I
use it properly. Once got in, the second race begins – the race for the spot.
The spot which is closer to your side of the exit and also where there is
proper ventilation. I suddenly feel that I am in a train bogey filled with
Sheldon Coopers, “Move it. It’s my spot!” Everyone is in war with everyone
else. Push, nudge, budge, punch are all the keywords one has to be well-versed
with. Inching towards Kurla, the train gets more crowded. There is an eerie silence
when the train comes to Sion. As soon as Sion passes, there is a lot of
movement inside the bogie. People are getting ready for the war. The war that everyone
wages on everyone else. Looking into their eyes, I listen to what their angry
eyes say. They say, “This is Sparta.”
Matunga passes by. People are more restless now. They
slowly inch towards the exit like programmed zombies. Step-by-step. When the
next station comes, everyone shouts as if it is a battlefield. This is not
Sparta anymore, “This is Dadar”. Watches’ glass broken, spectacles flying
around, my earphones became someone else’s and someone else’s mine, souls
stolen and true to its word, “This is Dadar.” Once the train starts to move, there
is calm after the storm. Life comes back to normalcy. Everyone goes back to
their office only to wait until evening to fight the “Battle of Dadar” at the sanctimonious
Dadar Railway Station.
1 comments:
bhai, this kind of war,you can experience in kolkata also...no difference...someone's earphone becomes mine and vice versa..........
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