June 9, 2011
I’ve spent most of my growing years in the gulf. Even if we’d go to Mangalore, it would be a short vacation and so I’ve never entirely been able to appreciate the beauty of this small and scenic place-my hometown Mangalore. But one fine day in December last year, everything changed…
It was an unplanned trip to the native, a quasi vacation of sorts. I had heard (and knew, thanks to a few retained memories of past visits) that life in the native is slow. So I made arrangements to tackle the boredom that would eventually set in- books that I could read for a week, music on my ipod that would see me through the day... I was ready.
We landed safely and I nestled onto the front seat of my aunt’s vehicle. What ensued is an experience so inexplicable. I felt the cool breeze caress my face. I stuck my head an inch further outside the window. The sun had already bid good bye and all I could see were houses and trees standing still like dark shadows. The star spangled night sky blanketed this little heaven on earth and from the red mud wafted a unique fragrance. My mind and body were weary with the journey but my soul felt refreshed.
The next day I woke up to a veritable bedlam of chirping birds. I wondered if they were trying to welcome me. I walked out of the house onto the patio in front of it. The soles of my feet felt the cool and rough cemented floor. My eyes smiled on seeing the greenery all around me. Colourful flowers, leaves of all shapes and sizes, beetle nuts baking away in the intense but merciful morning sunshine, house dogs engrossed in their fake quarrel- an expression of bonding with each other, the house cat lazily sun bathing and purring to her hearts content…A panoramic view of my home town in just one instant, an instant by the way that seemed like an eternity. I could stand there forever.
A moment that seemed like an eternity in contrast to a week that seemed like moment; before I knew it, it was time to leave. I sat in the air craft viewing a slide show of all those beautiful and heavenly moments that I had captured on my camera. I also smiled a smile of satisfaction as I thought of all the moments that I had captured with my eyes (the lens) on to my heart (the film) and yes, I would cherish those frames for the rest of my life.