May 16, 2007

Sunshine City

Pune, The Protagonist. Pune, The Paradox.


Turn Pune upside down and shake it hard. The part of the city to fall off first would be its swanky new malls and its recently baptized monuments of commercial enterprise – their glue's still wet. Next in line would be the multitude of students who converged in the city not too long ago with pockets full of hope, in search of that elusive degree and some fresh air. They will be followed in their free fall by the jaded Pune-ite. The one who was born there, went to school, fell in love, took up a job, quit, re-married, had children, opened a restaurant, got a club membership, burnt down a library, changed his name, bought another car and perhaps inaugurated yet another housing society.


Keep shaking.


Gravity’s next prey would be the ones who don’t belong in Pune. (Don’t belong to Pune?) The ones who’re there simply because there was nowhere else to go. For whom Pune’s not home, but a refuge. For whom, Pune’s not a city but a job. Pune, The Profession. And yet, somehow, the city seems to need them more than they need it.


And finally, spiralling downwards reluctantly would be a million hearts. Abandoned by the bodies that once assumed them. Rhombic hearts. Oblong hearts. Hearts of those who might have been to Pune only once. Hearts discarded by those who loved Pune once. Hearts with Pune-withdrawal-symptoms. Longing hearts. Bleeding hearts.

And while you're at it, do shake it one last time. Let me know if you see a handkerchief soiled with cheese and bread crumbs falling to the floor.

7 comments:

duende said...

"hearts discarded by those who loved Pune once"
sigh. :)

Anonymous said...

Wouldn't really know about handkerchiefs. Don't they wipe? Or is that anachronistic?
But yes, after all the quaking has subsided and Pune is recovering from the throes of the obstinate searcher with hope for palms and mad slivers of desperate longing for fingers, the dregs may show the shadows of two children in motion blur in the past tense. Older than adults and wilder than outlaws.

phish said...

"Rhombic hearts. Oblong hearts." Why does it hurt while reading this? It will take a while to break the spell you created.

Welcome back.

zatomm said...

The way "God plays dice" in your testimonial is a treatise on quantism.

Aurri said...

Take the first left in my head, and you'll see a sign that reads "Damn! the girl can write"

Two thumbs and two toes up!

Pooja Nair said...

this is maddeningly beautiful shagun! why has your blog evaded me all these months :(

Anonymous said...

People should read this.