Showing posts with label airport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label airport. Show all posts

Friday 13 October 2017

Untitled Joy

When I was just shy of 11 we had a rather eventful summer. For the first time ever I got on an aircraft. While this in itself is a momentous occasion for a ten year old from India, what made it particularly grand was the idea of flying abroad. There are no prizes for guessing that our first port of landing was Kuala Lampur. I was instantly in love. Tall skyscrapers unlike any from the naval bases I had lived in or Madras, gifts with burgers (oh to think a Happy Meal was the crowning glory of a holiday) and mind-numbingly delicious Ice-Kachang sealed my love affair with travel, a little something that I owe that first travel for.

There is little I remember from that journey other than the emotion of it all. There are pictures of my father, brother and I swimming the sea and parasailing while my poor hydrophobic mother, frightened of water, guarded our shoes and her sanity on the shorelines. There is a picture of a beaming 14 year old boy, metal braces in full evidence (my brother of course) posing on a bike so tall and muscular that his short legs wouldn’t hit the ground— little did we know then that a few months later that puny boy would shoot up a few feet and many years even after that buy himself a motorcycle just as special. I remember the taste of peanut sauce as it sizzled over chicken on sticks, a taste that was as foreign to me as the language I heard but just as thrilling in its unfamiliarity. What I do remember with crystal clarity is the tantrum I threw about not going to Langkawi many years later when I discovered the beauty of that island.   

I’m 29 now. The very picture of an independent woman. I have traveled extensively through India, often by myself, chasing down a wave every time I could find it— just once to surf but so many times to experience the sheer pleasure of swimming in the ocean. I will hike up hills and drive out on mucky roads for the opportunity to witness a waterfall and swim in its pools. I’ve discovered that kayaking is my preferred choice of meditation.
I’ve traveled to Norway to chase the Aurora and found myself couch surfing for the very first time and going “full legit” by diving into a Fjord at 3am because you MUST ice dive in January.
In Amsterdam I made a happy accident and decided to go pub hopping with a group and remember very little of the night other than rolling around a fountain in peals of laughter while my fellow inebriated traveler (and a dear friend) walked up to strangers saying “do you have a local Irish phone” to attempt calling an illegal taxi service— note to men, if you’re a shortish, baldish man who can’t distinguish the country you’re in from the country you live in, chances are nobody is lending you a phone. You will not be helped at all by the woman rolling about in a fountain struggling to breathe between all the laughter at your show. 

My travel through Hungary has delightful stories of drinking beer with locals and discovering belatedly how keypad locks in restrooms work or the wonder of getting hideously lost and discovering an underground club scene because I chanced upon a stranger who decided I wasn’t introduced to his city correctly when I stopped to ask for directions.
This was only a few days before my wallet was stolen in Budapest and I chose to spend the last of my money watching the ballet and then being taken dancing by the people in my hostel to celebrate my "financial independence from the shackling limitations that the concept of money imposes on you".
In Greece I learnt to say efharisto poli (thank you) repeatedly to universe—for the people, the food and the breath-taking beauty that surrounded me. And I dived; I dived under the sea to where more colours than my imagination live, off boats and ships because… well why not, and for the first time off high cliffs.

There are stories to tell of New Orleans, Delhi, Sydney and Perth. More of America, Germany, Sri Lanka, Malaysia and Indonesia. I spend a lifetime writing about India’s coastline, the little villages that make up Tamil Nadu, the Sundarbans, Ranthambore, Hapmi, Waynad, Dharamshala, and Rajasthan. They’re peppered with stories of what seems like bucket list check offs but is a story of my evolution— sky diving, bunjee jumping, white water rafting, para sailing, cliff diving, kayaking, hiking, camping, picnicking, chasing fireflies, and forming deep friendships with strangers. As I write this I’m waiting for my clothes to dry to pack a bag to take with me to Turkey where another adventure awaits.

And yet my most special travel remains my last in Greece that taught me gratitude, and my first to Malaysia that taught me the wonder of travel.
--

About Sitara
When I’m not breaking the bank in search of adventure, I have a full time job in the field of communications. In the last seven years I’ve been an ad-film maker, Communications and Documentation Specialist for an NGO and a Brand Manager for a home décor company based in Jaipur (Rajasthan, India) and Atlanta (Georgia, USA). I currently work with a fashion designer called Anita Dongre. 
While my parents are undecided about it, I’m convinced there couldn’t be a better use of my degree in Psychology, English Literature and Mass Communication with a Post Graduate Diploma in Advertising and Marketing Communication.  

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/citramenon/
(Handle @citramenon)

Thursday 4 October 2012

Magic bus

In a comforting world there would be a midnight bus; A bus for the broken, lonely and dispirited. The bus would have no destination it would invite neither conversation nor silence. Nobody would compete, not for the happiest nor saddest, nor bravest stories. We would drive around and around knowing we are united among strangers; That heart break and sadness are not lonely, inescapable little cages.

I would like to think that it would be a magic bus. An open top bust that will let you see the stars through your tears, magical because no matter where you are it will always feel 12 degrees Celsius  You could wear a sweater , hold yourself, maybe cry into your sleeve and believe what you will.

I would wear my hair down, find the darkest spot and wrap my oldest shawl around me. I'd snuggle into my shoes and cry as though it were raining. I'd carry some music, the kind of music I'm too scared to listen to on a regular day because of the truth in the writer's sadness. Maybe I'd whisper along. I would love my sadness on this magic bus, I would know it's a part of who I am. I wouldn't need to find excuses then and we would all drive round and around for hours until we stopped counting. I wouldn't carry a phone, or maybe the magic bus would jam all signals.

Airports are much like my magic bus. Everything is temporary- A collection of strangers who don't belong, so much left incomplete.