So after
reaching Kanpur
(the venue for shaadi), I realised that we were the second family from our long
list of relatives to arrive at the place where all the guests were supposed to
stay. For the next three days and even later guests kept trickling in, people
hugged each other like long lost brothers and why wouldn’t they? I had seen so
many people again after years, some had changed so much I couldn’t recognize
them, some I couldn’t remember, and those who I had expected to change still
were the same. And with the growing number of people, increased the amount of
chatter and along with that came petty fights, bruised egos, and random gossip
which sooner or later lead to the formation of small groups, this vs. that.
These groups could be based on something as frivolous as - the preference of
rice over chapatti, or the likeness of one time over the other for breakfast/ lunch/dinner!
=I
So in
this atmosphere for a person who is very fond of her relatives and is very
social at such extended family get together’s (sarcasm intended) ;) I decided
if I stayed in that house bustling with people for long I would go mad with the
tittle-tattle or get in a fight with someone who is conservative or a misogynist.
I have a flair for getting into fights for someone completely uninvolved. I
secretly want to be Dabbang or Singham (take your pick) and
often end up in a clash of thoughts and ‘words’ with elders trying to protect somebody else’s idea who at times is not
even present during the conversation. :P
So with
my bright pink backpack which screams
‘I am a girl’ I would every morning, which would be 11-12 pm, go and walk around
the place on foot and discover new things and places. I even got some really
nice clicks. :D I hate wasting time and I utilized that time fruitfully thanks
to my pink backpack. But for some people that bag become an irritant, why would
that bag be constantly strapped on me? For some it was amusing, and for some it
was just a part of funny banters and jokes. Some people in fact opened it and ransacked
through it to see what was that ‘secret’ something that I couldn’t live without
and carried everywhere with me. But being the cool girl I am, I happily showed it to them. Yet there were people,
who didn’t even take permission and went through the contents, forgetting in
the hurry to keep things back in the right order.
After the
shaadi got over, and we got back from Kanpur,
the memories which stuck to my head for the longest time were the one’s
surrounding my pink backpack. It opened my eyes and gave me a whole new perspective
on the essay by Virginia Woolf – it didn’t seem as outdated now, people in
general seem to have a problem with anything that a girl owns privately, the
society at large has a difficulty accepting a girl who can be on her own, and in
fact likes to be alone. ‘A Room of One's
Own’ wasn’t only about owning a room, it was about any private
space, including a bag which a girl, a woman owns and carries with her almost
all the time. Those who are intrigued, interested or even intimated by such a woman
want a peek inside her bag, to check if she is carrying weapons for destroying patriarchy,
which they love so much. In my case my bag only had – a notepad, a pen, a book
and a camera.
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