Friday, May 11, 2012

Window of Hope

I am sitting in a train, on the lower side berth, looking out through the window not just right beside me but through the one that lies on my other side. The aisle is bustling with chai-walas, 'coppy'-walas and many more moment-based-defined walas. There is no one sitting next to me. However, next to the window through which I was looking out, had a guy with turban from Goa who kept ogling at me as if I were an alien and a joint-family with five women playing antakshari singing the latest bolly songs and their kids who were jumping like little monkeys exploring the natural wilderness of the Indian trains.

Somehow, getting a glimpse of the world seen through their window through all that commotion was much more stimulating than looking through mine. A funny feeling struck me. Looking outside of the train window suddenly felt as if I were holding a video-cam, with the train driver directing the shoot by navigating through the scenes and fellow travellers were the viewers. The difference is that they were watching the movie along with me, while I was taking the shots. Strange yet colourful thought. I could almost sketch out the reel.

Window is an access to the external, access to a new realm of experience. A world maybe you are unable to step out into but at least view and enjoy. With music blasting in my ears, through the window I start observing the continuous snap-shots of emotionally –rhetorically exciting frames of landscapes changing from green to brown, crowded stations with each person playing his part in this epic movie of either porters scurrying along with the passengers’ suitcases, late-comers chasing the train, kin bidding good-bye, people at transit, beggars counting their pennies and then again the chai-walas, ‘coppy’-walas. I am enjoying the simplicity of the movie where the varying scenes are well knit forming a novel art movie.