Most of us experience excessively boring lives as adults.
Except scuba divers maybe or at least I like to believe that they are thoroughly
enjoying theirs. This is because we fail to see the beauty of small happiness.
We all hope for great opportunities, experiences and love to come our way. We
all hope to gloat over that one big story to tell others. But do we really let
go of society's expectations and just go silly? Well hardly. One such day when
I decided to add a little zest before breakfast was 14 July.
14 July 2013, the last day India sent a telegram, a
forgetful ode to the 163 year old service. It was a spectacularly mundane Sunday
morning for me. I woke up to the cheerful chirp of my cell phone and as I
browsed through the twitter feed, one particular event caught my eye. The
telegram service in India was coming to an end. I breathe in the time of unromantic instant messaging.I had never received a telegram before. Not even a post card. And there it was disappearing before my eyes like horse carriages on English
boulevards. I had to do something to get one. Anything.
This is the day when I missed Sunday breakfast, tracked the
telegram offices in Pune and their contact numbers and made frantic phone calls
to all of them. Tiny spatters of disappointed began to dampen my enthusiasm. Pune
telegram had shut its services a day before. After loud curses followed by a dozen
more phone calls, a decision was reached. It had to be done from Mumbai. But
the question still remained unanswered. How on earth do I get one of the last
telegrams sent in India? Few more hysterical phone calls later to family and
friends, I was pacing down the hallway, biting my nails and engrossed in
thoughts. I had to weigh my options. Wait for a friend to send the telegram or
travel around 350 km to just do it myself. It sounded crazy, pathetically
desperate, even borderline insane in my head. There is this certain nervous
obsession that grips you that completely negates any logic whatsoever. I was
exactly in that place, an energized fixated heaven. My pace picked up and
waiting for the phone call seemed like an eternity.
The phone buzzed. My friend confirmed that the telegram was
sent. A sense of relief spread over me. Although it was a false sense of achievement,
it was immensely satisfying. The next 10 hours were spent thinking about the
telegram and how it would feel to own one. A tiny piece of cheap paper with
text in faint ink somehow evoked childlike glee and amazement. Would it make me
happy or my heart skip a beat? Would it be a major disappointment? All such anxious
questions floated in my head. The post board in the hostel was
religiously checked for the next few days, hoping for the telegram to arrive.
Days passed, weeks flew by but it never arrived. The thought of enquiring at
the post office about it did cross my mind a zillion number of times but the
enthusiasm fizzled out. As weeks turned into a month, the enthusiasm died as it
spiraled into a vortex of ordinary conformity and dullness. A faint
disappointment lingered like a ghost.
Almost a month later, when I had given up on
receiving a telegram, it arrived. The feeling of the weightless parcel in my
hands did not evoke any emotions I had foreseen. They were amplified to the
extent of a child receiving its favorite candy. Through foolish smiles and
half droopy eyes, the envelope was carefully torn and the message was read. A warm
smile lit my face as if Christmas arrived five months early. The telegram is now a gentle
reminder of a frantic yet satisfying morning of absolute silliness.
Few years down the line, I would like to open up the wooden box
that holds it. Gently I would open it up, read the printed message and smell
the ink if I can. Probably I will laugh on my foolishness or perhaps smile whilst
remembering the absurdity of it. Maybe I would show it to my little kid and
share the story over breakfast. Nevertheless, thanks to a dear friend, this piece
of history will invariably light up my eyes and remind me that you are never too
old to be curious and silly.
Well done! Telegram was mostly about bad news more than good. In its last days, it saw a lot of happy faces. Good read