My Window to the World!

Born into a Fauji family , my earliest memories date back to the late 70s when Dad was posted in North Sikkim. He was a Deputy Commandant then with the Assam Rifles”The Oldest & the most decorated ParaMilitary Force of India” estbd in 1835.

As a company commander he was stationed at an outpost ,at Lachung (a beautiful tourist destination today ) alongwith a Doctor & a few hundered troops  gaurding the borders at about 9600 feet. Lachung has been described as the “most picturesque village of Sikkim” by British explorer Joseph Dalton Hooker in his Himalayan Journel (1855).Its was a trading post between Tibet & Sikkim before the Chinese occupation of Tibet in 1950.

Life for a 4 year old was a complete bliss.
Waking up to a thick carpet of snow (upto 4ft) blocking the doors, getting started every morning would be a fun exercise. The snow had to be removed and then the doors would open to a bright new day !

Our abode was the PORTA CABIN , insulated homes to brave the sub zero temperatures.The furnishings of a Fauji household those days was the perfect example of innovation at its peak.  Our moms used to make setties out of the black painted, steel fauji boxes with Dads name n rank written on it  with a to and fro destination which kept changing with each posting. Written with white paint and numbered to know which box contained what ! These boxes were a part of every Fauji household as  we moved lock ,stock and barrel every 3yrs to a new location ,on transfer.
These boxes had a very important role to play , hence were adorned with  soft cotton mattresses and then draped with beautiful hand embriodered sheets  and cushions strewn around  adding to its beauty &  comfort  .The two safety pins on each side  of the box held the fort like two tiny gaurds ,at ease only when the sheets were to be washed resuming duty  on the new cover as alert as ever.
Not a single crease would be tolerated by this Fauji housewife!

Then came our daily ritual. The mornings started with hot milk in a huge steel glass (life for a Punjabi is meaningless without milk but I hated it ) the glass looked like a missile to me those days. Gulping that down ,we were covered in  layers of clothing , hand knitted woolen gloves &  caps with a pigtail popping out and my favourite red gumboots .Balancing the tiara on the horns,with the trail of the poncho the tiny miny devil in me was now  ready to take on the world !

The older siblings being packed off to the Hostels those days ,the younger ones would have a field day at home.No work only play !!!

Climbing trees, giving mini heart attacks to mom ,playing with our Naga hound Tommy , jumping ecstatically covered in snow , visiting Daddy in office ,who needed these gadgets anyway (pun intended)
I was the only kid for most time of the year but never lonely.
Nature nurtures you !

Evenings would be visits to the Apple orchards with mom and dad. The memory is so well placed in my heart ,of trees laden with fruit and a beautiful stream of the Teesta river passing by. As I playfully jumped around ,trying to lift my tiny frame to pluck an apple ,the stream would flow along gurgling with happiness intune with the innocence of the 4yr old ,as if silently encouraging to leap higher the next time!
We would come back home with crates of apples each time once they ripened. Till then the light greens , a few sour bites and a few jumps were enough to cheer me up .
 
I was my  Daddy’s tail and  followed him everywhere  remember  the Pug …oh ! That came decades later .
I remember the visits to the local village headman (The Gaun Bura as he would be called) who would lovingly garland me with strings of CHURPI ( traditional  cheese made out of Yaks milk in the Himalayan region ).What more could a little girl ask for ! The queen walked carefully with the heavy strings of responsibility to finish them by the time they are due for the next visit .

Then came the much awaited time of the year ,the hostelers coming back home for vacations . I would wait for my elder sister ~My Window to the world, My 1st Google !!!

She was poised, calm ,sophisticated with the finesse  of a convent education quite emminent in her mannerisms & here I was all covered in mud ,with cuts and bruises all over and just learning my A B C… I looked upto her, She was my Ideal. I had so many questions and she had all the answers . As I said she was my 1st Google !!!

She was my Santa coming home each year but no clause attached ! My box of goodies would include popsicles, chocolates and the phantom cigarette candy (kids my generation would know ),NP chewing gums, Gems ,the milk toffees that would stick to your teeth forever and what not.

Vacations were the best time of the year as I had my Santa  pampering me spoilt. So the drill now was to dress  us both  in the same outfits, a trend parents loved to follow those days . With hot milk keeping our bellies full we would hop skip our way to the lawn which was a step lower than the house. There a swing waited ,with open arms welcoming us for this season of acrobatics ,as excited to reach for the clouds as the two sisters. As I was the little one I was made to sit and my sister would stand , with a strong jerk to her knees she would push it with all her might & with each swing we climbed higher and higher cutting through the chill in the air kissing our cheecks turning them apple red …

(I can still hear the chirpy  laughter in the air as I write this )

The next would be a short tea break , fresh orange juice for us though , (oranges were in plenty there)squeezed into our pretty pink Tea set ,adding a little salt and red chilli powder and sip it as gracefully as if having the most exclusive silver tips! To this day I dont know why we added the chillie powder but my google said so and so be it !

There stood a dainty boulder in the middle of the lawn , evesdropping and smiling at the two sisters giggling away to glory , waiting to give us a ride.It felt like Alladins carpet to me for I could see the world once atop the dainty boulder.

There I got my first brush with music. My sister had a diary with the latest numbers penned down in colourful ink. It is here on my Alladins carpet,I got introduced to Boney M… with “Brown girl in the ring tra la la la “….becoming like an anthem for me ,yes, that is the 1st song I ever learnt! Then followed the whole play list “There lived a certain man in Russia long ago,…. Rasputin ” so on n so forth!!!

I was always fascinated by the tinsle town of Bombay ,Mumbai ,now even as a 4 yr old. So now came the ultimate moment of my life. We would stand up on the solid rock and my sister would point at a certain direction and say,”There,thats where Bombay is, can you see it “? I would crane my neck, strech it to the last nerve ending and shake my head , a little dejected .I thought it was my tiny frame standing at a few feet that I couldnt see so far. She would try again & after a few untiring attempts I would exclaim,”Yes ,Yes I can see it now “!!!That was the elder sister who wanted to give me the moon, she would do anything to bring a smile on my face. She did all she could as a 10yr old to make my sweet little dream of seeing Bombay from my Alladins carpet come true .

As the setting sun would whisper,”mom’s  waiting” we would sprint as fast as our legs would take us  and reach home huffing and puffing. After a wash and slipping into our flannel  nightsuits we would gather around the Bukhari .The evenings were spent with mom and dad,playing antakshari or
Or some indoor games. Learning while having fun was how the families spent time together.

Today life has become so easy, The whole world is just one click away .
Our times things were different.We wanted something , we asked for it and waited,patiently! Shopping didn’t happen just like that ,anytime anywhere.That happened when Dad would travel to Gangtok on a temporary duty some 125kms away .So all you would do was wait for him to come back home ,it could take a few days or weeks .

I am reminded of one such incident.So I got a brand new badminton racquet. I went to the kitchen to show it to the staff working ,we would lovingly call them Daju ( big bro) .There was a bucket of water lying there so I dipped my racquet to wash it clean.Now I had to dry it ,so I placed it on top of the small bukhari in the kitchen and in a jiffy all the gutterings were gone….All I had now much to my utter shocked tiny existence was an empty circle with a handle. I sheepishly walked back to mom with tears swelling up told her the great feat I had just achieved. Today when I look back I can understand how frustrated she must have felt,but she did not get upset, instead smiled as though she was quite expecting this calmly said ,”don’t worry, now you will have to wait for daddy’s next trip ! I feel bad today ,because they had bought me the latest one, the wooden ones were too heavy for children so this new plastic one was the latest in town ,it was a parrot green racquet I loved and lost in a moment. The next line to follow as always was,learn something from ur elder sister ,an example I loved to , but stumbled quite often ?

In the evenings ,the centralised generator would run for a few hrs and then the alternate lighting would be up , that of the Petromax ( pressurised paraffin lamp with a bright white light ) and kerosene lanterns.The evening drill was something I loved to watch every single day. I would be in the kitchen watching daju religiously wipe the glass lamp shades humming softly. In between he would raise it up as if asking me to inspect the sparkle . Once I nodded in affirmation he would happily fix them back still humming his fav number.

Lo and behold ! There were two stars each night sparkling next to us.
The silver of the moon splashed on the white carpet outside and in the bed the night sung lullabys to this 4yr old snuggled into her love and dreams of Bombay ,the bukhari kept the chilli winters at bay and the lantern n petromax duo brightened the path of her dreams.

10 thoughts on “My Window to the World!

  1. Just wonderful mam. Reminiscing about all of it since I experienced the same. Just the place was different. Our lives had a charm in them . Liked the 1’st Google and the racquet part 🙂 . I could picturise it while reading. So clear .
    Remembered a quote by Ratana Suzuki.
    “Some places are so beautiful
    I cannot help but reminisce.
    And the only thing that’s missing
    Is the one I always miss…”

    • Thank you dear!!!Chuba we were fortunate, we had an amazing childhood.There in simplicity the values inculcated were deep. It feels like another world today.
      Miss it dearly !

  2. Daisy good you wrote your childhood memories. Lucky you to be part of adventurous lyf…which changed your outlook. Enjoyed reading it & good one Daddy’s tail ?!

  3. Very well written. A beautiful peek of your early years. ????
    Here’s to many more such blogs ?

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