Bas kuch ‘aura’ ki baat (Just some things about ‘aura')

Last weekend I was walking from Gateway of India to Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus with a few friends from Delhi. We were engulfed in discussions having left the Regal Cinema just minutes ago after watching Tamasha. The idea of a walk to cover the little over 2 kilometres distance wasn’t well-appreciated by my friends, but eventually amidst talks, we did the walk never realising the distance- From Gateway via the Bombay Stock Exchange building and the Elphinstone Circle to CST.

Picture this: It is the last week of November, a pleasant Saturday evening sans the usual humidity, art-deco architecture on the illuminated buildings in the Fort area- a blissful experience? For me, it captured the essence of the real Mumbai. The ‘aura’ as we called it, thanks to Walter Benjamin’s 1936 essay from our Cultural Studies classes.

I still think the photo does no justice to how beautiful and magnificent CST looked that evening

I tried initiating a conversation about it with my friends- about experiencing these little things, about remembering these moments as being an integral part of our Mumbai experience. Surprisingly, all I was met with was indifference. I was amazed and realised it at that moment that probably not everyone can appreciate the art & culture that makes a place different from another and probably that’s what differentiates personalities of people. Or perhaps they simply were not interested at that particular moment-thank hunger.


It wasn’t until the next day that I actually gave much thought to this. Yes, I don’t like Mumbai for the fact that it mostly looks dull and dirty. But then this aspect of South Mumbai’s beautiful architecture is not found in Delhi or any other city in the country. It is what makes Mumbai Mumbai. Just as the broad and clean roads of the New Delhi Municipal Corporation area make New Delhi New Delhi.

A colleague once asked me: ‘What do you wish was different about Mumbai?’ I said- I wish it was cleaner, the roads were wider, and it was a little less congested. Most importantly, I wish it had winters like Delhi. Yes, the winters! It’s December already and I am sitting in a half tshirt and shorts in my room with the fan running at full speed. The humidity has decreased considerably from about a month ago, but if you are out in the afternoons, you might actually drop a sweat. I haven’t got a single piece of winter-wear in the luggage I carried to Mumbai and the office ACs run throughout the day with full power. Yes, I miss the Delhi winters. And I realised that this would be my first birthday when I am not clad in winter-wear. A year without winters. It feels unbelievable, frankly. But then that is what is going to make this period memorable in the long run, right?

I remember when I was home in Odisha and it was the 2012 New Year party, a school friend had a conversation with me and wanted to take note of Delhi’s influence on the way I speak- particularly the ‘io’s - as in ‘Wo kaam kar diyo yaar’. She had been surprised not finding it in my conversation. It wasn’t until a couple of days ago here in Mumbai that I realised how heavily influenced now my conscience is with the Delhi-lingo. My colleague would tell me something at work and I would say a simple ‘Sahi hai’ to acknowledge that I have heard him out. Nobody else around me is using these Delhi-mein-absolutely-every-other-minute-used-terms here in Mumbai. Of course the ‘kar diyo’ can’t be expected in anyone’s vocabulary here. Nor the ‘O, bete!’

Q: Did you get my point?

A: Baraabar hai. (And not- Yes/Hann)

Q: Ok, give me a minute and let me get back to you on this.

A: Hann, chalega. (Instead of thik hai/Alright/It’s okay)

That’s the Bambaiya lingo. It’s not pure Hindi. I find it amusing right now; little weird, to be frank. Who knows, 7 years down the line this might be mixed in my lingo and I might not even realise it. But, this is the authentic thing. It’s a unique way of speaking Hindi that Mumbaikars have that people from other Hindi-speaking areas in India cannot replicate. It’s the aura and the uniqueness of Mumbai and it ought to be appreciated. More importantly, respected.

On those rare days when I get free from work on time, I prefer going to Marine Drive and sitting there for an hour or so, with or without company. I love sitting there on the cemented perch, staring at the dark sky, the low waves smoothly hitting the rocks, while the entire Mumbai skyline glows in front and traffic passes by on the Queens Necklace. I love the aura of it, of the fact that however congested the city might be, howsoever busy one’s life might be, this place brings in some relief, an escape from it all. (Of course, if I am a little early, the place is flooded with lovebirds and it is awkward!) Usually the Natural’s ice-cream next to Jai Hind College becomes my pit-stop between Churchgate station and Marine Drive. I just sit there or take a walk to Nariman Point and back, enjoying the me-time and usually with thoughts as random as ‘What am I doing with my life?’

For me, it’s been less than 3 months in Mumbai and there is something new that the place keeps teaching every now and then. It’s the small joys that keep life going, the little things that make memories, the everyday happenings that make stories. The city still keeps me enchanted. It gives me new tales everyday to think about. New experiences to blog about. Best of all, it has brought in a lot of new friends and people into my life.


Saying It’s a new phase is perhaps too unrealistic, but changing cities sure has brought in a fresh zeal for doing something new and different in life. There is something romantic about it all. It’s some kind of a well directed play that makes things fall into the right place. Or perhaps it is just something about the ‘aura’ and we are meant to live it.

Comments

  1. Nice one... Even though I had been to Mumbai only twice, I can mostly relate to all of these...

    Specially the Marine Drive... Keep enjoying...

    ReplyDelete
  2. waah! nice read!
    Btw i too like to go to marine drives, its the place which gives me much needed solace. Whenever I feel frustrated I wish running to marine drives but the thought of local trains dampen my spirit :P
    Anyway the click of VT station is awesome.. I have one too. Check here - https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10208392907364757&set=a.1934822774751.2113321.1367774896&type=3&theater

    ReplyDelete

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