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Road to Mussoorie

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The road to Mussoorie stirred. It was the schoolchildren who woke it — small clusters of them, satchels bouncing against their shoulders, voices tangled in homework and cricket scores and the possibility of rain. Beyond them the hills waited in clouds, patient and half-hidden, while the smell of last night’s monsoon clung to the earth, rising each time a foot presses the wet ground. Outside a shop no bigger than a doorway, someone turned up a radio. Kabhi Kabhie mere dil mein… The song arrived with the morning light — unbidden, already familiar. The children walked on. Songs were nothing new to them. Ahead lay gates, friends, the long unspooling of a school day. But one boy slowed down. He was round-faced, small, his bag too large for his shoulders, and something in this melody stopped him mid-step without permission. He did not know the singer. He did not know the film. He only knew that the music has asked him to listen, and that he must. For a few seconds the road dissol...

Mehta Tea Shop

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On Canal Road in Dehradun, sits Mehta Tea Shop. A modest counter, a few worn benches, a warm kettle, and always that fragrance — tea leaves surrendering to ginger, cardamom, milk. All day the place shelters people in small waves. Cyclists pause mid-morning, one foot still on the pedal. Forest guards linger before the climb begins. Students stretch a single cup across an hour of nothing in particular. Walkers drift back from the canal and sit a while, letting the evening catch up with them. The tea itself is unremarkable. Made the same way, every time, poured into glasses too small to rush — glasses that warm the palms the way they ease the ache of the day. Nothing here hurries. Talk begins with weather, wanders towards the fields, towards cricket, towards an elephant seen near the treeline last week, towards the monsoon that is always either arriving or leaving. And often enough, no one speaks at all. Silence, too, is welcome at this table. Beyond the shop’s tin roof, the valley ...

Waiting for Winter

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Winter arrived late and soft in Hindi film songs. The rains arrived with ceremony — dark clouds gathered, leaves trembled as though they already knew what's coming, hearts restless before the first drop fell. Spring came dressed in blossom. Summer shimmered with longing, heavy and slow. The moon stretched its nights out like silk. But winter waited at the edges of the frame, never quite stepping into the light. Mist thinned over a lake. A singer’s breath was visible for a moment on a hillside, then gone. The India these films imagined — the fifties, the sixties, the seventies — was a country fluent in its seasons. No song had to explain what the first chill meant; the meaning was already in the air, within the audience, who knew the pale gold of a December afternoon, the hush of fields after harvest, the mountains far off and freshly white. They had lived it. The songs only had to remember it with them. Winter here was rarely cruel. It was, instead, a season built entirely of w...

A Porcupine Came at Night

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No one saw it arrive. By morning, it had already gone, leaving the night to close over its passing like water over a stone. Its visit was written only in absence. A wound of freshly turned earth beside the vegetable garden. A few potatoes gone missing, as if the ground itself had swallowed them. Small claw-marks scored into the damp soil, faint as a signature no one stayed to read. And sometimes, if the morning was generous, a single black-and-white quill lying beneath the hedge — not dropped, it seemed, but “placed”, the way a visitor might leave a card behind to prove they had truly called. In the villages of the Himalayas, the porcupine is known less by its shape than by these residues — the syntax of a creature that speaks only in traces. It keeps to the hour after the fires have dimmed and the last voices have thinned into silence, when the mountain exhales and settles into its other, older self. Then it moves along paths it alone remembers, pausing to sniff, to dig, to forage, ...

A Cup of Cold Water

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There is a thirst that only a mountain path could teach you. It would gather slowly, the way dusk may gather. An hour into the climb you might notice that talk has thinned to breath, and every bend in the trail revealed a small promise. It is then, when the body would have grown quiet with wanting, that nothing in the world would seem as generous as a cup of cold water. In the Himalayas, water is perennial. It rises from a spring that has been flowing since before anyone in the village had a name for time — before the village itself. It comes up out of the hillside without hurry, pools in a stone basin or slips along narrow channels and moves downhill asking nothing of anyone. No sign marks the place. It doesn’t need one. Those who walk that path already carry the spring’s location the way they carry their own address — somewhere past the third ridge, just where the trees lean in! The water itself is unbearably clear, clear in a way that feels honest. It holds the cold of shaded st...

After Everyone Went Home

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  The forest began speaking in a different voice when the last person went home. Towards evening, the familiar sounds slowly faded. The laughter of children returning from school disappeared along the footpath. Women carrying bundles of fodder emerged from the trees and made their way towards the village. The ringing of a shepherd's bell grew fainter as the flock rounded the hillside. Even the woodcutter's axe fell quiet. For a brief moment, the forest seemed to hold its breath. Then another day began. The first to appear were the birds that prefer the fading light. Their calls were fewer but carried farther through the cooling air. A squirrel made one last hurried journey along a branch before vanishing into its nest. Somewhere deeper in the woods, a barking deer gave its sharp, uncertain cry. As darkness gathered, moths replaced butterflies, and the patient work of the night quietly began. Most visitors imagine that forests are busiest during the day because that is w...

The Centuries of Patience

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Long before there were villages, or temples, or paths worn into the mountains by human feet — there was only snow. A rich white carpet for miles. Winter came, and then winter came again, falling upon the young Himalayas in a silence that was so complete that it seemed to ask nothing of the world. At the highest elevations, where the sun’s warmth could never quite climb high enough to reach it, the snow stayed. It survived. Each storm lay down upon the last, patient, unhurried, until the weight of uncountable winters pressed the snow into something else entirely — blue, glacial, vast. And although it looked frozen, like stillness itself, it was, in truth, always moving, ever so slowly. The glaciers flowed downhill so gently that a single human life was too short to notice the journey. Beneath all that snow, the mountains too were still becoming. Far below the ice, the Indian continent went on pressing itself against Asia, lifting the Himalayas by the width of a few millimetres each ye...