Friday, December 14, 2012

Bengalured

Something I wrote for the office magazine: :) 


Today, as I took a moment of break and stumbled on the intranet page, I found the topic, "Things you love about Bangalore". I knew I had to write about it. How could I not? Bangalore has been the object of my affection ever since the day I arrived here, with nothing but an offer letter in hand, a million hopes, and a heartbeat-speeding, breath-stopping excitement about the unknown.

It was January, and the city was at its best; a mixture of blossoming spring and yellowing fall, cozy winter and sweet summer. The nights were breezy, sometimes chilly, but never in a hostile way. So, I guess the first thing about Bangalore that I fell in love with was her weather, which was kind, playful, and sometimes, unpredictably moody. I spent months exploring the nooks and corners, realizing that the city was never going to satisfy my curiosity. I was right. I found myself lost in and surprised by the history and heritage of her buildings, the mind-boggling choices of her shopping streets, the random pleasant encounters with the parks, varieties of vegetation, and flowers! I love how you can take a turn on an innocuous street and be greeted by a giant, bright bunch of yellow or pink flowers.

And then, I discovered Blossoms, the tiny little used book store at Church Street, and it stopped my wanderings for a bit. I mention this place because I discovered it by serendipity, and it is one of my most haunted places in Bangalore since then. It consumes you for hours together with its never ending piles of sweet-scented pale pages. As I blended slowly in the ten million, I too found my niche, places where I would shop, places to unwind, places to meet friends, places to flatter the taste buds, places to go, places to be. And Bangalore never falls short of options. She has lakes, gardens, chocolate factories, craft melas, flea markets, book shops, churches, electronics markets, and of course, tech parks; something for everything in you. Slowly, but surely, I became a Bangalorean too, with a phone camera pointed towards the tracks and a broad smile of inexplicable joy pasted on my face when Namma Metro made its initial trial run.

However, what I love most about Bangalore is not her weather, or her history, or heritage; it is her diversity and acceptance. There is a simplicity about her that never overwhelms you like a faceless crowd of human bots in a concrete jungle. Mumbai is often called a city with a character, but to me, Bangalore has a distinct character too - the quality of never being imposing on her people. She does not try to change you; she accepts you for who you are and offers you a tiny little space of your own to live your life on your terms.

As I sit at my desk by the window and type, a waft of breeze brings me the scent of moist earth, and I smile. I love Bangalore. It's my favourite city in the world, and it’s home.



2 comments:

Kartik said...

Bangalore ki yaad aa gayi.. :)

Jack said...

Tulika,

You have revived my old, very old memories of my stay there. I am sure if I visit now I will find many changes but basics will still be there.

Take care