Tuesday, December 28, 2004

Nostalgia: '87 -'93

In May '87 we shifted to T. Nagar (Habibullah Road). I was to spend the next 6 years of my life here. This also was an independent house with place for 3 families. I joined LKG in June '87 exactly at the age of three. As I mentioned before, I was not a happy school-goer in the beginning before I settled down.

Our house owners were Tamil and here is where I got initiated into the language - even managing to read a bit! The owner's family consisted of an old couple with his son and his family staying with them. The owner's two granddaughters were my first friends (of course, I have completely lost touch with them now and can hardly talk to them). One being 2 years elder and other, a day junior.

Besides the owners lived another family. They had a daugher and a son. The boy was 5 years my junior but it was with him I played cricket as long as I was there.

It was in kindergarden that I met one of my closest friends, Vedik. He and his family still remain one of our closest.

I was an average student in kindergarden but started picking up from 2nd std. I remember consistently topping my section from IV to VIII. I also remember having won the prize for academic excellence for a couple of years.

Let me recall some names I remember: Arun Bosco, Aravind, Charlie, Sriram, Arunkumar, Sivakumar, Prabhu, Vijayaraghavan, Karthik (D & N), vagairah, vagairah.

Vacations:
Most of my vacations were spent at my mom's village with my grandmom and my grandaunt there to take care of me besides my aunt and uncle. I have played hell of cricket in the front yard with neighbouring kids and my uncle's daughters, much to the irritation of elders and neighbours.

I always loved going to the village. A welcome relief from the bustling city. Things were so quite and so much greenery around. The vast paddy fields are awesome to look at. As good as the movies! The care people show for others (it can be irritating many a time) is also phenomenal. Everyone knows everyone. Not to forget the fresh fruits and coconuts we get. My mom and myself have always enjoyed the palm fruit. Nights were spent fighting mosqis and lots of stories from my grandaunt.

We also used to visit my father's village where my ailing grandmom and my father's sister lived. This village was a coastal one and far less fertile. This one was a typical stereotype village compared to my mom's which was far more modern. Thachted & bamboo houses with huge courtyards and kitchen gardens. With dry thorny branches as compound walls, and red mud roads. Electricity was a read luxury - only used to light a bulb. Fans weren't present and who needed them when there is an awesome breeze present all the time. Eventhough the village looked ancient, it had great educational institutions producing scores of professionals like my father who went out to towns and cities to make a living.


3 Comments:

At 8:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Vinoo here. I couldn't be bothered to get an id.
I too had a blog on blogger. My first post was on Linux.
I remember going back to the site 20 minutes later seeing the post and realising how sad my life was! I promptly deleted my blog, but it may still be alive in the Google cache.
That said I am happy (for you) that you are nowhere as near as boring as me. Though I do think you might have been a bit competitive as a kid: "I was an average student in kindergarten."! (btw I just realised kindergarten is a german word!) Ciao

 
At 8:03 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Can't believe that you actually remember mine and Bosco's name :-)

Man..so many memories from back then.

Do mail me at sriramk@gmail.com sometime

Sriram

 
At 4:42 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

hai Charlie here, I guess its been 12 to 13 years we met ... and still u remember my name ...It really nice to read your blog...also i am surprised and happy to know your magnificient growth over these years...

My thoughts are rolling back to those unforgettable moments dude...
The paintings we made,the choclate wrappers and soap wrappers that we collected,the hindi language we studied....blah..blah...all those sweet nothings ....
I can still feel those freshness dear.

 

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