Sunday, September 09, 2007

Two Cities (Not A Tale of)

There are two Trivandrums that I see. One that I see from the driving seat of my Maruthi Zen and the other that I see from the window seat of a City Bus.

No no, I'm not talking about the Trivandrum of the haves and the Trivandrum of the have nots. Even when I understand that it is an important topic to write on, I don't have statistics to do that. Now, I'm just talking about the looks of the city.

I had left Trivandrum in Island Express[1] in July 2002 and returned driving my Zen in March 2005. I've given the Zen to workshop yesterday for a round of patching and polishing and so he will be away for this whole week.

Ever since I had returned to Trivandrum, I was mostly seeing the city from the driving seat of the Zen. And I too had the waves of surprise, nostalgia, appreciation and back pain. But today, with him in the workshop, I took a City bus from Peroorkada to Statue, and got a window seat on the left row. Since I wasn't going for anything urgent, I was just absorbing the view of the city as a function of space while the bus accelerated and braked its way through the same old city. And again a new wave of surprise, nostalgia, appreciation and back pain rolled over me.

From the driving seat of my car, I see the city as an arrangement of roads, traffic islands, traffic signals, turns and parking spaces. From the bus I see the city as a string of shops and people waiting in the bus stands. (A third way of seeing the city is when I take a walk with some of my friends, and then I hardly see the city.)

Is the first view when I traverse the city with a purpose and the second when I just absorb the journey? Is the first about the results and the second about the details? Is the first about the me of today and the second about the me of yesterday?

No no, I think the first is about me keeping myself busy in thoughts.

Am I depriving me of a sweet joy by keeping myself busy in thoughts? Plans, analysis and purpose. Are they all conspiring to take away a different view of this world from me?

Ahhh. Its analysis again. Stop.

Notes:
1. Thats not that train's official name since ages, but people just don't call it Kanyakumari Bangalore Express. Local historians say that It was originaly named after Wellington Island in Kochi.

9 comments:

Abhilash Suryan said...

with him in the workshop!
are you sure that ur Zen is a boy?
Well I thought I was having an 18 year old girl for company (read my 800)

Deepak said...

definitely male. ;-)

Kurien Thomas said...

that was a cool post sir
I also have felt so...while driving our aim is to get past the one who is just in front off and often when we drive we have an aim...then we are not even aware of the new films that are in towns we are two engrossed driving through our dilapidated roads..but when we are own the bus we get to know about every single picture in town...just my thoughts on my "two views" of the city;)
BTW this is KURIEN

Anonymous said...

True, sitting in the window seat of bus is a really 'kewl' experience. Reminds me of my college days when I used to opt for bus journeys to Cochin rather than train, just for the joy of watching a 'mobile cinema' :). Of course, train too provides one, but not as vibrant as the one you can experience on the road. These days I guess the 'mobile cinema' screen would be really jittery, thanks to monsoon 'treated' roads...
~Sierra

Sierra said...

Here is a Wikipedia entry regarding Island Express. I guess the local historians were right...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_Express_%28train%29

~Sierra

Deepak said...

Nice Sierra, I always trusted folk history ;)

Anonymous said...

Even thought i never had such a journey through the roads of Trivandrum, i can imagine what kind of nostalgia our narator felt.

your way of talking was really nice!

But i don't think ZEN can be included in the Male category.
it does have all the beauty of a women

Keep doing more posts ,sir

Abhi said...

I've felt that i control the pace when i drive and i always enjoyed driving than sitting in a bus(maybe because i hardly get seats in my route). I still feel that the effort of driving is what makes it a pleasurable activity, rather than the sights!

Anonymous said...

great post.. something I have always felt too.. :)