Wednesday, December 23, 2009

 

Solstice sans winter

The 22nd of December, my Geography books used to say, was the shortest day in the year. Winter solstice it was called. Counterpart to summer solstice, the longest day of the year, which occurred on the 21st of June, both solstices happen when the planet is at some angle to the sun or something. Then there are equinoxes which I always thought were a cross between horses and cows, but aren't. Over the years, I try to keep track of these important geographical dates, and try to see if the day feels any longer or shorter. Usually it doesn't. Today was slightly different. Caught in a slight breather between days of two submissions, pushed to my most patient limits by the never-functioning e-service IRCTC, and deprived of sleep for the most part, the day in hindsight seems to have been long. But it was short in the sense that I could not complete this Jeffery Archer book that I've managed to pick up, I could watch only 2 episodes of 24 and was not able to meet Kaptaan, who is back from his Euro Trip. A subtle reminder perhaps, that while life does invariably suck, things keep happening to cheer you up.

The 22nd of December, before climate change threatened to end the world, also marked winter, hence the first part of the term. By now, schools were usually closed, there was Christmas and New Year to look forward to and sweaters, fog, convector, quilts, socks etc were the buzzwords. Then why, I ask myself, am I not covered in layers of warm clothing, wrapped snugly in my favourite Nepali blanket with a feeling of contentment that only hours of sitting in front of the heater can give. The answer, dear reader, is not too difficult to fathom. The city of Joy is not just warm in the metaphorical sense. You don't sweat at this institute just because of the workload. Here, I might mention that I wouldn't be getting so heated up had my seasonal puns been able to include hot women in their ambit. But they don't. So blast the Bay of Bengal and its temperate effects. Winter in Calcutta is a joke, an insult, an excuse and a mighty poor one at that.

When I look back at the places I've lived in, I find that I've been moving, albeit in small degrees, to cooler and cooler places (pun totally intended). Till now that is. Winter is not my favourite season for nothing. Be it Patna, Delhi or Roorkee, how I miss the lazy mornings and afternoons spent with the newspaper, a book, or even the odd course-book in the delightful winter sun. The precious ritual- adjust your chair so that you're directly facing the sun, prop another chair for your feet and start off with a blanket and sweaters. As time wore on, the sweater would start becoming redundant. The blanket would follow suit. The newspaper was done by then. The eyes half-closed. Lazy conversation going on. People around me following their own sun-facing preferences- some with their backs to it, some with their faces in the shadows. This is what people should really have in mind when they say warm up.

The heater is another romance that tries to console the sun-deprived self. I always find it strange that people miss out on sitting in front of the heater when they talk about addiction. It's great fun to expose one foot to the heater after another, and keep switching between them as and when the heat gets to you in that biting manner that the heater provides. The palms take their turn in the moments when both feet are trying to cool off, so that they may regain their rightful place sooner than later.

The fog. The description of Amity's brick red building appearing out of nothingness can give any Hitchcock thriller a run for its money. Fog succeeds where laws fail, and makes cars adhere to the speed limit on the most awesome and deserted of roads. And sheer volumes could be written about long solitary walks in Roorkee, with the incandescent streetlamps providing a blurred glow somewhere in the distance, the white aura of nothingness providing a perfect setting.

Sleep. The enchantress becomes all the more captivating as the year begins to fade and the new one emerges. The seductress has me forever in her thrall with every dip that the mercury takes. The affair with the pillow, the mattress and that Nepali blanket is never more intimate. This is one of the rare moments that I wish I were, and now would be a good time to stifle your laughs, a polar bear so I could hibernate and not have to wake up because the stomach demanded it.

Winter is all this and more. Winter is one eternal side of the much loved perennial human activity cycle. Winter is packing away your T-shirts and making room for all the woolens stowed away at the end of last season, while anticipating what new arrivals the doting Grandmother would bestow. Winter is more dinners had while watching TV together, because no one wants to leave the comfortable heated room to go sit around the table. Winter is the fresh feeling of the outdoors suddenly refreshing you, gradually turning into an association with the invisible man thanks to your reddening nose tip. Winter is bonfires, with memories of litti parties and the farmhouse- Wall-E and the 31st of last year to name a few. Winter is deliberately setting the alarm for six even on a holiday, just to get that incomparable feeling of being able to afford more hours of blissful sleep and being aware of it. Winter is annoying your relative who is all nice and warm in a blanket by making contact with your cold glove-less hands. Winter is barely 3 months long, yet memories of it get you through the remaining nine. And winter, much to my chagrin, is hardly to be found in the eastern metropolis of India.

"I'm a Lefty, with a predominantly rightwards ideology, in the communist bastion with vestiges of burgeoning capitalism everywhere. But even the Cold War has ended."        - Me, on ending this post.


Comments:
I'll be happy to switch places. There is no Sun here. The rain would give Cherrapunji a run for its money (I know it is not a record holder anymore, but I do not know the current entry in the Guinness book). The thin white layer I found on the first day of marking has since been washed away, exposing the cold, bare ground. And I have work to do over the so-called 'winter break'.
The last line's a killer. But seriously, do people in Cal get these jokes, or do they just humour you?
 
I don't wish to rub it in, but Delhi is bliss right now! 6 degC odd, and it couldn't have been better!
I love winters!

FYI... Patna is bad too. My granny tells me it's like Feb-March in Delhi.
Tsk tsk.
 
Lets hope Jairam Ramesh and co. fail and Global Cooling hits C.
But, as I said: It's Coffee, Sleep, Girls, Bath and Fog.
 
I have always been partial to summers. Your did bring back some very fond memories. Hyderabad is still quite warm- a jacket will get you by the whole 'winter season'.
The last line was quintessential Lefty. Good to know the grind isn't taking its toll on the writer of Morning's Here and Boomerang Theory.
 
This comment has been removed by the author.
 
As I told you long long back, the mercury hits anything near or below 21, people in Visakhapatnam have their monkey caps and sweaters and mink blankets out. And the only way you can see your (bad) breath is when you've taken a ride in a 70- kmph or more bus at 7 am with your head hanging out like a dog. The little that you do get is good fun around here; don't know about Cal. And the mist/fog over the sea in the mornings is something almost no one else can get so, there, I quite like winters here, too!
 
@ Rapistaan
Now where exactly are you? I always thought of Vancouver as this place with the most amazing climate.
My sense of humour, is slowly but surely finding its way in the land of Jok(e)a.

@ Anunaya
I heard about Delhi. Luckily I'll get 4 days there to cool off. Regarding Patna, it usually gets cold by December end-Jan.

@ Kondy
Global cooling is important. And not just for C.

@ Shrey
I remember one Hyd winter. The fan was on almost throughout.

@ Murty
Monkey caps in 21 degrees. That is amazing.
 
It seems you are still in IIM devoid of the essential vacations. And to top it, there are no winters at your disposal. I can imagine how hard you would be missing old Roorkee days.

@ Murthy

Monkey caps in 21 degrees in indeed amazing.
 
I never felt nostalgic about winters till I left the capital city to spend some time in perennially hot South India. But oh, for the Dilli-waala, how could the mention of seasonal change be made without discussing the wonderful months of December and January? Once the cold fury and chilly bites of the winds are taken care of, these are months of sheer bliss- coffee, sleep, bath and everything else.
It is sad you will miss most of it, but you might not regret it so much now since global warming has well and truly kicked in? I can certainly feel the difference- the winter hasn't been half as cruel as it usually is around the same time of the year.
 
@ Amit
You are, unfortunately, right. But on the plus side, at this time tomorrow, I hope to be in cold cold Delhi, if only for a couple of days.

@ Arun
I keep hearing contrasting views. Some are saying it's freezing out there, while others, like you, claim it's nice and warm. Only one way to find out, huh?
 
Saagar, it's uncanny the way we think/write on the same theme, sometimes! To think that I just finished singing paeans of this season and the month in today's write-up and then should stumble on your latest post.....quite amazing
 
P.S-And the loss-due to your migration away from colder climes-is clearly mine:I didn't get a lovely shawl this winter, as I did last year, from the famed hill-station near your erstwhile home:(
 
Ah Lefty, I miss winters too. And where I'm headed, I doubt I'll need so much as a bleeding sweatshirt.
One thing though, you're not alone in missing winters. :)
 
I hate winters. Bleh!
 
@ PTV
For you, it's going be all about trade-offs for the moment. Winters for Moh and Yella. And I hope, that where you're ultimately headed, there will be a more-than-substantial winter.

@ Srishti
But whaaaaeee?
 
@ Mamma
I know. This is like another form of the geek wifi- the family wifi.
 
Axcellent post :) ..Loved it...Brings to my mind, certain memories!!

Winter was the ONLY GOOD thing about leaving Goa @ New year's time during BITS days !! All the others were just derivatives of it!!

N playing basky on Jan1, 2004 ( or 05, dont remember which!) was another day I associate well with winter..Couldnt see where the hoops were :)
 
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