The Equation
I can easily recollect the days we spent together. I am just five
months elder to her (a year ahead of her in school). It is a story of childhood
rivalry to being the best friends forever. She was the bubbly one, always on
her toes dancing around. You say ‘da..’ and there she goes on the floor with
her cute moves. I was not so fond of her moves, she would dance past me and
within no time give me a nudge or a pinch, ultimately irritate me. She loved
doing that and I hated her for that. I dreaded going to their house if she was
there. I was being silly, I realize, but then it made a big deal. Before she
turned five, they moved to her father’s place of work in Saudi Arabia. After
that they came to their house once in a year during their vacation. It was from
then, the equation we shared started changing.
I started looking forward to
their homecoming. She would bring an years stories of her school, friends and
whatever we could talk during those times. I would even write down the things to
tell her when we had sleepover at either of our houses. We would share the same
bed and start our endless conversations at night making sure that we have
enough in reserve for the coming days as well. We would play our own games with
our siblings after feeling sorry for shooing them away for overhearing our chat.
They were kids after all. I still remember the music station we created with an
old iron rack and sticks in the backyard, imagining us to be rock stars,
singing and banging. We exchanged our clothes; we also had twin frocks, which
we would wear on occasions. With the bits and pieces of few songs that we knew
from other languages, we sang and even choreographed our own dance, calling it
“ the dance form”.
Then came e-mails, we were
more in touch keeping us more updated about each other. I joined college; she
followed me the next year after she came out in flying colours, in her twelfth
boards. She has always made everyone proud when it came to academics. But she
never made a big deal about it. She was the next best partnership in Chennai (VANAKKAM CHENNAI) .
We had our own group of friends; our own space and a part of us that we kept to
ourselves. That never mattered. We knew each other well. Even before asking the
entire thing we would know which and what. The equation was unusual; the
interests were not always mutual but heart-warming conversations.
That is how it is with cousins. We loved the fact that ‘Bangalore Days’ the movie by Anjaly Menon was about three cousins and
their relationship in helping one another to cope with change. That felt so right
and true. For some it is friends. It is the work of the soul, the equation
proved just right.
Awesome ...ofcourse it's emily
ReplyDeleteEnikku Vayya! 😘😘😘
ReplyDeleteathe athe :):)
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