Sunday, June 29, 2008

A chain of events

I complimented a friend on her long, rather-interestingly strung, beaded chain. No, she did not brush the compliment aside, as most of us are wont to, and say, ``it’s-an-old-one-that-I’d-bought-off-the-street,'' or ``it’s-one-of-those-ghastly-gifts-from-my-inlaws-that-I-wear-only-when-they’re-in-town.'' Instead she told me a story about the chain that took us to Chennai first, and then to a fire-accident which the chain survived when the rest of her house had burned to cinders, from there to Singapore where she stays; and to where she took the chain along as an fortuitous omen and then for a last stop in Beijing, where a Chinese chain maker read the inscription on the locket of the chain which when translated read, `keep safe’!

Ask me about my bag and I’ll probably say Garuda Mall or Hidesign and that’s where my story will end, if you can call that a story. I very seldom have long-winding descriptions about how I came to posses the said bag, and what circumstances followed after, or occurred before and during its purchase. I see, I buy. The only variation in my story would be that I either paid for my purchase with the Citi Bank Gold Card or my old and trusted HSBC classic, whose limit has remained modest like my earnings.

Same goes for the furniture in my house. I don’t possess a centre table that I once saw lying neglectedly in a hamlet near Karaikudi, which only my peripheral vision picked up even as we rounded a corner on a dusty village road, and how I had the driver back-up the car to take a second look at the table, found it too beautiful to leave behind, and picked it up but not before I went in search of the village panchayat to verify if it was truly disposed off by someone in the village who believed it brought him bad luck, and since I was a skeptic, I decided to take it nevertheless, but not before asking if there was any money I could offer if not for the table, then alteast for a trust fund to preserve old wooden treasures! No, I don’t own such fanciful `anything’ with such far-fetched ancestry. Mine is all store bought. And they remain inanimate, mute and do not trigger off cataclysmic events that would bring about a new world order. Quite unlike the toys who come alive in an Enid Blyton story.

That’s not to say my friend with the lucky chain is spinning me a yarn. I believe her and all the others. For every story-teller, there must be a listener!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Ah the stories! The really long ones, the incredible ones, the absurd ones and the touching ones..all spun around the mundane frame of the everyday life, as we affectionately and sometimes disdainfully call our existence. There's always one, isn't it?

I'm sure if we think hard enough, for long enough, every piece of our possession will have a tale to its credit:-)

Very interesting story, this one is! You must write more often...cheers!