The professor was sitting inside my dream and telling me his dream. He looked like a wise buffalo, but he assured me he was a professor. 'I dreamt of your father,' the professor said. 'Your father was telling me that you have never worked in your life.'
The professor parked his car at our house and we left for the village in my car. The professor had forgotten to pack his medicines, so we first picked up his medicines. We drove to a Heart Care Centre, and after picking medicines for him we drove onwards to the village.
At night we stayed in a forest. In the morning we went deeper into the forest. We saw many tall trees. We eventually reached a watering hole. There were some fish in the water and many strange-leaved plants grew around it.
There was a mango tree and my wife tried to break some mangoes. The professor helped her with a stick, but they didn't get any mangoes. On the way back, the professor complimented my driving skills. He then gave us a free lesson on the Romantic period, and the history of seeing Nature as a beautiful thing, and how we have to first alienate ourselves from Nature to appreciate it. 'For a forest dweller, a tree is not a tree; it is spirit,' the professor said. It was very complicated and very fulfilling. Something spoke to me inside the forest. 'You are living inside a womb,' it said to me. 'Really?' I asked. 'If you put a seed in the earth, doesn't it grow?' Something answered. 'It must be a womb then,' Something said. I agreed.
In the evening we started for the tribal village gathering. On the way, we stopped at the house of the professor's student. We ate watermelons and ripe mangoes plucked from trees. The student told us about the village of her ancestors. She showed us a hill in the distance, and told us that they went to the hill once a year to repair the houses, and to live there for a week. They carried provisions for a week and cooked at the village of the ancestors. Then they came back, only to go the next year.
As it grew dark, we left the temple and went to the village gathering. There were hundreds of people at the gathering. The buddhvants of the village sat on either side of the professor. My wife recorded the professor's speech on a video camera. After that many children performed on the stage. We gave a prize to the children, and they announced our prize to the gathering.
We left soon after midnight and got lost in the forest. The professor's wife expressed satisfaction at being lost. 'No journey is ever complete without being lost,' she told us. Then she told us stories about getting lost. We all agreed they were good stories. We were all happy then that we were lost. We saw many field mice along the road. Suddenly some people appeared on a motorcycle and looked at us. 'You are the guests from the gathering,' they said to us. They pointed the way out of the forest.

so many questions that you raise in the article go answered for us readers... and they are kinda settled... not done, Dear Writer :)
ReplyDeletewhy did your wife cry during the tribal gathering...?
you have my email id.
thank you so much for a lovely article.