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This is a personalised essay that explores the author’s experience with DTC buses as a Delhiite. It seeks to map the sentimental role that a public transport service can play in a frequent commuter’s life

I thought I’d write about buses. The first time I sat on a bus was when I was 5, at least that is what I remember. I got enrolled in what my parents proudly call “the best girls school in Delhi” – Presentation Convent Sr. Secondary School. It’s almost as fancy as Delhi Public School (not really). My school sits bang in the middle of Chandni Chowk on a graveyard (well, obviously). It was 8 km away from our home so the parents decided to opt for the school-enabled bus service. My bus was green. Almost as a welcome gesture, the seats were torn with the sponge sticking out at odd places and windows that refused to budge open. We used to pick at the sponge with our nails. On the first day of school, papa held my hand, walked me to the conductor and told me to memorise his name and face. On my second day of school, my class teacher, an especially modern woman (she wore knee-length skirts) wrote the bus number on the back of my hand and walked me to the bus. I leapt and held my hand up like a trophy when I recognised conductor uncle’s familiar face. I used to sit with him when I’d miss my parents. That he had a droopy moustache is all I can remember about him now. At 5, I had decided I liked the bus. I liked putting my face out of the large windows with cars zooming past me. I had memorised every stop, every turn. I was quick to learn of the hierarchy in the seating arrangement – the snooty senior school students sat at the back and we gremlins took the front rows. It was an unspoken rule, everybody knew. 

Then I got into 7th class. I started playing badminton and would stay back after school for practice. Maa would come pick me up. We’d go home by the DTC bus no. 901 or 185 that dropped us at GTB Nagar, closest to home.  I did not like the bus anymore. I was embarrassed, you see. The 5 rupee fare was cheap and convenient. It was everything a thirteen-year-old hated. So, I’d try to get maa to stand away from the bus stop, which was right outside my school. It would be the end of the world if any of my friends saw me take the public bus. And I would smirk on days when after an hour of waiting, the bus would refuse to come and maa would have to relent to an auto rickshaw ride of 80 rupees. It has been 7 years now and I hate spending more than 20 rupees on a rickshaw, bus, auto and all things transport. I am stingy. Today, I also know that my friends would have probably not ditched me because of the bus. But I didn’t know this back then. 

All of 20 years, I am no longer in school. But you know, I travel by bus; it drops me about 1.5 km away from my college. On days that I feel fancy, I take a rickshaw, on others, I walk. Earlier, the bus cost me a ticket of 10 rupees, but now, the fare has been waived for ladies. Governments come and go but the ones that make buses free are my favourite. Naturally, it is more crowded now and the race to get a seat is not for beginners. No. It requires calculation and expertise. You must know the exact timings. And yet, you must also know that the bus will almost never come on time. Don’t be naive. And as soon as you see the number of the bus that will take you home, you must strategically place yourself at the point where you know, no, you are certain the bus will stop with its door open right in your face, ready to pile you up. Many others will try to oust you, board the rumbling beast and secure the best seat only to leave you standing with the other losers. But you must be smart. If you are a seasoned traveller, you will know that the key is to be quick on your feet, to hurl yourself inside no matter who tugs at your shirt. You fight as if your life depends on it because it is not just a seat, it is an average of 20 minutes of comfort and a smug smile on your face as you sit, while others…stand. No matter the despair and failure in your life otherwise,  know that you are a winner for the next 20 minutes. If you are nice, really nice, then you’ll offer your seat to an older lady, but no one really does that. You’d have to be a fool. Once inside, you see a series of arms hanging from the railing overhead and everybody looking at each other listlessly. It is boring, but you can always look into your co-passenger’s phone screen. Once, an aunty stood next to me in a bus brimming with people. A school kid sat. Aunty told the kid to go get the tickets for both of them. By the time the kid jostled his way through the sea of sweaty armpits to the conductor, got the ticket, and made his way back, he found aunty dearest perched on his seat. And of course, he didn’t dare ask her to get up. How could he? Sassy aunties rule the world. 

The bus is a site of forging friendships and rivalries. If you inch your head close enough, you can almost hear someone ranting to her bestie about her boyfriend’s latest tantrums. In summer, at least 3 people will always say,”aaj garmi bahut ho rahi hai”, and all loyal travellers will nod their heads in agreement. One weather forecaster will predict rain for the next day; sighs of relief.  Because babies are everywhere, one will be crying at the top of its voice. And then there will always be that one uncle who will right on cue, play a Shri Ram bhajan at full volume. Earphones are for the woke. 

I think I like buses. For now, at least.

Image Credits: Hindustan Times

Read Also :The Unspoken College Essentials: Delhi Metro and Buses

Chetna Rani

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Death on road attracts only flies.

– Ishita Anand

A man, lying on the side of the road near a bus stop, sprawled on the pavement, his arms and legs in a weird position. It had rained some time before. And you can see dried drops of rain and mud on his face. He is lying so still that you can’t even make out whether or not he is breathing. All you can see is a boy, barely 19, probably dead, with flies all over him.

“He’s been lying like this for the last 3-4 hours!� says one man at the bus stop
“Did u call the police??� asked another man who had just got off his bus and had enquired about the boy.
“I don’t think anyone did� is the reply and the man walks off yet again, just like he had done before.
The other man was new to Delhi. He didn’t know what to do, how to contact the police. He stopped three girls on their way home from the college nearby.

“Beta, will you call the police? This man has been lying here for a long time and nobody has bothered to inform the police�

I turned around. I hadn’t noticed the boy. I looked at my friends unable to understand what was happening.

“Call the police??� I spluttered, “ WE? Call the police?�

I looked around at the 15 or so men sitting on the bus stop staring at us. I was hesitant, my friends clueless. Should we call? What if we get entangled in something? One of my friends just took out her cell phone and dialled. I stared at her.
“Are u sure?� was what I conveyed with my eyes.

She still dialled and told the police. They said they’d send someone to check. My other friend was getting psyched. I could see a series of emotions pass through their eyes – pity, helplessness, and a bit of shock at seeing a dead man.

I on the other hand felt nothing.
I stared back at the 15 people sitting on the bus stop. “What are you staring at?� I wanted to ask them but I didn’t put it into words. None of them had bothered to call the police. They just sat and wondered whether he was dead. A hundred people probably passed by him. And still didn’t bother to do anything about it.

“I think we should go.� My friend said, “ I’ve told the police. They should be here soon. And if they need us they have my number�

The truth was we couldn’t just stand there even a minute more. It made us want to look at the boy, hoping that maybe he’d show signs of life. But it was kind of evident that he was dead. Flies don’t scatter around a man sleeping. And the weird arrangement of his legs…
He could be drugged. But then he would’ve woken up when it rained. Several thoughts bounced in my brain. All I wanted to think of was getting back home. So I hired the next auto and bid goodbye to my friends, telling them to keep me informed if they heard anything from the police.
On my way back home I started thinking. Do we care about people enough to do something for a boy we don’t even know? It felt nice that we had done the right thing by calling the police. But why did I hesitate? Would everyone hesitate the way I did? I wanted to ask the next person I met,

“ What would you do? Would you call the police, or would you get on the next bus and then forget about it”

I guess the fact is that we’re all afraid. Afraid of getting unnecessarily involved. But was this unnecessary? A mother was waiting for her son somewhere, to return back home, probably getting worried. Was it unnecessary? That boy wasn’t just a body. Yet we hadn’t gone near him. Fearing what? That he would explode? People hadn’t called the police. They had just sat there and then got on the next bus, gone back home and forgotten about it. Hell, I hadn’t even noticed him before. WHY?

We’re taught all our life to be considerate to others. People talk about humanity and making the world a better place to live in. We talk about giving people opportunities. Of giving everyone an equal status. Of helping the aged and the sick. Of charity and goodness.
We just don’t think before supporting these causes. We think that we are sensitized towards the world today. It hurts to see people suffer therefore it’s time to do something about it. Yet, a young boy, probably dead. And no one did anything about it. And walked off without a trace of guilt. It seemed like the right thing to do. To walk off. How is it justified?

It makes me think…Are the to-dos and not-to-dos we are taught all our life actually feasible? They are �politically correct�. But are they the right thing to do? Frankly, I don’t know. But I do know that no matter how easy the decision to walk away was, it’s always doing something about it which is the right thing. It feels nice. At least in this case it was so.

If only people before us had realized that…