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Train adventures on a couch

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Iwatched my cousin’s two-year-old son, play with a train set the other day. “Does the baby asked, a bit curious.

“Yes,” she said, “He the tank engine!”

“Thomas?” I sighed reeling in nostalgia.

When Sid was two, a curious little incident happened. My parents had taken him for a walk when an Arab lady stopped by in her car. She pulled out Dh100 and handed it to my dad. My dad, all confused and scared, didn’t accept it. But she insisted. A passerby explained to my dad that the money was a gift to the baby. My dad, unable to deny, accepted the gift, thanked her profusely and got home with Dh100 in hand.

“Why would you accept money from a stranger?” I asked, a bit upset. like trains?”, I likes Thomas

“The lady meant it as a gift for Sid,” my dad defended. “We should use it to buy something for him,” he said emphatical­ly.

“It is not like we don’t have money,” I muttered and the thought bothered me for the rest of the day.

My dad seemed very pleased with this bizarre incident. “We should use it wisely,” he went on, much to my chagrin.

That weekend, we decided to give in to my dad’s excitement. “Let us buy a blackboard,” I suggested. “At least, he will stop using the walls.”

“Let us buy a study table,” my husband offered. “Sid can use it once he starts school.”

Dad was quiet toy store.

We all wondered about what we thought best. But dad’s eyes had settled on a big box. “This is perfect,” he declared.

“This?” I picking it up. “Yes,” he was adamant. A blue rectangula­r box with a smiling face staring back at us. “You can’t be serious,” I protested. “Why not give it a try? Besides, the lady wanted Sid to have fun,” he seemed convinced.

My husband and I read the contents in the box — a blue tank engine, a few blue train tracks, a railway station, a signal pole and a plastic tunnel. till we landed at the asked, unsure, before

“Thomas

“Never heard of that,” my husband said.

But we brought home Thomas the Tank Engine. The rest, like they say, is history. Sid spent every waking hour with his engine set.

He chugged like a tiny engine when we went for walks and he would ask us to pretend like the coaches he pulled along. Many times, he sat at the edge of the bed imagining driving a train and took me along. I went on many train adventures sitting on a couch or on the floor and the joy it brought us has been immeasurab­le.

As he grew older, his love for trains has increased many-fold. To this day, Sid wonders what it would be like to drive a train on rails. Today, as I watch the little engine, I cannot help but wonder what turn life would have the Tank engine,” I exclaimed. taken us on if we had bought a piece of furniture or a blackboard with that Dh100.

I will never know this good Samaritan, who gave a little baby Dh100. She will never know what joy it has brought to us all, but I am sure of one thing — she must have loved my son to have given that money because, when something is given with love and in good faith it can only bring more love.

As for me, I am thankful to dad too. Perhaps, it was vested interest (he too is notorious for his obsession with trains), but it has surely instilled a love for trains in Sid.

And I just hope and pray that that Arab lady has boundless joys because a person unknown to her prays that she does.

Sudha Subramania­n is an author and freelance writer based in Dubai.

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