Hindustan Times (Noida)

Stories on the move

Her daily journey to the office was the most creative part of her life

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She is an engineer in a Noida-based multinatio­nal, but has been working from her home in Vikaspuri since March last year, because of you-knowwhat.

But Jyoti Vij Ahuja is also a writer, who exploited the pandemic by compiling her short stories into a self-published e-book, Marital Bliss & Other Things.

Ms Ahuja, 39, wrote these stories during her two-hour daily Metro trip from home to work and back, she says in a Whatsapp video chat. The commute was the most creative aspect of her day—it would give her ideas for prose and also for occasional poetry. “Looking at strangers’ faces, I would try to imagine the stories behind them.” Her writing pad was a tablet—husband Gagan’s gift.

Today she shares a poem she wrote when brother, Vikas, was starting a new life in Europe. (While posing for a snap, her younger son, Samarth, tiptoes from behind, and photo-bombs the portrait.)

The immigrant

If I were you, I wouldn’t have left as soon as I had turned twenty-one,

Leaving pale memories at home and its sullen owners comforting themselves,

Dusting the dirt off your little belongings, in a hope that you may need them when you return. If I were you, I wouldn’t have chosen a place where sun shines only for a few months in a year,

Unlike our own land where the tan is not a statement but a by-product.

If I were you I wouldn’t have needed to do currency conversion­s in my head, every time I had stopped by an unknown roadside joint to have a meal.

If I were you, I wouldn’t have had the heart to make space for the immigrants from that hostile neighbouri­ng land of ours.

But there, they were as attached to you as if they belonged to the same bloodline.

That hard-to-ignore resemblanc­e: of the same colour, of the familiar dialect or that twin expression of brotherhoo­d.

If I were you, I wouldn’t have mustered the courage to stand for my dreams: To make big in the world of strangers, miles away from my birthplace.

Getting glances, some loathsome, some surprised, others plain indifferen­t but never familiar.

How I wish sometimes that I were you, so that I could have just for once

Felt the pains and joys of leaving the beloved motherland.

Left behind but never forgotten, memories etched deep inside my soul.

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Mayank Austen Soofi

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