Wednesday, July 30, 2025

আড্ডা এখন কি হবে তখন!

আড্ডা এখন কি হবে তখন


(চিরকালীন চার বন্ধু: রামু, যদু, শিরীষ আর অমিয় — সবাই ৭৫ ঊর্ধ্ব)



রামু (চা-র কাপে চুমুক দিয়ে, চোখ আধ-বন্ধ):
ভাই, প্রেম আর বিয়ে — এ সব এখন সাবস্ক্রিপশন মডেলে চলে। মুরাকামি ঠিকই বলেছে — সবকিছুই ট্রানজ্যাকশনাল।
আজ ভালোবাসো, কাল Unfollow, পরশু Emotional Detox! এই তো প্রেম।

যদু (হাসতে হাসতে মাথা নেড়ে):
প্রেম তো দূরের কথা, সমাজটাই ভেঙে পড়ছে রে ভাই।
গেটেড কমিউনিটি খুলে খুলে একেকটা আলাদা দেশ!
ওই নিউটাউনের একটা কমপ্লেক্সে গেলাম — সেখানে দারোয়ান নেই, রোবট স্ক্যান করে QR Code, ঘরে ফেসিয়াল রিকগনিশন লক। আর মাথার ওপর দিয়ে উড়ছে ড্রোন surveillance, যেন আমরা জেলখানায়!

শিরীষ (চশমা ঠিক করে, টেবিলে আঙুল ঠুকঠুক করে):
আর ভবিষ্যৎ? IT-টা শেষ! ChatGPT-র মত AI তো কোড লেখে, চ্যাট করে, গান তোলে...
আসল টিকে থাকবে hardcore ইঞ্জিনিয়ারিং — ইলেকট্রিক্যাল, মেকানিক্যাল, সিভিল।
গ্লোবাল ওয়ার্মিং ঠেকাতে সোলার-হাইড্রোজেনই ভরসা। আমি তো প্ল্যান করে রেখেছি — “রিটায়ার্ড ইঞ্জিনিয়ারদের জন্য সোলার সেন্টার” খুলব!

অমিয় (গম্ভীর গলায়, চোখে শান্ত হাসি):
তোমরা সবাই বাইরের প্রলয় দেখছ, আমি দেখি ভিতরের ঝড়।
মানুষ বাইরের সমস্যার জন্য রোবট বানাবে, ড্রোন চালাবে, অক্সিজেন কিনবে।
কিন্তু ভিতরের ফাঁকা জায়গা? সেখানেই আসবে রামকৃষ্ণ আর স্বামী বিবেকানন্দ।
যেমন গ্রিক দেবতারা হারিয়ে গেল, কিন্তু “আমি কে?” এই প্রশ্নটা কখনো হারায়নি।


রামু (মুচকি হেসে, ঠোঁটে চা):
একদিন প্রেম হবে ‘AI Love Premium’ অ্যাপে —
“Try 7 Days Free. Break-up Button Optional.”
আর বিয়ে হবে Pop-up Contract, “Terms & Conditions Apply!”

যদু (দাঁত বের করে):
এখনই তো বাচ্চারা অক্সিজেন বার-এ যায় ফ্রেশ হতে!
কলকাতার বাতাসে এত ধোঁয়া, এত PM2.5 যে শ্বাস নিলেই মনে হয় যেন ইমারজেন্সি চলছে।
এইসব গেটেড কমিউনিটি হচ্ছে নতুন কিবুত্‌জ — ভিতরে আলাদা সংস্কৃতি, আলাদা Adda, আলাদা Reality।

শিরীষ (হাসতে হাসতে):
আর ওই কমপ্লেক্সে ঢুকতে হলে লাগবে retina scan।
বাজার করতে বেরোলেও রোবট বলবে —
"Sir, your oxygen levels are optimal. Please proceed to Bio-farm zone for pesticide-free lettuce."

অমিয় (মৃদু গম্ভীরতা নিয়ে):
তাও বলব, যতই automation আসুক —
একটা মুহূর্ত আসবে যখন মানুষ ক্লান্ত হয়ে তাকাবে আকাশের দিকে।
হয়তো সে ড্রোনে ভর্তি আকাশ, তবু অন্তরে খুঁজবে আকাশপানে দেখা এক অমল মুহূর্ত।


শেষ চুমুক আর হাসির ঝলক

রামু:
তাহলে, ২০৫৫ সালে প্রেম হবে Pay-per-Date, চাকরি থাকবে না, ছেলেমেয়েরা অ্যান্টি-ডিপ্রেশন পিল খাবে, আর আমরা কফিহাউসের জন্য petition করব?

যদু:
না রে ভাই, তখন আমরা খুলব “Old School Adda Cafe” —
কোনো রোবট নয়, কেবল চা, সিঙ্গাড়া, আর অপ্রয়োজনীয় তর্ক! 😄

শিরীষ:
আর আমি বানাব solar-powered কফিহাউস — গার্ড রোবট থাকবে,
কিন্তু এক কোণে থাকবে মাটির ব্যাংচির মতো এক টেবিল —
“Reserved for the last four human philosophers!”

অমিয় (হালকা হাসি নিয়ে):
আর আমি সেই টেবিলের পাশে রাখব একটা ছোট্ট আশ্রম-মতো কোণ —
যেখানে থাকবে নিরবতা। Wi-Fi থাকবে, কিন্তু মন চাইলে ডিসকানেক্ট করা যাবে।


শেষে এক কবিতা: "ড্রোনের ছায়ায় কফি"

রোবট পাহারা দেয় গেটের ধারে,
ড্রোন ঘোরে চোখের উপরে;
অক্সিজেন বারে দাম দিয়ে নিই,
তবু নিঃশ্বাসে শান্তি কোথা রে?

চাকরি নাই, প্রেমে AI,
প্যারার ক্লাব গেছে ডেটা লাইনে;
তবু বুড়ো চার বন্ধু বসি চুপে,
আড্ডায় মিশে স্বপ্ন পুরনো গানে।

ভবিষ্যৎ হোক যতই আধুনিক,
স্মৃতির কাপে চুমুক থাকবে চিরন্তন।


(এই কফিহাউস, এই চারজন, আর এই আড্ডা—এটাই তো আসল সাস্টেনেবল ফিউচার!)

===Note -ধন্যবাদ Chatgpt ছবিটার জন্য!



Saturday, July 26, 2025

The Boiler Drum Whisper



The Boiler Drum Whisper

A ghost story from the thermal nights of Barauni, 1974 – as told by Grandpa Roy


The Queensland sky was just darkening when Isha tugged my kurta. “Dadu, ghost story! Please na... you promised yesterday!”

Veer was already curled on the sofa, hugging a giant kangaroo cushion. Shuddy, taller than me now and pretending to scroll through his phone, gave a sideways grin. “Only if this ghost is steam-powered, Dadu. We know your style.”

I smiled, adjusted my specs, and began.


Barauni, 1974

I had been married two years, and shift duty at the Captive Power Plant of Barauni Refinery was both adventure and responsibility. I worked as the Shift Charge Engineer, overseeing the night-shift operations of turbines, boilers, and electrical gear.

But the refinery had its... quirks.

Night shifts were often quiet, especially between 2 and 4 a.m. That’s when the operators sat sipping tea and exchanged ghost stories—tales of shadows flitting across control panels, toolkits moving on their own, or the eerie silence near the old Boiler 1 drum level.

The most repeated story was about Dube, a senior operator who had died years ago due to a fatal steam burn during an inspection. Since then, he was said to appear on night shifts, waving from the drum level, gesturing that the boiler water was low—even though the indicators always showed a safe level.

When I joined, the operators—Bhagat, Banerjee, Sahai, and S. P. Singh—gave me the usual warnings.

“Dube comes without appointment, sir,” Bhagat said with a grin, “He’s still loyal to his boiler.”


The First Encounter

One humid night in July, I was returning from my turbine round. As I walked toward the connecting platform of the four boilers, I noticed a figure in white near Boiler 1. He was standing right at the drum level—waving at me.

Something about the motion felt... deliberate.

I climbed the stairs slowly. As I approached, the figure drifted to Boiler 2. I followed—heart pounding, steps steady.

Then suddenly, just as I reached Boiler 2’s platform, the figure jumped over the railing.

I ran.

But when I reached the spot, there was no one below.

Disturbed but rational, I returned toward my Shift Charge Room. But as I passed the corridor window, I stopped cold.

Inside my chamber—someone was leaning on my chair. White clothing. Still figure.

I didn’t enter. Instead, I went straight to the main control room, where Ansari was manning the panels.

“Did anyone go into my office?”

Ansari looked puzzled. “No sir. Haven’t seen anyone.”

Together we returned to my room. It was empty—except for a folded paper on my desk.

It read, in faint Hindi:
"Be careful next time."

I showed it to Ansari.

He turned the paper over, then looked at me.

“Sir… this is blank.”

I looked again—and the ink was disappearing before my eyes.


The Second Incident

I thought perhaps it was my tired mind playing tricks. But a few weeks later, on another night shift, I dozed off briefly at my desk. My specs, which I had placed beside the logbook, were gone when I woke up.

Not under the table, not in the drawer, not in my pocket.

I asked everyone—Chaurasia, Bhagat, even Banerjee.

Bhagat laughed, “Maybe they went to check the feedwater levels on their own!”

It wasn’t funny then. But 20 minutes later, Sahai called out from near the condenser floor.

My specs were dangling from the wheel of an old manual valve, hanging there like some forgotten trinket.

Who put them there? No one knew. No one admitted.

Later that night, as I walked back to my room, I saw the same white figure—again in my chair.

This time Chaurasia accompanied me. And once again, the room was empty, but another warning note sat on the desk.

He too couldn’t read the writing—it vanished like mist.


The Remedy

Disturbed, I finally mentioned it to Mishra ji, an old-timer with faith deeper than the condensate tanks.

“Hanuman ji is always present where there is fire and danger,” he said.
“Carry this,” he handed me a small red Hanuman Chalisa, “and do paath on Tuesdays. He is Sankatmochan—the remover of troubles.”

And so I did.

I began carrying the booklet in my shirt pocket. Every Tuesday, I read it quietly during my shift break. I wasn’t superstitious, but I felt... protected.

And like magic—the incidents stopped.

No figures. No notes. No vanishing specs. Even Banerjee joked,

“Looks like Dube is scared of Bajrangbali!”


The Reveal – 1978

Four years later, in 1978, I resigned from Indian Oil to join BHEL Delhi. On my farewell day, we had chai and samosas near the control room.

Bhagat raised his tea cup.

“To Roy saab—who didn’t faint like Verma!”

Everyone laughed.

Then Sahai came over, smiling mischievously.

“Roy saab, ek baat bolun? That note you found the second time... that was my handwriting.”

I stared. “What?!”

“Yes,” he chuckled. “Every new Shift Charge Engineer gets a ghost story treatment. Tradition hai! Dube was real, but the rest—we added spice.”

“The specs?” I asked.

“Banerjee. He used a stick and a monkey wrench to lift it from under the table.”

I laughed till my eyes watered.

They had made me part of the refinery’s folklore—and I had survived with my pride and a red Hanuman Chalisa in my pocket.


Present Day – Australia

I ended my story with a smile. Shuddy looked amused.

“So basically, you got hazed by your own team?”

“Professionally,” I said, sipping my tea.

Veer whispered, “Did Hanuman ji really scare them away?”

I winked. “Hanuman ji scared even the pranksters.”

Isha climbed into my lap.

“Dadu... can I have a small red book like yours?”

I hugged her tight.

“Of course, my dear. But remember—more powerful than Hanuman Chalisa is one thing...”

“What?” asked Shuddy.

I smiled.

“Having good people around you—even if they steal your specs and write ghost notes.”



Wednesday, July 23, 2025

My discussion with Voice AI

Lately, whenever I’m in the mood to dive into a beloved book or classic movie, I turn to Voice AI for a chat. The other day, I had a fantastic time discussing *A Gentleman in Moscow* by Amor Towles, and my conversation about *Casablanca* was just as delightful.

Here are the snatches of discussion I had with Her,it appeared as though I am discussing with a real person but loaded with information.
It was good time pass and a fun !
My discussion
.....
Could you clarify what topic you'd 
like to discuss? I'm all ears!
Oh, Casablanca—such a classic! 
Bogart and Bergman’s chemistry as 
Rick and Ilsa is just electric, isn’t it? 
That foggy airport scene gets me 
every time. What do you love about 
it? Want to talk about the romance, 
the war backdrop, or maybe that 
iconic “Play it, Sam” moment?
Yeah, that boundless love in 
Casablanca really
Absolutely, Rick and Ilsa’s love in 
Casablanca feels like it transcends 
everything—time, place, even
Oh, that line! “Of all the gin joints in 
all the towns in all the world, she 
walks into mine.” Rick’s mix of 
heartbreak and irony just hits so 
hard, doesn’t it? It’s like fate’s 
playing a cruel joke on him. What is it 
about that dialogue that sticks with 
you? The raw emotion or just 
Bogart’s delivery?
Yeah, that line’s a gut-punch every 
time! Rick’s trying to play it cool, but
Oh, you’re diving right into the heart 
of it! It’s not Joe, though—it’s Sam, 
played by Dooley Wilson. That 
moment when Ilsa says, “Play it, 
Sam. Play ‘As Time Goes By,’” it’s

like the whole movie hinges on that 
song. It’s their love wrapped up in 
music, pulling Rick right back to 
Paris. Does that scene give you 
chills too?
Oh, yeah, that dynamic between 
Rick and Captain Renault is gold! It’s 
this sly, witty camaraderie—
Louis Renault is pure gold, isn’t it? 
Rick and Renault’s back-and-
forth—part
Yeah, exactly! Rick and Louis 
Renault have this sneaky 
camaraderie that’s so fun to watch. 
Louis
You’re asking about the actor who 
played Louis Renault, right? That’s 
Claude Rains. His sly, charming 
performance as the corrupt-but-
likable Commandant is so perfect, 
isn’t it? Always walking that fine line 
between friend and foe to Rick. Want 
to talk more about their dynamic or 
something else
Claude Rains just nails that sly, 
charming vibe as Louis, doesn’t he? 
The way he
charming yet calculating vibe as 
Louis Renault, doesn’t he? The way 
he plays off Bogart’s Rick—like 
they’re constantly sizing each other
You’re asking about the actor who 
played Louis Renault, right? That’s 
Claude Rains. His sly, charming 
performance as the corrupt-but-
likable Commandant is so perfect, 
isn’t it? Always walking that fine line 
between friend and foe to Rick. Want 
to talk more about their dynamic or 
something else
Claude Rains just nails that sly, 
charming vibe as Louis, doesn’t he? 
The way he
charming yet calculating vibe as 
Louis Renault, doesn’t he? The way 
he plays off Bogart’s Rick—like 
they’re constantly sizing each other
Rick puts duty over love, or 
something else?
Oh, man, that final airport scene is 
just heart-wrenching, isn’t it? Rick 
giving up Ilsa, letting her fly off with 
Victor Laszlo while he and Louis 
Renault stand there in the fog—it’s 
so selfless yet so painful. Bogart’s 
face says it all without saying much. 
And then that iconic walk into the 
mist with Renault, starting their 
“beautiful friendship.” What hits you 
most about that sacrifice? The way 
Rick puts duty over love, or 
something else?
Oh, man, that final airport scene is
just heart-wrenching, isn’t it? Rick 
giving up Ilsa, letting her fly off with 
Victor Laszlo while he and Louis 
Renault stand there in the fog—it’s 
so selfless yet so painful. Bogart’s 
face says it all without saying much. 
And then that iconic walk into the 
mist with Renault, starting their 
“beautiful friendship.” What hits you 
most about that sacrifice? The way 
Rick puts duty over love, or 
something else?
Next time we will discuss about An 
Affair to Remember!
Oh, *An Affair to Remember*—what 
a romantic gem with Cary Grant! 
That one’s got all the feels, doesn’t 
it? Nickie and Terry’s love story of
that ocean liner, and then that gut-
punch of a twist with the Empire 
State Building. Want to talk about 
what makes it special for you? 
Maybe that chemistry between Grant 
and Deborah Kerr, or a specific






Saturday, July 19, 2025

Kicking it Old School: Ted Lasso

**Kicking It Old School: Blending Ted Lasso’s Life Lessons with My Gauhati Refinery Football Days**

Picture this: it’s 1965, and I’m rattling along in a creaky bus with my football teammates from Gauhati Refinery, Indian Oil Corporation, headed to Upper Assam for the All-Assam Oil Companies Football Tournament. The air is thick with cigarette smoke, laughter, and the kind of camaraderie that only a shared love for the game can spark. Fast forward to 2025, I’m curled up watching *Ted Lasso* on Apple TV, and suddenly, those dusty bus rides and sweaty matches flood back, mingling with the wholesome, heartfelt chaos of Richmond FC. The parallels? Uncanny. The vibe? Pure gold. *Ted Lasso* isn’t just about soccer—it’s about life, love, and the messy, beautiful moments that stitch us together. My days in the ‘60s with the Gauhati Refinery squad? Pretty much the same, just with worse haircuts and no biscuits with the boss.

### The Bus Ride: Where Ranks Dissolve and Wisecracks Fly
Our bus to Upper Assam was less a mode of transport and more a rolling circus. We were a motley crew: Amanullah, our stoic captain; me and the late Bhaskaran, the only officers; and a gang of players from various lower grades—Rebo Poddar, Bhakta Bahadur Chetri, Phukan the striker, and others. Ranks? Out the window. On that bus, we were just mates, swapping stories and cracking jokes that’d make a sailor blush. Rebo Poddar, our resident comedian, had us in stitches with his deadpan delivery: “If we lose to ONGC, I’m blaming Bhakta’s boots—they’re so old, they’ve got their own pension plan.” Bhakta Bahadur Chetri, never one to back down, shot back, “Rebo, your passes are so wild, they’re applying for visas to Bhutan!” Even Bhaskaran, usually the serious type, chimed in, “Boys, if we don’t win, I’m trading you all for a crate of Kingfisher.”

It’s the kind of banter that *Ted Lasso* nails perfectly. I can almost hear Ted, with his folksy charm, saying, “You know, fellas, be a goldfish. Forget the bad plays and move on.” That’s what our bus rides were—moments to forget the daily grind, to laugh, strategize, and dream about life beyond the refinery. We talked about the game, sure, but also about girls, politics, and whether we’d ever afford a car that didn’t sound like a dying buffalo. It was our version of Ted’s “Believe” sign—our shared faith in each other, no matter the scoreline.

### The Phukan Fiasco: A Jailbreak with a Side of Giggles
The tournament itself was a blast—matches against Oil India in Duliajan, Assam Oil Company in Digboi, and ONGC in Sibsagar. But the real story? Our striker Phukan’s legendary bender after the Digboi match. The man celebrated our draw with Assam Oil like we’d won the World Cup, downing enough local hooch to sink a small ship. Next thing we know, he’s cooling his heels in a Digboi police station for “disturbing the peace” (read: singing off-key Assamese folk songs at 2 a.m.). 

The morning after, the whole team piled into the station to spring him. The scene was straight out of a comedy sketch. The officer, a stern type with a mustache that could star in its own movie, glared at us. “Your friend thinks he’s Lata Mangeshkar,” he grumbled. Rebo, quick as ever, piped up, “Sir, if Phukan’s singing is a crime, you should arrest his barber too—that haircut’s a felony!” Even the cop cracked a smile. Bhakta, ever the diplomat, slipped in, “Sir, he’s our best striker. If you keep him, we’ll lose to ONGC, and that’s a bigger crime.” After some groveling (and a small “fine” that suspiciously resembled a bribe), Phukan was free, looking like a scolded puppy but grinning by the time we got back to the bus. Ted Lasso would’ve loved it—his line, “There’s two buttons I never like to hit: panic and snooze,” could’ve been our motto that day.

### Amsterdam Adventures: Ted Lasso Meets My Red Light Rambles
Fast forward to 2002, I’m in Amsterdam for work, tagging along with my buddy Surender Wahi. Watching *Ted Lasso*’s Amsterdam episode—where the team scatters for a night of self-discovery—took me right back. Surender and I, like a pair of clueless Roy Kents, stumbled into a gay bar by accident. The bartender, spotting our confusion, winked and said, “First time? Don’t worry, you’re not *that* cute.” We laughed, stayed for a drink, and moved on to a bar where the air was, let’s say, *herbally enhanced*. Then came the red-light district, a tourist magnet where call girls posed in glowing balconies like living postcards. It was surreal, like stepping into a movie set. My second trip to Amsterdam was quieter—strolling along the canals, soaking in the city’s charm, much like Ted’s reflective moments by the water. 

*Ted Lasso*’s Amsterdam adventure, with its pillow fights and Jamie Tartt’s canal cruise, captures that same mix of chaos and clarity. Ted’s gem, “I think it’s the lack of hope that comes and gets you,” resonates here. Whether it was navigating Amsterdam’s wild side or surviving Phukan’s jailbreak, it’s the hope—of a good game, a good night, a good life—that keeps you going.

### Why Ted Lasso Hits Home
*Ted Lasso* isn’t just about soccer; it’s about the messy, human moments that make life worth living. My Gauhati Refinery days were no different. We weren’t just chasing a ball; we were chasing connection, purpose, and a few laughs along the way. The show’s wisdom—lines like “Be curious, not judgmental” or “You beating yourself up is like Woody Allen playing the clarinet: I don’t want to hear it”—echoes the lessons we learned on those bus rides and dusty pitches. We didn’t have a Coach Lasso, but we had Amanullah’s quiet leadership, Rebo’s wisecracks, and Phukan’s ability to turn a match into a misadventure.

The show’s relatability is its magic. Whether it’s Ted’s relentless optimism or Roy Kent’s grumpy heart of gold, you see yourself in the characters. My team’s bus rides, Phukan’s jailbreak, and my Amsterdam escapades—they’re all *Ted Lasso* moments, full of heart, humor, and the kind of stories you tell for decades. As Ted says, “If you’re with the right folks, you can handle whatever comes your way.” That was us in ‘65, and it’s why *Ted Lasso* feels like a love letter to those days.

**Footnote on Ted Lasso**: *Ted Lasso* is an Apple TV+ series (2020–2023) created by Jason Sudeikis, Bill Lawrence, Brendan Hunt, and Joe Kelly. It follows Ted Lasso, an American football coach hired to manage a struggling English Premier League soccer team, AFC Richmond, despite knowing little about the sport. Through three seasons, the show blends humor, heart, and life lessons, earning critical acclaim (including 13 Emmy Awards) for its writing, performances, and themes of optimism, teamwork, and personal growth. It’s less about soccer and more about the human connections that make any team—on or off the pitch—unstoppable.




TAGLINE (Ted's voiceover as credits roll):

"In football as in life — it's not just about scoring goals. It’s about showing up, passing the ball, and sometimes… drinking tea you don’t even like, just to say you tried."


Thursday, July 17, 2025

वो शाम

ब्लॉग शीर्षक: वो शाम...
✍️ लेखक: एस. एन. रॉय


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"वो शाम कुछ अजीब थी..."
हर बार जब ये गाना बजता है, दिल में एक गुदगुदी सी होती है। जैसे किसी ने पुरानी रील चला दी हो – कभी रंगीन, कभी ब्लैक एंड व्हाइट, लेकिन हमेशा दिल के बेहद करीब।

बात सिर्फ गाने की नहीं है, किशोर दा की आवाज़ जैसे दिल की नसों में उतरती है। कभी किसी सुंदर दृश्य को देखकर – झील का शांत पानी, हल्की गुलाबी शाम, चाय की प्याली और पत्नी की नाराज़गी (जो हर शाम के साथ फ्री में मिलती है) – तो लगता है, बस यही है जीवन। फिर वही गाना... वो शाम कुछ अजीब थी...

लेकिन जनाब, ये गाना सिर्फ खुशी में नहीं बजता।
कई बार ऐसा भी होता है जब कोई वजह नहीं होती उदासी की – फिर भी मन भारी-भारी सा रहता है। शायद शरीर के अंदर के केमिकल्स कोई सीक्रेट पार्टी कर रहे होते हैं – डोपामिन ने छुट्टी ले ली हो, सेरोटोनिन रूठ गया हो, और कोर्टिसोल ने पूरा मंच संभाल लिया हो। तब ये गाना खुद ब खुद मन में गूंजने लगता है।


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नॉस्टैल्जिया – इस उम्र की एसी!

अब 80 की उम्र में, जबकि घुटनों की 'ग्रेजुएट डिग्री' पूरी हो चुकी है, और नींद 3 घंटे की 'मिनी सीरीज' बन चुकी है, नॉस्टैल्जिया ही एकमात्र Netflix है जो बिना सब्सक्रिप्शन चलता है।

कभी-कभी जब सुबह अख़बार लेकर आता हूँ (हां, अब भी आता है – डिजिटल युग में ये एक ‘पुरातन गौरव’ है), तो याद आता है – तब के अख़बार में खबर होती थी, अब बस विज्ञापन और अपराध!


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हास्य भी जरूरी है, वरना शाम अजीब से भी अजीब हो जाएगी

पत्नी पूछती हैं – “इतना उदास क्यों हो?”
मैं कहता हूँ – “कुछ नहीं, बस वो शाम याद आ गई।”
वो मुस्कराकर कहती हैं – “तब की शाम याद कर रहे हो या तब की शमा?”
अब क्या जवाब दूं? बस मुस्कराकर नींबू पानी का घूंट लेता हूँ। वो भी अब चाय की जगह ले रहा है – डॉक्टर साहब की सख़्त हिदायत पर।


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शाम और जीवन – दोनों अब धीमे हैं

अब शाम 6 बजे का मतलब पहले जैसा नहीं है। पहले यही वक्त होता था छत पर टहलने, बच्चों के शोर-शराबे, पतंगबाज़ी और गली क्रिकेट का। अब शाम होती है WhatsApp यूनिवर्सिटी की पोस्ट पढ़कर और रिमोट खोजते हुए।

और जब टीवी से भी मन ऊब जाए, तब मन फिर उसी धुन पर लौटता है –
"वो शाम कुछ अजीब थी, ये शाम भी अजीब है..."
पर अब हम अजीब को अपनाने लगे हैं।


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अंत में – वो शाम, हर शाम में है

हर उम्र की अपनी ‘वो शाम’ होती है।
कभी कॉलेज की कैंटीन में, कभी स्टेशन के प्लेटफार्म पर किसी को अलविदा कहते हुए,
कभी नौकरी के पहले दिन, तो कभी रिटायरमेंट की आखिरी मीटिंग में।
हर बार कुछ अधूरा, कुछ पूरा... और दिल से निकला एक ही सुर – "वो शाम..."


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नोट: अगर अगली बार कोई आपको उदास देखे और पूछे "क्या हुआ?" तो बस मुस्करा दीजिए और कहिए –
"कुछ नहीं, बस... वो शाम याद आ गई..."

🕯️🎶


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Monday, July 14, 2025

ভরা থাক

ভরা থাক, ভরা থাক... স্মৃতিসুধায় বিদায়ের পাত্রখানি

এই গানটা যখন প্রথম শুনি, তখন ঠিক যেন কোথা থেকে এসে আমার ভেতরটায় ঢুকে পড়ে। মনে আছে, ১৯৯৭ সালের কথা। আমাদের সহকর্মী দীপকের বিদায় সংবর্ধনা চলছিল অফিসে। বিদায়ের মুহূর্ত এমনিতেই একটু গুমোট হয়ে থাকে। হাসি-মজার আড়ালে কোথাও একটা হালকা বিষাদের সুর লুকিয়ে থাকে।

কিন্তু সেদিন, দীপক হঠাৎ গেয়ে উঠল—"ভরা থাক, ভরা থাক স্মৃতিসুধায় বিদায়ের পাত্রখানি..."

আমার মনে হয়, ওই মুহূর্তেই গানটা আমার নিজের হয়ে গেল। দীপকের গলার মধ্যে কোনো পেশাদারি ছিল না, তবুও যেন একরাশ আবেগ আর আন্তরিকতা মিশে গিয়েছিল। ওর কণ্ঠে গানটার যে আবেদন ছিল, সেটা নিখুঁত গায়ন দিয়ে বোঝানো যাবে না। সেটা ছিল হৃদয়ের সুর।

সেই গানটা যেন বলছিল—বিদায় মানেই ফাঁকা কিছু নয়, বরং যা কিছু পেয়েছি সেইসব স্মৃতির সুধায় ওই শূন্যতা ভরে তোলাই তো আসল উদ্দেশ্য। গানটা যেন অনুরোধ করছিল, “চলে যাচ্ছি ঠিকই, কিন্তু মনে রাখিস, সময়টুকু যেন ফেলে দিস না… সেটা যেন ভালোবাসা আর স্নেহে ভরে থাকে।”

সেদিন অফিস থেকে ফেরার পথে, গড়িয়াহাটে গিয়ে কিনে ফেললাম দেবব্রত বিশ্বাসের রবীন্দ্রসঙ্গীতের একটা ক্যাসেট। খুব ইচ্ছা ছিল আবার শুনব ওই গানটা—শুধু শ্রুতির জন্য নয়, অনুভবের জন্য।

আজও মাঝে মাঝে গানটা শুনি। বয়সের সঙ্গে সঙ্গে জীবনের অভিজ্ঞতা বাড়ে, জায়গা পাল্টায়, মানুষ আসে যায়, কিন্তু এই গানটা থেকে যায়, একইরকম ভাবে। বারবার মনে করিয়ে দেয়—জীবনে পাওয়া-না-পাওয়ার হিসেবের বাইরে, কিছু মুহূর্তই আসলে আমাদের ভেতরটা ভরিয়ে দেয়।

এখন যখন গানটা শুনি, একা বসে, চোখ বন্ধ করে—তখন মনে হয়, জীবনের এতগুলো বছর পেরিয়ে এসেও কিছু কথা ঠিক আগের মতোই সত্যি।
"ভরা থাক, ভরা থাক..."—এই লাইনটা যেন নিজের মনকেই বোঝানো, যেন নিজেকে বলা—সব কিছু হয়তো রোজ পাওয়া যাবে না, কিন্তু হৃদয়টা যেন খালি না হয়।

এখন বুঝি, গানটা সেদিন শুধু দীপকের বিদায়ের গান ছিল না। সেটাও ছিল, কিন্তু তার বাইরেও এটা ছিল একটা জীবনদর্শন। যেকোনো বিচ্ছেদ, যেকোনো সমাপ্তি—তা ব্যক্তিগত হোক বা পেশাগত—তাকে যদি আমরা স্মৃতির সুধায় ভরতে পারি, তাহলে শূন্যতা আর নিঃসঙ্গতা কিছুটা হলেও সান্ত্বনা পায়।

আমরা সবাই চুপিচুপি এমন কিছু রেখে যেতে চাই যা আমাদের চলে যাওয়ার পরেও থেকে যাবে। হয়তো কেউ মনে করে বলবে, “ওর সঙ্গে কাটানো দিনগুলো ভুলব না…” সেই বাক্যটাই তো আসল সার্থকতা।

আর তাই আজও, বিদায় বলার সময় মনে মনে গেয়ে ফেলি—
"ভরা থাক, ভরা থাক স্মৃতিসুধায় বিদায়ের পাত্রখানি..."

সমরেন্দ্র নাথ রায়


Friday, July 11, 2025

Golfer, Ghosts & Glamour – A Changi Confession



🎬 Golfer, Ghosts & Glamour – A Changi Confession

Changi Airport, Singapore — the unofficial United Nations of layovers. I was marooned at Gate C34 thanks to a mysterious "technical delay" that airlines announce with the same expression you'd use for a missing umbrella. My wife, Madhuri, had drifted away into the glittery forest of duty-free stores. Perfume testers, scarves, ceramic mugs—anything but what we actually needed.

I settled down with a kopi o kosong and opened my Desh magazine. That’s when he entered my life—like a character in one of my short stories who doesn't knock, just appears and makes the story move.

A slim young man with a disheveled man-bun, red-rimmed glasses, and a T-shirt that read “Make Cinema, Not Excuses” flopped beside me with dramatic exhaustion. He held a Starbucks cup and a laptop covered with festival stickers like Dhaka Shorts ’22 and Cannes Rejects Anonymous.

“Bengali, sir?” he asked, eyeing the Desh.

I nodded. He smiled. And with that, my peaceful layover morphed into a pitch meeting.


🎥 Dipak the Dreamer

His name was Dipak, but he preferred “D. Sen.”

“Short, punchy, like Ray or Nolan,” he said. “You must become a brand, sir, before the world gives you a budget.”

He was returning from Singapore, triumphantly clasping a verbal promise of ₹20 lakhs from two IT engineers with deep pockets and shallow cinema knowledge.

“Once I have 40, I start shooting,” he beamed. “It’s a noir-thriller. Bit of ghost, bit of revenge, social commentary woven in. Set in Kolkata. Very rain-washed. Monochrome filters. And one slow Rabindra Sangeet track played on saxophone.”

He spoke like he was already walking the red carpet.

I felt the itch, that secret fantasy of mine—that one of my short stories would one day leap onto the silver screen. I casually mentioned I’d written a few.

He pounced.

“Sir! Let me use one of them. As a flashback. A pivotal incident! I’ll montage it like Nolan but rooted. Grounded. Bengali.”

I leaned in. “If I pitch in with ₹5 lakhs, what do I get?”

He looked around dramatically and whispered like a man offering a banned substance.

“If your funds are a little… ahem… grey, we’ll return it shiny and white. Also, I’ll cast you. Or better—your whole golf group! I'll write a golf scene into the script. Like Srijit did in Zulfiqar.”


🎬 Bengali Bollywood Budgeting

I was curious.

“Hero? Heroine? Who’s acting in this?”

He sipped his latte. “Sir, these days heroes pay to become heroes. I know a couple of rich Bengali kids with six-packs and no jobs.”

“Heroine?”

“Modeling girls. Very camera-friendly. Also pitching in.”

“Character actors?”

“Faded TV stars. 2,000–3,000 rupees per day. They just want work and fish cutlets.”

“Crew? Lights? Sound? Editing?”

He shrugged, smiling. “Sir, the industry’s starving. Crews are sitting idle. You offer chai and a meal, they’ll shoot a dream sequence at midnight.”

“And special effects?”

“I’ve got a friend in Bangalore. IT guy. Worked on a Hollywood VFX project. He made a pigeon explode for a Malayalam movie. He’ll help with my ghost golf ball.”


🦸 Then Came Malegaon

I raised an eyebrow. “You sound confident. But do you really think people will watch this?”

He lit up. “Sir! Have you seen Supermen of Malegaon?”

“Of course! Those Malegaon boys made a Superman parody using bamboo sticks and dupattas.”

He slapped the table with joy, almost spilling his coffee.

“Exactly, sir! No training, no studio, no nothing—just dreams. They made magic with mosquito nets and car horns. If they could make people laugh and cry with one lakh, then why can’t I make a noir ghost thriller with forty?”

He leaned in like a director giving a final shot instruction:
“Sir, Malegaon gave us hope. I have WiFi, passion, and a VFX guy. What else do I need?”

I said, “Luck. And maybe another ₹15 lakhs.”

He nodded solemnly. “That too.”


🧳 Back to Reality

Just then, Madhuri returned with a bag of suspiciously expensive Singaporean biscuits and that all-knowing look wives carry like a handbag.

“Who’s this?” she asked.

“Just someone I met,” I said coolly. “He was explaining GST.”

She squinted. Dipak faded away like a skilled junior artist, blending into the crowd near the noodle counter.


🕳️ Epilogue: Or Was It a Prologue?

Back home, a WhatsApp popped up from an unknown number: a digital poster that read:

🎬 Ghorer Bhut Golf Khele
A noir thriller by D. Sen
Starring Raja Roy as “The Swinging Spirit”
Coming soon (pending funding)

I showed it to my golfing buddies—Jaggi, Sikka, Paul. They laughed for five minutes straight. Then Paul leaned over and said,

“Oye Roy, you think they’ll cast me as the caddy ghost if I pitch in ten lakhs?”

Ah, cinema dreams. Once it bites, even spirits start queuing for auditions.

Monday, July 07, 2025

From Flat White to Flat Cushions: Musings from Australia While Missing Kolkata



“From Flat Whites to Flat Cushions: Musings from Australia While Missing Kolkata


My IIT batchmate Himanshu, always the practical voice of reason, reminded me recently: “Enjoy the pollution-free air and blue sky of Australia while you can—once you return to Kolkata, it’ll be muggy skies and auto exhaust.”
That comment stuck with me.
And so, instead of getting offended, I got inspired. I sat down with a flat white in hand, stared out at the impossibly blue Queensland sky—and penned this little tribute to the chaos I love, the mess I miss, and the madness that makes Kolkata feel like home.


It’s 7:15 a.m. in Upper Coomera, Australia. The kookaburras are laughing outside my window, the sky is perfectly blue, the traffic is polite, and the air smells faintly of eucalyptus and organic floor cleaner.

And me?
I’m sitting on a Scandinavian-designed ergonomic chair with lumbar support, sipping a flat white, and missing my old, rusty bed in Kolkata like it’s a long-lost friend.

Not the memory foam mattress here that judges me for every turn—but my creaky, no-nonsense wooden bed with a hump in the middle. The kind that doubles up as a musical instrument when you shift position. You don’t sleep on that bed—you negotiate.

And oh, my high-cushioned sofa, positioned like a throne in front of the TV back home. The kind of sofa that swallows you whole, along with any plans of being productive. It's probably still bearing the exact imprint of my body, slightly concave, slightly wise.

I miss my worn-out clothes—those once-black now-gray T-shirts that have retired from public service and live full-time in my cupboard. They smell faintly of naphthalene, childhood, and a vague trace of aftershave from the 90s.

Out here, every third person looks like they’ve stepped out of a wellness brochure. Back in Kolkata, my neighbourhood uncle in a faded banyan and lungi still commands more respect than a CEO in Crocs.

And yes, let me not forget the sky.

Out here in Australia, the sky is blue. Not metaphorically—actually blue.
It’s unsettling.
In Kolkata, the sky has character. Layers. Drama. Suspense. A mysterious greyish hue that changes based on how many autos, bikes, and unlicensed buses have passed in the last ten minutes.

The sounds—I miss those too.
The soundscape of Kolkata isn’t just noise. It’s a symphony of survival.

A sharp horn, a shouted “O Dada!”, the soulful wheeze of a rickety rickshaw, a sudden “Inquilab Zindabad!” from a protest procession, and somewhere in the distance, a vendor’s “Dimpoooriiiii!” stretching longer than an autorickshaw’s brake line.

And then there’s the smell—oh, the smell. Not eucalyptus and lavender-scented laundry. No sir.
I mean the shifting aroma kaleidoscope that is Kolkata.
Step out and it begins: car exhaust, old newspaper ink, then suddenly—a whiff of frying fish or someone’s magical chicken roll in progress.
Walk ten steps further and it's someone brewing coffee in an ancient steel kettle with dents that have witnessed history.

Out here, people walk by in silence, holding hands like elegant wallpaper ads.
And then, I see a couple doing the same in Kolkata! On a footpath! In the chaos! I smile.
Maybe we aren’t that different after all.
But yes, every single one of them is looking down at a mobile phone.
That’s one thing humanity has agreed on, like gravity.

Of course, I miss my adda.
Those long, entirely pointless, extremely essential conversations at Tolly Club, with Sikka, Anantada and Jaggi over sada dosa and cappuccino after a round of golf. We never solved world hunger or climate change, but we certainly discussed it, between bites.

I miss my walks around the lake, bumping into Ashok Ghose or Santanu Sur, exchanging two-line conversations about rain, politics, or cricket—followed by warm smiles and tiny nods that said, “We’ve seen things, haven’t we?” or listening to Ashok Ghose ' s soulful vouce " woh sham kuch ajeeb thi... ".

Back in Kolkata, I go to office—not just to work, but to pass on what I know to the juniors, while sneakily learning what's new from them. It’s a fair exchange. They get war stories, I get WhatsApp tips.

And let’s not forget my housing society.
Where fixing a water pump is a crisis worthy of national news, and keeping the old lift running requires the diplomacy of the UN, the patience of Gandhi, and the electrical knowledge of Tesla.
But it works. Somehow. Through jugaad, prayers, and the magic touch of Ramesh, our part-time electrician, full-time philosopher.

And then there's Maa’s Kitchen.

Ah, that glorious mess of flavors, smells, and raised voices. Where every table is a theatre stage and every waiter deserves an honorary psychology degree. Where I once sat, quietly enjoying my kosha mangsho, and watched the Chatterjee family wage war over chili chicken vs. ilish bhapa, while Bapi the bearer scribbled down everyone’s conflicting orders like he was decoding a treasure map.

Maa’s Kitchen, with its wobbling fan, peeling cinema posters, and menu older than some ministers, is still my favorite restaurant in the world.

Not because of the food alone—but because it is noisy, chaotic, alive.

Just like Kolkata.
Just like home.

And so, as I look out this morning across the manicured lawns, watching another kangaroo hop past like it’s late for a meeting, I remind myself:
Next week, I fly back.
Back to my messy, magical, magnificent city,
where the dosa is crisp, the beds squeak, the roads yell, and the heart is always full

Sunday, July 06, 2025

Tandoori Time Travel From Panipat to Australia




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“Tandoori Time Travel: From Panipat to Australia, One Chicken Leg at a Time”

“Baba, it’s your last Saturday in Australia. What do you want for dinner?”
That question came from my son Anish—IT-enabled solar power expert by profession, but at heart, a five-star chef disguised in an apron with attitude.

I didn’t blink. “Tandoori Chicken. The one you make on that contraption that looks like a barbecue but behaves like a Vedic yajna setup.”
And so it began: marination, skewering, that sizzle, the aroma wafting like an old friend tiptoeing back into memory.
I poured myself a glass of rum with hot water, settled into the chair under the Australian sky—blue, smug, and mosquito-free—and took a bite.

And that’s when it hit me.

Boom! 1978. Panipat. BHEL.
I’m in my 30s again. Back from Indian Oil Corporation, full of voltage and vision, posted to commission the 2×110 MW thermal power station of Haryana Electricity Board.
We lived in Panipat New Township—a dusty, dreamy setup where the tea was strong, the gossips stronger, and the fans turned even when the power didn’t.

But Saturdays, ah… those were sacred.

Every Saturday evening was booze night. Not a party. Not a get-together. It was an institution, complete with standard operating procedure, democratically run by our friend Late Gurdeep Singh—the only bachelor among us.
Gurdeep was our self-declared bartender, chef, treasurer, DJ (without any music), and emotional counsellor—depending on how far along the Old Tavern you were.

Our group had Late Kandaswamy—a gentle, wise Tamilian whose whisky intake was directly proportional to his storytelling in broken Hindi;
Lenin—yes, that was his real name, and no, he was not remotely Marxist in drinking habits;
And then, of course, me—the only member who brought along a 4-year-old assistant named Anish, tucked under one arm like a lunchbox.

The protocol was simple:

₹50 per head.

₹10 if you’re under 4 feet and eating only the chicken.

No questions asked.

Gurdeep does everything.
We called it: “Give 50 bucks to Gurdeep and forget about it.”
And honestly, we did. Gurdeep never disappointed.


The menu? Unchanging:

Rosy Pelican beer in the summers (₹5 a bottle—cheaper than peanuts today).

Old Tavern or any other Solan-based sorcery in winter.

Tandoori chicken, ₹5 per whole, marinated in turmeric, red chili, lemon, and mild anxiety about salmonella.


The setting: folding chairs, a cracked transistor blaring Lata Mangeshkar, and one mosquito coil valiantly losing to the entire insect population of Haryana.

Anish, all of four, would gobble tandoori chicken with alarming professionalism. He would sit by my side  with a leg piece in one hand and throw in the occasional one-liner, which, frankly, had more bite than the chicken.

“Uncle Lenin,” he once said, “why are you laughing when your glass is empty?”
Or, “Baba, why is that chicken leg on Gurdeep Uncle’s head?”
Gurdeep didn’t flinch. He always said, “Beta, tension mat lo. This is called garnishing.”

We’d talk shop—
—how to commission the turbine without tripping the generator;
—how Shamnani, our short-tempered Site Incharge, could reach 400°C before the boiler did;
—how Manocha, the self-declared welding guru, once corrected a welder’s angle with a scale and then blamed the welder when it cracked;
—how the Ranga-Billa case had everyone scared, though we couldn’t tell if we were more afraid of them or of the canteen's mutton curry.

Sometimes, we just sat quietly, watching Gurdeep dance around the tandoor like a kathakali artist with a skewer.

One night, when the beer count crossed into double digits, Kandaswamy solemnly declared, “We must all buy shares in Gurdeep.”
We laughed for ten minutes.
Next morning, Gurdeep increased chicken prices to ₹6 and blamed it on inflation.

That was life.
No swiping, no scrolling, just chicken, banter, and bonding.

And now, back in Australia, Anish placed a steaming plate of tandoori chicken in front of me—red, smoky, glistening.
I took a bite. Tender, perfectly spiced, crisp at the edges.

And suddenly—he was four again, licking his fingers.
Gurdeep was yelling, “Bas karo yaar! Only two legs per person!”
Lenin was laughing at nothing, and I was 30, full of dreams and chicken grease.


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Maybe you do fly across the world.
Maybe life gives you solar panels and sky-high airfares.
But one tandoori bite, and you’re right back to ₹50 evenings, folding chairs, and friends who never left.

Cheers to rum, chicken, and memory circuits that never trip.


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Wednesday, July 02, 2025

Despatch from Australia



“Another Raj Incident?” – Musings on Desis Down Under
By S. N. Roy


Every time I return to Australia, I notice that the Indian footprint has grown — not just in size, but in visibility. You see it in the long queues at Indian grocery shops, the aroma of sambhar mixing with sarson da saag, and of course, in the unmistakable presence of Indian accents at every second corner. But this year, something stood out more than usual.

The desi presence has become… tactile. Trolleys pushed at Coles? Indian. Garbage bins wheeled in rhythm? Indian. Car washes with bhangra beats in the background? Also Indian.

But the intrigue truly began with Piyush.

The Curious Case of Mr. Piyush

One afternoon, while my wife went veggie shopping, I sat peacefully with my cappuccino — a habit I’ve developed to help caffeine and curiosity coexist. Behind me, two men were speaking in Hindi. Naturally, I turned. (At my age, subtlety is optional.)

One was a Nepali, who’s been manning the veggie shelves for ten years. The other was pushing a garbage bin with such precision, you'd think he had a GPS installed in his shoes.

I struck up a chat.

How many days in Australia?” I asked.

He laughed, “Not days, uncle. Thirty years.

What’s your name?

Piyush.

A twinkle appeared in my eye. “Then your surname must be… Goyal! Like the cabinet minister?

He roared with laughter and said, “Nahi uncle, main sirf bin minister hoon.

I must admit, the resemblance to Tamil comedian Yogi Babu in the recent hit film Ace added to the fun. In that film, Yogi plays a garbage collector in Kuala Lumpur with hidden wisdom and sharp wit. Just like this Piyush — perhaps a philosopher in fluorescent overalls.

Jatland Down Under: The Gaddi Files

Later that week, we made friends with the Gaddis — a jovial Punjabi couple. Mr. Gaddi is a retired Military Engineering Services officer, full of old war stories, loud laughs, and louder opinions. Their son, an IT engineer, now works from home and owns a neat unit in Upper Coomera. He codes by day and barbecues by evening — all made possible partly by Mr. Gaddi’s retirement fund and completely by Mrs. Gaddi’s aloo parathas.

The Gaddis, like many Indian families here, have blended in comfortably. They represent the rare, balanced migratory tale — where roots are intact and routes are smart.

The Silent Lives of Many

But not everyone has it this smooth. Many youngsters from Punjab, Haryana, and even Nepal land up here via student visas or migration consultancies. Their parents, mostly prosperous farmers or traders, fund these journeys — ₹30–40 lakhs, with hopes pinned like medals on their chests.

The destination? Australia.

The reality? Driving Uber, pushing trolleys, stacking shelves.

Now, there’s no shame in honest labour. In fact, a garbage collector here earns more respect (and dollars) than an average office clerk in India. But one wonders — did they migrate for this, or was the dream lost somewhere at a red light?

Social media often mocks Indian truck drivers here with the slang “Another Raj incident” when accidents happen. It’s a bit racist, yes — but also a reminder that integration is still incomplete. Their English needs polish, civic behaviour some guidance — but their intent is pure and their backs strong.

Library, Walks, and Rebus

Meanwhile, I’ve found my own rhythm in Upper Coomera — staying mostly with our son’s family. Every morning, my wife and I take our walk to the community centre, 1.5 kilometres away. It's our ritual. There, at the library, we meet people from all over the world — Chinese grandmothers, South African toddlers, European retirees. But strangely, never any Indians. Perhaps they are too busy coding, cleaning, or driving trucks.

As for me, the library is my temple. Books are my prayers.

The last one I read was The Final Curtain by Keigo Higashino — a subtle, suspenseful farewell. Now I’m engrossed in Midnight and Blue by Ian Rankin. I’ve always been a fan of Inspector Rebus — the only detective who can out-stubborn a Scotchman and out-think a whisky.

I often joke that books are keeping me alive — they engage the mind, stir the soul, and politely ignore my aging knees. While others count calories or steps, I count chapters.

Final Thoughts

Australia is a kaleidoscope of cultures — where dreams meet dustbins and destinies collide at coffee shops. Whether it’s Piyush the garbage collector or Mr. Gaddi’s son in IT, each has a story, a struggle, and a smile.

As for me, I’ll keep sipping my cappuccino, keep reading my books, and keep writing my thoughts — because as long as there are stories, life refuses to retire.

– S. N. Roy
Upper Coomera, July 2025