I am walking the last mile in my beloved Uniform. It has
been a wonderful journey of 26 years since I joined the National
Defence Academy in 1988. These days I drive to MDI, Gurgaon for my
Management Course. As I get into the maze of traffic, I cross the New
Delhi's Airport's 03 busy runways. Yesterday, on my return leg, I parked
my car on one side and just watched plane after plane landing into New
Delhi. On my side was a family of four who had also stopped their
2-wheeler to admire the flying machines. The glint in the eyes of the
young children and their excitement with each landing reminded me of my
tryst with air planes.
My first journey in a plane took place in 1989 when I had to rush to
New Delhi from NDA on receiving the news of my father's sudden death.
The memories are hazy as my mind was racing between rigors of 2nd Term
and the future that lay in front of me post this news. So much so that I
did not even acknowledge the passenger sitting next to me. He was also
aloof but somewhere in the flight he asked me whether I was from NDA? I
said yes to Shashi Kapoor and he told me a few details about his
association with NDA during the shooting of his movie "Vijeta". I was
engrossed in my tiredness and did not connect much with the aging movie
star. Post my stay at my hometown, I returned on a connecting
Delhi-Mumbai-Pune Indian Airlines Flight. The flight was late and the
airline put me into a hotel at Mumbai for the night halt. The next day I
was delivered at Pune and was back to NDA.
Thus began my account with the air planes. The fascination to fly is
universal amongst human beings. This invention of Wright Brothers is
infectious. After all-it has the components of speed, design and shapes
and they are all encompassed together in a composite frame. However, all
fascinations do not turn into reality. Soon, my career also took its
own shape and I contended myself with diving and surfacing Submarines
into the depths of the mighty oceans. A badge remained the common
identity with the Fly-boys. The Services gave me ample opportunity to fly
to various destinations. I flew with Pilots from the Navy, the Air
Force, the Army and Commercial Pilots from India, Germany, Russia,
France, Britain and America. The thrills of flying were at their extreme
during mid-flight emergencies and air-turbulences. I calmly sat through
a couple of engine failures on twin-engined commercial air planes and
also through an emergency landing . I witnessed the dare devilry of a
Russian Tupolev Pilot when he took off with us in a blinding weather and
also clapped with fellow Russia bound passengers as another Russian
Pilot landed his plane safely amidst a frozen Moscow. A Naval Chetak
pilot almost got my guts out with his antics over the picturesque
backwaters of Kerela. A smooth take off and landing is all that a
passenger needs.
The excited family standing next to me were counting the landings and
excitedly reading the Airliner's company name. The father and mother
were holding the hands of their chirping children. They all were
dreaming- a new future was all that ran into their minds. The mother
told her children to study hard and become big people to sit in the air
plane. The son exclaimed that he would also become a pilot. The time
stood still for me and turned around the images of the past. The country
has hopes,wishes,dreams and desires. The young generation of India
still has to travel and travel far and wide. The popular verdict
proclaims that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. We need to
traverse the tunnel-each one of us in his/her unique way. Our future has
a young dream.
I took out a few candies from my bag (you need a few shots of glucose
in 6 hour long classes at MDI) , introduced myself and handed them over
to the young children. I wished them good luck for their dreams and
started my car. As I pressed on the gas to merge with the speeding
traffic, I was clear- there is a glint of hope and I must continue on my
tryst with the destiny.
2 comments:
I have just finished reading your write-up 'The Glint of Hope'. The way you have captured your 1st airborne travel experience from Pune to Delhi was an awesome piece of work. The pleasure and pain of your first flight can be felt with ease.
I believe in the Golden Words which I read, scribbled on a huge road side rock at Rajouri (J&K):
"If you can dream it, you can achieve it"
My organization holds a tag of '16' as the magic number. Our motto goes like this :
"There is nothing that the SIXTEENTH cannot do"
I wish you good luck for the passions that you hold within your inner soul & we all know that by your writing skills,
you will leverage and generate fresh ideas into constructive reading for all readers.
Thanks !
Now this one is a masterpiece ! Superb writing
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