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I wandered through the streets of my past, Each building telling a story of my childhood. The shop there, with maximum customers, I remember going there, Standing for hours, not able to out voice others, Just to buy a petty thing! Beyond it was a shop, To say it a 'shop' would be too much in its praise. Just a raised cemented platform. A man there, sold cold drinks, different flavors. Don't remember if it still exists. But there is a clear picture of the man who sat on road, Beneath the shop. He sold ice, and I was his regular customer, Until we bought a fridge. Oh! How much I used to admire looking at the ice block unloading from the mini truck. Moving further, there is a shop, With usual hustle bustle. I could see the owner as young as I saw him eleven years before. There is my father, sitting at the corner eating the gujiya, while talking to him. My father looks at me and smiles. I move in the shop, He hands me a ten rupee note. It was getting dark and I had to leave, I walked towards my old house, Thinking that I would go back with my brothers and sisters. No fascination was left for the house that treasured so many memories. My brothers and sisters were leaving for home. I stopped them, asking to take me along. They refused, saying, 'There is no place for another.' I saw them receding into the dark. I decided to walk back home. The road was peculiarly solitary. The weather was cold and it had started to snow. I trudged on, but cold had numbed my senses. Feeling dizzy, I lost my balance. But someone caught me. Wrapping me in his warm arms. He held immense radiance, Like the omnipresent. As I passed away thinking that there wasn't any tomorrow, I heard him say,'I will always be there for you.'
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Apr 14, 2019
Apr 14, 2019 at 2:22 PM UTC
Lost and found
I wandered through the streets of my past, Each building telling a story of my childhood. The shop there, with maximum customers, I remember going there, Standing for hours, not able to out voice others, Just to buy a petty thing! Beyond it was a shop, To say it a 'shop' would be too much in its praise. Just a raised cemented platform. A man there, sold cold drinks, different flavors. Don't remember if it still exists. But there is a clear picture of the man who sat on road, Beneath the shop. He sold ice, and I was his regular customer, Until we bought a fridge. Oh! How much I used to admire looking at the ice block unloading from the mini truck. Moving further, there is a shop, With usual hustle bustle. I could see the owner as young as I saw him eleven years before. There is my father, sitting at the corner eating the gujiya, while talking to him. My father looks at me and smiles. I move in the shop, He hands me a ten rupee note. It was getting dark and I had to leave, I walked towards my old house, Thinking that I would go back with my brothers and sisters. No fascination was left for the house that treasured so many memories. My brothers and sisters were leaving for home. I stopped them, asking to take me along. They refused, saying, 'There is no place for another.' I saw them receding into the dark. I decided to walk back home. The road was peculiarly solitary. The weather was cold and it had started to snow. I trudged on, but cold had numbed my senses. Feeling dizzy, I lost my balance. But someone caught me. Wrapping me in his warm arms. He held immense radiance, Like the omnipresent. As I passed away thinking that there wasn't any tomorrow, I heard him say,'I will always be there for you.'
We have to walk alone on the path of achieving our aim. But there is someone constantly with us.
deepali-agarwal
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Apr 14, 2019
Apr 14, 2019 at 2:22 PM UTC
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