Calcutta birthed me—
cradled not in silk but in
lazy afternoons thick with politics
and perspiring nights where every ceiling fan
sounded like a revolution too tired to speak.
The people? Laid back.
Their anger sipped slowly like red tea in clay cups—
never burnt, just brewed.
Even childhood felt like a nap with dreams too socialist
to be sold in capitalist bedtime stories.
Adolescence came with its predictable rebellion—
except, I wasn’t rebelling against Calcutta,
I was rebelling with it.
The DNA of dissent was already coded into my chromosomes.
Authority wasn’t a villain.
It was just a terribly written protagonist
we were all forced to applaud.
Literature. Cinema. Communism.
The unholy trinity.
The Bermuda Triangle where optimism goes to drown—
and boy, did I drown with style.
Reading Neruda while hating capitalism
and secretly wishing my poems sold like toothpaste ads.
Watching Ray films
and refusing to admit my real fear wasn’t poverty,
but mediocrity.
Then came Bangalore.
More than a decade now.
New language, new food, new traffic.
Same old self-loathing wrapped in quarter-life promises.
Machh bhaat made way for ghee pudi dosa,
and one fine hungover afternoon,
I discovered puliyogare like it was a Godard film
no one warned me I’d fall in love with.
I hated veg biryani at first
(because some ideologies are harder to let go than exes),
but now I even recommend it
to lost souls in office cafeterias.
Growing up is strange.
You leave behind parents
you never really chose—
only to choose partners
who carry the same red flags
in better fonts.
Cheap whiskey with peanuts at shady MG Road pubs
morphed into single malts shared in overpriced 2BHKs
where conversations felt like therapy
but weren’t covered by insurance.
You call neither place home.
But you can’t not call both, home.
From Leftist propaganda to right-swiped matches,
from believing mutton biryani was sacred,
to devouring paneer with conviction—
I’ve changed.
Not entirely.
Just enough to notice
that forgetting to change my net banking password
bothers me more now
than failing to change the world once did.
I still carry Calcutta.
Like a folded poem in my back pocket,
creases deep,
edges fraying.
I unfold it sometimes,
read it in the dark
when Bangalore’s neon grows too loud.
And the cities—
they never fight.
They coexist like twin truths,
each allergic to perfection,
each echoing the other in unexpected corners.
Because the thing about the cities we carry within—
is they never leave.
They just learn to live
in each other’s metaphors.
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