Mercury rises by 2 degrees in Delhi
The national capital saw a surge of 2 degrees Celsius in the minimum temperature in the past 24-hours on Monday, the weather department said.
Just as I had given up the idea of meeting anybody else on the trail, suddenly there appears a young boy, coming this way, almost rushing. As he comes close, and I am about chime a word of greeting, the person speaks, and I realize it is a young woman. She is covered in a heavy overcoat and her hair is neatly tucked in a rainbow woollen cap, but her voice is that of a woman. It is plaintive. “Excuse me, could you help me, please?”
Now is the winter of my discontent. I don’t feel quite as despondent as Shakespeare’s Richard III. Nor do I have his murderous plans. But winter, as I am experiencing it now in Washington leaves me far from content.
Most days now the temperature rises to a maximum of 4 °C and sinks to -4 °C by midnight. A cardigan will not of course do. Nor would even a well-padded parka or windcheater. You must have a combination of both to keep winter’s devilry at bay. If you are going to some event, your jacket has to have the added layer of a heavy overcoat. I dislike carrying all this load, but I have no option. This is not all when the mercury sinks further. I have to wear thermal vests and underwear and remember to put on extra-thick socks. I have to wear gloves, not the slick ones that look as elegant as the waiters’ at Ritz, but heavy gloves of the kind that loggers or drillers use.
Worst of all, since I shave my head and am vulnerable to snow and sun alike, I have to put on a cap. Since my earliest days, I have associated headgear with decrepit old men. Or at best with policemen and soldiers, for whom I hold no great admiration, thanks to my exposure to those arrogant classes in colonial India and racist USA. Yet, now when I brave an early-morning jog or a late-night carousal, the keen cold air induces me to take on a Sherlock Holmes look and cover my head.
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A generous friend has gifted me a dark French beret that I find much better than a hat or a cap. Particularly as I can fold it and put it in my pocket and not lose it in trains, libraries, or restaurants. Once dressed in all this regalia, I step out. I walk along the familiar trail to the lake nearby, large trees all around me. They are all denuded, shorn of their leaves, still royally holding their ground, and waiting for spring to bring them a green splendor. There are no ripples in the lake; the surface is iced. There is a sign warning enthusiastic skaters to stay away, for the ice layer is thin and fragile.
The sun is beginning to glint on the ice. As I walk back, I don’t see any of the regular walkers on the road. The freezing air has kept them indoors. For the easy-going like me, the elaborate robing and disrobing may also be a damper. I miss the lighthearted Hello and Good Morning that passersby throw at each other. Never mind. Bravely, I trudge along, though my heart craves for my warm living room and a steaming cup of coffee.
Just as I had given up the idea of meeting anybody else on the trail, suddenly there appears a young boy, coming this way, almost rushing. As he comes close, and I am about chime a word of greeting, the person speaks, and I realize it is a young woman. She is covered in a heavy overcoat and her hair is neatly tucked in a rainbow woollen cap, but her voice is that of a woman. It is plaintive. “Excuse me, could you help me, please?”
Apparently, she came out of her house nearby for a walk with her grandfather, and, after just a few steps, he had slipped on an ice sliver on the road and fallen flat on his back. It had rained the night before, and during the nightly drop in temperature some remaining water on the road had frozen into ice patches. Her grandfather could not get up by himself, and she could not pull him up. She needed help and needed it quickly before the cold got the better of the old man. We rushed to the spot.
Fortunately, grandpa hadn’t hurt his head or broken a bone. Unfortunately, he wasn’t easy to lift, for he was a corpulent man. I am no Samson and weightlifting is not my strong point. Anna, the granddaughter, and I manoeuvred to get him to sitting upright on the road, and now lay the tougher job of getting him to stand. Anna was too small to help much. After a number of false starts, I was finally able to heave grandpa to his feet. But he seemed too uncertain on his feet without any support. There was no option but to put his heavy right arm on my shoulder, grab his waist and slowly inch our way to their home.
It wasn’t far, but making it was still a near thing. When I dropped him on a sofa in their drawing room, I sighed with relief and prepared to leave. But grandpa would have none of it. He thanked me extravagantly and went to the hyperbolical length of declaring that I had saved his life. I suggested that he should have himself checked by a doctor if he felt any serious pain after a few hours. In return he suggested that I should stay back and have a cup of tea with him.
Anna had taken off her heavy coat and cap and quickly produced a very welcome cup of tea. As I was sipping my tea, I noticed in the corner of the room a wooden box with sets of small iron bars of varying weight. I asked Anna if she did exercises with the iron weights. “Not me,” said Anna, “Grandpa uses them sometimes. He likes to train. You see, he used to be a champion weightlifter.” I resisted the temptation to claim that I was the greater champion, for having lifted his weighty frame without any training at all.
(The writer is a US-based international development advisor and had worked with the World Bank. He can be reached at mnandy@gmail.com)
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