Saturday, December 27, 2025

Till The Great Tilkut Diwas

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The recent stream of forwards on WhatsCrapp exhorting us to replace the old holly jolly tree this winter solstice is in full flow. As long as we are open to such ideas, I propose another one that is close to many of our hearts. I am speaking of tilkut, of course... something that never did ask for attention ever. The one and only tilkut. It doesn't need a viral campaign. It once used to arrive in our home quietly, fresh from the most famous halwaai dukan in Upper Bazar. It occupied a special place on the table, wrapped in old newspaper, tied with a thin sutli (string). It arrived like some underground legend, a long-lost relative every winter. 

For the uninitiated, real tilkut is that deceptively simple roundish slab about the size of your palm. It's a disk of roasted sesame seed (til) pounded (kut) into perfection. Always molded with gur (jaggery). We won't talk about the other abomination, its sinful, faux cousin, that slick, stylish mockery with sugar. It is thicker at the edges, shaped like a donut, wholesome without a hole. The outer edge protects the fragile, thinner middle section. It looks like it was designed following divine inspiration by someone who said, “What if... we made something humble… but supremely powerful?” One bite in, and suddenly your teeth are questioning your life choices and your dentist starts planning his next beach vacation with his projected earnings. You don't care if your hands are sticky, your knees weak and your legs are shaky. Your brain is flooded with warmth of grandma's hugs. Your ancestors are nodding in approval from several centuries ago.

Tilkut... doesn't care about trends. It has survived generations without being “reinvented,” “deconstructed,” or turned into a pumpkin spice latte tilkut milkshake by some corporate cucina. No east-west fusion, no north-south confusion. It shows up every winter like clockwork around Makar Sankranti and says, “I’m here. You know what to do.” And you do. You always did.

Which is exactly why the mighty tilkut deserves its own The Great Tilkut Diwas. A full day for the weak and the meek. A full week for the old and the bold. National holiday. Schools closed. Offices on half-day mode. Conversations start with “Tilkut?" and end with friendly arguments that sometimes would turn emotional. A day where we collectively acknowledge that no fancy dessert has ever matched the raw confidence of toasted sesame seeds pounded together by jaggery into rounded determination. Tilkut over Tiramisu. Tilkut รผber alles Trifles.

Tilkut Diwas would celebrate contradictions. A creation seemingly impossible to break but any undue force and it crumbles in the middle. Sheer simplicity compared to the pure seasonal joy of winter food supremacy. Only two main ingredients, zero nonsense about additives or preservatives. Certainly addictive. Only minor controversy - are you Team gur wala or Team chini wala? There is no need for elaborate tilkut supply chain, no tilkut experts screaming their heads off on TilkutTV. Maybe a tilkut appreciation WhatsCrapp post or two. Certainly all the tilkut patents protecting it from international IP (intellectual property) theft. UNESCO should declare it a Heritage Food. Le Cordon Bleu recognized, Michelin starred. Never industrialized nor mass produced. We expect many videos of teenagers trying to besmirch its grandeur and immediately regretting it after a stinging chappal or two from their grandma.

Because tilkut isn’t just food. It’s culture. It's lifestyle. It’s a collective winter reverie in a land that truly appreciates the season with fresh chuda dahi. A crunchy reminder that greatness doesn’t need frosting, icing, glazing or otherwise fancy culinary techniques. Yes, let us give Tilkut it's own Diwas. The world has waited long enough. The Tilkut Diwas would herald the coming of Makar Sankranti. No longer a plus-one who never got their own invitation but absolutely made to the party on its own. Back when the sun’s northward journey was apparently important enough for humans to care, Makar Sankranti used to arrive with cosmic significance. Zero marketing campaign. No countdowns. No merch. Just vibes, astronomical math, and sesame seeds. Ali Baba (of the Forty Thieves) understood its significance well enough to whisper "Open, Sesame!" This is a fitting slogan for this special day for this mouth-watering treasure.

Such a day would start with the traditional Hunt for Great Tilkut. The quest. The pilgrimage. The whispered tips: Us galli mein ek dukaan hai…Woh corner wala abhi bhi taazaa banaata hai…Kal sawerey sawerey jaana, baad mein khatam ho jaata hai.” (There is this one shop in that lane. That corner guy still makes it fresh. Go as early as possible tomorrow or they run out quick.) Hushed whispers of certain locations in Upper Bazar, Mahabir Chowk or Ashok Nagar... or the holiest of the Holy, Tilkut dhaam, Gaya, too far away. Maybe next year with some planning.

Tilkut purchase is not a simple transaction. You test its texture, gauge the structure and compare its color with your past experiences. You savor the aroma with proper reverence and nostalgia. A small taste may be offered to judge its freshness, accept it with greedy grace. Now you negotiate the price with your instincts, and debate that man who had been stirring sesame longer than you’ve been alive. The Tilkut maestro who has assumed the physical shape quite the opposite of their masterpieces, thinner at the ends and thicker in the middle. Portly, very well-rounded, a reverse tilkut

Great tilkut snaps with jagged edges and showers you with crumbs. You dive after them, shoving the larger crumbs back in your mouth. The errant smaller crumbs would cling to your clothes and proudly announce to the world the crunchy choices you had made that morning. You don't care.

Makar Sankranti mornings in the faraway days used to begin properly with chuda dahi. Not the sad, pre-flattened version that come in a plastic bag labeled “authentic, organic, eclectic, ethnic” or any other "ick." Freshly rolled chuda, still warmish, uneven, flaked with bits of husk, and smug about it. It soaked up the thick, sweet, full-fat homemade curd made by moms and grandmas. It understood it's purpose, that of adding a new zest for life as well as a few pounds to your hips. Brown sugar liberally sprinkled with confidence. Maybe a banana if things were festive. Breakfast of champions, with quiet dignity, smug pride and total self-respect.

Fast forward to the present, a hectic morning in this cultural wasteland, a black hole where traditions vanish. Here, tilkut does not seem to exist, even in the local Desi Bazar. Its owner, with a dubious origin unlikely from the sacred tilkut-land of our memories, feigns ignorance and promises to "look into it". We have to settle for the “freshly packed” pretenders, poorly sealed six months ago, brought over in bulging suitcases by fast friends or resentful relatives. Vigilant Canines and Customs agents at international airports had sniffed disdainfully at these packets but eventually let it go. These pretenders are now clumpy, huddled, shapeless messes, sickeningly sweet, gur wala shamelessy stuck together with chini wala cousins. Fatigued from their travel-induced trauma and tasting like nostalgia filtered through sweat-socks.

The arrival of Makar Sankranti just stirs up desperation. The day shows up without fail, too cold here to bring out any dueling kites. The winds whisper or wail, taunting us about seasonal transitions. Chuda dahi is still our choice on this day. No steel-cut oats, no cinnamon sprinkled over soy milk, thank you very much... But where is tilkut? I look around, confused, wondering when exactly it went from “essential” to “optional.” Maybe next year, I resolve. Once, these weren’t foods. They were signals. That winter was manageable. That Spring was just around the corner, about to spring. That your jaw was still strong and your sugar level was not a drag on your existence. 

So yes, let's start The Great Tilkut Diwas tradition. For worldwide tilkut awareness and celebration. With the memory of sticky crumbs, forgotten jawline trauma, and the eternal gratification of knowing that somewhere, far away, real tilkut still exists… just not here, not yet. 




Thursday, December 25, 2025

Dear Santa

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From: SC
To: SC
Subject: Dear Santa 

I hope this letter finds you thriving and emotionally resilient, sipping a Piรฑa colada somewhere... because I have some concerns.

I am xxxtyxxx years young. XXXTYxxx. Which means I have been a loyal believer to your whole cockamamie narrative for decades. And yet, despite being mostly good in the last few days (well, minor snarkiness on the WhatsCrapp groupchats notwithstanding), my Christmas wish list has now been ignored yet again, for the last FIFTY CHRISTMASES IN A ROW.

At this point, Santa, this feels... Intentional. Personal. Malicious.

And while we’re talking about it, can we discuss these unfair WhatsCrapp posts about... fruitcakes from Nahoum’s? Honestly!

One old lug who calls himself Jug, in full & nauseatingly nostalgic mode, writes something like:

“Slap, Tickle, The Lousy, blah blah blah…" and suddenly everyone is waxing poetic about a "Jewish bakery baking a Christmas fruitcake, celebrating a Christian tradition, for their largely Hindu bhadralok clientele.” 

Santa, if that isn’t the most Calcutta Christmas sentence ever written, I don’t know what is. And yet people are still not offended. By fruitcake. FRUITCAKE. I am not sure about Nahoum's but an average fruitcake has magical properties and is guaranteed to survive earthquakes, floods, fires. It can even be used as a weapon or a structural brick here in Da RedWhiteBlueLandistan.

But I digress. Let’s review my this year’s (very short, very reasonable) wish list:

* The latest geezer gizmos that make me feel futuristic, not fossilized. Without the annoying beeps, buzzes or dings disturbing my naps. 

* A smartphone dumber than me. One that remembers where I left it. The one which does not freeze, frightened by my face. One that actually unlocks without me having to beg it, threaten it or yell at it. 

* Wireless earbuds that don’t fall out like my dentures or my hair.

* A smartwatch that tracks my naps accurately (which is less than half of what Mrs. YT accuses me of! Believe me!!)

* A non-achey back. Or a knee upgrade.Firmware or hardware, I’m open, so it doesn't pop like bubble wrap. 

* One miracle, brand-name preferred. Or one original funny joke in WhatsCrapp, not more lazy forwards from 1986.

* And Good Kids. Whirled Peas. 

Let's review your non-performance this year against the wish list. What did I receive? Socks. Undies. AGAIN. Socks that scream, “You should lie down after this email.” The tighty-whiteys that don't slide off.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Yours Truly (YT) seems to have received MOST, if not all of the items on her list. How do I know? Because she has been chirpily singing and calling every sakhi & saheli in her entire phone book since early morning. Santa, it’s like living inside a celebratory call center.

I left you fresh low-fat milk (not implying anything or body shaming, mind you). Soft cookies, low-sugar. Antacids. I went to bed early, before prime Santa visitation hours. I practically rolled out the red carpet for you and those dang reindeers. And still… undies, socks and a lump of coal?

Which brings me, regrettably, to a rather delicate and sensitive topic.

I am beginning to have… questions about your whole Santa scam operation. If this trend continues, I may be forced to look under the tulsi shrub for a cake baked by Ralison's (R. Ali & Son Cake Shop & Bakery) instead. As for my toys, well, let’s be honest, your competition's elves are not asleep. They are toiling 24 - 7. Amma Jan still delivers next day or sooner, provided Mrs. YT's credit cards have not been naughty. And unlike you, she believes in gift receipts.

I’m not angry, Santa. Just just deeply disappointed. Profoundly, seasonally disillusioned. You did sock it to me again. While my toes are snuggly warm in these woolen socks and I am wearing fresh undies, this youngster is still gizmo-poor.

Next year, please do better. Or at least send a tracking number.

Festively snarky,

A XXXTYxxx-Year-Old Young'un

Desperately wanting to believe… But Actively Exploring Alternatives

(Apologies to Jug Suraiya and his article about A Calcutta Christmas)

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Bear With Me!

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Once upon a time or was it a long long time ago, deep near a Midwestern forest in a little village with spotty cell phone service, only dial-up internet connection and in a state of questionable blue shopping laws, lived four bears: Papa Bear, Mama Bear, Little Bear, and Baby Bear.

Baby Bear had been named so by Little Bear himself when she arrived two years after him. He’d had stood thoughtfully beside her crib, pondering about the inadequacy of tale of The Three Bears in this new family situation. After a little noodling, Little Bear weighed in. “She’s a baby. She’s a bear. Baby Bear.” Everyone agreed to this flawless logic and went along. Only later she was renamed by Little Bear after Cindy Lou Who, who was not more than two.

Papa Bear, although he was a loyal fan of another franchise, also followed Da Bears, another hapless NFL team in those days. Sundays in the forest were sacred: watching semi-naked fans on TV cavorting around in sub-freezing weather wearing face paint and sporting beer can hats. He was content growling at the TV from his living room, and insisting that these teams would definitely turn it around this season. Definitely. Mama Bear, on the other paw had given up on these gems, but was dazzled by the whole De Beers marketing campaign. She didn’t care much about diamonds for herself, well, maybe one or two baubles wouldn't be so bad, now, would it? But she loved their slogan. “A diamond is forever...” she’d sigh dreamily, while Papa Bear would mutter, “So is a bad offensive line.”

Little Bear was the practical one. He would read Instruction Manuals. He sorted Recycling. He named Siblings. He made Plans. He created and enforced Schedules. He loved Calendars. Baby Bear was in awe of her brother's skills. Apparently, at some point unbeknownst to Mama & Papa Bear, he had warned Baby Bear that he would write a note to her pre-school teacher about some infraction which immediately caused her to fall in line.

Together the Bears lived in a beary quiet, mostly peaceful Midwestern bear patch. One routine that they followed rigorously - Papa & Mama Bear read multiple bedtime stories to their little bears every evening before going off to sleep. Near the top of their "most requested" list was the adapted old tale, now called The Four Bears and Goldilocks, the numerical enhancement being just right for the Bear family.

It followed the classic plot. A brazen home invasion by a juvenile delinquent of female persuasion. Disdainful sniffing and causal tasting the bowls of steaming Porridge. Disrespectful playing of a game of Musical Chairs. Careless ruffling of every carefully made Cozy Beds in the bedrooms. Until her morning snooze was disrupted by the rightful owner of the aforementioned bed, followed by her narrow escape out the window. No one knows if Ms. Goldilocks ever really faced the consequences of her nefarious actions, now, did she? In the olden days, it would have meant a paddling on the bottom, as Baby Bear had learned, thanking her own lucky stars, absorbing it all with big round eyes. Mulling things over. She had questions about such egregious behaviors. Many questions but she stayed quiet. Until one day... now old enough to ask dangerous questions, she blurted our mid-story, “Wait!” 

Everyone froze. “Isn’t this… did no one teach this naughty girl... stranger danger?" Baby Bear had yet to learn the phrase "breaking and entering.” Or "Trespassing." "Cloture" would come much much later. But she was morally outraged. Her sense of justice and fair play was perturbed, limited vocabulary notwithstanding. She was quite puzzled. She had detected there was crime in progress before anyone else that day. A veteran observer of many a playground shenanigans and casual larceny by now, she mused out loud “Who is this girl... going into a stranger's house? Trying on stuff that didn’t belong to her? Eating their food without thinking that the family would go hungry?”

Mama Bear blinked. Papa Bear slowly lowered his foam claw with a proud grin. “That,” Baby Bear was shaking her head, “is not a thing something good children are supposed to do." She stared at Mama & Papa Bear, with an accusatory look, "Mrs. Lynn and Mrs. Lane at pre-school said so! Even you guys told me that.” And there she was, later that day, found humming The Three Bears Rap thoughtfully: One day, Goldilocks was walking in the woods, You could tell by her looks, she was up to no good… 

That wasn't the end. Oh, no? Oh, no! Baby Bear unleashed a barrage of questions like a dam that burst. “So!” she said, hands on hips, which reminded Papa Bear of a strikingly similar posture he had encountered earlier, “Who made this...  porridge? What is this thing... porridge anyway? Is this the same one as in "peas porridge hot, cold, in the pot" that was "nine days old"? When was it really cooked? Why were the three bowls from the same pot at different temperatures? I don't want any of this porridge, thank you! And who goes out for a walk but not lock their front door? Where were Goldilocks' folks? Why wasn't she in school? What was she thinking?

Mama Bear tried her usual parenting move. “Because I said so.” Baby Bear stared defiantly. “nuh uh.” (loosely translated, "this makes no sense."). That was the ominous start. From that point on, all the rest of the fairy tales that followed were scrutinized by the Baby Bear brains working overtime. 

Among other classics, Tales of Peter Rabbit was their favorite. This determined young reviewer expressed very strong views on the characters, the phrasing and the story arc as it unfolded. Ms. Beatrix Potter had introduced Peter's cutesy bunny sisters Flopsy, Mopsy and Cottontail early in the story. They were all declared to be silly, goody-two-shoes, total sissies. No self-respecting Baby Bears would ever want to be friends with them. 

Peter, the rogue wanderer with his daredevil adventures in dangerous neighborhood gardens was clearly her hero. She fully sympathized with someone who had lost his beautiful blue jacket with brass buttons and his new shoes during a tense chase sequence. Having lost her own socks and mittens quite recently, she felt instant kinship. Baby Bear declared solemnly, "I don't like that meanie, old Farmer McGregor. Or his wife." As the story said something like following some accident, "Mrs. McGregor made a rabbit stew" with Peter's dad. Such obtuse sentences made no sense. Why would Peter's dad, presumably a rabbit himself, be a collaborator in the Farmer McGregor's kitchen for such a ghastly concoction? It sounded weird. Something was clearly amiss. 

All these stories were very confusing. Like why wouldn't all Three Little Pigs live together in a big sturdy house made of bricks instead of flimsy little straw and stick homes, what with that The Big Bad Wolf huffing and puffing in the neighborhood? They did find out quickly that the hair on their chinny chin chin was not much of a protection. Or this boy Jack who traded his family cow for some magic beans. Baby Bear did not know any friends in her pre-school class who ever owned a family cow. She had checked with a few. So the premise of that story seemed quite flimsy to start with, she mused. Talking wild animals menacing peaceful piglets she had met in the petting zoo. Mean ogres chasing unruly boys, whether they deserved it or not. Witchy step-mothers. Talking mirrors. All the stories suspiciously ended with some ominous warning and arbitrary adult rules disguised as what sounded like... mural of the story?

Christmastime was near. Baby Bear suspected that she might have a prominent place on The Naughty List. She was not happy about it. Quite annoyed. This Ho Ho Ho'ing dude with clothes that smelled like mothballs was getting on her nerves... Baby Bear had questions. Many questions. Didn't he employ child-labor in his workshop? And he ignored the other stupid little reindeers to even though they didn't play nice? No time-outs, no being sent to their caves, just letting them be mean to a fellow reindeer just because he had a... different color nose? This fat man was supposed to be nice and jolly but... he actually spied on children? A conflicted Baby Bear was weighing her options on whether cookies, milk and carrots near the fireplace might swing some things in her favor... With vague memories of the previous Christmas and the appearance of an American Girl doll for herself and Thomas the Tank Engine stuff for Little Bear, she was willing to withhold her skepticism. However, after being reminded too many times about being good, she snapped back, "I am going to put Santa on my Naughty List."

She next challenged Papa & Mama Bears on rule enforcements, starting with her forest curfew being earlier than Little Bear's. "Why?" She would often declare, “I’m going to check with Little Bear.” Papa Bear scoffed. “You think Little Bear knows more than Papa Bear?” He looked at Baby Bear. Baby Bear stared back and answered with a very firm north-and-south head shake, with absolute confidence, “Uh, huh.”  Papa Bear sighed. Mama Bear smiled. Little Bear beamed. 

That evening at dinnertime, the food on their table was served, just off the stove. The Bears decided to go for a short walk around the block to let their dinner cool down. So that it would be just right. Not too hot. Not too cold. But they definitely locked their front doors. No more uninvited guests. No more home invasions, thank you very much, declared the budding Future Champion of The Underdogs. Oh, yes. Oh, Yes!

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Oh, Snooooow!

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Snow has arrived this year in our little Midwestern town with a vengeance. That stirred up a flurry of flakes swirling in the ever-shrinking snow-globe of my mind.

Having grown up in a place where snow was never a topic of discussion, I had absolutely no idea about this facet of life. As I went to Calcutta for my visa interview, the visa officer, a Ms. Laura Livingston looked at my I-20 form from U@Buffalo and asked me what I knew about the place I was going to. I launched into a narrative about the research program on Computational Fluid Dynamics at the university. She lost interest quickly beyond a pitying "you fool" look and signed off on the paperwork. After all, how bad could it be, I mused. Apparently, Ms. Livingston knew it well, quite aware of the Blizzard of '77 when 100 inches of snow had blanketed that city with wind gusts as high as 70 mph. I later learned that a Mr. Jimmy Griffin, then the Mayor of Buffalo, had become famous internationally during the blizzard for providing absolutely practical advise to the local residents of the City of Good Neighbors to "Stay inside. Grab a six-pack."

I arrived in the Fall '81, landing at JFK after an unforgettable trip on Maharaja's Chariot and then, Shuffling off to Buffalo. The campus was a glorious riot of Fall foliage and the warm weather in western New York was spectacular that year. Wonderful. I was smug about my choices, armed with your regular clothes, a pair of sandals and nice brown leather shoes from Bata, a pair of gloves. Add to this a thin jacket that was considered more than adequate for my hometown winters and an even thinner understanding of what “lake-effect snow” meant. Until one fine late-October morning. I stepped out… and saw white. Endless white. It looked as though someone had emptied a million sacks of cotton straight onto the world, only colder and wetter. The stairs had disappeared under a thick blanket, cars and trees and buildings looked like snow-sculptures. I stuck my tongue out, caught my first real snowflake, watched it melt instantly, and thought, Well, this is magical… right? Right? I was cold. But I was also enchanted.

My first winter was mostly spent on-campus in a graduate dorm and my lab at school. Both places were nice, warm and cozy. The only hitch was the five minute trek braving the elements twice a day. Snow was anywhere between boot-deep to knee-deep in spite all the effort made by the campus maintenance crew. The winds howled like crazy; by the time you covered the distance between the dorm and the lab, you couldn't feel your nose or your ears and any exposed part of the body was pretty much numb. My sturdy brown leather shoes lost the battle quickly and fell apart, the soles separating from the uppers without much fight after the first couple of encounters with the salt and snow, right on the sidewalk. This cold-weather noob forgot Computational Whatever Dynamics for a bit as he learned the basics of snow boots, woolen socks, layered clothing, long johns, ear-muffs, ChapStick® and so on. Young co-eds on-campus who had been sun-bathing in skimpy outfits only yesterday had all transformed into shapeless but colorful blobs. A fellow desi grad student named Partha from Calcutta had actually brought with him his manki-tupi. However, it seemed to provide no more protection against the wind and the snow other than open stares and snickers from the amused natives.

Then came the winter break. The dorms didn't have that many foreign students in those days, as most of them usually lived off-campus in the "affordable" rental units, aka, student ghettos. Sharing kitchen facilities, leaky toilets, threadbare carpeting, with hulking old black & white TVs that received three channels on good days, and cockroaches. I was one of the very few and rare non-native dorm denizens. We were asked to move out of our cozy digs for those two weeks of winter break and had to find a place to crash at a very a short notice. For me, that was a 20-something year old couch with three-ish legs at a friendly student slum. A place with drafty windows that whistled with the wind, a rattling ancient heater that reminded one of steam engines, and a front stoop barely big enough to stand on without sliding off. Others sharing the unit were gracious and no one made a fuss when my friend allowed me to take over the couch. We all shared the common bonds of misery, the trials and tribulations of being phoren grad-school creatures, the lowliest of the lowly bugs on-campus. 

During those two weeks, I kept my routine to make my daily trek to my lab and the library, now on the other side of town, after a ten-minute walk and then an inter-campus bus. However, each cold morning it was becoming more difficult to force myself to make it to the lab ignoring the open invitation from that nice, warm spot on the couch in front of a droning old TV. So I did go one day, stayed inside the lab, probably playing text-based games on the mainframe into the evening, venturing out fairly late to go back to my temporary off-campus abode. Only to discover that weather had changed drastically, and a blizzard was on. Winds were howling mercilessly, snow, sleet, stinging ice-pellets flew at me sideways, and it was absolutely miserable. Took the last bus back to the other campus as one of the few intrepid souls on the bus who learned that the rest of the bus schedule which would normally run into wee hours of the night was canceled due to bad weather. 

The usual ten-minute walk that late evening took me only half an hour, wind pushing hard in every direction. All street signs and neighborhood landmarks obliterated by thick snow-cover by now, no other color except pristine white. Visibility was a few feet at best. It was miracle when I stumbled into the barely-familiar place where I was staying, bitterly cold, questioning my life's choices, dripping icicles and snot, looking like the abominable snowman. I became an instant and avid fan of fledgling Weather Channel, checking it multiple times on the ancient TV before poking my nose out the door. There was no internet in those days, no cell-phones, etc. The only other way to get weather forecast was the radio or the local newspaper, printed the night before and delivered during wee hours of the morning. Weather forecasting was in its infancy, computer models were non-existent, relying mostly on Ye Olde Farmers Almanac. Local TV weather people were mostly vivacious young ladies, impossibly sunny, cheerful and chirpy no matter what the forecast, or older men with no other real qualifications except their soothing personalities and droning voices. 

Following grad school, with my first job and a sporty car, I moved to a semi-decent one bedroom rental unit in a block of apartments. It had a living room and a galley kitchen. 850 sqft of neo-middle-class opulence with shaggy brown carpet. Come November that year, I stepped out in the morning and saw my neighbor who was already out there with a shovel and a snow cleaner brush that he shared with me until I acquired those for myself. He was muttering something unprintable loudly that sounded like (I can only repeat the parts that were not blankety blank) “Here we go again…” I learned a few previously unfamiliar phrases that day to add to my already impressive and colorful IIT lingo. We commiserated, we cleaned our cars, we went to work, we came back and hid in our warm rental caves daily, all winter long which lasted many many months. I also learned that "sporty" car was not really a good thing for winter driving. I wish I had really understood what Ms. Livingston was trying to tell me.

Fast forward, Mrs. Yours Truly (YT) arrived and joined me and my trusty feline buddy, Stranger in that one-bedroom rental one summer. My feline friend abandoned me hastily and started following her like a puppy, he had an uncanny and innate sense of which one of us had a better value proposition for his needs and wants, responding to his variously pitched meows. Mrs. YT had brought with her a suitcase full of Bollywood snow dreams. You know, the costume changes in billowing chiffon saris and dazzling salwar suits, in sub-zero temperatures, the running up on the gentle slopes in Kashmir or among the Swiss Alps. Without slipping, the singing, dancing around trees typically native to warmer tropical climates, not these mountain terrains. The dramatic twirls, those long eyelashes fluttering to choreography, out of sync, unlike the ten lords a-leaping and the nine ladies dancing, pirouetting like peacocks. My attitude towards snow, unlike the Bollywood leading men, was sadly tinged grey with my recent real-life experiences with snow. Not as enthusiastic as Mrs. YT certainly, and she delivered the ultimate insult later (much later) that my attempts at appearing romantic that evening were quite half-hearted. "Not Kgp-worthy. What did they even teach you there, that IIT?" Apparently not the right stuff, I think. I want a refund now on that vaunted "IIT education."

No matter, when the first snowfall arrived, she nearly flew out the door. “Come! LET’S MAKE SNOW ANGELS!" Before I could even zip up my jacket, she had thrown herself backward into a pile of snow like a full-on Bollywood diva making a grand entrance to a soaring orchestra. We built crooked snowmen. We made elaborate snow angels. We staged our own mini musical, although without exchanging jackets, gloves and hats, or other attire, this poor man's version sans Bollywood costume changes. No selfies in those days, alas.

And, most importantly, we had our first snowball fight. I didn’t want to hit her too hard, so I tossed a gentle one. She responded with a fastball straight to my face. This movie heroine unleashed her inner Xena, the Warrior Princess. She had surprisingly good aim and very strong arm. She had been plotting, scheming and planning, apparently. Positioned herself strategically close to a huge pile of snow. She could shape and build up a rapid supply of well-shaped snowballs of exceptional size and weight, experience gained from making chapati dough-balls, I guess. She used those very particular set of skills acquired over her teenage years with the available supply of abundant snow. Effectively. Ruthlessly. Relentlessly. Mercilessly. That rental parking lot became my Napoleonic Waterloo, I was hopelessly outgunned and yelled "uncle" after a semi-valiant effort, and my white flag fluttered after a brief but intense battle. None of it was supposed to happen per any Bollywood scripts favoring the hero to the best of my knowledge, they all turned out to be wretched lies. Mrs. YT marched back inside triumphantly like the Conquering Queen while I dragged my sorry self in abject surrender. She did make hot chocolate with s'mores and said, "There, there." I did not quite grasp the significance of this moment, another one in a long series of an oblivious, clueless existence, for this was the turning point in our relationship. From that day onward, I don't recall a single battle that she has lost while my white flag has seemed to have fluttered desperately numerous times.

The snow magic lasted exactly until the next couple of snowfalls that week. Our rental parking lot was now buried under six-ish inches of snow and ice. The city plow had created grimy snow walls at least four feet high on the sides of the parking lot. Ice coated the car windows so firmly it looked like nature had laminated them. People were gingerly shuffling out there doing their penguin waddle. The more adventurous had swiftly reverted back to being less adventurous after a few spectacular landings on their rumps on slick surfaces with an icy glaze. Then the cheerful TV weather person came on: “8 more inches expected tonight…" Mrs. YT stared  at the screen in sheer horror. She did not believe me nor her favorite avuncular weather person on TV. That the forecast for next several months would continue to include snow showers, snow flurries, snow fall, snow flakes, snow squalls, snow drifts, snow swirls, and all manners of that dreadful four-letter word. Long before it became popular among the unsocial media, she decided to "do her own research."  She discussed this in depth within her ever-expanding circle of intimate friends and casual acquaintances, natives and desis, young and old. Her fascination with snow turned into shock, at the prospect of facing many more months of this sh..tuff. Quietly at first and loudly shortly thereafter, a new Bollywood tune emerged, a song of betrayal, with open hostility and outright malevolence with the J'accuse, with a refrain of "...tum mรฉrรฉ ko yรฉh kahan lรฉ aayรฉ,O saajana...(Where have you brought me, you...?!) Oh, and Stranger? He used to poke his nose out, and express his opinions loudly about the weather. All of us howled together. "Meouw ouw ouw ouw."

The next year, we moved away from Buffalo with my new job. Life took us to a small Midwestern town. “Winters are milder here,” people said. “You’ll love it,” they promised. We believed them. Desperate to believe anything hopeful about less snow. We built our first house with a driveway that looked reasonably sized in summer. But then the first snow arrived, while nothing compared to Buffalo, mind you, our snow trauma kicked in with sore muscle memory. And then our next move was to the Windy City which was pretty much the frozen tundra in the winter months, grey, gritty, cold, wretched and miserable. With wind off the Great Lake that shrieked and cut through the multiple layers of clothing like a sharp knife. We were shell-shocked snow veterans by then, and the now familiar song continued to play every time but with love and exasperation "...tum mรฉrรฉ ko yรฉh kahan lรฉ aayรฉ,O..." Every snow event.

One incident from our years in The City of Big Shoulders stands out. After one big snowstorm, the street plows had come by and had cleaned out the streets the best they could. But the careless plow-drivers had piled up hard packed snow almost two feet against the mouth of the driveways, making it impossible for cars to get in and out. Mrs. YT had had enough, after all of us having spent hours cleaning our driveway. She called up the Superintendent of the City Garage and gave him a piece of her mind in her own unique way, usually reserved for unruly kids and errant husband. The kids and I were very silent, very quiet witnesses to her fury, the irresistible force unleashed at the poor civic administrator. Within 15 minutes, snow removal crews arrived back in our cul-de-sac and cleared up those snow boulders blocking our driveway. To her credit, Mrs. YT called up the same Superintendent soon after, dripping honey and being Miss Congeniality and Miss Sweetness Incarnate. The kids were in total awe at the transformation. 

We have since moved back to the small Midwestern city. We had some good times during the next few winters with our kids, by now beyond toddler stagefiercely debating who got the better toboggan, helping clear pathways in haphazard zig-zag patterns, making snowmen, sliding down our steep driveway with their friends, the snowball fights. Happy at delayed start of the school days, still praying fervently for occasional snow-day school cancellations, learning to accept the snow as a way of life. And the song from Mrs. YT still continued to play every dang time with all intensity of marital love and exasperated maternal resignation "...tum mรฉrรฉ ko yรฉh kahan lรฉ aayรฉ,O..." 

The kids have now "grown and flown" the nest. These days, our driveway feels longer every winter than the year before when snow arrives. Growing much, much longer each winter. Much, much wider. Instead of shrinking in cold weather, expanding, stretching, defying all the laws of Physics. Much, much steeper as though the earth had tilted overnight. We engaged Randy and his two Elves for lawn maintenance and snow removal. Randy was a child at heart, enjoyed life and would also stop by singing Christmas Carols every year for some extra cash. After his sudden and shocking departure at a youngish age to the Great Snowy Driveway in the Sky, these days Seรฑor Raimundo's crew performs their snow magic. We save ourselves the sore muscles and the aching backs for the most part in exchange for a little lighter wallet. Only very occasionally, I get around to shoveling snow like a veteran who had survived many a snowmageddons of life, those snowcalypses of The Second City, the snowapaloozas in The Queen City. These occasions just become hours of quiet rumination, some fresh air, a little exercise, followed by steaming mug or two of masala chai and complaints of stiff necks, sore arms and aching backs. I prefer doing the driveway myself, slow, steady, methodical. I have a process, a path, a technique. A private battle between me and the snow. Man vs. Mother Nature, although I know fully well that Mother Nature always has the upper hand as Mothers normally do. 

But Mrs. YT? She insists on coming out every time. To "help". She’ll grab her shovel, make three enthusiastic scoops, then declare that her shovel isn't any good. Reminding me that one she really wanted, nay, needed was that one was On Sale at the neighborhood Big Box store at 25% Off a few weeks ago. That I had apparently questioned her very unfairly and argued too loudly, in public, about the usefulness of another such high-tech, lightweight snow-removal implement and caused her much anguish. That the ones we already have are too old, too unbalanced, too heavy, too worn out, unsuitable for the task at hand. I wonder if she is talking about her shovel or YT, the other person behind the shovel. Refusing my offer to exchange the shovels or buy new ones the next time we go to the Big Box store. She would survey the endless white expanse, muse loudly about her friends who run their households "back home" with four and more helpers and have never had to do any snow shoveling, before launching into her snow song with some new verses but with the same refrain "...tum mรฉrรฉ ko yรฉh kahan lรฉ aayรฉ, O..." Within moments, she’s shivering, melodramatic, and fully immersed in her tragic snow-soaked routine. I ask her to go inside. After a few more woe-is-me verses, she surrenders and does. And I keep going, just good old me me and my good old shovel. Our two felines venture out cautiously sniffing the cold, wet, fluffy stuff, suspicious, not enjoying the cold but reluctant to follow her inside. And the memories of yesterday's winters loom over me like a cold, wet, fluffy ghosts.

Yet every first snowfall…No matter where we have lived, no matter how much my back protests in memory, the first snowfall always brings a spark of magic. Mrs. YT hums a cheery Bollywood tuneWe pretend not to think about the cold, snow, ice, the wind, the dripping noses, stiff fingers, sore muscles, or aching backs. And for a few brief moments, before the shoveling, slipping, sliding, sighing and singing begins, we are again two naรฏve dreamers having lop-sided snowball fights in that snow-covered parking lot. Still dreaming. Still jousting. Still walking the delicate line, chasing the mythical Bollywood snow dreams before waking up to the snowy realities in this winter of our lives. With "...tum mรฉrรฉ ko yรฉh kahan lรฉ aayรฉ, O..."