tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7306330.post-13858260064653273542007-10-02T19:02:00.000+05:302007-10-05T13:11:03.822+05:30parfum. From this angleSometimes, the lens view takes over real life.<br />A casual conversation suddenly hushes all ambient sounds. A random passerby looks at his watch in slow motion, the <span style="font-style: italic;">tick</span> from minute-15 to minute-16 audible a mile away. A child’s white-knuckled grip on her mother’s shoulder more desperate, the otherwise infuriating honking joyously cacophonous, even the cemented grey of flyovers meaningfully gloomy.<br /><br />The job behind the camera has shown me how exactly to achieve teemingness in a not-so-crowded street. How to capture the brightest festivity in a low-key celebration. I now see potential in every moment.<br />And add to that obsessive movie watching. Everything these days looks like a scene from a movie recently seen, or a dream dreamt with spectacular cinematography.<br />Which means, out of the job, I’m pretty much living in dramatized moments.<br /><br />One such is the Sunday autorichshaw ride. All is quiet after the initial bargaining session. The put-put-put is all I can hear. And the flow of unfinished sounds from scenes that zip past. I consider closing my eyes.<br /><br />“Madam, the perfume you’re wearing…. It’s very good.”<br /><br />I’m jolted awake.<br />This is not the opening line of any of my auto-men conversations. Not weather, not traffic, not those damn politicians. He spoke about perfume. <span style="font-style: italic;">My</span> perfume.<br />Before I figure out why I should feel a comment about my perfume is <span style="font-style: italic;">too </span>personal, he adds to the discomfort.<br />“What message are you trying to give by wearing that perfume?”<br /><br />There. His T-shirt turns redder, the put-put-put softens, the situation slows down. A lock of my hair flies slowly onto my face. It’s cinema time.<br /><br />“Message?”<br />“Yes, don’t you think everyone has their own unique smell?”<br />This, he asks in perfect English.<br />Is he a <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0396171/">man with no personal smell</a>, but supreme olfactory senses? Is he on an autorickshaw ride in search of smells he wants to bottle?<br /><br />“It’s a smell I like. So the message is only that I’m wearing something I like.”<br />“So, madam, it’s not for others?”<br />“No, definitely not. Why would you think it has a message for anyone?”<br />“I don’t know. Doesn’t everyone do everything only for others these days?”<br /><br />Pause. Pregnant.<br />“Madam, which part of South are you from?”<br />(How?! But yay, he knows there are 4 states and not just one idli-shaped island)<br /><br />“Why are you so sure I’m from South India?”<br />“You called me ‘sir’,” he beams into the rear-view mirror.<br /><br />Then there was mention of my grey hair, his laughing confession about his sham musical talent until he played the flute at his sister’s wedding. His probing questions about why I didn’t wear any symbol of wedlock. His knowing grin when I say, “Only if the <span style="font-style: italic;">aadmi</span> will wear it too.” His sad definition of ambition as a fading dream. His rejection of associations with Delhi.<br />40 minutes later, he shakes my hand and appreciates the conversation.<br />“<span style="font-style: italic;">Aaj kal</span> traffic <span style="font-style: italic;">ko gaali dene ke siva koi kya baath kartha hai?</span>” (These days, who says anything but to curse the traffic?”)<br /><br />He wasn’t a perfume bottler, but he owned every second of the 40-minute film.<br />The ambient noise returns.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7306330-1385826006465327354?l=pebblesthrow.blogspot.com'/></div>Rohini Mohanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12772993003665957369noreply@blogger.com5