(3 mins read)
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One of my fondest memories goes back to a summer afternoon in my maternal grandparents’ village. Back then, their home was a beautiful mud house, not very fancy, but full of warmth and character. That house doesn’t exist anymore; it has been rebuilt with bricks and concrete. But in my mind, it still stands the way it was. I was around seven or eight years old, and it was the kind of hot, lazy afternoon. As it happens on a lazy summer afternoon, everyone had a stomach-filled lunch and went off to sleep. But I was restless and curious. I decided that the two-hour nap would ruin my productivity! :P So while my parents and siblings took the nap, I began to wander, quietly exploring the corners of that peaceful house.
I went to the first floor: yes, the mud house had a first floor, which still feels quite fascinating to me. There were two rooms on the terrace. One was used to store rice, wheat, onions, and potatoes. The other had a charpai and a small pile of books on a table near the window. That room was empty, but I had a feeling someone would come up soon, so I knew I didn’t have much time. I flipped through the books, searching for something, found no pictures, so I gently placed them back. But then I found a small black notebook. Inside, it was something bluish and mysterious, a carbon paper. I don’t remember whether the notebook belonged to my uncle or my nana, but I did know what it was, and that made me feel oddly proud. So I placed it between two sheets and started drawing something, just to see the magic of two copies being made at once. What did I draw? I don't remember. Did I tear out the page and saved it? I don’t remember. How I left that room? I don't remember. But I do remember the feeling.
That hot breeze outside. The quietness of the house. The joy of finding something new. It’s a small memory, really. But it has stayed with me all these years. I’ve spoken about it to my wife with childlike excitement, and now I find myself sharing it with my children. They may not understand what carbon paper is, or why that afternoon meant so much. But maybe someday, they too will carry a quiet little memory from their own childhood. A simple, forgotten moment that refuses to fade.