Thanks to the weather spoilsport, the urge to have a tea cuppa led me to an old tea kiosk which has its own uniqueness and that is – it is managed by a stalwart who has been doing this work with all his dedication and commitment for more than thirty long years… yes you read it right …’thirty long years’
Even today the man in his early
sixties, though he does not look so, wakes up at 4:00 a.m and starts preparation
for his regular customers, who are mainly the labourers and now ‘urbanized’ dwellers
from Axis bank which is across the roadside. The stall is opened till 10:00 pm every day , though nowadays the lockdown has hampered its opening and it gets closed by 8 p.m. His first daily task is to
remember his God which he says has led him to tread such a long journey as he
came empty handed from upper reigns of the Himalayas in order to make a life
and career out of this big city. As time passed, he found an opportunity to start
a small tea shop with only bare minimum he could save from his previous job.
Single handedly, he started his kiosk with an aim to settle himself in this big
city – it was early 80’s as he told me, “ I was hell-bent not to go back to my
village and that I had no choice but to settle down and support myself in that
phase of my life.!
My case was quite similar too,
just after my morning jogging with my old pal and discussing matters as mundane,
we both had the urge to have tea – the weather being benevolent and it was a little
drizzle which prompted such desire in us – it lead us to Vinodji’s kiosk and as
soon as he saw us coming, he started to give us his welcoming smile – the premature
talk of weather led to discussion regarding the upcoming elections and also to other
perky topics.
Suddenly, I noticed a young man working hand and glove with Vinodji – he was introduced to me as his son ‘Manish’ who was well qualified and was working in Gurgaon in IT sector – being a holiday today, he had just spared some time to help his father in his daily chores – though Vinodji has given employment to two associates. Installation of Paytm and Google pay scanner is purely his thought, as I could clearly sense that his tech-savvy nature is giving wonderous results to Vinodji's' daily effort.
The conversation was
routed to Manish and to what he does in life, to my surprise, he was a software engineer
employed with an IT firm – it was his way of paying obeisance to his father and
he had no shame in doing so – the best part being , he had a similar
captivating smile on his face whilst he was doing his work – both the father-son duo were a formidable combo – though the son didn’t seem too interested to tread
on his fathers footsteps… but time is a great leveler… who knows…
My inquisition led me to ask
questions to Vinodji about his family apart of his son and he smilingly said , “Sir,
I have 4 daughters and 1 son” – all of my daughters are well settled, 2 are
teachers and one is a UI designer in an IT firm and she is the one getting
engaged tomorrow…. My question seems to be quite pertinent… I wished him a
customary congratulations and internally felt the respect his hard work and
accomplishments have done wonders for his family – the best part being, his son
realizes his father’s life journey – for him being working on his tea stall on
a holiday when others of his age are enjoying theirs is a silent salute to his
father!!!