13 November 2011

A little gift from the river

The days I walk to the river - some days, if I remember to carry a plastic bag with me I pick up some bits of trash lying around. I picked up the habit from Joe (who'd go armed with plastic bags if he were going hiking; some stories there but another time). There's not a whole lot of it but one does find some, and it displeases me, and I like picking up the junk and dumping it while thoughts of different sorts wander around my head. Some days I've had to hurry over to the garbage bins lying next to the river trail having found and collected five cans of beer and a couple of empty bottles of whisky and rum just so that nobody imagines that I was downing all the stuff while sitting on the sandy banks of the river.

Today the wind was blowing furiously. It was a wind that was raising yellow, brown, and orange leaves into whirling dervishes. The blazing wind I thought was going to blow me off the bridge. I didn't really expect it to but just to make sure that it wouldn't, and just in case it did, I was walking near the rails. Just so that I could grab on to the rod on the rails if in case the wind got a little too playful. But it was warm too. Strangely warm for a November afternoon. And after walking around and a bit of climbing and racing down, and walking and looking all around the still overgrown banks, having a fairly huge and happy dog running towards me and barking merrily just when I was climbing up a sheer slope and all...near one section of the river where I decided to visit today, there were plastic cups and paper and stuff lying around. I scrunched up my face and went and sat near a bit of the banks for a bit. Did my usual stuff. Wrote a bit, smoked some, laughed a bit, and looked and listened. I got up after a bit, and armed with my plastic bag and another couple I found lying near the banks, I started stuffing all the plastic and paper and assortment of trash which probably was simply blown out of some open garbage bin. I had a merry time too. Walked all around, climbed up and down the banks and some of it required leaping around like a goat. I was talking out loud at some points too, and hoped that nobody was around to watch my antics. Found a discarded magazine in which I read about a young Purdue student, who started an I-Read program in Indiana schools, and it made me sigh and gulp at the same time. The magazine too went into one of the plastic bags...

But nothing compares to the delicious moment when I chanced upon a $5 bill lying there half-hidden under the carpet of leaves. I was so delighted, and I'm not quite so sure why....but it was lovely. I put that carefully in my bag, smiled widely, and surveyed my surroundings. The plastic bags of rubbish I deposited in a dumpster, and feeling quietly pleased I wondered what I would do with the completely unexpected $5 gift from the river and river banks....

4 comments:

Suvro Chatterjee said...

oops... about that five dollar bill. Give it away, quick!

Nice to hear that you have been justifying your existence in a significant way. Few better things than cleaning up litter unasked.

It's unusually warm for mid-November here, too. Nature's vagary, I suppose, helped along by man's tinkering...

It's a pity there's no river I can walk to so near my house.

Shilpi said...

I knew you were going to tell me to give it away. I thought I could save it and look at it every now and again and hope for some millions to grow from it.

Thank you. I think I do that near the river especially because I seem to think the river and the banks are mine.

I was wondering what the weather was doing over there. 'Man's tinkering'...that sounds rather lyrical.

That is plain sad...

I'll put up some pix from the river very soon if I can steal a camera from a friend. That day the river was looking mystically beautiful. The sun kept going in and out with the wind and my thoughts.

Thanks most awfully for commenting (and I'll give the $5 away sometime today!).

Subhadip Dutta said...

I believe that $5 note was a small gift from God for all the good work that you do Shilpi-di. It is indeed for people like you that a nation deserves the adjective ‘developed’. Try to pick up litter from the river banks in India, you will immediately be considered a sweeper. Cleaning up their own country is something that the majority of the Indians can only dream of.

I am not too much of a believer in God, but these small gifts indeed make me feel his presence. These make me feel that He watches everything indeed.

Shilpi said...

Thanks for commenting Shubho. Shubho, I live in a bubble for the most part, and don't really do much of any noble work, which makes any good and discernible difference but picking up stuff from the river is one of the things among other things that I can do and like doing. It's going to get too cold for all that and so maybe I shouldn't have said anything.

I don't know about all that - calling a nation developed and all because of people like me. I've done nothing.

I'd be very. very wary about trying to pick up trash from river banks in India because there will most likely be dog, cow, and human poo lying around. The only reason I pick up stuff here is that there's no human and animal waste products lying around...

The "gift" was given away the same day. Went into a donation box. I was just waiting for someone to tell me to give it away and not be a greedy pig about it.

Shilpidi