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Just A Little Something

Adventure lover, vegan, ceramic artist, writer, and organizer of fun tours. Come and discover India with me!

An evening by candlelight

Posted on August 25, 2006August 25, 2006

And I so spent an evening by candlelight.

It does seem a tad romantic. It really wasn’t that way though.


An evening by candlelight

I went back home from office late in the night to realize that my electricity connection had tripped (I have no idea what this means in electrical terms but it does sound rather cool). No self respecting electrician in Bangalore would come to my rescue at that late hour and this not being Mumbai, (when I could have probably called one), I decided to spend the evening by candlelight.

I realised how much we take things for granted. Things like electricity. I made a list of things you can’t do as a result of the lack of electricity. You can’t charge your phone, you can’t operate any electrical appliance, you can’t watch TV, you can’t read or write. I tried some writing by candlelight and found like I was transported into one of those low lighting slow movies (like Eyes Wide Shut or something). I thought of gate crashing options and decided that I might not be welcome at that time of the night.


Writing by candlelight has a nice slow movie kind of feel to it

The most important thing I realised was that I couldn’t operate my mosquito repeller and meanwhile my rooms were swarming with mosquitos. Big, small, noisy & buzzing creatures – you realise just how much of a pest they are when you don’t have electricity.

Finally, resigned to my fate and hunger (I had not the slightest inclination to cook in the dark), I decided to try and sleep early. But I did quite foresee the difficulty in this seemingly simple act. Being a late sleeper, I found the sleep gods unwilling to descend at that hour.

My mind went back in timeÒ€¦ About 2 decades ago to my grandma’s place : a town called North Lakhimpur. Electricity there would come for about an hour in the evening. It was a time for much rejoicing. Everyone gathered in the family room and there was excitement all around. This lasted for about an hour, till the pall of gloom would descend again as the town plunged into darkness for the rest of the night. We had to eat by the light of gas lamps peering into our plates, sometimes not quite sure what the next morsel was all about. It has to be said that there was an element of surprise during meal time.

Then, back to Guwahati where we would spend our summers. All of us cousins would congregate at my other grandma’s place. Even though many of our evenings were conducted without electricity (loadshedding was a common occurrence), we invented games to play in the dark (hide and seek for example, gets much more difficult when you can’t see). It was the days of the AGP agitation against foreigners (read: Bangladeshis) and while tyres burnt and folks shouted slogans outside and the town was ensconced in a dark cocoon, we in our innocence, continued our games.


Counting sheep by candlelight is a recommended activity

Back to the present – Kit Kit thinks the candle is a play-thing. She goes near the flame, screws her nose to get a whiff. I scream, she yelps and scampers off with her tail between her legs.

I decide to count sheep by candlelight. I am overwhelmed by how quiet it suddenly is. Without the hum of electricity and all related appliances, the sound of silence is so much louder.

As the candle burns to the very end around midnight, I finally fall into a deep dark sleep.

All in all, a rather “enlightening” experience. Try it sometime!

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Comments (11)

  1. Bijesh says:
    August 25, 2006 at 12:13 pm

    I love candles. They have a sort of mystery around them and staring at the flame can take u to places in your mind that u never knew existed.

    Reply
  2. Aqua says:
    August 25, 2006 at 3:59 pm

    reminded me of the movie swades …

    and hey…you are welcome to gatecrash at our place ANYTIME πŸ™‚

    Reply
  3. Gina Kale says:
    August 25, 2006 at 8:23 pm

    I feel at times there are so many small things that occur in our day to day life which we are unable to comprehend how important they are, somehow maybe because of the time restraint or “seemingly” more important issues occupying our minds. Things that are much more meaningful than those typical mundane thoughts regularly hovering around in our minds!

    Reply
  4. kannan says:
    August 26, 2006 at 10:46 am

    what a memorable evening! Think if the Candle is Lavender Scented? feel like heaven. try it again with Avon Contemporary Diwali Giftpack. Try this September!!!

    Reply
  5. Abdullah Fathyn says:
    August 26, 2006 at 3:08 pm

    Let there be light

    Light could easily be seen when in dark
    makes one realise the beauty of light
    Counting the enjoyed nights
    That you spend in candle light

    One could see this a life
    And dream of light to life
    Stop the violence in time
    To live in a happy peaceful world

    Reply
  6. Anshul says:
    August 26, 2006 at 9:22 pm

    AB!!
    Back in my hometown, electricity cuts are quite a common thing. Back in good old days – without generators and invertors, it used to be the best time with the whole neighbourhood intermingling, the central park buzzing and us kids having a ball…

    But then that was the good old 20th century πŸ™‚

    Reply
  7. Asha says:
    August 27, 2006 at 6:05 pm

    Lovely stories and pictures! All stories about light interest me! We once had a colleague from a remote island village on the Karnataka coast who told me that they didn’t have electricity until around 10 years back.
    When I am alone in the house, there are times I put off the light and sit in candlelight.

    Reply
  8. Anita says:
    August 29, 2006 at 6:34 pm

    Bijesh: Me too πŸ™‚

    Madam Aqua: I did think about you and then remembered you had guests πŸ™‚

    Gina: You bet! And I think its occasions like this when you appreciate things even more!

    Kannan: You sound like a closet Avon dealer.

    Reply
  9. Anita says:
    August 29, 2006 at 6:37 pm

    abdullah: Thanks for that nice thought!

    anshul: we are in the 20th century!

    asha: thanks for dropping by and that’s a nice thing to do. I might do it more often now!

    Reply
  10. kannan says:
    August 29, 2006 at 8:54 pm

    no no i am not a dealer its a wrong term. Beauty Advisor

    Reply
  11. Don Tietig says:
    September 4, 2006 at 5:28 pm

    Your a very good writer and I enjoyed the pic also

    Reply

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