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Poging GOUD - Vrij

Songs as time machines, our memory bookmarks

Hindustan Times Gurugram

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November 23, 2025

The year is 1996. It's a cold December morning, you are riding pillion with your hands wrapped around your dad's waist, as he rides his Rajdoot motorcycle to drop you at school because you missed the bus.

- Abhishek Asthana

Missed buses are a mini-calamity for middle-class households, as if they are the first domino falling which will lead to a failed career and, eventually, a distress-sale of the ancestral house. Your father is furious, and how your lack of morning discipline will lead to loss of shareholder value you create in life and other such rebukes come your way. You are a 10-year-old.

"Jaldi subah nahi uthoge to yahi reh jaaoge (If you don't rise early, you will have to stay here)," you are warned - desi parents' worst nightmare is their kids not being able to emigrate. You swallow it all, immobile with guilt with your ear stuck to his back which allows you to sense the words ringing from inside him. You wait patiently for things to cool down.

And they do. You are in the last stretch of the ride, which he has eased into - probably a bit guilty about all the harsh words said, but conditioned by society to not apologise. Yet, it softens him up and he hums: "Hai apna dil to awaara ... (My heart is a drifter)". It was sung by Hemant Kumar in 1958 for the movie Solva Saal, well before you were born. Yet that song - seeded deep in your disturbed mind that cold December morning - subconsciously becomes your favourite. Even if your parents have nothing to give you, what you inherit is their music, their songs.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Hindustan Times Gurugram

Hindustan Times Gurugram

Hindustan Times Gurugram

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