Treasure Hunt
Gopal Wedding Last Part
The first part of treasure hunt is already published in this blog. This is second and the last part.
I forgot to tell that my relatives were also busy in
performing their duty as my kindred during that period. After many layers of
their filtration based on bride’ qualification, her age, her family social
status and of course their own larger personal interests, they managed to push
a bride party, as it is called in marriage circle, to my house. It was a late
Saturday afternoon when evening was getting ready to spread. I had just cleared
my huge stock of laundry which had piled up for last three weeks. I was about
to start my lunch. An unwanted knock on the door and I found four people of different
ages, weights, attires and different hair colors on my door. It did not take
long for me to understand that they were on ‘Treasure Hunt’ and my house could
be their ‘Treasure Hunt’ spot that day.
They changed the mode of interaction from question-answer
session to feedback session but in a unique satirical way. With each piece of
feedback, they were trying to dig one foot of grave for me. And their volley
started as “My brother in law distant uncle sister in law’s son changed five
companies in three years”; “My nephew became manager within four years of his
career”; “My brother in law’s nephew got call from India’s four premiere MBA
colleges “;” We have four houses within a city”. Neither I had asked for any of
these gold plated sentences nor was I interested in any of them. But these nail
biting social facts were revealed before me in order to give me social
enlightenment but without any demand from my side. They left my house after two
hours of rigorous interrogation and they made it sure to spoil my afternoon,
evening and even my lunch.
But that disaster did not deter my relatives from putting
their network on high alert. They had taken that incident on a very serious
note and why not, their prestige was also on stake. So after meticulous
filtration based on their well-known parameters mentioned above, few more bride
parties came to grace my house with the same hope of winning the ‘Treasure Hunt’ contest. They had more
or less the same set of questions but they had their own way of putting it and
that was really interesting to me. None of them ever asked about my interests,
my hobbies, and my views towards life and society. They were more interested in
my degree and my salary slip.
Days passed and months followed, I remained clueless about
this whole cycle of events. Marriage looked mysterious to me and the chance of
getting a bride elusive. But few question remained there to haunt me. Why
should I change five companies in three years to get a bride? Were IITians the
only eligible bachelors?? Was bride an engineering concept or a business puzzle
as they were so desperate for IITians and IIM guys or an average bachelor like
me could not even dare to solve that??
19th Mar, 2011.”Happy Birthday Dear, Gopal” my
sister was again the first person to wish me on my birthday. I thanked her.
This time I did not pass any resolution. And I had no regrets of fulfilling my
first ever resolution in life which I had passed on the same day last year. But
The “Treasure Hunt” was ON.