So long, farewell, I have to say goodbye

The first time I realized that being a part of a family that was used to shifting houses, cities and compass directions was a culture in itself was when a cousin was shifting cities for the very first time after having lived in one place for twenty-nine years. The fact that they could not settle into their new city even after six months was mind boggling to me. Especially since I can settle in my immediate surroundings in a week and take maybe a month to settle in a wider context of where I’m living.

Goodbyes for me are easy, almost clinical. I donโ€™t understand when people fight over houses or refuse to sell their ancestral homes because of memories. I have never been attached to a home or a place. Sure I have fond memories, but no attachments. 

Because dad had a transferable job, any time we would leave a city, we would leave it for good. The first time I went back to a city I had left was Dehradun for a friendโ€™s wedding. If that nostalgia of revisiting a city as a tourist, one in which I grew up from a teen to a young adult was not enough, we took it a step further and went to our school too. 

I may not have attachments but by god seeing our classroom, which we had for three years from tenth to twelfth, changed into something else wasโ€ฆnot pleasant. But meeting our class teacher and English teacher who had taught us for four years wasโ€ฆquite extraordinary. It was because of her that I caught the bug of actually writing and not just dreaming about writing. It was because of her that I developed a lasting love for Shakespeare and literature.

So long, farewell, I have to say goodbye
That’s Parul ma’am – with our textbook of Macbeth (which I still have by the way)

But my original exit from Dehradun and reentry was marked by a distance of about a decade. So it wasnโ€™t such a big deal. I was a new person, visiting a new city. Even if the view to Mussourie reminded me of dadโ€™s excited chatterings when he first brought us to the city saying, humare ghar se na Mussourie dikhta hai. As if Dehradun ki har road se Mussourie nahin dikhta!

Cut to 2018, weโ€™re packing up a house in one part of Bombay and moving to another part of Bombay, to another house. The old house has seen too many moments but weโ€™re all pros at this by now. We already know how this goes, how much time it takes, which boxes need to be used for what things. There are so many thingsโ€ฆbut we pack it all and move. 

This is a new sensation for all of us – moving and yet not moving. Though for all intents and purposes, we are moving to a new city only. Cuffe Parade is near the sea, Goregaon is near aโ€ฆhillโ€ฆ? There were no autos in Cuffe Parade, only taxis but Goregaon runs on autos. Because of the sea, Cuffe is cooler, but Goregaon is dustier. The restaurants are different, the malls are different, the people are different – the very air is different.

But, weโ€™re old hands and we settle in for the ride, looking for stores from where to order groceries, discovering new places to eat and shop at and relearning the cadences of sitting in an auto.

What I was not ready for was going back to Cuffe Parade after two weeks of moving away. Suddenly, all of my friendsโ€™ dialogues that coming to my house for a visit felt like coming to a new city made sense. It was such a discombobulating feeling that it took me a while to figure out why this coming back was such a big deal. And when I did figure it out, it felt wrong coming to a place I had already said goodbye to.

That incident put a whole new twist to my aloof – I donโ€™t get attached – thought process. I realized that I do miss things but because of all the experience I have had in shifting, I donโ€™t dwell – or compare. But by god can I reminisce. I have favourite anecdotes and I can bore you with repeating them in different ways. 

I havenโ€™t gone back to Cuffe Parade since then, you know. But knowing my sister, sheโ€™s going to drag me there as soon as it becomes โ€œsaferโ€ for us to visit and just drive around, reacquainting ourselves with the roads we had travelled many times. Maybe, Iโ€™d even revisit my library and the old man who was always listening to a debate on BBC News whenever I entered that little oasis.

But I donโ€™t think Iโ€™d be able to bear it if I found out the pandemic swallowed it.

Sometimes, forever goodbyes are better. At least then, the library is still standing and the old man is still listening to a newscast.


Connecting this post to #BlogchatterA2Z. To read other posts, check Theme Reveal 2022: Without Prearrangement.


PS: If you like how I write and would like to read more, I have 2 ebooks on Kindle – both free if you’re on Kindle Unlimited. You can read more about the ebooks here.


Photo by Lachcim Kejarko

16 responses to “So long, farewell, I have to say goodbye”

  1. I’ve moved out of houses and cities a bit too much. Just a few months back I was counting how many houses (owned and rented spaces) I’ve lived in and it came to 10+. But I totally relate to you when you say you don’t feel too attached to a place. I, do, however, like to revisit those places just to reminiscence the pleasant and some unpleasant memories. I understand your hesitance and I hope you can visit the place again sometime.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Wow 10+ is quite a number. I like “clean” breaks so I try not to go back to things that were.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Suchita, this post resonates within me. As an Army kid, and later, Army wife, I have had wheels under my feet all through. Shifts were second nature, and packing turned into an art. Just when I thought that we had found our final house after retirement in Thrissur, Kerala, there we are moving out into another one after five years of being in this one! Well, one lives to shift, apparently! ๐Ÿ˜Š๐Ÿ˜Š

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes we have a history of staying in a house for either 3 years or 10 ๐Ÿ˜€ In our current house, we have crossed 3 so lets see what happens next.

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  3. Anagha Yatin Avatar
    Anagha Yatin

    Memories are safely stored inside the being, coated with the change-resistant emotional varnish! So yes, it’s difficult to see the good things changing in reality, scratching the full proof coating over them.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Change resistance emotional varnish – what an excellent way of putting it.

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  4. Swarnali Nath Avatar
    Swarnali Nath

    Forever goodbyes are better, you’re right Suchita. At least at that time we don’t bear an expectation in our hearts. Goodbyes are always stories themselves, I keep counting the goodbyes in my life, and almost all of them taught me a lesson in life. Loved your piece Suchita.

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    1. Goodbyes are stories – very interesting thought. Thank you Swarnali โค๏ธ

      Liked by 1 person

  5. I have moved quite a bit in my life in India, Ahmedabad, Dehradun, Chennai, Pilani, and Bengaluru, before finally settling down and putting roots in Dubai. Only Dehradun has a hold on my heart, maybe because that was where home was always, even when I was in another city. Dubai is another place I shudder to even consider leaving, but I know, I will have to leave it one day. But like you said, more than the place it is the memories that call to us. The people whom we left behind, hoping against hope that they will still be there waiting for us.

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    1. Yes I have started to feel the same way about Bombay and it’s stuff like – will I get an IMAX theatre in the new city? But there’s no Uber, how am I meant to travel? ๐Ÿ˜‚
      You know it’s the house helps I miss the most.

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  6. nostalgicmoments Avatar
    nostalgicmoments

    I envy people who can move on and move away this easily.
    But like you implied, it’s the memories that make the real difference. And evidently, you have loads of them.

    So cheers to (re)beginnings! ๐Ÿ™‚

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    1. Yes and it’s nice that I have the same set of people too ๐Ÿ™‚ Thank you.

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  7. This was so beautiful, Suchita. I have been moving all my life and the longest I’ve been at any place is Pune. I always disliked moving as a child because making friends used to be so hard. But I used to adjust to the new houses quite easily and ‘find my spot’ like Sheldon. Aaand you look so pretty in the picture ๐Ÿ™‚

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    1. Yes leaving friends behind was hard but technology has made it easier. Thank you!

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  8. Loved it Suchita… not only because you have written it so well, but also because it resonated with my rootless existence. When I moved to India, it was a forever goodbye to my childhood. I hv never met my friends from those years.. and definitely not gone back. In a way, its good. Like you put it… the library is still standing and the old man still there. In my later life, I hv said goodbye to many places. I carry memories,sometimes people… but never the desire to revisit. You can never step in the same river twice.

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    1. There’s a reason they say life is lived forward but understood backward. “You can never step in the same river twice” is such an amazing thought.

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