When in Delhi, “Chase” Experiences
When my family finally announced that they are going to visit Delhi and spend about a week over here, I was thrilled! It almost felt like I was their host, in this city that is very familiar to me, because I live here. Irrespective of the fact that they have all come to Delhi multiple times in the past, and must be fairly familiar with the city as well, I want to give them the “quintessential Delhi experience”. I sat down to “curate” an itinerary for “things to do” when they come to Delhi. In other words, what kind of experiences do I want them to take with them.
“Of course you cannot miss watching the Light & Sound Show at the Purana Qila, but you also have to spend an afternoon at Dilli Haat and watch the Safdarjung’s Tomb all illuminated after it gets dark! And what about cafe-hopping in Hauz Khaas!”
The list kept growing longer. The list of experiences to chase, when in Delhi!
Cut to a couple of days later, at office during lunchtime. While sharing slices of pizza, a friend of mine broached the usual question that most people in the corporate world ask each other towards the end of the work-week: “Guys, what are your plans for the weekend”! She narrated a list of things to do in Delhi over the weekend: a movie screening, a food festival, a cultural fest, a concert, and many others. All of us added our own bits of what we knew was happening. Spoilt for choices as we clearly were, we did not know which experiences were worth chasing, and which ones were not! And was it worth anything to stay back at home and “relax”, when so much was happening outside.
Who doesn’t like experiencing new things in the city and curating one’s experiences with as much thought as can be put to it? Especially a city like Delhi has no dearth of what can be experienced at a particular time. However, here’s something that I have been thinking off lately: in the bid to chase experiences, are we spending enough time in savouring and relishing the ones we get?
In the recent years, the city’s cultural landscape has become quite diverse, and yet repetitive. Sufi music festivals are no longer a novelty, one such festival would be hosted almost every month! Crafts and handicraft fairs are all in the run now, almost every big and small fair ground in Delhi hosts one. Many of these are touted as be “international” and grab your eyeballs. To top it off, periodic waves of what can be described as “random fancies” gain prominence across different city venues: candlelight concerts this month, and “bhajan clubbing” on the next!
The same can be said about heritage walks! The same monument will be visited by four different groups on four separate weekends in one single month, simply because everyone in Delhi talks and feels passionate about heritage! Whether that’s good or bad for the city’s heritage is a debate to be had on another forum, but the problem really lies in how some of these are just imitations of one another, rather than original interventions.
All of this sometimes makes me feel nauseous. Nauseous of how every place in Delhi has now got a tag attached to it of some experience that no other place can offer you! For instance, forest bathing at the Aravallis, catching sight of ducks and fireflies at the Lodhi Gardens, Sunday brunch at the Sunder Nursery, and so on and so forth!
Think about this: why don’t we pause for a little longer and try to savour the same experience a little more than we would normally allow ourselves to? I might want to sit and sketch at the Sunder Nursery, and spend a couple of hours beside the lake, rather than be on the rush to catch the concert at the Piano Man at Hauz Khas? After all, I am not on a trip with a travel agency and a group of 20 individuals to account for the time spent, but have come here on my own, with my own time and space.
Deep down, I miss those pre-2020 days when Instagram was not such a rage, and the social media influencer wave was not on the rise. Yes, we did know when the book fair is going to happen at the Pragati Maidan (now Bharat Mandapam), but we would not be urged to “must do this at that spot”! We could figure out ourselves, with less social media intervention, what is worthy of being experienced and how long should you cherish that! Word of mouth would make some place sound enticing, and the thrill of exploring that place on its own terms would reveal itself to you!
I am not against curating experiences (people who know me personally would perhaps appreciate how much I love researching and curating lists of things to explore)! But my idea is also to not to make that list too long and make experiencing something just a check-boxing exercise. As long as you are not convinced that you have explored a place well enough, there is no harm in going back to it. Some places only reveal themselves when revisited, when you slow down and pause and reflect. While planning works, random experiences are not entirely bad!
Above all, Delhi as a city should not just be reduced to a bunch of experiences. Yes, there are things to do everywhere every weekend, and that’s not bad! But the city and her people are also like a slow-paced novel that has chapters and narratives. You spend more time reflecting upon a single word, reading the same paragraph multiple times till you are able to absorb its meaning. And that, my dear reader, is absolutely fine!
“ Ah it's so well written D. I can experience Delhi in the way you have described it, and it was heaps slower when I grew up there. Going down to your own colony market to have chat or gulab jamuns was the best way to hang out with friends or just have a good end to a school week. Nirulas or momos at Dilli Haat was a cool thing to do or hanging out at the different places at Mandi House. It's a different city but all places change and it's our memories that remain. Living in the cities of memories is how I sometimes see my life.” - VG
ReplyDelete“ Very thought provoking! And it's always a pleasure reading your musings!”- AP
ReplyDelete“ I love the part about Delhi before Insta rage. And the part where it says it's not just Experiences but so much MORE.”- NB
ReplyDelete“ Such a comforting read. It reminds you to slow down and truly feel the moments instead of just chasing them 💖”- S
ReplyDelete“ This is so heartfelt and true Diptarka 🥹! I’ve felt this too, i loved the writeup🥹“- SG
ReplyDelete“ This paragraph was the best -
ReplyDeleteIn the recent years, the city’s cultural landscape has become quite diverse, and yet repetitive. Sufi music festivals are no longer a novelty, one such festival would be hosted almost every month! Crafts and handicraft fairs are all in the run now, almost every big and small fair ground in Delhi hosts one. Many of these are touted as be “international” and grab your eyeballs. To top it off, periodic waves of what can be described as “random fancies” gain prominence across different city venues: candlelight concerts this month, and “bhajan clubbing” on the next!” -TG
“ Thank you so much for sharing another one of your wonderfully written and thought provoking blog posts 💜 As someone who come to Delhi occassionally, I do come with a whole itineary prepared and I would admit that most of it is because of what I saw online as a place being branded as a "must-visit" place in Delhi. But I do understand where you are coming from, as someone from Shimla, I keep going back to places that people just visit for a short while and check it off their list, as if that place/experience is not worth a second time or more. And with Delhi being so vast and with so much more to offer, it is necessary to curate what speaks to you and experience that, even if it means revisiting a place/experience again. Of course, one can always follow a friend's recommendation because that is another experience of its own. But finding your own pace is what matters, I think, just like you said”- PF
ReplyDelete“This really resonated, great stuff Diptarka!!“- SA
ReplyDelete“ Now this blog makes me want to visit delhi soon! That too with a well researched and curated list 🙈😂 no, but humour aside, I felt so connected with this post. It felt like being understood in many ways! Especially when it comes to chasing experiences and when to prioritising not just visiting places but actually Savouring them over the places just being some items to be tick marked in my itinery. I guess social media has really influenced us to think that the more the places the merrier. That's fine if it resonates with someone. But visiting places again, discovering new things about them, theres so much beauty in it. I loved the comparison at end of re reading paras again & places. Beautiful blog! & well put feelings. Thank you for such a refreshing read!”- SR
ReplyDelete“ This is so nice. And I agree, that due to insta and influencer culture so many places now have events and are almost completely occupied, especially during weekends.
ReplyDeleteBut I still believe there are a lot of unexplored places in delhi, and I'd like it to be like that, atleast till I get to be there. When someone asks me delhi, me krne ko kya hai, I'm like bas bahar nikl, sb jaga kuch na kuch ho rha hai!”— RM
“ I had to go through your complete write up , at least four to five times to engulf the true fervour of your thoughts in your black and white format . Honestly , for me Delhi visit means being with you and enjoying with you and that too in a relaxed mood . Of course , a bit of shopping is an essential part of the tour as it had been from the first experience of visiting Delhi . I remember , my frantic madness over shopping which left me to buy a bag of shoes from different markets . This time , you and bhaididi will help me to see Delhi with your eyes .”- SD
ReplyDelete“ I have been thinking along similar lines a bit recently - especially because of the similar context of showing parents around the city.
ReplyDeleteEspecially this line - Nauseous of how every place in Delhi has now got a tag attached to it of some experience that no other place can offer you! For instance, forest bathing at the Aravallis, catching sight of ducks and fireflies at the Lodhi Gardens, Sunday brunch at the Sunder Nursery, and so on and so forth!
Ughhh so true!
It's really well written!”- KR
“It’s lovely! We nowadays get easily influenced by what people are doing on social media and want to have the same experience but it honestly doesn’t feel as enjoyable as we would have though.”- MS
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete“Tbh, even though I have been born and brought up in Noida and...Delhi has been in my vicinity, I too got a lot of interesting inferences of the city thanks to your write-up.
I realized, dang! Even I haven't traveled Delhi all that much in my 27 years of life as much as you have done in....a handful of them 😅
Thanks for sharing! This was an amazing read”- R
“ This is so precious, D!
ReplyDeleteFirstly, I'm so glad that my paradox of choice for that weekend led to this chain of thought, haha. And you know what I ended up doing that weekend? Nothing. And that is absolutely fine!!
I love that you use the word 'chase' because that's exactly what it can feel like, especially to someone who's newly moved here. It feels like you've wasted away a weekend if you haven't had any new 'Delhi experience'. But what your blog beautifully conveys is this - if you experience something for the sake of checkboxing and move on to the next, did you even really immerse yourself in that experience and were able to truly appreciate it?
My favourite bits were these: "Every place in Delhi has now got a tag attached to it of some experience that no other place can offer you! For instance, forest bathing at the Aravallis, catching sight of ducks and fireflies at the Lodhi Gardens, Sunday brunch at the Sunder Nursery, and so on and so forth!"
This is quite an observation! Made me realize how this restrains us from having a unique experience of our own.
"Deep down, I miss those pre-2020 days when Instagram was not such a rage, and the social media influencer wave was not on the rise. Yes, we did know when the book fair is going to happen at the Pragati Maidan (now Bharat Mandapam), but we would not be urged to “must do this at that spot”! We could figure out ourselves, with less social media intervention, what is worthy of being experienced and how long should you cherish that! Word of mouth would make some place sound enticing, and the thrill of exploring that place on its own terms would reveal itself to you!"
This made me wish that I had experienced the city pre-2020! I can still, with your help, pretend to. So will try now!!
Thank you, D for sharing your thoughts so beautifully!! It was a lovely and thought-provoking read!!”- RN