Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Settling In

I never imagined it could be so disconcerting to come back home to your own country and have to 'settle in' all over again- after all, it has only been a year since I went to Singapore, and I also made a one-week trip to Hyderabad/Vizag in April.

A lot has changed since then, though, and with Vizag no longer being home, I wasn't particularly keen to come back here. There are people who think you oughtn't to be saying so about the country you've grown up in, and I have often thought so myself about people who spent a spell abroad and came back all altered and a little irreverent, but I know what it really feels like, now.

My last week in Singapore went by in a blur. Shopping, cramming things into suitcases and cartons to be sent off through cargo, packing for the flight, last-minute goodbyes, and that one last, longing look at sights that had grown so familiar to me, and which I'd fallen wholly in love with. Oh yes, even the Merlion, a little grudgingly. (I'm not the biggest fan of the Merlion, you see- while it is symbolic of Singapore's rise as an economic power and a mix of history and modernity, the country definitely has plenty of other very interesting landmarks.) threaded numerous times through the alleys of Vivo City mall, which connects to our office at Harbour Front, and now I could probably go around blindfolded. I kept telling myself, don't say goodbye, it'll only make you feel worse. I went on a boat ride down the Singapore River, on one of the little cruises that operates from Clarke Quay, and saw the Fullerton in all its splendid evening grandeur. I went to dinner with cousins and had Thai food, for the first time ever. It was a pretty memorable week, little disappointments notwithstanding.

I still haven't reached the stage where I can say with a clear conscience that I'm glad to be back. I'm going to work from tomorrow, 9 AM to 6.30 PM, and obviously, not really looking forward to it after the almost regular 8-hour shifts I've been doing. It'll probably only be the beginning of something exciting and unpredictable, because that is exactly how Singapore came about. Touch wood.

10 comments:

W said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Welcome back.

Jaya said...

Thanks, Wes.

Frozy said...

oh.. I shall so miss you, here in Singapore.. All those nice shopping we did.. And the sight seeing.. the wonderful F1 races with equally racing hearts.. Ahh.. i shall miss all those and you.. farewell, kiddo.. may F1 come to India fast.. LOL!! :P hihi..

Bhuvaneswari Jayaraman said...

did you go to the market after you returned to Vizag? The reason I ask is after I got home I thought everything here had suddenly become very expensive. A 100 Rs did not get anything substantial. Thought this feeling was quite strange because I had lived on a student's budget and on the more expensive side of the Re-$ divide:)

Jaya said...

Frozy: Wake up.

Bhuvani: I'm in Hyd, and yes, I've had to go shopping- I agree, things seem so expensive! While in the early months in Singapore, we were converting prices to Indian currency, now we're converting back to dollars in relation to what we were earning there :P. Weird.

Arun Ramkumar said...

my yer optimistic :)
here's to another onsite trip soon!

Jaya said...

Arun, I'd love to go abroad again, but you know what I want to be doing if I do get a chance again :).

Ananyah said...

Welcome back Pooja! :)

Jaya said...

Thanks Anu :).