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| My BAGWATI! |
The most exciting thing during school reopening time was buying a new bag every year. Which included convincing Mumma that the old bag is not enough, or it's torn, or about to become non-functional soon. And then going for bag shopping was like an event, similar to buying a house; both are equally difficult things to choose. Touching the bags, feeling them, fidgeting with the chains, looking at how spacious the interior of the bag is, will it be able to fit our tiffin and bottle (the most important things in a bag), and if it fits in all the above conditions, then its aesthetics should be trendy too. Sometimes it took more than one visit or more than one shop visit to finalise ‘THE BAG’ of the year.
Earlier, we used to buy those horizontal backpacks. They had two locks, and everything was kept horizontal in them. Then came the vertical backpacks, where we kept everything vertical. My new Bagwati is a mix of both; things are kept horizontally, and it is carried vertically (in backpack mode).
Do you remember coming out of an examination hall and spotting your bag and feeling like you had spotted your home? Because bags are not just bags; they are really mini houses, they house our belongings. When we peek into them, we actually peek into a mini version of our house. The mini compartments are like dry balconies, which are just for psychologically fooling us; nothing really fits in there. The next medium-sized compartment for tiffin is like a mini kitchen, where we keep peeking in when we know something is interesting in there. Then the next medium-sized compartment is like a drawing room, where we keep notebooks, and some short textbooks, less space, less clutter; more like a well-kept room in the house to host guests (like if you want someone else to keep something in your bag, you ask them to keep it in this compartment). Then comes the last huge compartment, which is like the master bedroom; it has everything that did not fit anywhere else. Along with this, there is a laptop compartment, which is more like a half-bedroom (1.5BHK, it is that 0.5 BHK). It literally had no use in school bags, but we were fooled, in the same of a separate compartment.
These mini houses become our home away from home when we are in school, college, or on a trip. When everything around is new and intimidating, a look into the bag can calm us and remind us of the purpose with which we filled the bag to be where we are. We often say, I travelled to so and so place, but it’s never just I, it is always ‘us’(I + BAG = US). It’s never a solotrip, Bagwati is always there. Watching ‘Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara’ made me realise how a bag can be a character in itself. All our bags have a story to tell, sometimes even more interesting than we think. Someday, just sit and recall all the bags that you can recall and all the associated memories, and it will be a nostalgic trip down the memory lane.
My fondest memory of a bag is the one where I forgot my school bag at home and went to school, but that is a story for another blog. Let me know your crazy bag stories in the comment section of this blog.
PS. The name of the blog was given by my sister!

I remembered one of my bag is like metal peti or suitcase....
ReplyDeleteHouse tour in your bag is fantastic ...
Keep writing.....
That's great to know!
DeleteThank you!!
Bag as a home is unique and fantastic concept.In my school days I had aluminium box bag..and I was only having it in whole school..After reading your bolg I became nostalgic and there was a flood of memories in my mind about my bag .
ReplyDeleteaapne to bag me jan dal thi..Keep it up.
Aluminium Bag, that's interesting!!
DeleteThank youu!!
The most admirable thing about a bag is that , it is our traveling companion which carries out burdens no matter what we are going through in our lives....very few people appreciate about this non living object which we use in our day to day life...
ReplyDeleteTrue!!
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