Public Transportation: My Independence
MANYA MANRAL
It is said that a child's background and upbringing
play a major role in shaping their personalities. I come from a fairly
stereotypical middle-class Indian family. My mother is a housewife and my
father is a government officer. All the women in my family are housewives so I
grew up having great respect for professional mothers. I always wondered how it
was possible for them to balance their professional and personal lives.
Growing up,
my mother didn't know how to drive a scooty (still doesn't but I don't blame
her). I guess it was one of those things which you always think you will do but
never get around to actually doing it. As a result of mom not knowing how to
drive, we would always use public transportation. My dad had been transferred
to Patna so every time we had to go to school and my van wasn't coming, we
would be using public transportation.
I had never
used public transportation alone. Living in a place like Uttar Pradesh, the
issue of safety is always there at the back of every girl's mind. In my final
year of school, I was made an office bearer and my dad, after a stint in
Lucknow, was transferred to Allahabad. Being an office bearer meant additional
responsibilities. It also meant waiting in school at least one hour after it
was over almost every day. My mother has a weak immunity and falls ill easily.
She was undergoing treatment for some health issue and it wasn't possible for
her to pick me up from school every day. I knew she would fall ill within two
days. Luckily that year Lucknow got its metro and going to school became
simpler on my own. Coming back home was
a problem as the tempo connecting the metro station and my area would drop me
on the other side of a road with very heavy traffic and walking till the metro
station was especially tiring after a long day at school. To reach home the
other way, I needed to use three vehicles: a rickshaw, an auto rickshaw and a
tempo. The first couple of times I was really scared. I knew the route and
everything but I would be extra-cautious sitting next to any man and would
worry about something going wrong. After the first few times, I gradually
became a lot more comfortable.
It is very strange that something as simple as going
home yourself can give you such confidence. Going out to do anything seemed
like a huge chore for me before. It meant I would have to have to inform my
mother so that she could manage her schedule or carpool with my friends, which
meant taking permission from my father. I don't have a personal phone so I
can't even book cab rides that easily. Using public transportation meant that I
didn't have to rely on others all the time. It made going out somewhere less of
a burdensome chore and more of a simple task. It was like my brain saying “Oh,
it wasn't as difficult as it seemed”. My school had week long extravaganza to
celebrate its hundred and fiftieth anniversary and as a result I had to be in
school at various timings and my ability to travel alone helped not just me but
also my family. My mother still jokes about that week saying that she would
have fainted by the end of it if have had to drop me off to school. It also
made me examine the social mobility amongst women and how unsafe public
transportation can deprive them of opportunities which ultimately go to men
because they can travel anywhere at odd hours.
Editor’s Note: Its
surprising how, sometimes, the littlest of things can make you feel proud and
independent. In India, especially, where girls have less freedom, less exposure
to the outside world, it’s difficult. Isn’t it funny how girls in India are not
allowed to travel alone (because oh strangers), but they are very easily
married off to strangers and told that her in-laws, who are also complete
strangers, are her new family.
If you also have something to write about or speak about, do
it now. We encourage our audience to be the ‘voice of change’.


Yay Manya you rock
ReplyDelete