Friday, December 3, 2010

Post-mortem

** Fiction as always**

There are only some 1,440 tigers left in India, presumably including the CWG mascot, Shera. Clearly the Indian tiger is an endangered species, and we must do all we can to save it. But while we are trying to save the tiger, let's spare a thought for a species that is not just endangered but extinct: the postman.

Remember the postman? He was the guy - though it may well have been a gal, the erstwhile postal department having been an equal-opportunity institution - who left mail for you in your letter box. Postmen - postpeople, if you prefer - were like Santa Claus, or the Tooth Fairy: you never saw them but you found evidence that they'd been there by what they left behind - letters, bills, junk mail, what have you. No, it's not quite true that you never saw postpeople. You did see your postperson, once a year. On the dot of Diwali your postperson would turn up on your doorstep for the annual Diwali mubarak baksheesh that all postpeople were entitled to by tradition, if not by their official terms of employment.

Over the years, i'd got to know my postperson quite well, thanks to our once-a-year meetings on Diwali. Then this Diwali, my postperson didn't turn up. Had my postperson forgotten? Unlikely. Postpeople had to have powerful memories, capable of remembering all those addresses and where exactly each one was on their beats. A good memory was a professional requirement if you were a postperson. So why had my postperson not kept our Diwali rendezvous?
Then I begun to come across people, friends and neighbours, whose postpeople had also not turned up for their Diwali baksheesh. Why this sudden paucity of postpeople? That's when the ominous thought struck me: were postpeople becoming - or had already become - an extinct species, along with the dodo, the typewriter and telephones which had dials instead of pushbuttons?
And the chilling answer seemed to be 'yes'. Along with the dodo, the typewriter and phones with dials, evolution had bypassed the postperson. With the advent of internet and e-mail people not only stopped using 'snail mail' to correspond with each other, but they also stopped writing letters at all to each other. Instead, they tweeted each other, or sent each other SMSs: Hw r u?
OK, so people stopped writing letters. But what about bills, junk mail, pizza delivery offers (If It's Not Hot/Our Bandha Can Be Shot), and all that other stuff? If there were no more postpeople - because people had stopped writing letters - who was going to deliver all the other mail? The answer, of course, was couriers, a vast army of which appeared overnight.
Unlike postpeople whom you never saw, save on Diwali, you see couriers every day, several of them every day. When the doorbell rings you always know it's the courier come calling. How do you know this? Because experience has taught you that couriers, all couriers, have an uncanny psychic ability by which they know exactly when to ring the doorbell while you are in the middle of performing an intimate function which requires your total concentration, like using the loo, or trimming your toenails, or dealing with the blackhead that's suddenly appeared on the tip of your nose. You're just about to squeeze the damn thing out when ... Ring! It's the courier. With an invitation to an ikebana exhibition organised by the Indo-Japanese Friendship League, or the exciting book launch of the Telephone Directory.
Yesterday the doorbell rang. I wasn't in the loo, or the shower. So it couldn't be the courier. Could it be my postperson, come back to life? It wasn't. It was the courier. Demanding Diwali baksheesh. I gave it too.

As a bribe. Not to make sure the courier kept coming to deliver my mail. But to make sure the courier stopped coming to deliver my mail.

13 comments:

  1. What a change of perspective.. I thought you are going to write a boring one this time on our long los postman... but it turned out to be just fine. You never cease to amaze us...

    I am pretty sure you would have seen the same guy in the DHL uniform whom you saw last year in the khaki uniform and a small netaji type topi on his head. Probably he learned quickly and kept up to speed with the technology. Snail mail is out and courier is in. But what if courier will soon become extinct ... Soon the same guy will probably change the uniform again with a flashy ID card this time and be the guy at Yahoo or Google DC in a country like India or Phillipines, writing code to deliver e-mails to you. And then Yahoo and Google will start demanding the monetary favors (so called annual fees) for delivering e-mails. The heavier the attachment, the more the money :-).

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  2. @SF1:Don scare me i keep sharing all these HD (hush hush)videos via email and i am on penny a day payscale :(sob sob,Now that you are imagining a future..imagine a future where i will have real MONEY plants at my desk :)

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  3. A very well composed write-up. As a reader, I couldn't help but think back to the good old days of the postman's Diwali baksheesh visits. The writing is characterized by the smooth flow which I found evident in the fact that I stopped only at two points while reading. Good work. Write more!

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  4. Am kinda confused.. were you raised in US and missed Indian postmen? I dont think they send pizza coupons in India, and USPS guys are still making it every day here..

    The best lines:
    "while you are in the middle of performing an intimate function which requires your total concentration, like using the loo, or trimming your toenails, or dealing with the blackhead that's suddenly appeared on the tip of your nose. You're just about to squeeze the damn thing out " i am not sure whether you have pun intended here but is surely masterful.. :)

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  5. Nice, as always... but y such a long gap... u really need to make more time for the blog....

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  7. And I love the pun in the title... cute!

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  8. one post morterm !! very well written for sure. the best line is that pizza shot me pun :D - pavnesh

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  9. Poor Dakiya would have never imagined that someday all the letters in his jhola gonna get the form of zeroes and ones and thrown up in the air to be caught at another end.
    The kids running behind his Atlas Bicycle would grow up being network engineers and cement the grave of his own species :P

    Whatsover...u never gonna get ur cheeks dat wide while reading an email..as u had reading an awaited letter...

    Well written Malkin...the title is too good.

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  11. @Kaushik:Thank u bhai:)

    @abhinav:what u talking abt dude no pizza coupons in india..in whic centuary did u leave the indian shoreline ..high time to visit darti mata :) n ye thanks!

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  12. @khitija: point noted :)

    @pavnes:pizza ki bat sab ke mann aur pet ko humesha choo jati hai !!

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  13. @malik:
    yahn to letter ke nam pe bill aate hain jis pade ke wide smile to nahi han big hole in pocket jarur ho jata hai!!

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