My Y2K memories
My Y2K memories
It was the summer of 2000. I was ten
years old and believed the world had somehow "reset" with the arrival
of the Y2K year. Everyone was talking about computers crashing and
satellites falling. But my thatha, Shri Srinivasan Iyengar, Cheenu Thatha as I
fondly called him said something quite different: “Y2K year? Let me make it
memorable for you.”
Now, mind you, Thatha was a retired
government servant, living a quiet life on a modest pension, with no family properties
to boast of only rich values and rock-solid character inherited from
generations before him. He had also fought and survived multiple myeloma since
1975. But what he lacked in material wealth, he more than made up for abundant
love in heart and courage to travel.
That year, he planned a trip for me, my
dear Pattu Paatti and my Periamma to Pandharpur and Mantralaya. It was my first
time going anywhere beyond South India. It felt like boarding a rocket ship.
The train journey itself felt like an
adventure. I remember clinging to the window bars, staring at the changing
landscapes, breakfasts of coconut chutney turning into dry puris served with mysterious
sabzis. Somewhere around Solapur, I got introduced to “sukha bhel”—and fell in
love, thinking, Wow, chaat can be crunchy and dry?
We reached Pune first, where we stayed
at a relative’s place. As a typical South Indian girl used to her sambhar-rasam
cycle, I remember how the smell of vendakkai vathakozhambu wafted through their
home. That first bite of rice, hot ghee, and that familiar tangy-spicy pull of
tamarind—it was not food, it was home on a plate. I still remember licking my
fingers and feeling like I had won some culinary lottery.
From Pune, we set off to Pandharpur.
When I entered the temple of Shri Panduranga, I was utterly awestruck. The idol
wasn’t black like the granite deities in Tamil Nadu, it gleamed in a polished,
creamy, marble-like sheen. My young brain went, "How is God white and
shiny here? Is this North Indian magic?"
And then came the biggest cultural
shock of my life.
I remember tugging at Paatti’s saree and
whispering, “Aren’t they going to get yelled at?” There was no loud “THODAATHA,
MELA PADAATHA”. The air smelled of camphor, marigolds, and the dust of old
bhajans. I joined the crowd, put my little hand on the feet of Shri Panduranga,
and I swear, I felt something shift inside me. Even at ten, I knew this was
big.
After
the darshan, we drove back towards Pune Junction through sugarcane fields
dancing in the breeze, and nimbu paani was sold in roadside. I still remember my
periamma’s warning me, “Don’t even think
of a second glass; your bladder will burst, and with no washrooms in sight,
you’ll have to graduate from the roadside Open University with a major in
Emergency Pee Management!”
Our
next and final stop was Mantralaya. The landscape softened here. The
Thungabadra River flowed like poetry—serene, ancient, unbothered. I remember
dipping my feet in holding the hands of my paati, watching the ripples stretch.
My cheenu thatha’s dark-skinned face gleamed with the brilliance of the pure
white Vadakalai Thiruman, a mark he wore with quiet pride. Clad in a dhoti as
white as milk (which washed with his own hands each day), he was the very
embodiment of self-discipline to me.
At
the temple, we had darshan of Shri Raghavendra Swami, or Shri Raayar, as we
lovingly call him. The atmosphere was meditative and gentle. Thatha stood
silently, palms folded. His eyes were closed. I looked at him and wondered—what
was he thinking? Was he thanking God for letting him live past cancer? For this
journey? For pattu paati ?
I
didn’t ask. Some silences are too sacred to fill.
Eventually,
the train pulled back into Chennai Central. I was tanned, slightly sunburnt,
and deeply transformed.
Over
the years, I’ve had other vacations—fancier, more luxurious. But none of them
ever matched what that trip gave me: a slice of my soul, a memory stitched with
faith, simplicity, and love.
24th
April 2025 marked the 18th death anniversary of my beloved Cheenu Thatha. And
even now, I feel his presence in the smallest things. He didn’t leave me land
or gold. He didn’t build mansions or write his name in history books. But what
he gave me is more powerful than any inheritance: willpower, authenticity,
self-respect, and discipline.
Every
time life gets noisy, I close my eyes and hear him say, “Let’s make it
memorable.”
And
I try.
Because, if a retired man with no wealth, just a government pension and a faith could
create a lifetime memory for a ten-year-old girl in the summer of Y2K—then I,
too, can live with that level of heart.
Forever grateful. Forever proud.
Forever your granddaughter.
— Saranya Sriram

Excellent Saranya.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ranjani
DeleteThat was a Fabulous Write up Saran 👏👏
ReplyDeleteThank you Anonymous :-D
DeleteThese are evergreen memories, whenever you read them you travel to those moments and can relive it. Beautifully written.
ReplyDelete