FESTIVALS:reminiscing dhanurmasam!
From the Bhakti List Archives
• January 14, 1997
After hurriedly making pongal while reciting thiruppavai, I got ready to go to work. I pulled up my snow boots, buttoned my coat, threw an old scarf around my neck, and adjusted my gloves, ready to tackle the 40 mile drive to work on a cold icy morning. I glanced at the rear-view mirror, and sighed, thinking back to my mornings back home, and my these cherished came alive... The start of the day ... The usual wake up calls are heard around 5:00 am. A folk song in kannada is heard from a distance, as if in a dream. It is sung by someone on his bullock cart, going to Hebbal via Vyalikaval, where I lived in Bangalore. The bells in the bullocks neck would make a rythmic jingle, accompanying his song! After a while the bells would become very loud, this time accompanied by a calf's "ambaaa, ambaaa." Next it would be our milkman, who would knock on the door, as he had done every day. he would announce that he was ready to milk the cow and we should see that the bucket was empty, to show that he was not adding any water. The simple milkman would milk the cow, and we could hear the milk from the cow's udder hitting the bottom of the bucket, proclaiming his honesty! My mother would go out with the pathram, touch the cow's forehead, touch her eyes, take the pathra inside, and saying Srikrishnaparamathma's name, start off the daily chores. Dhanurmasam Mornings... Dhanurmasam was extremely special and auspicious. We would wake up to these beautiful, melodious bhajans and songs rendered by a group of devotees walking in the street early in the morning! I would wake up with this festive 'sadagara', and go through the morning chores, all the time hearing a sloka or the thiruppavai from my father, mother, and my sister from all parts of the house. Next door, we had the good fortune of having this Ayyangar "thatha" who said thiruppavai in a booming voice! Then I would get ready to go to work. I worked at State Bank Of Mysore, Vyalikaval branch, which was a 'ladies branch', a stone's throw away from my home. But it would take me a while to get there because every couple of steps some one would say, 'Don't forget thiruppavai today in ramamandir,' or 'There is a discourse in the kovil' or 'There is a puja in so and so's house.' I would stop and say, 'Oh how nice! Yes I will be there' and so on. As I neared the bank, the suvasana from the agarbatti would come wafting out of the branch to greet me as they just finished doing puja to the laxmi patam. Well, the best part was that the majority of us at the bank were ayyangars, including the manager, Usha Sunderraj. So the branch would be filled with the 'swish swish' of the kanjeevaram sarees in a myriad of colors, the strong, but pleasant smell of 'mallige' in our hair, and the 'khan khan' of the bangles as they danced on our wrists! The customers would come in and greet us with big smiles and say " Oh wow! did I just walk into a Maduve Mane? (wedding choultry)"! They would all wish us a happy Dhanurmasam; most north Indians and others knew it as only the Ayyangar's special month! My branch timings were from 9:00-1:00 and 3:00-7:00, so we had plenty of time to go home, enjoy a pandige meal (invite non ayyangar freinds to lunch) and even take a nap before going back. In the evenings, I would rush back home and go to different thiruppavai functions. At the Venugopalaswamy temple in Malleshwaram, all through the month there would be special events. There would be wonderful alankarams and sevais. If I close my eyes I can still see Krishnar adorned in blue velvet with shiny pearls and gold work. And Andal thaayar in yellow and green 9 yards saree!! I just want to keep my eyes closed and relive those memories forever! Oh well, anyway, all these wonderful memories, and listening and reciting Vishnu Sahasranamam, took me (and Bheema, my mazda van!) through the 40 mile drive effortlessly! Here at work, between my long ADA compilations, I read my mail and see Sri Sadagopan's wonderful dhanurmasam postings. I get so engrossed in and inspired by all the vivid descriptions that I get through the rest of the day with the same enthusiasm as I did at the bank back home; even though the 'Swish' is not the Kanjeevaram saree, but the sleet and the slush!! Thanks to Sri Sadagopan and Sri Mani and ALL of you learned Bhagavathothamas for bringing such divine feelings from your postings in our otherwise daily mundane routines! I Wish you all a very Happy Pongal and may we always be blessed by the Divya Dampathis kripa kataksham!! Regards Indira
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