ETERNAL WAITING LINES (14-Aug-2020)

Often, I remember the days when as kids we played a game called ‘statue.’  Between two friends, the first one to say ‘statue’ to the second transformed the latter to freeze in that moment, and it lasted into eternity.  Unfreeze was only after the first friend allowed a break!  Modern times present a variation where waiting lines freeze in an eternal state like a mass spell of magic!  Admission lines to schools, counselling for professional courses, marriage hall formalities, and a few more test one’s patience, on the flip side though.  On the positive side, it offers an opportunity to be human once again and a quick chance for collaboration!

Marriage halls create a waiting atmosphere and are a natural abode for gossip.  Eavesdropping is then akin to a rush of adrenaline.  Like it matters - “Do you know if this is arranged or love marriage?” to “How did the groom’s father manage this ostentatious wedding with his paltry government salary, did he receive bribes?” to some good remarks like “they make a lovely pair, an ample proof that marriages are made in heaven!” to a quick scan of the environment to remark “all family members are well dressed and decked up, I wonder where they purchase their wardrobe!” are rife as we stand in utter gaze in perpetual lines to wish the newly-wed to whom we are mostly strangers.

Waiting lines then into the dining area is a story in bewilderment.  A candid evaluation of the food being served to a stream of suggestions, in between a quick brave act to grab a bonda or a sweet dish being transported, starts right then and there.  “Shouldn’t they serve a few more fried items with the papadum,” “shouldn’t the person add more ghee to his Obbattu (Puran Poli) and add hot milk so it tastes even better,” “oh come on the obese guy there is having another sweet, while we’re waiting forever,” and finally “jump for your slot right behind that guy, he has little quantity of mosaranna (curd-rice) left to finish in his plantain leaf” were just a few tactful remarks from friends as we waited.

The grocery store check-out lines are forever and offer a variety in snooping.  “Look at how much this lady has collected in her trolley,” to “Where is that product stacked, she has piled up a dozen of them and I looked in all aisles to no avail,” to the ever-nervous who hops to the next check-out line, a` la hopscotch, only to be left behind in the race.  My wife and I stood in the line at a store in USA; fed up of the indecisiveness of the person in front of us I thought I whispered into my better-half in Kannada “this dumb fellow needs to decide and move fast!” to which I heard a voice in Kannada from behind the rack “There are one too many and one in front of me!”

The ones that challenge my patience are the lines at highway toll booths.  I swerve my vehicle to the left and then to the right before my strategic movement into another line as I announce my grand entry as the ‘Eternal Murphy.’  Murphy’s law rears its ugly head my line moves the slowest.  I am a live testament, wherein my daughters’ have christened me with a middle name as ‘Murphy.’  Will FASTag alter my destiny…. must wait once again to discover an answer to this million-dollar question?!

If these lines are not for a patient wait in eternity, then where is the fun quotient in life?!

Comments

  1. It always feels like the other line moves faster .. 😀😀 . Good one

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  2. Nice one .... BTW the queuea when u hv to greet the newly weds .....I really get impaitent

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    1. Quite understandable.... and yes that's the right plan.... eat and then get the energy to greet
      Thanks buddy

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  3. Hey Prasanna, you my friend are a true student of life, and the fine art of people-watching. As I get older, I find people as a whole difficult to understand ! Hot milk with Obbattu might work if it’s Badam milk, but without sugar. Brilliant observations, anyway. I’ll follow your blog!

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    1. Thanks Sharat.... appreciate your encouraging comments.... now to more Obbattu....

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  4. It's a nice write up and reminded me of my childhood and the life before this unpredictability statue

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    1. Thank you so much....but thank God for the memories that we carry

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  5. Queues (other than at a wedding) were time for me to catch up on reading moral stories from a book in my hand whereas at weddings I prefer to have a meal and then come to wish the newly married couple if the queue is too long. No more long queues these days as most tasks can be accomplished online and certainly no big weddings these pandemic days, so let us make use of the lovely quality time that we can enjoy with our families. I remember the "statue" game we.played during schooldays and also "new pinch" when a neighbour or classmate wore a new dress.

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    1. Queues are good to collaborate with others in the line....there were so many games then that bring back memories. Thanks for taking the time to stop by and read and comment....means a lot

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  6. Thanks Dear Friend Pachchi , your article makes me to remember our childhood days . Marriage hall gossip & waiting in dining hall are true . But , now corona makes some resistance for it .

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    1. Yes there were many queues during our growing up years......great experience...there was fun in waiting too

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  7. Well written and how true .. poor Murphy would be suffering with too many hiccups ..

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    1. Thanks Jaideep.....Murphy's Laws always kick in ;-)

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  8. Those days standing , waiting in ques had lot of fun quotient. Standing in a que for the film ticket or for waiting for your turn to collect your bonda's and churmuri never felt like what we experience today.

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    1. Waiting is a fun game to learn more from teh people we catch up with standing and waiting.....thanks a lot

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  9. I have read and always tried to understand the Murphy's Law - such as why toast always lands buttered-side down when it falls off your breakfast table, and why the other queue is always faster....interestingly we experience these things happen almost everyday.
    I still remember those days when I waited in that long queue at KLE and MES college to receive an application....but sometimes those waiting times brings back so many memories of how all the friends planned and the kind of conversations we had while in the queue 😉😉 Also the same while waiting to reach the podium of the wedding receptions 😂😂😂
    Anyways thank you Sir for bringing back those memories.... I must now call my friends to have a reviving conversations of those days..Hmm my weekend’s going to be fun 😆😆

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    1. Enjoy the weekend with calling good old friends.....thanks for your time and appreciate the comments

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  10. Hi! Prass
    Another of your good reads. I enjoy each one of them.
    I feel the festi cities of 1960's and 1970's were good enough, more.naturelle and sumptous, though people of today feel.it lacked the glam and sophisticate. I always cherish sans these factors though. Marriage events would be a three day affair and what with the sweet remains we enjoyed post the event!
    That surely was a golden era bygone!
    Thanks a million for your lovely write up that makes the read worth each dime as always.
    Give us more!
    With love!

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    1. Thanks guru for your lovely feedback comments... yes those were the days. Waiting has its fun too and we need to enjoy those moments

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  11. Well written Prasanna. Very true too. Life is full of queues and waits, looks like we cant avoid them. So better to get some fun out of them.

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    1. Absolutely... and hence my last line on fun quotient
      Thanks a lot

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    2. Waiting and watching; that’s life

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  12. Thanks for reminding the childhood memories...and modern day freezing moments..very nice Sir

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  13. Remember AB's famous dialogue : "Hum jahan khade ho jaate hain, line wahi se shuru hoti hain.” Tathastu!

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  14. I never thought of the Statue Game as a life lesson being imparted, in preparation for all the waiting in never ending queues for everything, later in life. On reflecting on this a little bit, it does seem apt. Especially for us who grew up in the time of shortages and consequently we accepted waiting for anything and everything as natural and to be expected. Really happy that the current millennial generation is breaking out of that mindset and is eager and ready to question even a small waiting period. I wonder if statue game is out-of-vougue with current age kids.
    Quite a thought provoking write-up - KSM

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    1. Thank you very much....millennial are quite resilient in that regard. Appreciate your comments...

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  15. liked the subtle humour and very relatable observations - especially the one in Super Market and Dining hall sir.

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  16. Waiting in line is a chance to observe human behavior, and sometimes, unwillingly, 'eavesdrop' :-)
    Nowadays however, one sees only bent heads on their phones

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    1. Changing times...and waiting lines. Nowadays even if someone is waiting the phone keeps them company....

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  17. I can recall being impatient at times

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  18. Nice and simple article. A breath of fresh air.

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    1. Oh thanks a lot for your fresh breath comments....really appreciate it

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  19. The queue at the toll booth is the worst and to add to the irritation you find someone overtaking from the wrong side and try to get in and the audacity to put on the indicator lights!
    Forget not the queue at Vidyarthi Bhavan with gastric juice on an overdrive and you got to wait!!
    Well narrated. Nice to see you bring out the subtle aspects of life!!

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    1. Yes that's true about toll booth lines.... when we find it difficult to wait Murphy kicks in
      Thanks for your feedback comments

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  20. In these COVID-19 times, queue at wedding receptions will be a thing of the past.

    I think from now on, Wedding Invitation cards will come with the following footnote - 'Please prepare all the food items of your choice at your home itself and Do remember to Bless the Newly Wed Couple as you rejoice them' !! -- KSM

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    1. True Covid is out to change a lot of things for all of us... so from 'gifts not accepted' to ' cook and eat your own food' is a possibility... wait and watch

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  21. "Queue" . This blog also reminds me of temple queues. specially the Tirupati one. I had to wait nearly 8 hours once just to get a glimpse of the lord for just a second. And your pushed away in the name of moving lines. That's eternal lines. Grocery queue issue is long resolved with mobile apps which help you get Grocery at door step with all safety. And with regards to Highway toll booth lines. The fast tag really does not help. The queue is still there. But yes they are a bit faster.

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    1. We place online orders for groceries and still wait for the delivery....
      Thanks a lot for your comments....

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    2. Temple queues have their own varieties and uniqueneses. If you happen to visit a temple when it is most auspicious to visit it, one has to be ready to brave multiple queues. First queue is waiting to to find a suitable parking place for your vehicle or the place you can deposit your bags, purses, mobiles or footware. Then there would be a queue to purchase the entry ticket where you have to decide how much money you are ready to part with. Then you would join your queue which would take you nearer to the the main deity. When you are near the deity, there would be a mini-queue for getting the Archane or any other Seve of your choice. Then one has to jostle for Aarthi and Theertha.

      After this there will be one queue which almost everyone joins without too many complaints - Prasada queue.

      Then on the way back again one has to stand in queue patiently to get all the items that one had deposited.

      It is no wonder then that some wise people take a pragmatic decision that they will visit temples only when it is definitely off-season. This definitely seems to be a wise strategy since it eliminates most of the queues.

      If you begin to appreciate this strategy to beat the queues, there are still more wiser people - those who believe in Nirakara Brahma, who is present everywhere - and consequently find no need to visit temples at all -- KSM

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    3. Absolutely true.....world is full of lines and it just doesn't get over....Thanks for your comments

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  22. Brilliantly written... The brilliance is in the simplicity and the power of observation ...the conversations are right out of the humorous book of everyday life.... Haven't experienced waiting lines as much as I'd love to... Just because I was more inclined towards the old saying " WAIT NOT... WANT NOT😂......Congratulations on yet another feather in your literary cap.... Bless you... Lots more to come from u.... Lots of love

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    1. Oh my that's a lot of kudos... but thanks a million...I shall try my best to write ones that resonate with the reader. Once again glad you liked it.... appreciate it

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  23. Enjoyed reading it.Well written. Keep em coming.

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  24. When you mention queues, can queue jumpers be far behind? (please do pardon my poor imitation).

    In every queue, you will always find people who skillfully jump the queue. Some do it authoritatively exuding the air of 'Who can question me?'. Some do it with finesse joining their long lost and found aquaintance. Some plead to allow them to jump the queue showcasing their real and imagined disabilities or emergencies. And then there are those who literally use their physical strength to get ahead. To sum up, while in a queue, you get to witness, all the four strategies of sama, dana, beda and danda. There will always be those who are ushered to the head of the queue because they know someone who matters in the set up.

    Net effect - it is no wonder that queue moves at a snail's pace, if it moves at all.

    And consequently it always takes more time than your best estimate.

    But there is a positive streak here. More time in a queue affords more time to evesdrop on those around, strike a conversation with strangers or reflect on goings-on in the town or state or country. Or you can even complete reading that long yet-to-finish novel. -- KSM

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    1. True... all 4 techniques are experienced... some are mute spectators, some lose their patience but stay quiet, while some lose patience... depends upon the setting too

      Thanks a lot for your observations... cherish them

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  25. Good one. You forgot to mention the smart alec who breaks all rules and makes a grand entry from the other side of the dais to wish the newly weds, making all those who have been patiently waiting in the queue look like fools!!

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  26. He he

    Rule breakers everywhere... sometimes they act naive.

    Thanks for your comments and observations

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  27. Wow nice blog.. these common experience of older times are fast disappearing and being replaced with "Online Ques".. Prasanna sir - You have a knack of putting these experiences in amore enhanced way.

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    1. Thanks Pavan....there is so much fun in offline queue. Appreciate your comments..

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  28. Hello Prasanna, read some of your blogs. The first thing that strikes me is how you capture with flair quotidian happenings around us that for most of us just pass by without notice. You knit the story with ease, create a visual treat with Prasannaesque humour. Interesting how the mind works.

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    1. Thanks a lot for your keen observations and splendid comments....keeps me motivated. Appreciate it....

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  29. Your blogs are always full of life and fun to read. This one is no different - it took me a while to read some of the comments as well. What a marvellous group of visitors you have as I reach the end of the line to
    put in my comments.

    Our life is full of waiting lines and queues. Some are for fun like at the theme parks (which takes out all the fun) while waiting in line to live (to get a crucial organ transplant) is less funny. Without lines, I guess we would have less order but I wonder if there could have been a different way. Perhaps you can write a what if we didn't have blog.

    I half expected that you would also bemoan some of the weird and totally crazy lines such as the ones where people stand in to be the first to watch a movie or worse to buy an iPhone! :) Cheers. Ravi

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    1. Thank you so much Ravi.....if you have liked them as a reader that makes me happy.....and then of course great friends like you with your positive feedback comments make me thirsty for more writing.....appreciate it a lot ;-)

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  30. Undoubtedly every day activities are little and mundane, but mighty things nevertheless. It is an art - a literary bent of mind and an entrepreneurial spirit to capture and spell them out to publish. You my friend Prasanna, have indeed caught the bug right and are in good stead, making a great piece for reading! Congratulations on this corona - oh no, I mean in the real sense of the word, to represent a "kireeTa" or crown you have rightfully earned!
    PradeepJana

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    1. Oh my Pradeep/....those are highly encouraging comments. The kireeTa is too much of a honour for me to wear....however i look at the underlying encouragement and feel motivated to continue writing. Glad you could read and remark.....appreciate it.

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  31. A good peep into nostalgic bygone era, often missed in today's fast packed world, nevertheless we all embrace little of "Murphy" in us when approaching a toll plaza.

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    1. Murphy my guess is inherent in us. Thanks you very much Sanjay for taking the time to read and comment. Appreciate it....

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  32. Good one Prasanna - as a kid, I remember going to the bank in Mysore with my dad to withdraw money from his account. Invariably there would be a queue. We had to fill a form and a circular, metallic token would be given which had a unique number engrained on it. We had to patiently wait till the cashier called out that number. Then we would go to the counter to get the money. The entire process would take about 45 minutes to one hour, depending on the number of other customers in the bank that day.

    Reflecting back, my Dad would socialize sooo much during each of those visits. Since he had an excellent personal equation with the manager, my dad would walk into his cabin. Manager would get coffee. Over that cup of coffee, they would chit-chat about everything under the sun; they would make jokes and laugh so much. (God only knows how many cups of coffee that manager drank with customers like my dad). Finally, as a friendly gesture, he would get the money from the cashier and would give it to my dad in his cabin itself - "super personal customer care".

    Today's ATM withdrawals seem soooo lifeless and lame. Of course we like the speed and convenience of ATMs. But when there was no WhatsApp or Face Book, folks from the previous generation had such rich, healthy, in-person social interactions.

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    1. Very much appreciate your comments. So true that the personal connect while waiting in lines was the best thing to happen, though it would annoy you at times. You gain some...you lose some.....
      Thanks once again for your visit and comments...

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  33. Enjoyed reading 😊 so so true observations .. amazing capture PF gossip talks 👍

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  34. Prasanna, It is always a pleasure to read through your musings captured via your blogs. Great attention to detail and funny, as always!

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  35. Made for a good read n brought on a smile as usual prasanna... :-) i continue to b in the q for your posts..
    Keep writing and entertaining as always... !!

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    1. BNV. Thank you so much. One can write if only there are readers who actually like them. Don't be in a Q... I'll deliver it virtually...

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  36. As always written so well pops. Murphy is all of our middle names ;)

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  37. Good one Prasanna.. I was smiling while I was waiting at the toll booth and my daughter who was sitting next to me was wondering looking at me with question in her eyes for my reason to smile while there was nothing happening except crawling in the crowded line to cross the toll booth. Then I had to explain her that you are the reason for my smile as it popped out as I read your blog couple of hours before start of my journey over the weekend. One more line popped my mind was lining up in front of petrol pumps to fill the tanks of our two wheelers during rush hours trying avoid the guy who was jumping the line.. Another fascinating one was waiting in the line to buy tickets for favourite movies during 80's and 90's and feeling like winning prestigious award if you are fortunate enough to get a ticket on Friday new releases. You opened up so many thoughts that many are lined up in my mind now..Keep writing..

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    1. Thanks a lot.... we live in a world of lines... inevitable though. Better we enjoy them...
      Wish you had left your name...

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    2. Shashi here. I thought Google Id and name pops up.

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  38. Dear Prasanna, loved your articulation 'A smile on the face brings miles of peace within us'. Also, appreciate a novel perspective and in many ways true 'it offers an opportunity to be human once again.' During these times we definitely have quality time to spend with ourselves and think about what really matters to us the most.

    Keep sharing !!

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    1. Thank you so much and this must be Paras based on your ping. Appreciate your feedback.......

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  39. Queue at toll booth is where I typically use all my calming skills :) very nice sir 👍

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    1. Thank you very much....queue is always a challenge wherever you go...

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  40. Prasanna loved the post...I didn't know you write so well. I could relate with all the waiting lines 😉....let's hope the wait is over soon for the current covid situation to get over and we get back to our lines soon ☺️

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  41. Thanks...wish you had left your name. There is only one line right now which is the Covid line the world over.....hope that settles down. Like you have said we get back to our lines...

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  42. Very interesting observations...most of is know of it but not many will put the observation in a context...keep going...

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    1. Thank you much.....I'll try writing what appeals the most but you can never say....

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  43. Hi Prasanna,
    Every line of "Waiting in line" is interesting. Every line seamlessly flowed into the next one.
    I am sure you have the next BLOG already LINED UP!

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    1. Oh sir...thank you so very much. I was waiting for your comments ;-)
      My next blog should be out soon.....
      Appreciate your interest and the comments that you post.....pranams sir

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  44. Enjoyed reading your blog Prasanna. I know that with your strong will and perseverance this period too shall pass. Soon you will be back to your walking. I plan to incorporate some of your activities in my walking. Restez en securité. Soyez souriant.

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