The overnight return journey to Delhi carried a strange silence. The same mountains stood unchanged outside, but within us something had shifted permanently.
Yet,
even after reaching Delhi, the adventure was not over.
The
bus dropped us at ISBT Kashmiri Gate at precisely 6:55 AM. Some participants
had flights while others, including us returning to Nagpur, had trains several
hours later.
Neerja quickly devised a survival plan. Luggage was deposited at the cloak room, and a movie with recliner seats was booked at a mall. What followed became another unexpectedly memorable mini-adventure. We sat outside the mall before opening hours eating leftover snacks from backpacks while exhausted bodies searched desperately for comfort.
The
movie itself was terrible, but the recliners became recovery therapy. Most of
us slept through the film while later accusing one another of snoring.
After
food court meals and final conversations, we returned to the railway station,
collected our luggage, boarded trains, and finally reached home on 2nd June.
By
then, everyone had technically returned to offices, responsibilities, routines,
and normal life. Yet mentally, a part of us still remained somewhere between
tents, bonfires, rafting rapids, roadside corn, sleeping bags, mountain
silence, and endless laughter.
That
perhaps became the true success of the journey.
This expedition was never merely about trekking. It became a reminder that adulthood should never end curiosity, that women carrying responsibilities can still choose adventure, that emotional conversations matter as much as physical challenges, and that strangers can become family within days when life is experienced honestly together.
A
few days earlier, we were individuals from different cities. By the end of the
journey, we had become an extended family carrying shared memories, inside
jokes, emotional moments, promises of future adventures, and pieces of each
other’s stories.
And
perhaps that is the most beautiful thing about travel.
Sometimes,
people return carrying far more than luggage.
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"Your narration was so vivid and engaging that I felt completely immersed in the aura of the Himalayas. You possess a rare gift—the ability to connect deeply with both people and nature, and to experience them with a sense of emotional oneness. Through your words, the mountains cease to be mere landscapes and become living companions in the journey. Reading your account felt less like reading a story and more like walking alongside you through the heart of the Himalayas."
ReplyDeleteKeep it up.
Thank you :-)
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