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Sunday, May 24, 2026

Chapter 9 - The Empty School Playground

9

 

            The bus was moving slowly that afternoon, as if even the road had become tired of carrying people toward the same unfinished destinations.

 

            Outside the window, summer sunlight lay flat across the land. The fields looked exhausted. Electric wires hung lazily between poles. A tea stall slept beneath a neem tree where two men argued half-heartedly about politics without believing any politician would ever change their lives.

 

            Then the bus crossed a small government school.

 

            Its gate was open.  Its playground was empty.  Not silent - empty.

 

            There is a difference between the two.  Silence still carries life somewhere inside it. But emptiness feels abandoned by expectation itself.

 

            The swings stood still under the heat. A rusted football goal leaned sideways like an old man with knee pain. Dust had settled on the basketball court lines because nobody had run there in days. A faded slogan painted on the wall read:

 

            “Education Is the Key to Success.”

 

            The sentence looked hopeful once. Now it looked lonely.  I kept staring as the bus moved ahead.

 

            Usually during school hours, one expects noise - children shouting, shoes dragging across ground, whistles, laughter, punishments, friendships forming under trees. But that playground looked like a photograph from a forgotten decade.

 

            A place built for dreams… waiting for dreamers who never came.

 

            A few kilometers later, I saw some children in the fields.  Not playing.  Working.

 

            One boy, maybe eleven years old, was carrying a sack bigger than his own body. Another was helping his father fix irrigation pipes. A little girl sat outside a roadside shop separating green chilies into baskets while flies moved around her face without interruption.

 

            Their uniforms had been replaced by responsibilities.  And suddenly the empty playground made sense.

                       

            The bus window reflected my own face back toward me, and for a moment I wondered how many dreams disappear not because children are incapable… but because survival reaches them before opportunity does.

 

            Some children learn mathematics.  Some learn measurements for bricks.  Some learn poetry.  Some learn how to negotiate vegetable prices before they even understand what childhood means.  Society often calls both “life experience.”  But one is growth.  The other is sacrifice disguised as maturity.

 

            I remembered my own school days.

 

            Back then, schools were not luxurious. The classrooms were simple. Benches were old. Sometimes fans did not work. Sometimes teachers were absent. Yet there was still a strange richness inside those walls because children arrived carrying possibility.

 

            And possibility itself is wealth.

 

            I still remember boys playing barefoot in dusty grounds as if they were performing in international stadiums. A broken cricket bat could create happiness for an entire afternoon. One notebook was used for three subjects. One school bag survived five years. Yet ambition quietly sat beside poverty in those classrooms.

 

            Today, something feels different.  Poverty has changed its method.  Earlier, poverty used to stand outside the house like an enemy people could recognize.  Now it enters softly and sits inside family decisions.

 

It says:

“Let the elder son work for one year.”

“Let the daughter help at home first.”

“School can wait.”

“We will manage next season.”

“Studies do not guarantee jobs anyway.”

 

            Slowly, dreams are not destroyed dramatically.  They are postponed politely until they disappear on their own.

 

            The bus stopped near a small market area.

 

            A young boy entered carrying a steel container of tea glasses. He moved through passengers carefully, asking softly, “Tea?”

 

            His voice had already learned adulthood.

 

            That is the saddest thing about poor children - not their torn clothes, not their weak slippers, not even hunger.  It is when their voices stop sounding like children.

 

            I bought tea from him.

 

            His hands were rough. His eyes were sharp with alertness - the kind usually found in middle-aged men responsible for families.

 

            “How old are you?” I asked.

 

            “Twelve,” he replied.  But his face looked older.

 

            “School?”

 

            He smiled slightly.  “Sometimes.”

 

            Sometimes.  Such a dangerous word.  A child who goes to school “sometimes” usually ends up going nowhere permanently.

 

            Before getting down at the next stop, he balanced the steel container again and shouted loudly for more customers. The bus moved forward while he became smaller in the dust behind us.

 

            I kept thinking about him.  Perhaps somewhere there is already a government record showing he is enrolled in school.  Attendance exists on paper.  Dreams disappear in reality.

 

            Outside the window, the road stretched endlessly between villages and unfinished constructions. Half-built shops stood beside half-harvested fields and half-broken roads.  Our country often looks like a place permanently under construction.  But perhaps the saddest unfinished constructions are human lives.  We build roads faster than futures.

 

            At another crossing, I saw a private school van pass beside us. Children inside wore neat uniforms and expensive shoes. Water bottles hung from their shoulders like symbols of security. Some were laughing while using smartphones.

 

            At the same moment, just across the road, two boys were unloading cement bags from a tractor.  Same sunlight.  Same country.  Different childhoods.  Fate distributes opportunities with a cruelty nobody openly discusses.

 

People say,

“Every child has equal potential.”

            But potential without circumstances is like a seed thrown on concrete.  Not every seed gets soil.

 

            The bus conductor switched on old music from his phone. A soft song from the 1990s filled the bus with nostalgia. Strange how old songs make people remember the versions of themselves that still believed life would become simpler with time.

 

            An elderly man sitting beside me noticed my silence.

 

            “You are thinking deeply,” he said.

 

            I smiled faintly.

 

            “About the empty school ground.”

 

            He looked outside for a while before speaking.

 

            “In villages,” he said slowly, “poverty teaches children to become useful very early.”

 

            Useful.  Another dangerous word.  When children start being valued mainly for usefulness, innocence becomes a luxury.

 

            I asked him whether things were better earlier.

 

            He laughed softly.

 

            “Earlier we were poor but hopeful. Now many are poor and tired.”

 

            That sentence stayed with me longer than the road itself.  Poor and tired.  Hope requires energy.  Even dreams need emotional nutrition.

 

            A father working twelve hours daily under debt may love his child deeply, yet still unknowingly pass exhaustion into the next generation. Survival leaves little space for imagination.  And imagination is where most futures are born.

 

            The bus entered another village.

 

            Near a closed shop, three small boys were repairing bicycle punctures. Their fingers moved skillfully through rubber tubes and metal tools. Customers trusted them completely.

 

            Children adapt quickly to whatever world hands them.  That is both beautiful and tragic.  Give a child books - they learn stories.  Give them burdens - they learn silence.  Give them encouragement - they learn confidence.  Give them constant fear - they learn caution.

 

            Human beings become what life repeatedly asks from them.  Perhaps that is why some playgrounds stay empty forever.  Not because children dislike dreams.  But because responsibilities arrive earlier than possibilities.

 

            As the afternoon deepened, clouds slowly gathered above the fields. Farmers looked upward hopefully. In villages, people still pray directly to the sky because their lives remain connected to forces beyond salary structures and office walls.

 

            Rain means crops.  Crops mean money.  Money means school fees.  One good season can send a child back to class.  One bad season can remove education from an entire family.  People sitting in cities often debate education policies using statistics and reports.  But villages understand education differently.  For many families, education is not an intellectual discussion.  It is a financial gamble.  A gamble between present hunger and future hope.

 

            The bus crossed the same school again while returning in the evening.  This time a few children were inside the playground.  Not students.  Local boys playing cricket with a plastic ball after finishing work elsewhere.  One boy hit a shot so hard that the ball flew near the school wall carrying the faded slogan about success.

 

            All the boys ran laughing behind it.  And for one brief moment, the playground became alive again.  Dust rose.  Voices echoed.  Childhood returned temporarily.

 

            I watched them until the bus moved ahead.

 

            Maybe children never completely abandon joy.  Even tired hearts search for play whenever life loosens its grip for a few minutes.  That may be humanity’s quiet miracle.  A child can carry bricks in the afternoon and still laugh honestly by evening.  Adults lose this ability somewhere along the way.  We become too serious to survive beautifully.

 

            The setting sun painted orange light across the empty classrooms. Broken window panes reflected fire-like colors. A stray dog slept near the assembly stage where morning prayers were probably still spoken daily to half-filled lines.

 

            I imagined the absent students.

 

            One helping in fields.  One washing utensils at a roadside dhaba.  One caring for younger siblings.  One selling vegetables.  One already convinced education belongs to “other people.”

 

            And perhaps somewhere among them sits a future teacher, poet, scientist, officer, writer, or artist whose talent may never fully discover itself.

 

            The world loses countless invisible geniuses every day.  Not because they lacked intelligence.  But because life demanded income before identity.

 

            As evening wind entered through the bus window, I suddenly remembered something from my Army days.

 

            In difficult terrains, soldiers sometimes carried extra weight not because they were strong… but because circumstances gave them no choice.

 

            Poor children are similar.  People praise them for being “mature.”  But maturity achieved through compulsion is rarely a blessing.  A child should learn responsibility gradually- not inherit the emotional burden of an entire household before adolescence.

 

            The bus lights turned on.  Passengers grew quieter.  Villages slowly disappeared into darkness behind us.  Yet the image of that empty playground remained inside me.  Perhaps because it was not merely a school ground.  It was a mirror.  A mirror showing how societies often celebrate progress while quietly abandoning many of their children between statistics and survival.

 

            Development is easy to print in newspapers.  But real progress is visible only when playgrounds remain noisy during school hours.  When children carry bags instead of burdens.  When dreams are delayed only by laziness, not poverty.  When a twelve-year-old selling tea still sounds like a child.

 

            The bus finally neared my stop.

 

            Before getting down, I looked once more through the dusty window at the fading road behind us.  Somewhere in the darkness stood that school.  Waiting again for tomorrow morning.  Waiting for footsteps.   Waiting for laughter.  Waiting for children who may or may not come.

 

            And I realized something painfully simple:  The cruelest form of poverty is not empty pockets.  It is an empty playground during school hours.


Chapter 8 - Rich Cars & Buffaloes

 

8

 

            There are some scenes on the road that no city planner can predict.

 

            That afternoon, the bus was moving slowly through a narrow countryside road washed in the tired gold of the setting sun. Summer dust floated in the air like old memories refusing to settle. The conductor had stopped shouting for passengers long ago and was now half asleep near the door. A baby somewhere behind me cried without energy, as if even tears were exhausted by the heat.

 

            I sat beside the same window again.

 

            The same travelling frame through which life kept showing me unfinished truths.

 

            Outside, fields stretched endlessly under a pale sky. Electric poles walked beside the road like silent witnesses. A tractor overloaded with sugarcane moved ahead lazily, and behind it several expensive SUVs had formed a long line.

 

            Their polished bodies reflected the sunlight proudly.  White. Black. Metallic silver.  Cars that looked like they belonged to another world.  Cars with dark tinted windows, powerful engines, imported tyres, and shining logos that people often buy not for travel, but for status.

 

            But strangely, none of them were moving.  The reason stood calmly in the middle of the road.

 

            Buffaloes.

 

            A group of buffaloes had occupied the muddy stretch ahead after returning from a pond. Their bodies glistened with wet mud. Some walked slowly. Some simply stopped in the middle of the road as if the world had no authority over them. One buffalo even sat down lazily near a puddle while vehicles stood helplessly behind her.

 

            The SUV drivers kept honking.  Sharp horns pierced the peaceful countryside repeatedly.  But the buffaloes did not care.  The village boys walking beside them smiled casually. One old man holding a thin stick waved his hand without urgency.

 

            “Slowly… slowly…”  As though he was not controlling animals.  As though he was controlling modern civilization itself.

 

            Inside the luxury vehicles, faces grew impatient. A man wearing sunglasses leaned out angrily. Another continuously pressed his horn as if sound itself could remove reality from the road.

 

            But the buffaloes continued walking at their own ancient speed.  And for a few minutes, the entire hierarchy of wealth collapsed.  Engines worth lakhs waited behind creatures that knew nothing about money.

 

            I kept watching silently.  Sometimes life explains philosophy without speaking.

 

            The bus driver laughed softly and said to no one in particular, “In villages, buffaloes still think roads belong to them.”

 

            Maybe they do.  Long before asphalt arrived, their hooves already knew these paths.  Long before cars carried human ego, animals carried human survival.  There was something deeply symbolic in that traffic jam.  Machines designed to dominate distance had surrendered before creatures that measured life differently.

 

            No buffalo was in a hurry to become successful.  No buffalo was anxious about social status.  No buffalo cared who owned the biggest vehicle behind it.  And yet all those expensive machines had no option except patience.

 

            I leaned my head against the bus window and suddenly remembered a story from my own childhood.

            Not a story from books.  A story from mud.

 

            In those days, our village was different.

 

            The road leading to the village was not covered with cement or black tar. During summers, dust rose from it like smoke. During rainy days, it became a slippery river of mud where even bicycles trembled.

 

            Back then, owning a car in a village was not ordinary.  It was almost mythical.  In our village, there was only one man who owned a car.  Children looked at it with the same curiosity with which villagers once looked at airplanes. Whenever the car entered the village, people turned their heads. Some admired it. Some envied it. Some silently measured their own poverty against its shining body.

 

            The owner himself walked differently after buying it.  Not arrogantly perhaps.  But vehicles change human posture in invisible ways.  People begin feeling elevated from the ground they once walked on.

 

            One monsoon evening, heavy rain turned the village road into deep mud. Water collected in potholes large enough to swallow tyres. Still, the car owner tried to drive through proudly.  Maybe he trusted the machine too much.  Maybe success often creates that illusion. 

 

            But halfway through the muddy road, the tyres sank deeply.  The engine roared.  Mud splashed everywhere.  The wheels spun helplessly.  But the car did not move an inch.

 

Villagers gathered slowly under umbrellas and shawls. Some offered advice. Some simply enjoyed the spectacle silently.  Because villages have always understood one thing: Nature eventually humbles everyone.

 

            The more the driver accelerated, the deeper the tyres dug themselves into the mud.

 

            Finally someone suggested, “Call a buffalo cart.”

 

            And suddenly the entire meaning of progress became strangely funny.  A luxury machine had to be rescued by an animal-driven wooden cart.

 

            I still remember that scene vividly.

 

            The buffalo cart arrived slowly through rainwater. Its wooden wheels made heavy sounds in the mud. The buffalo looked calm, unconcerned by the importance of the car it had come to rescue.

 

            Ropes were tied carefully.

 

            Villagers shouted instructions together, “Pull!”

 

            The buffalo moved forward with quiet strength.  For a moment the car shifted slightly.  Then suddenly - Crack.

 

            One wooden part of the cart broke.  People sighed in disappointment.  Rain continued falling.  The car owner looked embarrassed.  But something unexpected happened next.

 

            The single buffalo, still tied firmly, leaned forward again with astonishing force. Muscles tightened beneath its wet dark skin. Its hooves dug into the mud. Slowly… painfully… steadily…

 

            It pulled the trapped car out.  Without pride.  Without noise.  Without knowing what achievement meant.

 

            That scene stayed with me for years.  Perhaps because it carried a truth larger than the incident itself.  Civilization often behaves as if villages are backward.  Cities laugh at bullock carts.  Modern people mock old ways.  But when systems fail, humanity still turns toward the raw strength of nature.  A farmer still understands weather better than many apps.          An old village woman still preserves seeds more carefully than corporations preserve ethics.  A buffalo still knows how to walk through mud better than a luxury SUV.

 

            Sitting beside the bus window, watching those expensive vehicles trapped behind buffaloes, I felt the same irony returning again.

 

            Modernity is powerful.  But not absolute.  We have built cars faster than horses, phones smarter than classrooms, buildings taller than trees.  Yet one flood stops cities.  One power cut silences entire neighbourhoods.  One virus locks nations indoors.  One animal standing calmly on a road can interrupt a convoy of expensive vehicles.

 

            Human beings often mistake convenience for superiority.  That is our oldest misunderstanding.

 

            The road ahead finally began clearing slowly. The buffaloes moved aside without apology. The SUVs accelerated aggressively the moment they found space, as if speed could erase humiliation.

 

            One car passed our bus with angry force, spraying muddy water beside the road.  But I noticed something strange.  The buffaloes did not even turn their heads. 

 

            Indifference is sometimes the purest form of power.

 

            As the bus continued moving, evening deepened around us. Smoke rose from distant village houses where women had begun preparing dinner. Children returned home carrying schoolbags larger than their dreams. Somewhere a loudspeaker played an old song broken by static.

 

            I kept thinking about roads.  Roads reveal human nature better than homes do.  On roads, impatience becomes visible.  Ego becomes visible.  Compassion becomes visible.  A rich man and a poor man may hide their realities inside walls, but roads expose everyone equally.

 

            Perhaps that is why journeys teach more than destinations.

 

            Near a small tea stall, our bus stopped briefly.

 

            I saw one of the SUV owners standing outside speaking angrily on his phone.  Probably complaining about the delay.  Maybe he had an important meeting.  Maybe time really mattered to him.

 

            But beside the same tea stall stood a farmer washing his buffalo gently with a bucket of water.  The animal looked peaceful.  Unbothered by markets, deadlines, ambitions, or traffic.

 

            And for a strange moment, I wondered:

 

            Who was truly richer?  The man who owned a machine worth lakhs but lost peace over ten delayed minutes or the man whose wealth breathed beside him quietly?

 

            Society teaches us to admire acceleration.  But nature respects rhythm.  A river never hurries.  Trees never compete.  Animals never suffer from comparison.  Only humans destroy their own peace trying to prove movement.

 

            The bus started again.

 

            Darkness slowly gathered over the fields. Electric lights began appearing one by one in distant homes like scattered thoughts.

 

            An old man sitting beside me suddenly spoke after remaining silent for almost the entire journey.

 

            “These city people become restless very quickly,” he said while smiling faintly.

 

            I nodded.

 

            Then he added something that stayed with me longer than the journey itself, “When a man stops understanding mud, even roads begin insulting him.”

 

            After saying this, he returned to silence.

 

            Outside, the buffaloes had now disappeared into village lanes.  The SUVs were gone too.  Only the road remained.  Quiet.  Ancient.  Unimpressed by both poverty and wealth.

 

            And as the bus moved forward through the night, I realised something deeply human: Progress is necessary.  Comfort is beautiful.  Technology is useful.  But the day human beings begin believing they have conquered nature completely, life sends buffaloes onto the road to remind them otherwise.

 

            Some lessons do not arrive through books.

 

            Some arrive walking slowly through mud.