Sunday 24 August 2014

London - then and now


After leaving London in 1997, I got a chance to visit the city again this year. We stayed at London 1996-97 for a total of 14 months. We were newly married and have fond memories of the place. No wonder I was feeling nostalgic and was reminiscing. 

The London I had in my mind was always raining, with no sun in sight. It was highly professional and strict. Might be because I was working then. Though my employer didn't object to my wearing Salwars to work, they did teach me about acceptable or rather unacceptable dress colors or sober colors as my mother calls them. I learnt many things in that 14 months of our stay. I learnt how to use fork and knife, even for pizza. I learnt not to swing umbrella in a casino, not to click heals in empty corridors. Though talking to strangers was not common, but smiling at fellow passengers and greeting strangers was routine. Most of all, I learnt to be proud of who I am. Looking at my attire, the first reaction used to be hesitation and attempting to figure out how best to communicate with me. But once the realisation dawned on the fact that I knew English and fluently at that, the attitude used to take a 360 degree turn. The hesitation and cold shoulder used to replaced by warmth and enthusiasm. It was like opening a Pandora's box, the amount of questions that followed was amazing. And I realised that I knew a lot about our traditions and customs! That gave me confidence to converse with strangers, something I never did before in my life.

Coming to the London of now. How it changed!!!! The crowd, noise and the carefree attitude. I got a culture shock!!! What happened to London? The place is overcrowded, to state mildly. And Indians, so many of them!!! And the sun, it was blazing. We went around July end and were prepared with warm clothing, not woolen but warm. We were overdressed. It was hot. Tubes were the same, efficient and on time. People, I couldn't find any locals, all looked like tourists. Everyone with a map in one hand and camera in the other. Many in groups trying to keep pace with the tour coordinator.

We went to visit the place where we stayed.
 That hadn't changed a bit, but the walk from tube station to the house was all wrong. It was lined with shops, that too Indian shops. And the walk felt too long, couldn't imagine doing that walk on a regular basis, did I grow old? There were multiple options for eating out, that too Indian restaurants.


We visited the places that were revamped since our stay - the crown jewels exhibition at Tower Palace, yes we saw Kohinoor!!!! The new additions like the Emirates Airlines, Millennium Eye and the Shard, tallest building in London, the concept in itself was a bit strange since we don't see many skyscrapers in London. We also did the usual round of Tower Bridge, Big Ben, Westminster Abbey, House of Parliaments, Buckingham Palace, Oxford Street and Greenwich. Everything was crowded and noisy. All in all it was a good experience and a proof that things change.......


Emirates Airlines
Tower Bridge
The Shard


Tower Palace
Millennium Eye
Greenwich
The Big Ben


2 comments:

  1. The only thing constant is change.... Indian proliferation seems to be the norm in every country now. Eleven years ago, I visited Australia and was amazed at the number of Indians and Indian/Asian stores there.

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  2. Very nostalgic. Whenever we visit any place after a long time, changes are inevitable.

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