As per my word to Principal Sir, I came back to Bhutan after
the Pujas, on the 22nd. My family along with my recently widowed
father-in-law came on the next day. Ultimately he was granted the road permit
for a week till the 29th of this month.
The problem with me has always been that I am quite shy when
it comes to making requests to others and asking for favours. I could have
simply asked someone to have my father-in-law’s permit extended for another
week or so, or by fax and have it sent back. But instead I had to do it by
myself. So I had to wait for the right time and moment. It was yesterday when
the time seemed right for me. I found it on the previous day in the duty roster
for the trial that I was free in the afternoon yesterday and though I had a
class with XII SC ‘A”, I was going to be free due to the exam.
So just before the Assembly I asked Principal sir in his
office if he would let me go down to Phuentsholing in connection with the
renewal of my in-law’s road permit. Sir as always graciously consented to my
request and then out of concern, he asked me when I was going to be back. I
told him that I ‘d try to be back by the evening itself.
So right after the assembly, I informed our exam secretary,
Lop. Gaza that I would not be available in the afternoon and in case the
students had any problem with the English Paper-I, which was set by me, they
had to send for Ms. Chencho Lham. I also made the same request to her while
handing her the Marking Scheme. Just earlier, I had a talk with Ms. Pem Zam,
one of our departmental colleagues, regarding the papers to be set for the
Annual Exam for standard IX, She informed me that there are now four of us
teaching English in the standard and expressed the desire to be excluded from the
task as she is busy making paper-II for standard XI. So I had no other option
than to ask Mr. Alex. It was finally decided between the two of us that he
would set paper-II for IX, while I would take care of paper-I.
Right after the last paper was submitted by the student in
the Agricultural Room being used for the exam purpose, I trotted to the exam
cell where Lop. Gaza took over the papers from my hand and once he was happy
with the arrangement of the answer-scripts and all, off I went to the Zero
Point. Now very often I forget to express my gratitude to my spouse. When after
a near bladder-bursting wait, Mr. Sangay Palden answered my call as a god-send,
on my way to the toilet, I had called my wife asking for my in-law’s documents.
She was waiting near the FCB sharp at 12.20 a.m. She had not only brought the
required things but also a cake, in case I had to skip lunch on the way!
I hurried down to Zero Point as if my very life was hanging
by a thread on getting a lift from there. While I was breathlessly waiting for
a lift, I remembered Mr. Kezang, the Telecom In-Charge. I had requested him to
recharge my broadband connection the previous day and was yet to pay him the
money! So I called him then and there and informed him about my problem. On
hearing it, he asked me not to worry and pay the money at a more convenient
time. No sooner had I finished making the call than I could see a car coming
and stopping near the sabji stands. I boldly approached
them for a ride down and my request was not turned down! Later on, during the
journey, I came to know that she is a geography teacher of Darla Middle
Secondary School. It was a pleasant journey as we came to find out that we had
worked in the same school (Wangdichholing Primary School, Bumthang) at
different times in our lives. We also talked about our common friends and the
people we know. She was extremely helpful and dropped me near the bus going
down. She wanted to talk to the driver personally, but I did not let her.
The bus unfortunately, was packed and I had to walk up a
mile or so for anything on four wheels going down! Finally it was one Mr.
Krishna, a businessman from Punakha, who agreed to take me down in his vehicle.
I was in for a shock when he dropped me near the immigration office in P/ling.
There was not a single soul to be seen anywhere in the vicinity and the
shutters must have be down not for an hour or so, but for some days! Only later
I came to know about the Phuentsholing Tshechu. All the government offices were
closed. Anyway, the office near the gates was still open. I approached the
Officer-in-Charge with my heart in my mouth. Mr. Karma, the In-Charge, was
extremely helpful and issued the new road permit after making a call to the
Regional Officer.
On the way back, I had the club magazine printed and bound
and as time was running out literarily ran to the Petrol Pump. It was already
past 5 by then. It was another businessman who reached me back till Gedu
(Sorry. I could not even ask for his name)! Having repeatedly kept glancing at
his watch and found the time to be quite late, he talked to a truck driver on
the way and asked me to get into that truck, if it was no problem. He also
saved my number in his mobile and asked me to call him if there was any
problem, with the promise of arranging a vehicle for me, if there was.
When the driver got me to the Zero Point at around 9 p.m., I
wanted to pay him. He bowed down, refusing my offer. “Sir, please don’t talk
about paying me.” He sounded as if by asking him about money and all, he was
forced to committing a sin! It was only then I remembered Madam Dawa, one of my
student’s mom, who had helped me a lot by running with a stick after a dog that
came chasing me when I was going down from out of nowhere! And was I not scared thinking about the
walk back up all by myself?
You bet I was. But God is always all merciful. Feeling pity
on me for my agitated state of mind, he sent a vehicle just in the nick of
time. I raised my thumb and the door opened. It was only after getting inside
that I realized that the driver was none other than Mr. Chimi Tshewang, our
ADO. He is not only a handsome man but also a very good human being as he
always makes it a point to stop his car, whenever he finds anyone on the way!
That is how I came back to Tshimalakha and realized once
again that The Almighty always wants this world to be a paradise. Whether we
can keep it that way or not, is solely dependent on our mentality, morality,
love and fellow-feeling.
P.S: Oh! By the way, I forgot to inform you, Reader, about
my father-in-law in the first place. Peace-loving and amicable by nature, he
wanted to leave Bhutan on the 29th thinking about the trouble his
son-in-law might have to go through in order to get the permit extended!
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