<p>After retiring from government service in 2019, I became an easy prey to a life of ease, enjoying the <span class="italic"><em>revdi</em> </span>of all <span class="italic"><em>revdis</em></span>: the Old Pension Scheme (OPS). So much so that the adage "work never killed anybody, but why take a chance?" sounded truer by the day. This attitude was further strengthened by the pandemic restrictions on going out. </p>.<p>But someone at home had been watching my evolution closely—my wife. When she saw that I had practically given up even walking, she proposed that we buy a treadmill. </p>.<p>That woke me up. I knew it was the thin edge of the wedge. If I did not shoot down the suggestion, other things were sure to follow—dumbbells, barbells and finally a home gym with a trainer and dietician thrown in. I was in a quandary as to how to oppose the idea when reports came of young people, including some celebrities, dying of cardiac arrests triggered by working out on the treadmill. </p>.<p>Thus, I was back to the state best described by Alexander Pope in Ode to Solitude: Blest, who can unconcernedly find / Hours, days, and years slide soft away. So when Rahul Gandhi launched his Bharat Jodo Yatra from Kaniyakumari (sic), I paid as much attention to the event as the mainstream media. </p>.<p>However, as the yatra and its popularity began to move northward, its vibrations came knocking at the door of my home. "Twenty-five kilometres a day, 25 kilometres a day," the tap tap began to reverberate throughout the house, creating a sense of unease, perhaps similar to what Rahul's critics felt.</p>.<p>The yatra had entered Rajasthan when one day my wife asked me to get something from a shop two furlongs away. As I was taking the car out to go, she asked, "Why do you need a car for such a short distance?" I said, "For two reasons. One, more pedestrians die in road accidents than car riders. And two, taking the car out once in a while is good for its health." She was not amused. "Do you know how much Rahul Gandhi walks every day? And he is doing it for more than a hundred days, braving all kinds of weather and threats to his security." </p>.<p>"Okay Okay," I said to save myself a harangue, but the message was home. Love and harmony, whether in a country or at one’s home demand sacrifice, <span class="italic"><em>tapasya</em></span>, I understood and completed the errand on foot. Needless to say, the first thing I did on returning was to search out my old walking shoes. </p>.<p>Well, I have resumed the morning walk, but the thought that keeps disturbing me is this: Rahul Gandhi’s ordeal would be over in a few days, but the <span class="italic"><em>tapasya</em></span> of a householder like me does not end even after retiring honourably. </p>
<p>After retiring from government service in 2019, I became an easy prey to a life of ease, enjoying the <span class="italic"><em>revdi</em> </span>of all <span class="italic"><em>revdis</em></span>: the Old Pension Scheme (OPS). So much so that the adage "work never killed anybody, but why take a chance?" sounded truer by the day. This attitude was further strengthened by the pandemic restrictions on going out. </p>.<p>But someone at home had been watching my evolution closely—my wife. When she saw that I had practically given up even walking, she proposed that we buy a treadmill. </p>.<p>That woke me up. I knew it was the thin edge of the wedge. If I did not shoot down the suggestion, other things were sure to follow—dumbbells, barbells and finally a home gym with a trainer and dietician thrown in. I was in a quandary as to how to oppose the idea when reports came of young people, including some celebrities, dying of cardiac arrests triggered by working out on the treadmill. </p>.<p>Thus, I was back to the state best described by Alexander Pope in Ode to Solitude: Blest, who can unconcernedly find / Hours, days, and years slide soft away. So when Rahul Gandhi launched his Bharat Jodo Yatra from Kaniyakumari (sic), I paid as much attention to the event as the mainstream media. </p>.<p>However, as the yatra and its popularity began to move northward, its vibrations came knocking at the door of my home. "Twenty-five kilometres a day, 25 kilometres a day," the tap tap began to reverberate throughout the house, creating a sense of unease, perhaps similar to what Rahul's critics felt.</p>.<p>The yatra had entered Rajasthan when one day my wife asked me to get something from a shop two furlongs away. As I was taking the car out to go, she asked, "Why do you need a car for such a short distance?" I said, "For two reasons. One, more pedestrians die in road accidents than car riders. And two, taking the car out once in a while is good for its health." She was not amused. "Do you know how much Rahul Gandhi walks every day? And he is doing it for more than a hundred days, braving all kinds of weather and threats to his security." </p>.<p>"Okay Okay," I said to save myself a harangue, but the message was home. Love and harmony, whether in a country or at one’s home demand sacrifice, <span class="italic"><em>tapasya</em></span>, I understood and completed the errand on foot. Needless to say, the first thing I did on returning was to search out my old walking shoes. </p>.<p>Well, I have resumed the morning walk, but the thought that keeps disturbing me is this: Rahul Gandhi’s ordeal would be over in a few days, but the <span class="italic"><em>tapasya</em></span> of a householder like me does not end even after retiring honourably. </p>