Skip to content
Menu
Travel Tales from India and Abroad
Travel Tales from India and Abroad

Happy Holi!

Posted on March 22, 2008
Wish you all a very happy Holi. This is my tall nephew (Brat 1, Brat 2 is giving 12th board exams) and small niece playing Holi.

It has been ages since I played Holi. I don’t know how it happened but somewhere along the way, I have completely stopped playing Holi. Like this time, I did not go anywhere near the colors.

Only at office we had a small get together. There too I kept standing quietly. Only when one of the senior professors put colors on our foreheads I too reciprocated. Some of the color sticked to my hands and instead of properly putting it on someone’s face (there were four people sitting next to me) I was looking for something to wipe it off! I politely asked a young colleague who was wearing a white shirt that was already colored, “can I wipe my hands on your shirt?” He let me do that!

Next time at Holi, I am going to relive one of my wilder years (not that I was really wild ever) and play Holi like my nephew and niece are doing above.

facebookShare on Facebook
TwitterTweet
FollowFollow us
PinterestSave

6 thoughts on “Happy Holi!”

  1. Sidhusaaheb says:
    March 22, 2008 at 2:20 pm

    I stopped playing too, while I was still at school, many years ago.Happy Holi to you and your readers! 🙂

    Reply
  2. Mridula says:
    March 22, 2008 at 2:24 pm

    Sidhu any plans of playing Holi again? A very happy Holi to you.Alka I deleted your comment. I was changing the typo while your comment sneaked in, Holi hai …

    Reply
  3. Nilesh says:
    March 22, 2008 at 3:28 pm

    Happy Holi to you Mridula.I too not playing Holi since long. I mean Holi full of colors/waters and lot of pranks. globalisation is taking its toll on our celebrating festivals. away from our homes, we do not have friends who will pull us into all these. missing those good old Holi.

    Reply
  4. Mridula says:
    March 22, 2008 at 7:01 pm

    Nilesh, I actually was musing about the kind of Holi you mentioned, the kind I am missing too.

    Reply
  5. अतुल श्रीवास्तव says:
    March 25, 2008 at 9:42 pm

    True spirit of Indian festivals is still alive, but in smaller towns and cities. Thanks to globalization; and easy access to internet and Hollywood movies V.D. (Valentine’s Day) and Christmas have become more popular in bigger cities (esp. in educated class). Arsa beet gaya hai Holi khele huye, but I vividly remember those wild and colorful Holis of Lucknow and Allahabad.

    Reply
  6. Mridula says:
    March 28, 2008 at 9:29 am

    Atul, in my locality in NCR Holi is still robust, it is I who somehow stopped playing. But I agree, that big cities generally fare poorer in this regard.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

About Me

I am Mridula Dwivedi and I started this blog in 2005. It has been an amazing ride. I have visited 33 countries till date! I have worked with many tourism boards and prominent travel companies. My blog was featured on the BBC and the Guardian.

I did my Ph.D. from IIT Kanpur. I worked full time in academics till 2015! I quit my job as a professor, thinking I will take a break for one year, which turned into five.

Subscribe to the blog!

Subscribe

* indicates required

Support provided by Credible Content Writing & Copywriting Services

©2025 Travel Tales from India and Abroad | Powered by SuperbThemes