I
arrived at the Save the Children Program Office, Thimphu for Go Youth Go (GyG)
Organizational Development Workshop 30 minutes before the scheduled time. Wow…30
minutes before the scheduled time! Moreover, it’s one Saturday morning; indeed,
one day in week that I’d be snoring till noon. Usually, I’m one person, civil
servant who reaches his office not before 10 am and avoids attending meetings,
seminars and workshops with all kinds of excuses.
The
rain hadn’t stopped, then, since a couple of days before. It’s still really beating
down, so heavily. And this kind of rain, excessive showering, does feed to our
mind. Not only hindrances our works, but also makes our mind gloomy and makes
us sick-literally.
The
SCF office’s caretaker offered a coffee for me. And I nestled on a wooden bench,
sipping a fantastic cup of coffee. Watching the rain falling on the ground, and
listening to its light pitter-patter sound. Ah, I love the sound of rain.
There,
right there, I spotted this beauty, this gorgeous bellflower. It was dancing gracefully,
gently, like a bell in a monastery, droplets of rain falling on it. I stood,
mesmerized, witnessing its beauty, the way round dew-shaped rain forming on its
petals and slowly dropping on the ground.
And
I bent and tipped forward, taking out my camera, and clicked a shot. I checked
it in digital lens, instantaneously. Oho! I couldn’t believe that I took this
picture. The photographer in me had blossomed to the fullest. He-he, no, no, it’s
the object of this naïve artist.
Beautiful flower. Beautiful Shot. Beautuful writing. Beautiful rain. So beautiful. Loved it thoroughly.
ReplyDeleteYou are really a good Photographer. The flower looks ever beautiful one.
ReplyDeleteIs that called bellflower??? I saw it in Nepal too, found it very nice, but didn't know the name.. I took shots of it too... Hehehe......
ReplyDeleteBtw, the way you wrote - very cute leh.... :P