Going to the
market is a big affair in our household. We don't dress up for it but we do
arrive carrying our shopping bags which will then be filled with vegetables or
fish or in some cases meat. Now, like every household, we have some rules when
we go to the market.
The first
rule of marketing is that we buy from one or maximum two vendors. These two
vendors we choose have to meet certain criteria. Their product must be good and
fresh and if by any chance we are cheated, we return the product in whatever
state it is and permanently boycott said vendor. This has been going on since
my grandma's times.
Vendors
treat us with respect. At the local market, we buy veggies from two people, onions
and potatoes from an old gentleman and fish from a bearded dude whose beard is so
long it's as if his beard is growing another beard 9as the joke goes).I have
often been asked to sit down and share a cup of tea with our vendors, or if
they've done a puja then they make
sure to save some prasad for me.
Like any
relationship, this one too has been nurtured. When we first started buying we
told them of our rule and one fishmonger gave us bad fish. We returned the same
to him the next day in a semi cooked condition, stinking to high heaven and
have boycotted him since.
In the era
of Big Basket and other such online portals, finding a good vendor is a
difficult task, because everyone has a smartphone now, but they don't get to
experience the pleasure of going to a market, and buying fresh veggies or
meats, which we can see in front of us and pick and choose from. Sometimes the
vendor tells us he has nothing to offer us and we should try this other one who
will not cheat us. In an age where everything is ones and zeroes, a little
analog helps
How? It
reminds you where your roots are. It reminds you of taking the car down to the
market, parking it, getting down with an empty bag to fill and then filling it
with stuff from one end of the market to another. Marketing is so much fun. You
get to do so much. You meet new people, who then become familiar faces, then
almost family.
Back in the era
of landline phones and dial up internet, I remember this one time my dad took
me with him to the market. It was an amazing experience for me. The vendors all
patted my head, blessed me or gave me toffees. Some gave discounts on their
product on seeing me. My father was offered tea. There were so many smells. The
smell of fish, of blood, of fresh veggies like cabbage. My little eyes, with
their plus powered lenses saw so much, a man's beard scared me a little and it
was one of the most memorable days of my life, which I can still recall almost
twenty years later.
Then I started going to the market on my own.
I always got a discount from the vendors we were loyal to. Sometimes I'd chat
with them as they weighed my goods. One of the vegetable sellers recently lost
his mother. As is the custom in Hindu households, I bought some fruit and
sweets and gave it to him with my sincere condolences. There were tears in his
eyes and he said to me "God bless you, beta".
You see it's
about the people around us whom we don't notice and yet who are very important
to our lives. Were it not for a man getting up at 4 AM and going to get produce, we wouldn't have
food in our houses. Think about them a little. Remember, they have families
too. Remember they are humans too. Don't just say that you want a kilo of this,
pay and walk away. Interact.
There is
much to be learnt from these people. Open your mind and let them in.
The Bilge Master
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