Monkey Business

When soya sauce saved the day

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When soya sauce saved the day

It's monkey season in Delhi again, which means walking on the streets is rendered additionally challenging. You have to keep your eyes on walls and balconies to spot fast-moving or lurking shapes while simultaneously trying not to trip on the intricate trap-maze that is the average Indian street. There are two kinds of people when it comes to urban Indian monkeys. The first display enviable calm, chatting with them or not even acknowledging their presence and just going about their business--perhaps they cannot distinguish between Delhi's monkeys and its humans. I am the other kind. I love monkeys only in fiction and amusing internet videos.

I've had four home invasions, and a tug-of-war over food that ended badly for the whole street, so my monkey-story standards are high. I'm sharing the latest one, not because it features special slapstick hilarity, but because it made me question everything about myself, and taught me life lessons.

I step out of my bedroom to find, in my living room, three monkeys having a panel discussion. Upon seeing me, they exchange glances, and approach me with steely glints in their eyes. This was their home now, they say; I was the interloper. Displaying the derring-do that I am famous for, I retreat quietly into my bedroom and lock the door.

Step One: I try calling my Top People for advice. Network is poor, as always, but not as poor as I feel when they do not take my calls. They are all busy overachievers and are out there conquering the world.

Life Lesson One: Keep a few friends with spare time on their hands.

Outside, the monkeys start making thumping and dragging sounds. They are rearranging the furniture, possibly beginning large-scale construction.

Step Two: I ask social media what I should do, and immediately receive fantastic tips. I should have locked my balcony door better. I should call a “langur man”<...

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