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I Forgot the Fall. I Never Forgot the Kindness
In a move-on culture full of fast forgetting, one woman recalls the stranger who chose instead to stop, notice, and care
Illustration by Siddhant Jumde
During my college years in Bangalore, some time in the early ’80s—before the internet, before television, before social media—our days were filled with simpler, and more tangible pleasures: a good book, endless conversation, or, most thrilling of all, for me at least, a Saturday at the movies.
Teeming with cafés, restaurants, and the busy chatter of people with places to be, Bangalore is a city that’s always on the move. But its crown jewel was the cinema. One weekend, my friend Sumi* and I set our sights on the Rex Theatre on Brigade Road, a magical place that felt like the epicentre of the universe. I can’t, for the life of me, remember the name of film we were going to see. What I do remember is the ride there—wedged into an autorickshaw that rattled through traffic like it had somewhere far more urgent to be.
That afternoon, Brigade Road was pure chaos in motion—bikes, cars, buses, and people spilling across lanes as if the pavement were optional. We disembarked at the theatre, and I stepped on to the road, thinking only of popcorn and plot twists. And then, in one strange, startling moment, I collapsed.
I don’t remember the mechanics of it—my right leg has always been the weaker one, and maybe it gave way. Maybe the road caught me off guard. Maybe it was a ground-level obstruction hidden by the crowd. Either way, there I was: splayed across the curb, foot twisted, and pain spreading quickly, dramatically, screaming to be noticed.
In India, any event—however small—tends to attract an audience. People gathered around as if I were street theatre, murmuring commentary. Not unkind, just...curious. Sumi, bless her, dashed off in search of another rickshaw. But after a string of refusals from drivers—a not-uncommon conundrum city dwellers face—she soon gave up and returned to my side. We sat there alone, amidst a sea of strangers—me in pain, Sumi feeling powerless.
The author, Ameetha Chari
Then, unexpectedly, a young man stepped out from among the crowd of 20 or 30 onlookers and passers-by. Lean, soft-spoken and impeccably polite, he looked to be in his early-20s, with a quiet, purposeful demeanour, entirely unlike the rest who were still frozen in their collective curiosity. He crouched beside me and asked how much pain I was in, and whether I felt I needed to go to a hospital.
I shook my head, trying not to cry—from embarrassment or discomfort, I wasn’t sure. It was hard to tell which stung more. But, without the slightest hint of judgment or condescension, he nodded, disappeared for a few seconds and returned having hailed a passing auto. He helped me in, and with a quick “take care”, disappeared back into the mass of urban commuters.
A short while later, I was home, nursing a bruised ego and a swollen foot, and spent the rest of the week replaying the fall—and the stranger’s kindness—in uneven loops. Months passed. My foot healed. The world resumed its rhythm. One evening, I was at the Lido Theatre on MG Road with a group of friends. We’d bought our tickets and were waiting for the doors to open, the usual hum of laughter and street noise swirling around us. And then, out of nowhere, he was there again. The same young man.
He walked right up to me and asked how my foot was. It took me a few moments to place him—he was less of a memory than a blur, a kindness I’d half-convinced myself I’d imagined. But here he was, real, and smiling softly.
“I was on a bus,” he said, gesturing vaguely toward the street. “Saw you standing here...thought I’d come over and check how you were doing.”
I smiled and told him it had been just a sprain—that I was back on my feet and doing a lot better.
With a nod and a smile, he said “take care,” and left—no further words, no over-familiar follow-up—just a small gesture of decency and compassion—extended twice—like a gentle punctuation mark in the chaos of city life.
Not once did it cross my mind to ask his name, or where he was going, or why he chose to stop. All I managed was a simple “thank you”—a hurried offering in the moment. And yet, his kindness shone bright long after the streets had emptied and the pain had faded.
That kind of warmth stays with you, doesn’t it? Not because it was grand, but because it was so entirely unrequired. There was no script, no expectation, no exchange—just a person on a busy street with somewhere else to be, who chose instead to stop, notice, and care. Also, it wasn’t just that he helped, but that he remembered.
In a move-on culture full of fast forgetting, that kind of remembrance feels almost sacred. It’s the sort of gesture that recalibrates something deep inside you—that maybe, despite everything, people are still capable of choosing kindness in the most beautifully inefficient ways.
*Name changed for privacy
To read more real-life tales on the kindness of strangers, click here.





