A Season That Hasn’t Made Up Its Mind: Reflections from a Cold Summer Evening
For the past four days, Uttarakhand's weather has been quietly repeating itself. The pattern has been consistent. Mornings pass without urgency. By afternoon, clouds begin to gather, with a kind of patient intent. And by evening, the sky resolves the matter with rain: Sometimes steady, sometimes accompanied by thunder, occasionally with sudden gusts of wind that announce itself and then withdraws. Each day has followed this rhythm with minor variations. Enough to be noticed, not enough to be called unusual. And yet, over these same four days, another pattern has been unfolding—one not in the sky, but in the language used to describe it. Foreign media like Bloomberg have been loudly writing about "intensifying heat" and "grid stress" in India. The implication is not merely that heat may come, but that its consequences are already beginning to unfold. Which is how one arrives at a mildly absurd situation: watching rain fall for the fourth consecutive afternoon, ...