A few years ago, around the Diwali long weekend, I was completely burnt out in Delhi. Work had reduced me to a machine — wake up, commute, work, repeat. That evening, I reached home around 5 pm, exhausted in a way sleep could not fix. I don’t know what came over me, or whether I was thinking clearly at all, but I suddenly started packing an overnight bag. A few clothes, toiletries, the most comfortable walking shoes I owned, and clothes suitable for trekking went in. Ten minutes later, I had booked a cab to ISBT Kashmiri Gate.
On the ride there, reality struck me: I had no plan. No bookings, no destination, no idea what I was doing. Somewhere in traffic, with Delhi honking around me, I opened Google and started searching for places I could escape to at the last minute. By the time I reached ISBT, I had somehow decided on Himachal Pradesh. About an hour and a half later, I was standing outside the Himachal Road Transport Corporation counter on the first floor, buying a ticket to Dharamsala.
That was it. No preparation, no strategy, no sensible thought process. I was going to Dharamsala, and I would figure the rest out later.
The overnight HRTC bus journey was rough, to put it kindly. It was one of those rides where sleep comes in painful fragments, your neck bends at unnatural angles, and your legs forget circulation exists. After what felt like an entire lifetime, the bus finally rolled into Dharamsala in the early morning. Twelve or thirteen hours later, perhaps. I can’t be sure. I was too busy slapping my numb thighs back to life after a freezing night ride.
But the moment I stepped out, it all felt worth it.
The Dhauladhar range stood in front of me like something painted by an overenthusiastic artist. The cold mountain air snapped me awake more effectively than coffee ever could. Around me, taxi drivers were in full form, trying to gather tourists into their vehicles.
“
McLeodganj, madam?”
“
Hotel booking we do!”
“
Arey, kaha jaana hai? Bata do!”
I stood there in the middle of all that chaos thinking,
If only I knew.
I had come all the way to Dharamsala with zero preparation, so I decided the only thing left to do was commit to the chaos. I got into a shared cab with a few other tourists. Apparently, I was heading to Bhagsu. I knew of Bhagsu from years of travel writing, but I had never actually visited it alone.
A fellow traveller from Delhi, a cheerful young guy, asked if I wanted to join him for the Triund trek. Under normal circumstances, maybe. But I had escaped Delhi to recover from exhaustion, not to punish my legs on a mountain trail. I politely declined. If I wanted labour, I could have stayed back in Delhi.
Then another problem hit me. I still had no accommodation.
I began frantically checking hotel and homestay listings online. Everything was full. It was the festive long weekend, of course it was full. Normally, panic should have set in. Strangely, it didn’t. I was too tired to panic. I simply thought,
Let’s see what happens when we reach.
When the shared cab dropped me at Bhagsu taxi stand, I started walking around with my overnight bag, convinced that surely not every stay in Bhagsu would be listed online. That instinct turned out to be correct.
I found a narrow little lane leading to a small gate and silently prayed it was a homestay. It was, apparently — just not that year.
An elderly Himachali lady came out and asked what I wanted. I asked if she had a room for one night. She told me their homestay wasn’t operational that season. Then she looked at me properly — a lone traveller, visibly exhausted, dark circles making a strong argument for humanitarian aid — and said I could stay in their spare room if I managed my own meals.
For INR 500 a night, I suddenly had a place to stay.
That room changed my entire tripAfter settling in, I went to the local market and ate a hearty meal of soup dumplings and spring rolls. Then I returned and did something tourists rarely do in hill towns: absolutely nothing. I lay down to rest.
The aunty asked why I was back so early instead of exploring like everyone else. I told her honestly that I had no desire to climb hills, visit temples, shop for souvenirs, or chase cafés serving food I could easily get in Delhi. I didn’t know why I had come. I only knew I needed rest.
She nodded as if that made perfect sense. Then she told me to bring a
mudha — a small stool — and sit with her in the courtyard.
That courtyard became my sanctuary. In front of us was a massive hill wrapped in drifting fog. Around us stood traditional Himachali homes with slate roofs and tiny balconies. We sat in the sun, cleaning saag and leafy greens. She asked about my life in Delhi and told me about hers in Bhagsu with her husband. She looked to be in her early sixties, strong and practical in the way mountain women often are.
Later, she walked to her kitchen garden to collect beans and motioned for me to join her. So I did. I stood there in borrowed peace, picking beans with a woman I had met only hours earlier.
That evening, as I was about to head to the market for dinner, she asked if I would like to “taste” her homemade food. I assumed she meant a small portion.
Instead, she arrived with a full plate of piping hot food and homemade pickles. I wasn’t tasting dinner. I was having dinner with them.
My one-night stay became three days.
Those three days were gloriously uneventful. I helped pick vegetables, sat in the courtyard while she cleaned greens, watched fog move across the mountains, listened to village sounds, and slept better than I had in months. No itinerary, no sightseeing checklist, no pressure to “make the most” of a destination.
Eventually, three days later, with beans packed into my bag and a surprisingly emotional goodbye behind me, I boarded my bus back to Delhi. Also, the aunty would not accept any money from me, and just told me to visit again.
People often ask what I did in Dharamsala and McLeodganj.
The answer is: absolutely nothing.
And by doing the exact opposite of what tourists are expected to do, I ended up having one of the best holidays of my life.
-
These 2 zodiac signs dominate in the Ambani family, if you also have this zodiac sign then your luck can open.

-
First-Ever Milk Freight Train Brings 1,000 Tonnes Of Amul Products To Jammu And Kashmir

-
Phone battery 9000 mAh! In noisy phone-loving circles, is there a need at all?

-
Bhadra: Medical camp at PM Shri School, doctor couple from BHU conducted health checkup of children.

-
IPL Slapgate: ‘Slap Scandal’ again in headlines… Sreesanth accuses Harbhajan of earning money, claims relationship broke down
