It’s fascinating how trying something new — even something as small as putting away a screen
— opens up a window to things you’d otherwise miss.
The realization hit me on a bus ride back to Bangalore from my hometown. It’s a six-hour
journey on KSRTC, the kind of stretch where I usually bury myself in my headphones,
rewatching Friends or The Big Bang Theory to kill the time. But this time, I decided to
experiment. I decided not to use my phone until I reached the city.
The first thirty minutes were, frankly, boring. I watched out the window, wondering if this
experiment was a mistake, and eventually, I drifted off to sleep.
Then again, life has a way of handing you exactly what you weren’t looking for.
I woke up suddenly to the sound of raised voices.
Not gently — the kind of jolt where you’re pulled from sleep by volume alone, your brain still
catching up to where you are. I was in a corner seat in the middle section of the bus.
Mid-morning light was streaming through the windows. And near the front, the bus conductor
and a passenger were in the middle of an argument.
And just like any typical Indian, my first instinct wasn’t to intervene or look away. It was
to settle in and watch.
I’d actually seen the start of this, before I fell asleep.
The passenger had bought his ticket early in the journey — handed over ₹300 for a ₹232 fare.
The conductor had given him ₹60 in change immediately, but not the remaining ₹8. “I’ll settle it
at the next stop,” he’d said. The passenger had seemed fine with it. These things happen. It’s
normal.
That was hours ago.
We were halfway to Bangalore now.
The conductor was walking down the aisle, issuing tickets to other passengers, when he passed
the passenger’s row. The passenger, still seated, said something — not loudly, not calling
across the bus, just asking as the conductor came near.
“What about my change?”
The conductor stopped. He pulled out a ₹10 note from his pouch and held it up.
“Give me ₹2 back.”
“I don’t have ₹2.”
The passenger’s voice tightened. “You’ve had three hours. You’ve been making change for
everyone else.”
The conductor’s face hardened. “I told you I don’t have it, right? Why are you making a scene?”
There was a pause. A beat of silence.
Then the conductor pulled out another ₹10 note. He held it in front of the passenger, loud
enough for half the bus to hear, and said:
“Here. Keep the ₹2. Go have fun with it.”
I sat up straighter.
You can’t say something like that to someone. Not like that. Not in front of a bus full of strangers.
The passenger’s voice came back, thick with anger now. He grabbed the note and threw it back
at the conductor’s chest.
“You keep it. Enjoy your ₹8.”
The ₹10 note fell to the floor. The conductor let it fall. He was furious — furious in that way that’s
both embarrassed and ready to escalate.
Then he said something I still remember word for word.
“Are you even worthy enough to give me money to enjoy?”
The passenger stood up then. I could see his face now — red, not just with anger but with
something closer to humiliation. They were standing sideways to each other in the aisle, and the
argument shifted.
It wasn’t about ₹8 anymore.
It was about worth. About dignity. About who had the right to feel insulted and who didn’t.
The amounts got absurd. Rupees became crores. “My worth is one crore,” one of them said — I
don’t even remember who said it first. They were throwing numbers at each other like weapons,
loud and sarcastic and completely unmoored from the ₹8 that had started it all.
I stopped listening to them.
I started watching everyone else.
People were laughing.
Not at the situation. Not at the absurdity of two grown men arguing over small change.
At the passenger.
Some had been laughing from the beginning — the kind of laughter that treats conflict as
entertainment, the way you’d watch a reality TV show. But as the argument escalated, the
laughter sharpened. It became pointed.
A man sitting near me muttered, his voice thick with dismissal: “All this drama over eight
rupees.”
A woman in the row ahead clicked her tongue. “He should have just let it go.”
I felt my body go cold.
The conductor had stalled for three hours. He’d made change for other passengers during that
time — I’d seen him do it. He’d insulted the man twice: once with the dismissive “go have fun
with it,” and once with that question about worth.
And somehow, the passenger had become the ridiculous one.
I sat there, frozen, trying to understand. My chest had tightened when the conductor said
“worthy.” I’d felt that insult in my bones. I’d wanted to stand up, to say something.
But I didn’t.
Maybe because I was still processing how everyone around me could be seeing this so
differently. Maybe because I was outnumbered. Maybe because at eighteen, on a bus full of
strangers, speaking up felt harder than staying silent.
I don’t remember how the argument ended. I don’t remember if the passenger stayed on the bus
or got off at the next stop. What I remember is the laughter, and the comments, and the way the
bus just went back to normal afterward — people returning to their phones, their conversations,
their sleep, as if nothing had happened.
As if dignity hadn’t just been auctioned off for ₹8.
When I got home, I did what I always do. I told the story.
There were four of us sitting around that evening — cousins, the kind of group where you can
say anything and expect honesty back. I framed it the way I always frame stories: You won’t
believe what I saw on the bus today.
They listened the way they always listen — patient, interested, waiting for the punchline.
When I finished, I asked them what they thought.
My eldest cousin spoke first. He’s the one I’m a little afraid of — not because he’s cruel, but
because he’s older, sharper, the kind of person whose opinion carries weight whether you want
it to or not.
“The conductor deals with this from morning to evening,” he said. “Passenger after passenger
asking for change they don’t have. Of course he got frustrated. It’s understandable.”
I turned to another cousin, hoping for a different answer.
He shrugged. “It’s not that easy to take a side. The real issue is the system. The government
should do something — round off fares, make sure conductors have change to start their shifts.
It’s a structural problem.”
He wasn’t wrong. But it also felt like he was sidestepping the actual question.
I tried to push back. “But it’s not always possible to carry exact change. Sometimes you forget.
Sometimes you don’t have it. That doesn’t give the conductor the right to treat him like that.”
The eldest cousin cut me off with a laugh. Not a mean laugh — just tired, like he’d heard
enough.
“Just tell me what answer you’re expecting,” he said, “and I’ll give it to you.”
Everyone laughed. I laughed too.
But it wasn’t a real laugh. It was the sound of a conversation ending before it really began.
The thought didn’t leave me, though.
A few days later, I told the story to a college friend. Same setup, same details, same question at
the end: What do you think?
Their response was different. Worse, in some ways.
“Was he rich or poor?”
I stared at them, confused. “What does that have to do with anything?”
They didn’t have an answer. Or maybe they did, and it was too uncomfortable to say out loud:
that asking for ₹8 looks different depending on what you’re wearing, where you’re sitting, how
much people assume you have.
I let it go. I was tired of asking people to see what I was seeing. Clearly, I was the only one who
saw it.
Then I came across an article.
I wasn’t looking for it. I was scrolling — the way you do when you’re half-bored,
half-procrastinating — and a headline caught my eye.
Man wins case against BMTC for refusing to return ₹1 in change.
I stopped scrolling.
The article was short. A man in Bangalore had been shortchanged ₹1 by a BMTC conductor.
Instead of letting it go, he’d filed a case. He’d fought it for three years. Three years, for one
rupee.
He won.
The comments section was split down the middle. Half the people called him a hero —
someone who stood on principle, who refused to let the system normalize theft just because the
amount was small. The other half called him petty, a waste of the court’s time, someone with too
much time on his hands.
I read the article twice. Then I sat with it for a while, just thinking.
I felt relief. I felt vindicated. I felt a kind of happiness I hadn’t expected — the realization that I
wasn’t alone. That there were people who understood it wasn’t about the coin. It was about the
principle of settlement.
That’s when I decided to write the bus story down.
I sat with my phone that evening, typing slowly, rewording sentences, trying to get it right. My
thumbs cramped. The screen felt too small for what I was trying to say. But I kept going.
I shared it with a few people. A few replied. Life moved on. I never posted it widely.
But it stayed with me.
Not because I’d figured anything out.
Because I hadn’t.
Here’s what I still don’t understand.
The same people who laughed at the passenger on that bus — who said ₹8 wasn’t worth
making a fuss over — are the first to complain when milk prices go up by ₹2. They call the
government corrupt over a ₹5 hike in petrol. They argue about grocery bills and taxi fares and
whether the vegetable vendor is charging them fairly.
But when a man asks for his own money after being stalled for three hours, he’s cheap.
When does dignity become negotiable? And why does the price keep changing depending on
who’s asking?
I think about that conductor sometimes. I think about the system he’s trapped in — long hours,
insufficient change provided at the start of shifts, passengers who don’t have exact fare, the
endless loop of small frustrations that add up over a ten-hour workday.
I think he probably is frustrated. I think he probably does deal with this constantly.
But frustration doesn’t justify cruelty.
And asking someone if they’re worthy to give you money — in front of a bus full of people, after
you’ve already stalled them for hours — that’s not frustration. That’s something else.
I think about the passenger too. I think about how his face looked when he stood up — red,
humiliated, trying to hold onto his dignity in a space that had decided he didn’t deserve any.
I think about the fact that I’ll never know if he was rich or poor, and how much that question
bothers me now. Because it shouldn’t matter. The ₹8 was his. The conductor owed it to him.
That’s the only fact that should have mattered.
But facts don’t win arguments when everyone’s already decided whose side they’re on.
That bus ride taught me something I didn’t expect.
It wasn’t about two rupees, or eight rupees, or even about the conductor and the passenger.
It was about the silence.
The silence of the people who laughed.
The silence of the people who looked away.
The silence of me, sitting in my corner seat, chest tight, wanting to say something and choosing
not to.
Small arguments like this happen everywhere. Buses in India, trains in London, markets in
Nairobi, subway platforms in New York. The currency changes. The language changes. The
specific indignity shifts.
But the question stays the same.
When does dignity become negotiable?
And who gets to decide?
I still don’t have an answer.
But I know this: the man who fought BMTC for ₹1 understood something the rest of us are afraid
to admit.
It was never about the rupee.
It was about the refusal to let the world tell him what he was worth.
Postscript: This is the first story I’ve ever shared. It’s a small piece of my history that I
finally decided to write down. It’s not the best I’ll ever write, but it’s the most honest
place I could start. More on these ‘isolated incidents’ later. For now, this is where it
begins.
What a beautifully honest narrative ❤️
Thank you for sharing it!
I am with you on dignity being non-negotiable.
“Thank you—glad that came through. That’s what stayed with me while writing it.”
I like the writing. Quite nice and without having the need to be flowery or grand.
But I don’t agree with the whole setup at all. Mistakes on every part. People assigning worth to wrong things, spending time, energy for something which at the core of it is ego.
Time is life.
Thank you for reading and for the kind words about the writing, really means a lot!!
I actually see the scene a bit differently. For me, the story at its core isn’t about an ego clash over 8 rupees, it’s about how casually people pick sides and how negotiable someone else’s dignity suddenly becomes in a crowd!
I agree time is life, but it’s also your life to spend how you choose – like that BMTC guy who fought 3 years over 1 rupee, most people would call that a waste, but for him the settlement itself was the point!!
That tension is what I was trying to sit with, more than a clean right/wrong.
I like the way of your writing. It’s simple yet so beautiful.
And the way you described that dignity is non-negotiable was so good and I agree with you.
And one last thing the way you were sharing your story and thoughts were so beautiful.
Thanks, that really means a lot to me. I’m glad you liked how the dignity part came across and that the story felt nice overall.
I like the way of your writing. It’s simple yet so beautiful.
And the way you described that dignity is non-negotiable was so good and I agree with you.
And one last thing the way you were sharing your story and thoughts were so beautiful.