THE TRIP THAT ENDED WITH
A HOSPITAL, A POLICE STATION
& A SECRET.
First college trip. Zero permission. One monkey. Two fractures. Infinite memories. — And we'd do it all over again.
Kuch trips hote hain jo plan ke saath hote hain. Itinerary, hotel booking, parents ki permission, travel insurance.
Aur kuch trips hote hain jo zindagi bante hain.
Yeh woh doosri wali trip hai.
Second year of college. Woh golden phase — jab tum fresher nahi rehe, aur placement ka darr abhi door hai. Jab dost best lagte hain, weekends infinite lagte hain, aur common sense? Common sense ek myth lagti hai.
"The most unforgettable trips are never the ones you planned. They're the ones that planned you."
— Learned the hard way, Mussoorie 2nd YearToh jab kisi ne casually kaha — "Mussoorie chalte hain" — nobody said no. Nobody said wait. And nobody — definitely nobody — called their parents.
CONFIDENTIAL 01 — The Setup: Nobody's Parents KnewMujhe ek cheez clearly kehni hai upfront.
Maine ghar pe bataya hi nahi tha.
My parents had absolutely no idea that their son was about to rent scooties in the hills of Uttarakhand with no license, trek through Landour and Dhanaulti with no plan, get his first challan from traffic police, survive an accident, end up in a hospital with fractured hands, and then deal with not one but two police complaints.
They thought I was studying. I was, in a way. Just not the kind they meant.
"Beta padh raha hai."
Beta Mussoorie mein scooty se crash kar raha hai.
Every legendary trip needs characters. Not friends — characters.
The Flatmate — My partner-in-crime. Literally. Police complaint and all. The one who'd later require surgery.
The Batchmates — A certified mix of adventure-seekers, scaredy-cats, and drama queens who wanted Instagram content more than the actual mountains.
The Choti Bacchi — Our youngest member. Escaped a challan by smoothly slipping cash to a cop before he could even open his notebook. Most competent person on the trip.
The Guy Scared of the Dark — The entertainment. The victim. The legend.
We exploited the scared-of-dark guy mercilessly. Switch off lights randomly. Make weird noises. Watch him jump every single time. Looking back — terrible friends. In the moment — comedy gold. He's still our friend, so I think we're forgiven.
The moment we reached Mussoorie, something shifted. Woh feeling jo sirf hills mein milti hai — thandi hawa, pine ka smell, winding roads that make no sense but lead everywhere beautiful.
"Pahadon mein ek baat hoti hai — tumhara phone bhi slow ho jaata hai, aur tumhari anxiety bhi."
— Mussoorie, 11 PM, Mall RoadWe stayed at Zostel Mussoorie — dormitory style, broke-student-friendly, and perfect for people who have no idea what they're doing but want to do it anyway.
That night, we walked Mall Road with zero destination. Just friends, laughter, and the kind of 2 AM conversations that only happen when you're far from everything familiar.
Someone pulled out an Uno deck back at the hostel.
If you've played Uno with Indian friends, you already know — it's not a card game. It's a personality test. Friendships are tested. Alliances are formed and broken in the same round. Someone always gets too emotionally invested.
We played till 3 AM. Hum sab hare. Sab jeete. It made no sense and was perfect.
Next morning. I opened my eyes slowly, still half-asleep.
And there it was.
A monkey. Sitting inside our room. Casually. Like he paid rent.
Now, a normal person would panic, right? Scream, maybe?
My friend — sleeping RIGHT NEXT to the monkey — didn't even open his eyes.
Pulled his blanket over his head. Went back to sleep. Right next to a monkey. That's the level of unbothered energy I aspire to every single day.
"Real peace is not the absence of chaos.
It's being able to sleep next to a monkey and simply not care."
Day two: exploration mode. Landour — quiet, colonial, the kind of place where streets feel from a different century. We walked, clicked photos, and pretended to be poets for approximately forty minutes.
Then Dhanaulti — more offbeat, more serene, cedar forests so thick that you lose signal and don't miss it at all.
To get there — we had rented scooties. I had no license. No helmet. Just vibes and a vague memory of watching someone else ride once.
The traffic police, predictably, did not share my philosophical attitude toward road safety. First challan of my life.
Our youngest member — the choti bacchi — had already encountered a cop earlier. Her solution? Cash slipped smoothly before he could even reach for his ticket book. Zero challan. Perfect record.
And there I was. Standing. Getting a full lecture on road safety. My friends laughing in the background. Main character energy — but make it humiliating.
Trip officially over. Back in our college town. High on memories, low on sleep.
My flatmate needed to pick up some stuff. One last scooty ride. "Kya ho sakta hai?"
Everything. Everything could happen. And it did.
— The universe, answering immediatelyThe scooty skidded. We crashed. Blood. A lot of it.
My flatmate's face was badly injured. I looked at my hands. Something wasn't right. Adrenaline delays everything — pain, panic, processing. The doctor took one look: "Surgery karni padegi. Jaldi."
And then, somewhere in the chaos — Minor fractures. Both hands.
Our other friends — who had left for another Mussoorie trip right after ours — heard about the accident. They literally turned around mid-trip. Didn't think twice. Rushed to the hospital.
That's when you know. Those are your real ones.
You don't find out who your friends are when everything is fine. You find out at midnight, in a hospital, with fractures in both hands.
"True friendship is not shown in comfort.
It is revealed in the U-turn at 11 PM when your friend needs you."
Ek accident. Do police complaints.
The scooty rental guy filed one. The people whose vehicle we'd crashed into filed another. And I — haath mein fracture liye — had to figure out how to handle this without my parents finding out.
Ek accident, do complaints, aur main haath mein fracture liye police station mein. Yeh woh life lesson nahi tha jo main expect kar raha tha — lekin shayad sabse zaroori tha.
— The Education System Never Covered ThisSome calls were made. Some sources were pulled. The situation was "managed." I'm not proud of it. But I am, honestly, relieved. And grateful for every person who made those calls.
And now — the part that still makes me laugh the most.
My parents still didn't know. I intended to keep it that way. So there I was: hospital bed, fractures in both hands, giving orders like a mafia don running his operation from a hospital cot.
- ▸ Koi bhi photo post nahi karega. Not one. Not even a Story.
- ▸ Instagram Stories — archive karo. Immediately.
- ▸ WhatsApp se bhi hatao — group photos, location pings, everything.
- ▸ Check-ins? Delete. Geo-tags? Remove. Captions? Gone.
- ▸ If anyone asks — we were studying. All of us. In the library.
- ▸ The monkey? REDACTED. The challan? REDACTED. This blog? REDACTED.
No check-ins. No geo-tags. No "Living my best life in Mussoorie 🏔️" captions. Just collective silence and a shared secret that has somehow survived all the way to this blog post.
(Hi Mom. This is completely fictional. 😊)
- First challan — because apparently helmets matter. Who knew.
- First police complaint — because apparently so does insurance.
- First major accident — because life has a twisted sense of humor and zero regard for timing.
- First time hiding a trip from parents — and somehow, still hiding it.
- First time friends turned their car around mid-trip for you. No questions asked.
- First time laughing in a hospital bed because the monkey story was still funny.
- First time understanding — memories aren't made in comfort zones.
"Comfort zones give you safety. The edges give you stories. And stories — real ones, the kind you can't tell everyone — those are what life is actually made of."
— The Only Travel Philosophy That Actually MattersWe spend so much time wanting the perfect trip. Perfect weather. Perfect hotel. Perfect content for the grid.
But the trips you actually remember? The ones that become stories you tell at 2 AM years later? They were never perfect.
"Life isn't about the trips where everything went right.
It's about the ones where everything went wrong —
and you were with the right people."
Yes, the trip ended with an accident. Yes, there was blood. Yes, there was a police station and a cover-up operation. But also — there was a monkey who paid no rent. There was a 2 AM Mall Road walk. There were Uno wars where nobody really lost. There were friends who drove back without a second thought.
There was life. Raw, chaotic, absolutely unfiltered life.
Would I do it all over again?
Without question. Same crew. Same chaos. Same complete absence of a plan.
Maybe with a helmet this time. Maybe.
"Have a crazy trip story your parents still don't know about?"
Drop it in the comments. I promise not to judge. Much. 😂This is a safe space — same as our WhatsApp group where we deleted everything.
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