The Day Nitin Gadkari Got Stuck: A Sticky Childhood Memory He Can't Quite Shake
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- November 13, 2025
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There are moments, aren't there, when even the most steadfast of public figures peel back the curtain, just a tiny bit, and let us glimpse the wonderfully, sometimes painfully, human experiences that shaped them. And recently, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari did precisely that. Known for his robust policy discussions and his visionary infrastructure projects, it was a refreshing, almost disarming, turn when he chose to share a rather sticky — literally — memory from his own childhood.
You see, this wasn't some grand political revelation, not by a long shot. Instead, it was a perfectly imperfect anecdote, one that involved a young Nitin, barely a teenager at twelve or thirteen, embarking on a family trip to Mumbai. Picture it: the excitement of the big city, the hustle and bustle, a typical family outing. But as these things often do, one seemingly mundane need led to a genuinely unforgettable, if slightly cringe-worthy, incident.
It happened, as these things often do, when nature called. He found himself in a latrine, and honestly, who gives a second thought to such a routine act? But this particular latrine, well, it had just undergone some… let's call it 'maintenance.' Perhaps a fresh coat of tar, or some particularly tenacious paint, had been applied, and crucially, hadn't quite dried. And so, our young protagonist, unaware of the lurking peril, made himself comfortable.
And then, oh boy. He tried to get up. But he couldn't. He was, to put it mildly, stuck. "Mai chipak gaya uspe," he recounted, a phrase that beautifully captures the sheer helplessness and sudden panic. The fresh, sticky substance had done its job a little too well. It wasn't just embarrassing; it was, in truth, quite painful. Imagine the indignity, the struggle, the desperate tugging as he realised he was, for all intents and purposes, glued to his seat.
Eventually, his father, hearing the commotion or perhaps sensing something was amiss, had to come to his rescue. And you can almost hear the sighs of relief, the immediate flush of embarrassment, and the lingering sting. Because, yes, it was painful. So painful, in fact, that the discomfort, the irritation, the very literal stickiness of the situation, stayed with him for a couple of days. A souvenir, you could say, of that Mumbai trip.
It's a story that, while undoubtedly funny in retrospect, carries that distinct echo of genuine childhood pain and awkwardness. A simple, human moment that reminds us that beneath the titles and the public personas, there are real people with real, sometimes hilariously unfortunate, memories. And honestly, isn't that just a little bit endearing?
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