Laapsi [better] -

We have all experienced it. That sickening moment when your foot finds nothing but air, your center of gravity betrays you, and time seems to slow down as you begin a rapid, undignified descent toward the pavement. In Hindi and colloquial North Indian English, this event has a short, punchy, and oddly perfect name: Laapsi (लपसी).

And the victim, now safe, will replay the flailing arms, the sudden gravity check, and the audience of strangers in the rearview mirror. They will blush. They will laugh. And they will vow to watch that one uneven tile for the rest of their lives—until the next laapsi , of course. laapsi

If there is a trip to the hospital, it is no longer a laapsi ; it has been promoted to a durdhatna (accident) or chot (injury). The laapsi lives exclusively in the realm of the non-fatal and the hilarious. Part of the joy of the laapsi is the word itself. It is onomatopoeic in a wet, slippery way. Say it aloud: Laap-see . It sounds like a small, soft object hitting a wet floor. It lacks the sharp, dangerous ring of “crash” or “collapse.” Instead, it feels forgiving, almost cuddly. We have all experienced it

The word gives us permission to laugh at our own clumsiness. In a culture that often prizes grace and composure, the laapsi is a great equalizer. The CEO, the intern, the grandmother, and the toddler are all equally susceptible to the humble floor. Once the faller is back on their feet, the laapsi enters its final, and longest, phase: memory. For the next several hours, well-meaning friends and family will offer unsolicited advice. “You should look where you’re walking.” “I told you those shoes are slippery.” “Maybe put on the light next time?” And the victim, now safe, will replay the

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