Yes, this is real ‘ganjing’.
Hazratganj has a way of keeping you longer than you planned, every single time. The chaat pulls you in, the lamp posts slow you down, the benches make you stay. You came for an errand and lost two hours. Sound familiar? Welcome to the club. Here’s your official membership checklist-
You bargain and shop at Love Lane/Prince Market, always!

Love Lane and Prince Market prices are just opening bids, and you know it. Poker face? Locked. Walk-away move? Perfected. You’ve haggled so hard here that shopkeepers remember your face. Not fondly, but they remember. You have spent enough time here that bargaining stopped being awkward and started being genuine and embarrassingly fun!
Devoured chaat/batashe at Shukla or Jain

You didn’t plan it, you never do. But the second the shopping bags hit your hand, your feet take over, straight to Jain or Shukla Chaat. Aloo tikki first, dahi bhalla after, batashe somewhere in between. At this point it’s not a choice, it’s just what happens.
Summer season=mango season at Chedilal

Blame Chedilal, seriously. One mango shake and suddenly every summer you’re back, same seat, same order, same stupid grin mid-sip. It’s been happening for years, and somehow you still don’t see it. You didn’t choose too much time to spend in Ganj, the mango shake made that decision for you.
Hit up kulfi at Moti Mahal or Royal Cafe

You said quick visit. In and out. But then Moti Mahal or Royal Cafe happened, one kulfi, creamy and cold, and suddenly the rush evaporated. You sat down. Then had another. Then lost track of time entirely. Nobody comes to Ganj for just a bit. The kulfi makes sure of that.
Witnessing the Republic Day parade is now a routine

Normal people watch the Republic Day parade. Ganj regulars have a reserved spot near Vidhan Sabha or GPO roundabout that nobody officially assigned but everyone knows is theirs. You didn’t choose this life. You just spent too much time in Hazratganj until January 26th had a fixed address. Here you are, again.
Seen at least one street performer

Most people walk past. You stopped, watched, and gave a full standing ovation, bags still in hand, chaat half-eaten, completely unbothered. It’s happened more than once and it’ll happen again. That’s what too much time in Ganj does to you. The street becomes a stage and somehow you always have front row.
Have atleast purchased one book from Ganj Metro book fair

You swore you’d skip it this year. You didn’t. There you were, Ganj Metro station, book fair, flipping through pages of things you definitely don’t need. Didn’t buy anything. Never do. But leaving without browsing felt physically impossible. Too much time in Hazratganj means the book fair isn’t optional anymore. It’s just life.
Ended up stopping for a random aesthetic pic

Your friends have stopped believing your ETAs. Because somewhere between the vintage lamp posts and that one perfect corner, Ganj stole another hour. One click became twenty, twenty became a full session, and suddenly you’re late again with nothing to show for it except the best photos you’ve ever taken. Worth it though.
Had your first date/break-up here

You’ve sat there in front of Ada showroom or Sahu Cinema with your heart racing, sometimes with excitement, sometimes with dread. Lemon tea both times, somehow. Ganj didn’t just become a place you hang out. It became the place life happened. First dates, hard conversations, big moments. Spent too much time here? The benches are proof.
Always stopped by at Universal Bookstore

There’s no such thing as a quick stop at Universal Book Depot. You knew that, went in anyway. Emerged two hours later, books you didn’t plan on, stationery you definitely don’t need, zero regrets. This is what too much time in Ganj looks like. You’re not shopping anymore. You’re just living here.
Halted for that VIP movement

Engine off. Sigh released. Not even a glance at who’s passing. You’ve sat through enough VIP movements in Ganj to know the drill, no point checking, no point rushing. You used to look. That was before. Now you just wait. The one time Ganj forces extra time on you, and you didn’t even ask for it.





















