Today was one of those days that starts rough and ends soft, like weather and life both decided to be dramatic.
In The morning...Faisalabad heat doing its thing...
I woke up to a sky that looked white, not blue. That kind of Faisalabad heat where even the fan feels tired. By 11 AM the air outside was thick. The kind of heat that makes your phone overheat on the table and your steps feel heavier. As a physiotherapist I spend all day thinking about bodies under stress — muscles, joints, hydration. And today my own body was sending the same signals my patients send: “Drink water. Slow down. Shade.”
The sun wasn’t just hot, it was personal huhh. Asphalt shimmering, rickshaw drivers wiping foreheads, trees looking like they’d given up. I thought, “Okay, today is going to be a survival day. AC, cold water, patience.” Also the news channel gave alert of heat wave during these days.
Then around late afternoon something shifted. The light changed. The white sky turned gray, like someone pulled a curtain. Wind picked up from nowhere. Dust swirled, plastic bags did little dances, and for 10 seconds everything smelled like rain before it even started.We don’t get this much in summer often. That first cool breeze after hours of heat feels like a reward. My skin literally relaxed. Shoulders dropped. I could feel my nervous system downshift from “survive the heat” to “okay, we can breathe now.”
Then the rain. Not a thunderstorm, not a flood. Light rain. The polite kind. Big drops at first, tapping roofs, making dark circles on hot cement. Then a steady drizzle that cooled the air without making everything messy. The whole city exhaled.
Me, my sister, and our friend looked at each other and the same thought hit all three of us: “This is street food weather.” Hahahah, our trio is definitely a true fooddie gang ..There’s a science to it, actually. After heat + dehydration, salty + tangy + cold foods feel amazing because your body craves electrolytes + fluid + dopamine. As a physio I tell patients “listen to your body.” Today my body was screaming “gol gappas.”
We grabbed umbrellas, slipped into sandals, and stepped out. The roads smelled like wet soil + fried oil + masala. That combo only exists after first rain in Pakistan. Cars slowed down. Kids were splashing. Even the chai dhaba looked happier.
First stop:....gol gappas. The stall uncle already had a crowd. Rain makes everyone want pani puri, I swear. He cracked the puri, filled it with imli pani, aloo, chana. First bite = explosion. Sour, spicy, cold water hitting a throat that was dry all day. My sister went for “extra khatta.” Our friend chickened out after 2 and switched to dahi puri.
I ate 6. Each one felt like resetting my mouth from the heat. The tang cut through the heaviness in the air. The crunch + the cold pani = instant mood upgrade. Street food isn’t just food. It’s sensory therapy. Texture, temperature, taste, sound of people slurping your brain can’t overthink when you’re focused on not spilling pani down your shirt.
Rain got a little heavier, so we ducked under a momoz stall awning. Steam was rising from the cooker, mixing with rain mist. It looked cinematic.We ordered both: steamed and fried momoz. Because why choose. The steamed ones came first soft, hot, dipped in spicy red chutney. They tasted like comfort. Like “we made it through the heat” food. My sister, who’s more delicate with spice, preferred these.
Then the fried momoz arrived. Crispy outside, juicy inside, that little sizzle sound. With Coca Cola. Cold, fizzy, sweet cutting through the masala. That contrast is why people love food science. Hot + cold. Crunchy + soft. Spicy and i lovee spicy food.
We argued the whole time: steamed > fried or fried > steamed. My vote: fried with Coke. My sister’s vote: steamed with extra chutney. Our friend just kept eating and said “both are therapy.” Honestly, she’s right. After a day of heat stress,
chewing + flavor + carbonation = stress relief.
Chewing actually reduces cortisol. So we were medicating ourselves, technically.
Between momoz and dessert we just paused. Sat on plastic chairs under the awning. Rain was steady now. Not rushing, just present. I watched people. A bike rider pulled over to wait it out. A kid was making paper boats in the rain water. Vendors covered their stalls but kept selling. The city didn’t stop it just slowed down 20%. That’s what rain does. It forces you to pause without guilt.
My sister said, “Remember how we used to hate rain in hostel because clothes wouldn’t dry?” We laughed. Then our friend said, “Now rain feels like a gift.” That’s growing up, I guess. Same rain, different perspective.
By the time we finished momoz, the rain had cooled everything. Perfect falooda weather. We went to our usual spot.
Freezy cold falooda. Its called MATKA FLOODA.. milk, basil seeds, vermicelli, ice cream, rose syrup, nuts on top. First spoonful and my brain went quiet. Cold hitting tongue after spicy momoz + Coke was like hitting a reset button again.Basil seeds are tiny but hydrating. Rose syrup is sweet but not heavy. The whole thing was cold, creamy, nostalgic.
We walked back instead of taking a rickshaw. Streets were wet, air was clean, smell of rain was everywhere. No more white heat. Just cool breeze lifting hair, wet roads reflecting lights.I checked my phone later: 10,400 steps. Didn’t feel like exercise. Felt like wandering. That’s the best kind of movement. As a physio I’m always telling patients “move for joy, not punishment.” Today I lived that advice.
If I had to keep 3 things from today:
My feet are tired from walking in wet sandals. My stomach is full in the best way. My phone has 23 photos of rain on tables, momoz steam, and our messy spoons in falooda. Today started with heat that made me irritable. It ended with rain that made me soft. Same day. Same city. Different weather, different me.
So thank you, Faisalabad sky, for the plot twist. Thank you, sister and friend, for saying yes to street food without a plan. Thank you, gol gappas + momoz + falooda, for being medicine that tastes like childhood.
Today wasn’t perfect. We got splashed by a car. We argued over steamed vs fried. We were 10 minutes late because rain. But it was perfect because it was OURS.
From “too hot to function” at noon to “too happy to sleep” at night ...that’s my experience of today. And if every day could have a little rain after the heat, I think we’d all be healthier.
#CrossPost on Blurt