Unlike the sophisticated English tote bag, the modest Tamiljolnapai is more like its unlucky step-sister. Ajolnapaicomes with baggage full of unmet expectations. It’s what a lot of unfashionable, uninspired, and poor Indians use to stuff their children’s school textbooks and notebooks, their groceries, and their paint supplies. This humungous, cavernous beast of a cloth bag, is a single compartment sack that is held together with two long cloth handles on each side and is capable of holding you, your family, donkey, and everything else you may own, enough that you can plan your escape carrying only that away from protective parents, cheating or boring partners or from an unpleasant world. That’s what my appa was referring to when he said, "Have you looked inside that jolnapai of yours? Maybe your butterfly clip is inside it."I haven't owned one of those cavernous beasts in over a decade. I used to, a long time back when I was very young and yet to grow up to be myself or to grasp my liking and disliking - I did own a jolnapai, a gift from appa. He outgrew his pair of black-but-fast-turning-grey polyester pants and so he took them to a tailor a few blocks down the road and had them sewn into two jolnapais. One for him.One for me.