Wednesday, June 25, 2014

'This' Empty Room

Thoughts ripple and emotions condense

Actions freeze and silence fills 

Shadows see the light 

as the mind screams, liberating. 

In this loneliness, depression is the price of bliss. 

Then....

Emotions ripple, thoughts condense

Tears travel and memory pains 

Darkness compliments a mirage

Living this lie, becomes the price of happiness.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Two stories and two misconceptions


Today I saw a quotation on Facebook which read, as follows:
I liked it. And I shared it.
I liked it not because I really liked it but because it struck me.
I shared it, so that I could reflect on it.

It reminded me of two different stories of two couples.

Story 1: A story of marriage

The boy is a prospective groom settled in England. The girl is an innocent Indian girl settled in Delhi. During a conversation post their engagement she asked the boy, ‘Why did you wait until now to get married and why did you choose me?’ She of course romanticized about the latter question and had framed the first one just so that she could ask the second. He told her that until then, he did not feel professionally settled. When his friends had girlfriends and he wanted to get in a relationship, he did not think he was financially comfortable to fund a relationship. As a young lad he aimed to get a motorcycle before he could impress the girl. Once he got the motorcycle, he aimed higher for a car. And then higher and higher, until he found himself in England, rich and successful, with a house of his own, a car, and a career people get envious of. He wanted to get married to an Indian girl, someone who was of the same culture, grew up in similar circles. ‘And you didn’t find such a girl in England?’ The girl was still hoping to get an answer that he chose her because she is extraordinary, special, and beautiful or something of that order. Oblivious the boy answered, ‘Well, girls in England do not like Indian Men. Even Indian girls do not prefer Indian men.’ ‘ I wonder why is that?’ he exclaimed!   ‘I wonder why’ repeated the girl. The boy didn’t even notice the tone of sarcasm. Eventually, the guy told her that he likes her because she was from Delhi and talking to her reminds her of the city he grew up in. ‘There must be other reasons of him wanting to marry me besides the accidental chance phenomena of her birth in a particular city!’ thought the girl who was pining for romance. As her dream filled conception of love faded, she got married to the guy who chose her as his life partner.

Story 2: A Love Story

This story is completely opposite to that of another couple where the guy was struggling to make his career and the girl, who initially refrained from developing a relationship with this boy, eventually fell madly in love with him. The girl initially refrained from the relationship because she wasn’t seeking one. She didn’t know she was romantic until she got in a relationship. She didn’t want romance in her life. It was not part of her value system. She belonged to an acclaimed business family and girls in her family did not fall in love with no-bodies. She was trained from a very young age to get married when the time is right to a boy her family will select. Eventually though, she fell in love with this boy. What worried her occasionally is that he was not financially or professionally settled. He was not from the same town. He was not very educated. He had a very different background. He was not very articulate. He could not construct one grammatically correct sentence if he had a gun to his head and was told to frame one such sentence. He was living by himself in a metropolitan city of Mumbai and worked his way as a junior executive in a multinational company. His good points were that he was good looking, calm, seldom lost his temper, charming and ambitious.
And of course, what eventually set him apart for her was that he treated her like a queen. He doted over her. He listened to her. He told her that she was the most beautiful person he had met. He told her that he found her to be the nicest person in the universe. He spent time with her, if not money. He made her feel very special. And so she reciprocated. As their love progressed the girl nudged the guy to take their relationship to the next level and that level was to speak to his family and talk about marriage. And the romantic boy did. He told his mother in front of his girlfriend during a casual conversation about a girl he really liked. As he brought up the topic of his marriage, his mother panicked. He told her that she was a really good girl who did not hang out with boys despite living in a metropolitan city. The mother asked in disbelief, ‘How is that possible? You do not know these city girls my son.’ Without paying attention to the insult to her peers, the girlfriend who was listening to this conversation on speaker phone gestured the guy to tell his mother that she had ‘an all girls’ education’ growing up, to answer her question.  Instead the guy told her, while insulting his comrades (that is all men) that ‘she knows how horrible and untrustworthy boys are which is why she keeps away from them.’ He told his mother that the girl is very simple, loyal, educated, sweet, friendly and caring. ‘Once she walks in the room, she brightens it up. All eyes are on her. She has a magnetic personality’ he continued. As the boy was engrossed speaking to his mother who was getting more and more worried as he kept on adding adjectives for this city girl from out of town her son was obviously seeing, at that very time, the girl was getting overwhelmed and pleasantly surprised by these wonderful thoughts about her. He had never ever told her these things in all their conversations as explicitly and with as much passion as he just did while talking to his mother. This girl who didn’t think romance was important and had only dreamt about marriage was snooped over by the power of these words which made space for romance in her life.

The boy’s mother, who wasn’t very educated or careful with her words and wasn't aware her conversation was being heard by this girl vocalized the point that 'this girl must be trashy to hang out with you, my boy from out of town. Educated rich city girls do not make good daughter-in-laws. They don’t adjust well. They will keep you apart from your parents. Do not get absorbed in the witchy tactics of these characterless girls my son.’ Tears dwelled in the eyes of the girl, as she heard her prospective mother-in-law dismiss her. That was the end of their relationship as she understood relationships. ‘What does she see in you my son!? What is she looking for? Doesn’t she know you are not rich or settled or educated?’ questioned his mother unable to think of a reason for which this girl was trapping her son at the same time fearing/wondering whether her son had been honest with this girl. ‘Does she even know your nature? Has she ever seen you lose your temper, get angry?’ At this point, the boy moved away from his girlfriend and removed his mother from speaker. The conversation was now in a very low voice. As the girl strained to listen more, she did hear him say, ‘She has. She has seen me get mad. And yet she is with me. I am struggling to make ends meet as you and dad and everyone is well off at home' he said hitting his fist against a wall 'and she is besides me.' he said. He continued, 'The reason why I like her so much mom, is exactly because she loves me despite all my flaws. She knows who I am, what I am, what I am capable of, of our financial situation, everything and she still cares for me and she still wants to marry me!’ He had not realized that the reason why this girl wanted to marry him was because that was the only obvious conclusion of such a relationship she had been told was correct. ‘And I do not think I will find anyone who will accept me like she does.’ He gasped. Once the conversation ended, both knew what had to be done. Despite rationale their relationship did not end, not just then anyways. There were times when he would kiss her and tell her that, ‘that is all I can offer you. This is all I have to keep you happy.’ And there were times when he would not kiss her telling her that ‘I feel guilty when we kiss. I feel bad for being treated well when I can’t reciprocate.’ Hearing this, the girl would get emotional, kiss him instead and calm him down telling him that ‘a kiss is not a prize which needs to be bought by success or money. It is just an expression of love.’  
Conclusion:
The men in both these stories would agree with, 'like' and perhaps even 'share' the quotation I liked and shared, but for very different reasons.  This is because they believe like the boys in both stories despite their status in life, that money and struggle attracts a certain kind of woman.     
The first story which lacked romance, despite a want of it, resulted in marriage.

The second story which had romance, despite a desire for it, did not conclude in a marriage.
Besides irony what these stories have in common is the thoughts of both these men, if not their personalities.

The rich guy thought that with money he would end up with the girl he wanted. During his years of struggle he did not believe that he had the money to fund a relationship.  
The romantic struggler felt grateful to have a woman who loved him during his struggling years and guilty for not being able to provide for her.

As a woman I think that either love or marriage or perhaps both or perhaps the notion of these concepts attracts women, it is not money or struggle. Some men are just lucky to have women besides them in both these spheres of life. The girl who stood besides the struggler was not attracted to his struggle. The girl who was engaged was not attracted to money. What is strange is that men get to struggle and men get to become rich and both kinds 'get the women!' This might be the reason why they form a connection between their life status and women and call it attraction. On the other hand women do not necessarily get what they want or need from men. In both stories at least, the one who wanted romance got a loveless marriage. And the one who wanted marriage got romance. Whether love/marriage is a need/want is a topic of a later discussion for which there is scope of much debate.    

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Cold seeps in!

The cold wind keeps blowing on.
No matter how warm you try to be
No matter what month of the year it is.
The cold seeps in!

Sometimes slowly, sometimes unexpectedly, but always with certainly
The rules of life get obsolete.
So we make new ones.
Those rules too don't work
So we stop making rules.

The combat continues though.
How do we live?
A life in isoluation is unhealthy
Social being tend to dominate the realms of thoughts and actions
Society demands compromise of every kind...(and is shameless about it!)
People Insult one's virtues with brutal honesty
The most overrated virtue ever is 'honesty'
and oh the supposed truths of apparently self righteous people
Irrespective of whether these truths violate the laws of decency
and are emotionally insensitive
these are placed on a pedestal so high
that the sight of disgust doesn't reach there
And so, should one live in isolation or the company of fools
Is God dead, does God exist, did he/she ever exist?
Rhetoric as these questions are or maybe, we visit these
when conflicted with the choice of a way to live!
to keep ourselves warm!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Diwali: An ironical festival: why do we celebrate it?!!!

Diwali Time is here again. It’s the time people go crazy in India. It is the time when a lot of Hindu deities did a lot of great stuff incidentally in this particular time of the year which gives lots of Indians, who worship different Ista devatas and in the case of Islam, no devata but the formless Allah. However, as far as my limited knowledge of Indian Mythology goes, the story which is most familiar for me to understand the significance of a particular festival of Diwali in North India, is the comeback of King Ram Chandra along with his sibling Lakshman and wife Sita after 14 years of exile to claim his thrown in Ayodhya from his dutiful brother Bharat, who fulfilled the King's responsibility in his absence. The fateful day of their return in antiquity was marked by a natural obstacle of the arrival time coinciding with a night of Amavasya (a moonless light). In the absence of the moonlight, every house in the city of Ayodhya lit several lights (via dias) and the reception was brilliantly lit. The infrastructural set up under Bharat's leadership along with the support of the citizens of the kingdom resulted in a night to remember.
As it so happened, the period of exile just mentioned included participation in a war which has now been symbolised as the victory of ‘good over evil.’ A case of honour killing of Lord Ravana is also celebrated in India few days before Diwali. For those who might not know, Ravana was an evil genius who abducted Ram's wife Sita in an attempt to defend the honour of his sister who was incidentally insulted by Ram's brother, Lakshman. This insult had resulted in a physical injury, so I guess, physical assault by men on women was not unheard of even back then. So basically a mythological feud resulted in a war which was won by Ram and his supporters. Every year on Dusshera, an ‘inhuman act of burning someone’....sorry....’the inhuman act of burning three persons at stake’ is recreated when Ravan and his two companions, a brother and a son, are burned around 6 pm in the evening as the sun goes down. People find nothing derogatory,  immoral or sadistic in such celebrations. I don’t think that even Hitler, undoubtedly one of the most hateful character in entire history is celebrated with such vigour even though all might remember that day mentioned on history books when he committed suicide.   And while I might even submit to an interpretation of Dushera being a good event, (if someone exhausts me into accepting defeat by being over-zealous about this event being the best example of victory over good over evil),  Diwali is still hard to similarly digest.
My objection is based on what followed Diwali, which people tend to forget. Lord Ram, who fought a kingdom run by supposed 'demons' to rescue his rightful wife, separated from his wife, who by the way, also happened to be pregnant at the time, when questions were raised about the chastity of the tainted queen due to the time she spent in a foreign land under the reign of a man other than her husband during her abduction. The dutiful Ram, who ironically trusted his wife, left his feelings aside and sacrificed by leaving his pregnant wife. Celebration of a day when all was rosy for the couple who had returned after years of obstacles and difficulties seems justifiable. However, the joy turns sour after reflecting on the outcome of that marriage. What finally did become of Ram-Sita? To interpret this mythical story in contemporary terms, celebrating Diwali is akin to celebrating a significant memory for a couple who ultimately did not end up together. No matter how beautiful a relationship is, no matter how true love is, when the relationship is mentioned in past tense, memories turn bitter-sweet. Celebrating Diwali is like celebrating a special event for a couple after their break-up. Any normal person with reasonable amount of emotional quotient will agree that such celebrations are indeed in very bad taste. Forget the contemporary example, I shudder to empathize with our 'Sita' of antiquity, the single mother who tried to raise the King's twin, must have had to go through each year on Diwali. If Diwali has been celebrated every year from the year when Ram-Sita returned to Ayodhya, then Sita would have had to go through an emotional turmoil any heartbroken girl who loved and lost would feel thinking about the memories of a special day of a past relationship. So, in retrospect, celebrating Diwali is just so cruel.
Again, to think about Diwali in terms of contemporary vocabulary, let’s say, our country hosted a magnanimous event, Olympic games or marriage of two very important Indians, and the government invested a lot of money on decorations and infrastructural advantages for the day, I doubt, whether we will feel it necessary to attempt to re-enact such an extravagant event. What you might do, is recall, 'remember, that wedding was so memorable because of the food, the lighting, clothes.' That is where we would stop. But we don’t for Diwali, do we?
Last year, my reasons to get annoyed by the paraphernalia of Diwali were different. I mean, the separation of Ram-Sita was also on the back of my mind but it is not something most Right wing Hindus are even mature enough to hear. Anyhow, previously, the reasons which I voiced out were economical.  I remember having argued that festival time is a season of wasteful activities of gift giving, shopping, extra traffic and a lot on the pockets of people who do regular jobs, most of whom don't get a hike in salary or diwali bonuses during this festival season. Festivals do not let them budget the way such people would have done otherwise. I remember somebody arguing, saying, it is a time when the average working guy, the picture of whom I seemed to have painted, is capable of buying several things, because of special diwali discounts. I was also told that festivals give a reason for people to celebrate and that gift giving during this season doesn't raise any suspicions. I had counter argued that people should not wait for festivals to celebrate and that gift giving during Diwali always have social prejudices. A person might have spent some good amount of money on a Diwali gift. The recipient might not appreciate it much and take it for granted, thinking, 'of course, I deserve a gift on Diwali. I will reciprocate accordingly. Perhaps I can keep this gift I have received to re-gift someone else I don't want to buy a gift for, but still entertain.' The value of a gift which is becomes necessary in social situations is not as much as the value of a gift given for no particular reason.

The only thing that I find is commendable on Diwali was Bharat and the common citizens’ efforts to light up a place on a moonless night. What they did at that time was perhaps an achievement at that point in history. Now, fortunately, it’s not required. There are other achievements which me can celebrate. (But no, we continue celebrating burning someone to death and a good day in the life of a couple who ultimately separated.) On Diwali, if I have to give credit to anyone or respect anyone, it would be Bharat, who  I hear, was a wonderful Vice President to the President (so to speak) for the kingdom advanced and developed in terms of economics and infrastructure while the righteous king went on an exile and ended up costing more to the kingdom by engaging in a war over a family feud.  Unfortunately, in all these years of having been present in India during Diwali celebrations this event against my better judgment, not once did I ever find a figurine of Bharat. The market is flooded with figurines of Ram, Sita, Ganesh and Lakshmi but there is no space for Bharat(the good man) in Bhaarat(the country). And while I have nothing against Ganesh or Lakshmi, (for I am not aware of an obvious problem in their mythological story line) I frankly have no respect of a deity called Ram. And Sita just reminds me of a wronged heartbroken single mother who was the punching pillow for a horrible, indifferent and insensitive society, I'd rather not remember. 

Monday, July 8, 2013

A scarecrow's open sky

Life is at a crossroad. Usually that signifies a choice to be made. Instead I feel I stand in the middle and am looking up at the open empty clear blue sky - a sky without clouds - white or black, without sunlight, without stars and the moon, an absolute blank. And yet I feel soaked in this void. I recall in primary school, we were given assignments about writing autobiographies of inanimate objects. Today I feel like writing from the point of view of a scarecrow but I still wish to call it 'it'. Perhaps that is the only way I can look at myself objectively, if I make myself an inanimate object and get rid of the 'I-ness' and also 'my ego'.

Only, this scarecrow....its not in the field of lush green life and yellow flowers. It's ill placed, in an arid zone. It is in the middle of nowhere from where two roads lead to a far off destination. There is no one to scare, no birds around, no humans, nothing. Just the road and the ground and that sky and that scarecrow. It is there, ready in its costume - designed to scare. But its head, is up in the sky. Its least bothered to scare anyone or anything. There is a solace of just being there. It looks ready for a fight but it is really not interested.

And still, it can feel the pain in standing it that position, in that posture. It can feel the pain in its artificial arms and feet made of hay as I can feel in my arms and legs right now after a long day. The body is tired and wants to float in mid air. But the mind, yes, this scarecrow seems to have one, is elsewhere. It is looking up at that beautiful clear sky. It doesn't have to choose. It doesn't have to succumb to the odd circumstances of its placement.

The choice is of not having to make a choice and still choose a path just by looking up and away from both the roads.And still, strangely such peaceful and strange thoughts are keeping me up at this odd hour of complete and utter silence.  There is no mystery, there is no desire, there is no hope, there is no angst, there are no expectations, there are no disappointments, but there just is this silence and a clear blue open empty ever extending sky and not just its promise with life being at a standstill. 

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Reflections on the demise of Jiah Khan

While I do not condone suicide for many reasons, I cannot but help understand what may have led Jiah Khan to take such a drastic step so quickly. It is hard to get a taste of success and then just sit back. It seems that her professional life and personal life did not seem to be going well. I can relate to that. However, what she failed to realize or recognize is that there are a number of people who cared deeply for her.



Despite being talented, having done some good films, she didn't get the kind of work she deserved. The nature of her work also did not provide her stability. Quite often, actors like her completely devote themselves to a project. And when the project gets over, it is over. The wait between two projects may be long. And it might not end. That leads to a lot of despair. Usually, when one's professional life is not working well, one can always feel successful in one's personal life. However, when it is rocky in one's personal life too, it must definitely get difficult. The problem really is that most often some women tend to make the man in their life the center of their universe. And when situations turn sour, they feel worse than lonely. There seem to be no ‘telos’ (purpose) for them. The parameter of success is judged by them by their relationship with the man in their lives and their standing in their professional realm. These women ignore the fact that they also have a set of friends and family, which dote over them. They seem to forget that life can have more meaning, in one's personal and professional life. If only they realize that their personal life should not be dependent on one individual and that there is not necessarily that one profession for them, they would find life worth living. Currently, my life too seems to be at a stagnant point, personally and professionally. I am a single woman (not defined by the presence of a man in my life) who is currently not associated with anything professionally despite having a hell lot of work experience at some of the best places in my field. Jiah Khan went for auditions. I go for interviews and I apply wherever I deem fit. She was told to shed a few pounds. I am told to shed a lot of pounds regularly. I have every reason to be depressed. I am not. I am quite alright with this stagnant phase too. I learn to enjoy it. I plan my day, each day. I do the things I love. I love myself. I am proud of my credentials. I love my body. I love my mind. I love my smile. I am optimistic that something will happen when the time is right. My optimism is not blind. I do oscillate between an optimist and a skeptic. Even so, when the skeptic devil takes over, I still feel glad. Though single and out of work, I still get to do what I love. I plan each day. And I enjoy each day. And while I seldom resort to religious prayers, I do pray that Jiah Khan's soul rest in peace. And I would like to be thankful to a God, if there is one, or perhaps my own subconscious, to allow me to enjoy each day of my life.

Never in my life do I ever want to take the path taken by Jiah Khan and so many other deceased personalities. 

And there is good reason for that. Some are cited below: 
1. Does our live really belong to us? If birth is not a choice, death shouldn't be either.
2. There is no guarantee that an after-life is not going to be just as bad if not worse. So, there is a probable possibility that the act of suicide itself will defeat its purpose.
3. It is selfish to die and haunt one's loved ones and caregivers and care getters stranded with a horrible and haunting memory of one's last moments.
4. Just about anything can be a reason to kill oneself. And if one rationally analyses it, each such reason can be found to be a non reason to kill oneself. It is conceivable to live or not live due to some hypothetical reason. So, it is really hard to be driven rationally to take such a step to end one's life.
5. As death is an inevitable fact, everybody can be replaced. Everybody will be replaced. The only way we can make our lives treasured is to let people register our presence in their lives. 


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

The pigeon's death at the doorsteps...Deja Vu


Today as I was leaving for office, mamma told me to be careful for there is a dead pigeon outside our house. Of all the things I could say, I asked 'where is it?' I was expecting one of the following replies: Right outside the door or in the drive way or outside the main gate?

Hoping that if she tells me exactly where, I would avoid looking at it.She didn't know where. She told me just to be careful. I did as I was told and fearing to see a dead body so early in the morning, I flinched and walked. I barely saw the body and ran outside the driveway. But something made me stop and look back.

Deja vu.

Right outside the door there are two steps. The beak of the pigeon was resting on one of these, quite like how people at temples touch their forehead to a stone platform nearest to the foot of the idol of God. Instantly, I recalled how a dog also died at the same spot some years ago. That time, I was deeply disturbed. I remember writing something about it. I looked for it and I found it under the heading 'a kid cried and a dog died'. This was in 2008. That time, I thought that it was nice that the dog found a resting place to spend his last moment. I am not sure I can say the same thing about the pigeon. For one, I don't know how did he die and land there. Did someone kill it or did it just stop flying and fell from the air. Was it another bird or was it some dog or other animal, who ended this life? Did the pigeon come looking for food? (Papa feeds birds and occasionally dogs everyday these days). I don't know. Unfortunately, I was not only bothered that the pigeon died, but scared for it is kind of eerie that two animals died exactly at the same spot, with the gap of six years!!! Maybe the doorstep of my house is a good place to die. This very sentence makes me scared of my thoughts occasionally. Interestingly, I really don't know what to make of it, if not this. Does it mean anything at all or should I just say its a coincidence. It would have been nice if I believed in coincidences. However, I don't believe there is any such thing - a coincidence. So I'd let you, whoever is reading, contemplate about it while I try to forget about it like so many other things.

This is what I had written in 2008, (on 13 October 2008 to be precise).....

Last Tuesday, when I went out for a movie, I saw a kid cry. Last Friday, when I came back from another movie, I saw a dog die. And both these unrelated incidents, possibly remotely connected by a fallacy of false cause, are not unusual events. As life would have it, kids cry and dogs do die! Suffering after all is inevitable. But what was unusual was the kid who cried, and the way the dog died.

The first incident took place outside Westside at 3Cs Lajpat Nagar where I got free parking, that superficiality made me very happy. This kid was a beggar, sitting on the concrete varanda with a child in his hand, probably a younger sibling. There was a packet of what looked like milk, and some food in a polythene bag. He must have said something earlier, but I didn’t notice him earlier. My friend did. She mentioned he was crying. I wanted to look away but when she mentioned it, the way she mentioned it, I didn’t. She asked me if I was keeping the Prasad kept in the car, if I plan to eat it. I understood immediately and went to get it. I gave it to the kid, asked him why he was crying, and told him not to cry and have something to eat. He pointed at his sibling and said that Ma wants Rs 30,she won’t come, my sister is sick. I didn’t understand what to do. I wanted to give him Rs 30 and probably also get a bottle of water besides the food. I just told him, not to cry and first have something to eat, Acha rona band karo, pehle kuch khalo. I wondered if the kid was faking to get attention or not. But he was not. These kids, my friend told me, are strong. They are tough. Something really bad has to happen for them to break down. The mother abandoned the child with the sibling. That made him cry! I didn’t debate with her, not only because she did an M. Sc in Child Development, but because I felt that she was right.

These kids who beg on streets and traffic light for money, have a tough life, they face the harsh realities, not with a constant pathos with the understanding that is part of their everyday life. It might seem sad to me or to you sitting in front of our pcs and laptops reading this email, but the truth is that life makes them tough, gives them an immunity to the kind of misery we might feel to ….walk in the sun, barefoot, in tattered pieces of cloth, not covering the body properly, knocking on a strangers’ window. I am not saying that is a good thing, that is the way they have molded themselves to adjust to their surroundings, but that is the silver lining in their lives, that is what makes them survive it.

I thought that maybe I should give him water. That is my initial reaction of ‘things to do’ when confronted by a social situation in which someone cries. That’s the there there, it will get better, I do. And in fact it does. When one cries, there is secretion of some amount of water from the body and so drinking water is advisable. Also if one splashes water on the face of someone who is upset or angry or crying, it does have a surprisingly calming effect, irrespective of the ‘slap in the face’ connotation of throwing a drink at someone’s face drama serials would have it.

In the movie incidentally that I watched which was filled with clichés and really badly written script and dialogues, the protagonist says that well ‘I have lived night mares you can’t even bear to hear about.’ But for some reason the way Imran Khan said it, and Manisha Lamba reacted to that, it was just funny and we laughed. But that was the truth, in the case of the kid I saw. It was a story of the revenge of a person who had spent his life in a juvenile delinquent center and incurred injuries. But that was reel life, this was real life. The kid outside the cinema was real, with a sibling to look after, when the mother had apparently scared him enough to break down a kid who was used to bear misery of the underprivileged in the daily course of life.

The movie was called Kidnap, as far as the kid is concerned, well I don’t even know his name, which is ironical considering that it was the kid that occupied my thoughts, for a longer period of duration than the temporary escapism the film provided me.

 I came back from a movie at 3.30 with mamma (we went for Hello at DT), didn’t latch the main gate, at around 4, the door bell rang and mamma opened the front door to see a dead dying dog at the doorstep. He just lay there, hurt and injured, covered in mud and dust. Mamma tells me what happens, and in my absent mindedness I wondered how did he ring the bell? That was my initial response, cold and calculated, just my initial neglected response to the cries of the kid until my friend had pointed it out to the human being within me. It was the second floor neighbor who rang the bell from the outside the main gate. I have recently moved in to a rental house at Gurgaon, where the structure is such that there is an L shape free space within the premises and outside the domains of the house. When one enters the main gate, towards the right side there is a varanda facing my room and the living room, and an aisle corridor straight ahead the main gate hitting a dead end, unless one takes a right turn and climbs two steps, where incidentally there was a dead dog lying at the doorstep this last Friday. And just as I was wondering, if the kid was faking tears or not, I was wondering if the dog had come there to seek help or to just die. I am not a dog person, otherwise I would probably know what to do to help the dog, would have perhaps called a vet maybe or bandaged him. But I didn’t. There was no use really, he was already dead. He was just a street dog who would enter the house occasionally and sit at the entrance or in the varanda outside my room....which is why we insisted that the door be latched each time anyone (including the neignbours on the first and second floor) entered the gate besides obvious safety issues. It doesn’t speak well of us as a society does it, wondering if a kid begging for food is really crying or if his monetary need is real or if he earns the food which we give him in our apparent act of charity and goodwill, when it is not, or when we latch gates to prevent stray animals and people, the homeless, just because we want to keep our veranda clean and not get disturbed. But that is again something like splashing water on a stranger if one did allow that to happen, that is, it is unacceptable in the social convention we live in, to fear trespassing. For what its worth, the dog that died, never really disturbed my studies when he was alive, nor did he make any sound before he passed away. What bothered me was the way he was found outside the doorstep, his Samadhi, if you will. Did he come to die in peace or in familiarity or did he really came for some help which he didn't get...in which case I should feel guilty...I shall rot in hell for not being a dog person and not being able to do anything to save the poor soul. My friend speculated that maybe the dog came there because he might be used to that house, because of the previous owners. That could not have been the case as no one lived where we moved in. Some talk about karmic connections and maybe it signifies a past relatives’ visit. But I don’t believe in that, in karmic connection, or past life etc, nor am I a dog person ( dog lover) to forge that bond. What intrigued or rather fascinated my thought was the way in which the street dog finally chose a place of comfort and peace when death was near. The poor thing still managed to get inside the gate, push it open a little enough to get inside and even climb up three marble steps to just lie at the door. He might have as well as knocked on the door I thought. It was a pretty sad and upsetting.

What hit me in these two incidences was the way to deal with the apparent suffering which is among the daily chores of these ‘less human’ creatures, the way we see it, be it the underprivileged child or the street dog. They are both abandoned, homeless, knocking on a strangers’ door. There is a dread to be them. This is probably what Historical Buddha Prince Siddhartha must have felt too when he encountered suffering. But the way I see it, what is suffering for us, is what is ‘life’ for them, real enough, that they live and they breath, it makes them resistant to feel the pain in it, unless something ‘really bad’ happens, and the definition of which is subjective. A life which is so harsh, that it has made them tough. Perfection after all lies in repetition. One is so accustomed to a certain things and activities and people, that after a point of time, these things and activities and people, they just become one with us, and one accommodates to mould oneself accordingly. One may thing that the pain may lesson each time one gets hurt. But the truth is that each time when one gets hurt, the pain remains, which indicates that got hurt in the first place, but one is so used to bear the pain, and to get hurt, that it becomes somewhat easier to live with the pain, instead of protesting and fighting and struggling to be happy. Men and Women go through so much, abusive relationships, corruption, disease and natural disasters, the city goes through bomb blasts and useless industrialization, the traffic, the workload, the competition, the grown up adult world. After a point of time, one is just too tired to be happy, or to seek happiness. Going through life over and over again, day after day, with the same intricacies, issues, problems in relationships, people, work, one just gets so tired and exhausted. It is just so exhausting at times, that one just doesn’t want to fight back. People look for happiness but Greys’ Anatomy Writers told me this week that it is also futile. Meredith, the protagonist decides that since she was happy and had a breakthrough in her relationship, she did not want therapy anymore. But then she asks her doctor on an elevator, ‘What is the point?’ ‘All those hours and all that money….what is the point? The world is a horrible place, young people die of diseases, (or in our city, more likely in a blast while returning that does not belong to them to the rightful owner…while doing a good thing) it makes absolutely no sense to try to be happy in a world that is such a horrible place.’ And she gets the reply, ‘Yes. Horrible things do happen. Happiness in the face of all that, is not the goal. Feeling the horrible and knowing that you are not going to die from those feelings, that’s the point.’ While one might agree there, but one can’t blame anyone to try to find some solace, some happiness, some comfort, when in the face of all that, is about to come to an end.

I think at the end of the day, one would be lucky to die like that dog at the doorstep who decided instead of compromising in his life and die in the street, exerted himself despite the pain and the injury, to find a safe comfortable place to find peace. Maybe the first noble truth is not suffering? What is suffering? It is something which makes us tough, which makes us tough out our daily existences. Maybe it is just apparent. Maybe it becomes apparent when we considers those factors as a fact one has to live with, so there is no point fighting. But even then maybe we do strive like that dog for some comfort, some peace, some sort of nirvana or moksha, moments before we are dying. Maybe that feeling of nothing to lose but something to gain makes us take that step towards a strangers’ doorstep, in a bloody injured condition. We are striving for happiness, for comfort, for peace, a way out of the exhaustion, not an end to suffering, for suffering becomes apparent when one stops fighting, but a way to just be happy without trying to be worthy of that happiness, without fighting to deserve it, because that too is exhausting and adds to the apparent suffering.

Basically in life, whether I get to watch two movies in a week or if I am like that kid with the responsibility of a sibling on me, the everyday chores, and dynamics of life, there will be something repetitive and with patterns, which I might get used to, or I might already get used to, which toughens me up enough to think that I do not feel the pain. But I would be lucky if I get to die like that dog, in peace and comfort and not fight for it anymore because that is just exhausting or accommodate and not becoming accustomed to the environment of survival, but if I can exert enough before life or rather its meaning comes to an end or a hold or a standstill, give it one good last shot in an attempt to climb that three steps and knock on a strangers’ door to find peace or at least ring that doorbell as a sign of victory to have achieved it, crossed the finishing line.

A kid cried today, and a dog died!  .....

....and now the pigeon died too.