Old habits die hard especially traits that are
hammered into our kiddy frames by our persistent parents. Even after we are done with growing up,
working our arse off, paying instalments for home loans, changing diapers of
our wailing progeny - we can never say NO to them. We are hardwired to obey our parents. So one fine evening, when you are flopped on
the bed after a hard day’s work, your
Mom calls you only to announce that we are all going to Jim Corbett next weekend,
you instinctively say YES to her. Of
course you have the rest of the week to repent, worry about unfinished chores,
incomplete reports. Ahh...I’ll manage,
somehow!
organisart.co.uk
|
My Mom has a special fascination for
animals, the wilder the better. In fact
just a few months back, she and Baba went all the way to Kenya to see lions,
zebras, hippos and their sundry cousins frolic in the Masai Mara forest
reserves. In the 90’s she had yet to acquire an
international taste and was content with desi forest reserves, especially Jim
Corbett. So every time she was feeling
low, high, bored, restless we would all rush off en masse to the resorts in the
vicinity of the wildlife reserve.
When my parents say they are taking a
break, they do exactly the opposite. As
kids whenever we took a vacation, we would see them mutate into hyperactive kids
ready to scale any peak or crawl under cobweb infested caves all in the name of
sightseeing. Since we had no choice but
tag along with them, we (me and my brother) would feel like hapless prey caught
in a Venus Flytrap. Once when I refused
to accompany them on a trip to Kolkata, my brother came back with a look of
betrayal in his eyes. Listening to his
endless stories of torture – of being dragged around in hot and humid Calcutta (as
it was then), forced to gorge on the much hated maachh and mishtee – I giggled
in relief.
Even after I had been married, the memories
were still fresh in my mind; so I had enough history to support my unusually
low enthusiasm about the much abused word break!
Clark Kent needed a phone booth to
transform into Superman and all my Mom had to do was sit in a car packed with
suitcases and voila she would be ready to fly with her brood in tow. Since
she has always a great believer of conservation, five of us (my daughter was
still a thought) would stuff ourselves in one car. And just as we were getting in the mood to
snooze, our limbs resting not so gently on each other, she would take out a thermos
full of coffee like a rabbit from the magician’s hat. Puhleez
Maa not now! But does she give up?
Nah. So whenever we stopped for a loo
break – I am so hungry break – Wait, aren’t those guavas, they look so fresh
break – Maa would triumphantly take out the thermos and threaten to pour out
coffee for us.