Courtesy : Wisie.com |
Compassion and I have been best friends for
as long as I can remember. I was all of
four when I tried to save half a dozen fish from drowning. As I was engaged in the earnest endeavour, dragging
them out of the school water tank with a stick, I fell in the pool of freezing
water. I was trying my best to drown
when an insensitive lout of a school peon pulled me out. Instead of being nominated for bravery awards
and made to sit atop an elephant on Republic Day, I was taken to the
Principal’s office.
Let me announce at the onset that this is a
pointless post. In fact I don’t even
know what I am going to write about. Aren’t
there times when you venture out for a walk and have no idea where you are
heading? You just know you want to be
outside, so you inhale the scent of the Hasnuhana trees, admire the striking
couple that passes you by, pat the Labrador as it looks at you with those
lugubrious eyes. You don’t have to keep
a tab on the kilometres you walk, no calories to burn, no destination to reach. Aimlessness can be liberating - it frees you
from expectations and you have no disappointments to fear. I wish life could be like that.
Today I will let my thoughts meander. I have no news to share, no point to make, I
may not make you laugh, but I still invite you to join me on this journey. It’s no fun being on your own.
Nostalgia is a seductive mistress. How often have we huddled together with
friends and family and dipped into the vat of collective memories for some
succour. We laugh ourselves silly,
sometimes blame each other for unspoken torment and invariably end up
confessing our so called misdemeanours.
Like the time when my Dadu banned me from reading the Godfather and I
still went ahead and read it. At thirteen when I tried shaping my eyebrows, I
ended up snipping away half of it. For weeks I faced the world looking like
Spock from Star Trek. Every time Ma said
No to me, I went ahead and did it. They
were my small victories and I cherished each one of them.
I was always restless, I still am. My daughter tells me she gets tired just
looking at me. I can’t sit still, I can
rarely relax and always need something to keep me occupied. I work myself to exhaustion and crib about
it. Is it because I am scared to face
the eternal ‘what next’? Is it because I
have no clue what it’s going to be? Of
course I know what I will be eating for lunch and dinner for the next seven
days – that’s how organized I am. But I
do wish that I could let go. Surrender
myself and let time take me wherever it wants to. Not be consumed with a sense
of guilt about wasting it.