Death, as I see it...
Time 11:49 pm. Setting- My Study-bed room.
I am lying in my bed, with eyes wide open staring at the
spiraling optical illusion of the 3 winged whirling ceiling fan just because I can’t
sleep. Abruptly, I hear someone suddenly breaking down, sobbing uncontrollably
and incessantly. Probably a few women. I cock my ears in the direction of the sound. It was probably from the slum situated next
to my locality. I sit up in the bed. I can feel the coolness of the floor; a
reminder that winter has set in. I walk unto the window, draw the curtains and
try to figure out what actually is wrong. I comprehend that someone has passed
on. I can’t stand the agonizing and dolorous weeping of those women. I try to
close my window. Closing it has done no good to keep the weeping, wailing sound
of those women from falling on my eardrums. They are crying ‘alas, alas’ and weeping
for the dead. I sit on my arm-chair and sink back. It is natural to cry out
when someone dear to you dies. But they beat their cheeks and pull out their
hair, and all these things are a grim reminder of the memories attached to the dead
ones in YOUR kinship.
I don’t know much
about life and death. All I know is that some days you are alive and some day
you die and once dead, there is no more dying then. By now I am pretty sure
that I am going to stay up until the wee hours of the morning until my eyes and
body give in. Even though I am sitting on my arm chair physically, my mind has
already gone out of the window in the direction of the grieving ones. I start
making out eerie guesses. Who might have passed on? A tired old man/woman who
was abandoned by his/her own son;the only son for he/she
had lived far more than what was anticipated? And now crying is a mere custom to
bid the departed soul. Or another old man/woman who was probably expected to
see another sunrise whose departure is going to leave an irreparable vacuity. Or…a
young boy, maybe? Who succumbed to an ailing or a major accident then? Or a mid aged man/woman who has left back his
vulnerable children at the mercy of this cruel world. In point of fact, I
neither have a good reason to go into the cosmic details of this incident nor
do I have the right. (Apparently, no right time too) yet I can’t resist from
thinking what I’ve been thinking now. An unclear dullness has clouded over my
mind and I am not able to reconcile what that’s about. I am reminded of very first dear person whom
I lost to old age: My Grandfather. I can remember of my maternal grandmother
who clearly wasn’t liked by my uncles and was in bed for rest of her life until
she gave in to a bedridden illness. I am reminded of an Uncle working as a
manager in a bus depot who died for a very silly reason when a MSRTC bus driver
ran into his course while reversing this giant vehicle, even though mistakenly.
I can think of a languishing aunt who finally died in her house just because
she couldn’t conceive a baby all her life. I can remember of my cousin who
immolated herself just because she was scolded by her mother for not having
stood up to her expectations of being a good child. I remember of a dear
brother who drank himself to death leaving behind a traumatic wife and a few
children. I am reminded of those 132 school going children of Peshawar, clad in
green school uniform only to return home in coffins. Death often seems like a
bitter-sweet occasion. Bitter in the pain, sweet in salvation, as they say.
I again find myself
trying to reconnect to the unknown-yet-known-grieving-family about their huge/ mediocre/minute
loss. Tomorrow when I wake up I’ll probably forget about this and go about my
business. But all that time I’ll know that the things I love, especially the people,
at any time can all be taken away. Irremediable, loss that would be! I live
knowing that. But I keep going anyway like everyone does. For our worst fears
are seldom realized.
Disturbed that I am now, I rise from chair walk into the
next room where my flat-mate is busy scribbling down some notes with his earphones
plugged in. I enquire if he has heard the mourning episode. Heedless as he is,
stops for a moment holds his earphone in his clutches and says, “You know, you
are foolish!” Worried now that I am, I call up my father, recite the whole
incident. He says, “Grow up.” I talk to my sister. Who after a brief pause, says, “So what? Good
night!”
I talk to my mother who says, “You understand grief. Nurture
it. One day you will rise above this.” I come to realize, unfolding such an experience
is like a painting which demands interpretation, but when you find one, it
begins to look shallow. Maybe I should keep the interpretations in check. Maybe
I should stop chasing the mice inside my skull. Or maybe I should bloody go
back to sleep or maybe I should wait for an enlightenment that would never
come.
Ritesh Randhir
18/12/2014
Touching. ... And a great piece of writing as always. ...
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