He rests his trembling
hands on the table. The veins form a complex network of tributaries and
distributaries. Some throb for seconds, uncontrollably. He tries to steady
them. The satin tablecloth lies under his fingers, wrinkle-free, cold. He
glances at the flowers in a small vase kept on the table, the cutlery and the
dishes. He looks around; the tall pillars, the crystal chandeliers, the
immaculately decorated chairs, the hushed conversations, the measured clinks of
forks and spoons, the mild Bach, the suits and the designer clothes. He tries
to steady his hand further.
A kid comes running to him. Plate
full of scones, poached eggs, muffins and croissants. Places it in front of him.
“Grandad, eat some.” He smiles nervously. The items on the plate look
foreign to him. More plates pile up. Noodles, miso soup, muesli, salads. More
family members join the table too. A lady in her well-kept clothes says,
“Papaji eat some paratha”. He looks at the plate. Slices of paratha (Indian
bread) that look quite dry and hard and a bowl of sambhar. He tries to tear one
piece, dip it in sambhar and takes a bite. People around him start chatting, planning the day. The different attractions to visit, the time it will
take, how best to organise.
He continues to chew. His hand trembles a bit, he takes a
gulp of water and tries a second bite. He stares blankly at the chandelier
while his mind wanders off. It was a bright sunny day if he remembers
correctly. It was a Saturday too just like today. They were sitting outside the courtyard,
chatting and having their morning milk. His daughter, who is sitting next to
him now, was playing with her toys. There were hot parathas being served and
pickles to go with those. He remembers the warmth of the plate in his hand
against the cold of the cutlery now, he sighs at the measured movements around him
and remembers his daughter throwing a ball at him that morning.
“Papajee you have dropped sambhar
on your clothes”, his daughter admonishes him gently. He goes back to chewing
the parathas, a nervous smile clings on to his lower lip. “These are hard and
cold”, he thinks. Those around him are praising the breakfast spread in
this 5-star hotel. They try to give him some muffin – the chocolate ones. He
takes them hesitatingly. Out-of-place, too-late-in-the-day, he smiles with pride at his
daughter’s enthusiasm to take him around the world, to good
restaurants, good hotels, or to the movies. And then he looks away and
sighs.
At what? I do not know.
But I know he sighs. I know they sigh. The fathers and the mothers. They hide
from their grown-up, accomplished children and they let go of a sigh.
As a
single child growing up in a middle-class joint family, I have seen my parents
make many sacrifices of their small pleasures for the family’s well-being.
These choices came easy to them. They sacrificed vacations, good clothes, good
restaurants while we somehow in our sub-conscious minds kept a count of these
all.
And then one day, all of a
sudden, having dealt with our own devils in life, education, work and society,
we-the children, now grown up feel this strong desire to give our parents the
comfort and pleasures that they once gave up. We drag them to the restaurants
and subject them to unfamiliar taste, we take them to the loud theatres and
expect them to get used to the Dolby digital surround sound, in the winters of
NY we take them to weekend Durga pujo or in the heat of Ajanta caves we drag
them from one cave painting to the other. We send them tickets and put them in
20 hour long flights across oceans to show them the foreign land, to drive them
around in the posh interiors of our automatics, we take them into the oceans
and put them on city’s eyes, we make them sit through musicals and ask them to
be comfortable with the soft hotel pillows. Doing this makes us feel good.
Going through all this, at this age, are they really happy?
I do not have an answer.
Parents to me are typically these unusual creatures who take immense pleasure
and satisfaction at their children’s achievements and can do almost anything to
keep their children happy and in the right path.
But still, I am sure, they do
sigh…they just hide it…but they do let go of a sigh…
Many of you reading this will recognise my dilemma. What do you think about this? What is your take on this?
5 comments:
Oh Durba...this is so good. Ever since my mom had passed away every single day I counted the number of things that I could have done for her, places I could have taken her to. We are by nature never happy. If we cannot give them happiness we lament. If we can give them some happiness, we question.
Spot on observation, Durba! Its a tug of war at times...our (as in we the children) wishes and their solemn logical fortitude. But the truth is, it is even if we manage to get them out of their known corners at their age, it is our wish fulfillment again...not theirs. Once again they WILL sigh and do it for our happiness. Seriously, which world are they from?!?
Darun. Made me teary...
Perfect take on a very common thing nowadays that we simply don't think about. Lovely imagery as well to drive the point home and make one stop and ponder. Brilliant! My take: parents need/prefer their children's company more than any of the luxuries and other stuff (foreign visits et al) that children tend to think of to give something back to their parents. But, then, what do I know? :)
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