Wednesday, 20 February 2013
A sequel to the Story
Writing a story
is not free from worldly hazards. It is like any other human activity which can
earn you fame or notoriety and at times both in the same vein. I was contemplative of the
subject because of my recent venture in honing my skills of story-writing which
was my passion for years. My imitative took almost a week to give shape to a
story, if it can be called one. After reading the story my wife didn't say a
word and took to her bed rather early. I knew she did not like the tragic
ending. But then nobody loves tragedy.
Monday, 11 February 2013
Backdrop of a Story
I have started writing short
stories quite recently after a gap of almost thirty years. The moment I begin
to start writing, my wife would appear from nowhere with the pleading, ’don’t
give me a sad story’. I don’t know wherefrom she discovered my potential to
kill the characters. True I am not a vegetarian, but does that turn me into a
potential murderer? Do I look like a killer or for that matter a mercenary? I
must ask my friends but they would be equally biased because of their
affection. Unable to find a solution, I started writing humorous pieces on
post-retirement scenario making her the recipient of all satirical blows which
she enjoyed without grumbling. I believe she enjoyed the stories, in spite of
descriptive tantrums because she was portrayed as the heroine. Now, enough is
enough, I declared. I have already written four pieces within three months of
retirement. Don’t cajole me into offering you lolly pops all the time I said in
disgust. Let us do something serious. She showed me the utmost indifference a
lady can offer. I put my hands on my head cursing all gods that came to my mind
for this predicament. But that is no consolation either.
Come whatever may, I must fight
headlong and with that promise I began writing stories. I had uninterrupted
existence for a couple of days but on the third day the uninvited intruder
started throwing medium-sized pebbles in shape of questions, ‘so rustic
characters with amorous scenes-that you call stories hey’. ‘Honey where do you
get such vulgar ideas’ I retorted. ‘It is a love story and I hope it would be a
nice one’. ‘So you are on a mission to recount all your numerous escapades with
those glamour girls who flirt but never love?’ ‘Stop, stop what are you
suggesting honey? I am a dignified person with decent disposition. You cannot
accuse me of adultery’. ‘But your friends say you were a live Casanova in your
college days’. Oh my God, those innocent looking affectionate friends have
turned villains indeed. I must take these traitors to task but I cannot believe
it. I became impatient and said ‘give me peace of mind to concentrate and
complete’. ‘You have all the time in the world to complete it, but remember if
I discovered traces of your exploits in any of the romantic dialogues with the
heroine or whatever you call that idiot- the story will go to the flames I usually
light every day to burn the weeds’. With those stern words she marched out of the room
in military style. I took a couple of glasses of cold water to regain my
composure. So the volcano is active again.
I confined myself in a room and
tightly locked it inside, except in the dining time, to prevent different
instrumental notes emanating from the chatter-box that I call wife. Story
telling is not easy once your skills became rustic because of negligence. But I
tried to revive it with emotions in late nights and could somehow manage to
complete only yesterday. ‘Don’t forget the censor’ my wife reminded. ‘No I
don’t, how can one forget it? Even the film people come crawling. I am a
mundane human being, how can I forget You Highness’ scissors?’ I humbly
submitted. ‘Don’t be over simplistic and don’t put up any drama. Tell me the
story in nutshell before I actually went through’.
After the Post-graduate final
examination the protagonist wanted to stay an extra day in the hostel to roam
around the campus and bask down the memory lane. Accidentally he came across a
classmate who happened to be a lady and requested her to stay back for a day so
that they could make a stroll around the campus together to make it memorable.
Initially the lady did not agree but to his utter surprise he discovered the
lady in the college square waiting for him. It touched a tender chord and
unknowingly they started loving each other. That is how the story developed.
‘The story sounds interesting and decent without Bollywood spices. But tell me
what is the end?’ she inquired. ‘Read it yourself’ I said calmly.
Unfortunately the story ends with the protagonist
expiring in a road accident and his lady-love, for the last seven years has been
pining each moment of their immortal love that lasted only for twenty-four
hours.
I do not know what would be the
reaction of my wife at the end. But am I a potential sadist?
Thursday, 31 January 2013
January-Part Two
During my formative years I had been asked time and again
‘What is your aim in life?’ I remember I had dissimilar answers on various
stages. It is quite obvious because you cannot expect a youngster of eighteen
to repeat what he stated as a boy at ten. Boys are very imaginative and are
prone to influences that impressed them. I have seen boys declaring ‘I want to
be a Joker’ after visiting a circus because he enjoyed the exciting and
entertaining antics. What is so embarrassing to raise our eye brows? A joker
may be his idol at that age. I for one never believed in asking a question like
this except in interviews, that too if the attitude of a candidate is
confusing. I sometimes wonder if the rationale behind such query was not
obscure and dated. But then I am not an expert.
After clearing the written test for Probationary Officers of
a Bank I was asked in the Viva-voce ‘Mr Dash, you look older than your age’.
‘How can I help it Sir? There is no way I could know my age except the
documents showing my date of birth’, I replied. In contrast when I retired many
said- you look younger than your age. Divergent views reminded me of Keats who once
wrote ‘beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder’. Here of course it is not the beauty
but age. With a little liberty a Shakespearean quote could be twisted as, ’what
is there in an age? A mind at any age could smell as sweet’. (Is it really?)
‘April is the cruellest month, but O sweet new one, Eliot
would have changed his version had he seen you today. Welcome to the Department’.
It was the month of April and the welcome message was written on the black
board by one of our friends welcoming a new student who enrolled in our
Post-graduate class. The new entrant who happened to be a lady blushed but
others were enjoying the note. Youthful exuberance I suppose. The professor-a true
Gandhian with Khaddar dhoti and kurta- entered the classroom and took
attendance. While delivering the lecture he noticed some sensitive under
current and suddenly looked back to find the source. ‘Who has written this?’ he
asked. No one answered in spite of his repeated queries. Unable to find the
duster he started wiping out the writing by his own dress while muttering ‘See
what your professor is doing’. Tears rolled down his cheeks when he left the
classroom. Our friend who later became a good writer, academician and social
worker immediately rushed to the chamber of the professor and confessed. The professor
initially did not believe at all but our friend was able to convince him. He
was a brilliant teacher but very sensitive and emotional. I am yet to find a
professor who teaches Shakespearian plays as beautifully as he was able to. He
considers the students as his children and was a tremendous human being too.
Alas, he is no more. I feel my wet eyes remembering him with love and
reverence.
The weather in January remains cool and pleasant, offering
ideal time for picnics and celebrations. So I was not surprised when my friend
rang up and asked whether I would be free to attend the get together the
following day. By all means, yes, I replied. He hesitantly asked again if he could count my name in the list. What
is so offensive in counting my name, I demanded. He was apologetic and
explained that he was under the impression that I would be attending the picnic
of the Retired Officers’ Association scheduled on the same day and that was the
reason for his confusion. I laughed and said that the problem had been resolved
by our learned friend in the Association who refused to recognise my credential
as a retired officer. “What credential” he was still not satisfied. I would
explain that when we meet, I assured him.
Our learned friend had
given me a ring earlier in the day and knowing my inconvenience in attending
the picnic declared that I was not qualified to be a retired officer because I
didn’t complete the probation. “Did you say probation?” I exclaimed. “Yes mate,”
he replied calmly “for not completing one year of retirement”.
We had a hearty laugh together
in the evening when I explained my disqualification to my other friends.
In spite of all these the fact remains that I
have retired from Government service. Charaibeti…charaibeti Go on go on until the
road ends until there is no other place to go I chide myself. Don’t stop don’t
rest till you are able to replace some one’s tear with a smile.
Sunday, 27 January 2013
Thoughts of January
Probably after reaching a certain stage we are psychologically conscious
of our position and responsibilities for which it is never easy to commit any
mistake but once we start committing mistakes, the psychological barrier fades.
Subsequent violations do not look as imposing as the first one. This
realisation dawned on me recently while I was taking stock of my negligence in
life. I imagine I could have been much more enterprising had I been a little
careful and such thought made me sad for a moment. However, the penitence was
short lived when I remembered ‘to err is human’. Is it the normal practice of
other reprobates too? I must find out.
To lead a life of perfection is an aspiration that keeps us ticking. We
strive to be perfectionist, but it is a huge task. Many years back when I
wished ‘Happy Diwali’ to my boss he retorted by saying, “It is the darkest
Diwali of my life”. Mr Perfectionist was upset that I could not achieve the
target fixed by him for the month. He had distributed the tax collection target
evenly and was expecting proportionate collection. I explained the pattern of
tax collection and reasoned out the unevenness because of the market behaviour.
The statistics of the last five years was illustrative of the pattern. He would
not listen to it simply because a person cannot remain hungry for days together
to enjoy a feast. You need ration every day to survive, he argued. He is an
honest and upright administrator besides being a virtuous person but never
accepts ‘no’ as answer. I had a very difficult time differentiating the animate
with the inanimate and their existential requirements. But then life is not a
bed of roses.
We consider people as performer who have dedication and hard work. Allurement
for recognition and praise is perhaps the secret of performance. My grandfather
used to tell, ‘nothing is more enchanting than your own praise or denigration
of others’. Recently I discovered that the second one is much more attractive
and entertaining than the first one. I heard that an educationist had a
brilliant record of academic achievements but what engaged the attention of the
people around him was his salacious rendezvous with the domestic help. Such are
the vagaries of life.
I know an extremely dedicated officer who was some years senior to me.
He is so dedicated that sometimes he forgets that he has a family of his own.
We all consider him as an authority on tax laws. Surprisingly, after his
retirement there was a departmental proceeding for his negligence in completing
an enquiry. We all know that he was so involved in the Court cases for the
Revenue that he had no time for completing inquiry. Time required for handling
a tax case for the revenue depends upon many factors. One only wishes these
factors be considered.
About six months ago the participants of a training programme met me at
my chamber and requested to address the trainees. I was surprised because the
training programme was over and the relieve order was in the process of being
issued, but they persisted with their demand which I conceded rather reluctantly
with the rider that it would be matter of minutes. They agreed
What should I tell you now? When the curtain drops and a play
concludes, what remains is the indistinct muttering in the wings. Should I get
your indulgence to recount those mutterings? What I propose to tell is not part
of the syllabus nor did we impart training on these issues. Imagine, after sixty-five
years of independence some of our women folk still walk five kilometres to
fetch drinking water. Our people continue to suffer the ignominy of
indifference when they go to different offices to get their work done. Justice
is denied to many for none of their faults. It is not that the God has failed,
but rather we have failed our own people. You are all Government officers and
part of the establishment that ensures transparency. Don’t you feel disturbed? If
you could find time to think these mutterings for a minute and identify your
role, I would be most obliged.
I hope against hope that they still remember.
January is refreshingly cool to think, meditate and reflect the events
of the past. I chanced upon discovering my old diary of 1982 where I scribbled,
‘to love and to be loved/ Are both perhaps simultaneous desires/Hovering around
relationship, old and new’. I wish it were true.
Thursday, 17 January 2013
Charms
Exposure to foggy morning made me indisposed for a
couple of days. During this short interlude one day I heard a remix of old
Hindi songs with some amazing metallic instruments. I was very curious to find
out the musical instrument that accompanied the songs. My curiosity led me to
the source of its origin and to my utter surprise I discovered that most of the cutlery and utensils were lying scattered in the kitchen. Immediately I
understood the mystery behind the strange instrument.
My wife is very fond of music and listens to the FM
station or CD whenever she works in the kitchen. That particular day she had
prohibited my daily errands as I was not well and it was a foggy morning but
the daredevilry in me refused to listen to her resulting fresh supply of
vegetables from the market. That annoyed her so much so that she used cutlery and kitchen wares as missiles to unleash her anger. The rhythmic music
created by the missiles in kissing the floor or the wall produced the mirage of
a remix. I congratulated her for this rare symphony which she dismissed with
disdain but I escaped unhurt because the armory was exhausted. These ladies are
really charming in their annoyance.
Recently I have been brooding over Beckettian('Waiting for Godot' by Samuel Beckett) waiting.
Is waiting has been our eternal situation? Do we always wait for someone or
something which would change our life? I am not sure. Perhaps a person loves to
dream because, expectations, remaining un-fulfilled can safely be dreamy of.
That probably is the cause of our waiting for the unexpected- so alluring and
attractive. Such waiting has a charm of its own.
All charms are attractive and enjoyable.
I remember an incidence some eight years back. While
moving towards the office, I saw a young and fully grown robust cobra near our
office at Jeypore at 9.45 am. The driver quickly parked the vehicle and said,
“Sir, I can catch this cobra for you to see,” but the reptile was so quick that
by the time he alighted it was 100 meters away and quite safe. I heard later
that the driver was capable of catching snakes by some magic charms. It reminded
me another incident that occurred many years back. One night, during my school
days, a cousin of my father had a cobra bite. He was immediately rushed to our
family physician. Incidentally he was our relation and had retired as a
Government doctor and settled in our village too. The Doctor plucked some Tulsi
leaves, forced those leaves to the patient’s mouth while chanting some ‘mantras’.
Thereafter he cleaned the wound and applied antiseptic. Within minutes my uncle
was cured. It was a known fact that he had cured many such snake bite cases and
none of his snake-bite patients expired during treatment. I do not know how it
is possible.
Apart from magic and magical charms, many other
activities become attractive in young age. During my college days one of my
aunts, three years senior to me, gathered us all during a summer vacation to
have a ‘spirit call’ session. As per the procedure, a cup has to be kept upside
down in the centre of a circle. All the twenty-six English alphabets are to be
written round the circle. Minimum four participants should keep their finger
tips on the cup and concentrate remembering a deceased person they all know.
After a few minutes the cup would appear to be moving and the questions asked
by the participants would be answered. I always had a hearty laugh when the
session ends because I knew all along that it could never be true but could be
enjoyed as a good fun and relaxation.
Oration has a wonderful charm to keep the audience
spell bound. I have seen many professors taking classes in such absorbing
manner that we wished prolongation of the classes. A professor of physics,
during my post-graduation, was participating in a seminar organized by the
English department. He spoke about Gorge Orwell and ‘Nineteen eighty-four’ for
about an hour in such a magical spell that none could move an inch. How a
professor of physics could find time to be critically involved in literature is
still a mystery but in our college days, most of the teachers were brilliant.
What the stars foretell is an amusing experience. I
heard that one day a Lecturer of a college at the end of the session had
suddenly picked up the right hand of a student sitting in the first row. He
deeply studied the hand and uttered in a low tone, “Yes it clearly shows you
are in love but you are to prove yourself in the studies as well to win her”.
“But sir,” he protested, but the Lecturer left the class without answering.
When the Lecturer was asked about the incident he confided that he did not know
anything about palmistry or fortune telling. He had been noticing for about a
month that the student was absent minded most of the time. He wanted to bring back
his confidence. The story goes on to tell that the student did well in the
examination and won his lady-love too. Probably we love to hear sweet lies and
interestingly some lies become true.
What we call the beginning is often the end
And to make an end is to make a beginning.
While ending this piece I am still apprehensive of the
beginning of further assault basically because I have been consistently
dismissive of feminine advice and the weather continues to remain foggy.
Friday, 4 January 2013
Events
The gentleman at the second row commented, “I wasted my time and money
in watching this wretched movie”. But it is a good film reflecting the
realities of our society, I argued. “Reality?
Nonsense. Who does not have agony, suffering, pain etc. in his life? We
do not go on lamenting all those in public. People come to watch movie for
amusement, relaxation-not to carry a heavy head back home to add to his overburdened
misery. Cinema is for entertainment. Don’t you agree?”
This encounter occurred some forty years back when I, along with my
friends, had gone to a show house to watch a newly released movie. I argued for
the sake of argument, but he was correct. “Human kind can not bear very much
reality” Eliot writes. How true! But there are movies with tragic ending which
move us as deeply as some hilarious ones. The poet writes, “Our sweetest songs
are those which tell us the saddest story”. I am reminded of a great
poet-Sarojini Naidu
‘The
bridal-songs and cradle-songs have cadences of sorrow,
The laughter of the sun to-day, the wind of death to-morrow. ‘
The laughter of the sun to-day, the wind of death to-morrow. ‘
The
couplet has a sad note but leaves a deep
impression. Basically, to my mind, it is the
presentation and the treatment of the theme that affects our psyche and leaves
a deep scar. That of course does not nullify the fundamental - art, whether
literature, film, painting, dancing or any other art form is to give pleasure,
to amuse and entertain. While posting the blogs it occurred to me that I
deliberately avoided narrating my experiences in handling unjust interference of
power centers. Quite true and that is the reason for raising the question-whether
literature is for pleasure or otherwise. Having resolved the question in favour
of the former, I would seek the indulgence of my readers to allow me to present
the pleasant only with minor digression.
I started my service career as a lecturer just after completing my Post
Graduation. This assignment offered me the opportunity to read more books as
the college had a rich library. Students from eastern states had enrolled in
this institution as it was a regional college. I had to prepare a lot before
engaging a class mainly because it was my first assignment and secondly the
students were young, inquisitive and very keen to participate in the concluding
interactive schedule. I enjoyed their company.
Annual play competition was an attractive itinerary in the extra-curricular
activities. One of my colleagues was an excellent Director. I had some
experience in the dramatic activities in my school days where I acted and
directed a small play. We decided to stage an innovative Odia play. We selected
the book as well as the players. I remember, I had to spend the entire evening
and part of the night at Nandan Kanan (open wild life zoo of the state) to
record the bird songs and the sounds of wild animals at night to give sound
effect of nocturnal-forest. I had to request my cousin (who was an AIR artiste
then) to render a solo song without accompaniment for the supporting actress.
Air-rifle of my uncle was borrowed to replicate the gun shot. The play was
adjudged the best play of the competition. The Chief Guest, an eminent writer,
actor and educationist was overwhelmed and embraced us for such beautiful
production. The experience was simply charming.
Much water has flown in between. After a brief stint in education, I
moved to Finance where I continued till my superannuation. Life moves on. You
have lived much of your life, I told myself. Be patient to see the remnant.
Don’t buckle or bend, stand erect to say goodbye at the end.
Tuesday, 1 January 2013
Expressions
Recently I was contemplative
over the question, ‘Why one writes?’ It appears to me that in spite of all faculties
for communication, it becomes impossible for a person, at times, to communicate
emotional issues. Oral communication is probably inadequate to convey the
feelings. Feelings are the language of the heart which the head fails to communicate.
Does it mean that the love letters are manifestations of communication obscurity?
I do not know. I must go to the youngsters to resolve the issue. But one thing is
certain. A person always wants to communicate those things which he/she feels were
not properly communicated or communicated inadequately. This urge for
expression may be the answer I sought. But this answer is confined to soft
instincts. You can not write niceties of pure science, mathematics or history in
the language of the heart.
I embarked upon the subject
because I had started writing short stories in late sixties which got recognition
when I got awards in different occasions in early seventies. While analyzing the
prime mover, it dawned on me that I had a bagful of thoughts then which did not
find expression in my ordinary oral skills. I wanted to say more and found a
medium in shape of story writing. That apart, I wanted to tell a story playing
upon my emotions as well as borrowed emotions. In those moments I feel, as if I
was in a trance, experiencing exactly the same emotions that the narrative described.
Only those stories had larger audience.
I am
inclined to believe that greetings on occasions are expressions of the heart
rather than head. New Year has remained a special event for me, over many years,
not because of celebrations but owing to the camaraderie and bonhomie which are
so infectious that one loses control over cerebral plexus and tends to become
emotional instead. Earlier I was receiving and dispatching a fair amount of
greeting cards which are now replaced by SMS and emails. But what stands out is
a “Hello” from a near and dear one wishing ‘Happy New Year’. I know, in course
of time, such greetings will thin out. But I am sure I will enjoy the fading
fragrance of the expressions which are more eloquent in its silence.
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