There are moments in
your life that make you introspect - they make you look back at your life and
wonder what you have done to have a life so good!
I had such a moment
yesterday. I would probably describe it sometime later. But it made me look
back at such moments that had happened in my life and every single minute after
that long flash-back, I have been asking myself only one
question - What did I ever do to deserve all this goodness?
****
Every time I start
from my hostel to my home, I try really hard to start the 7-hour journey by
noon because whenever I start the journey by night, the next morning I would
find my mom's happy face welcoming me at home but her eyes would be a bright
reddish shade - the result of staying awake the whole night worrying that I
should have a safe journey.
Every sacrifice made,
every fight/ argument lost intentionally, every minute of caring, every single
rupee earned by her spent just to make me happy – Why? Is it just because I
carry the same genes?
****
It was a very hot day.
I had gone to my home for a three-day holiday. My mom had gone to work and only
my grandmother and I were at home. We had had our lunch and I, generally having
this uncontrollable tendency to eat sweets after a meal, couldn't find any that
day. And I complained about it to my grandmother and went to my room and
started watching a film. About 2 hours later, as the film got over, I removed
my headphones and I could hear the clattering noise of vessels from our
kitchen. As I went there to see what the cause was, I found my grandmother,
fully covered with sweat, preparing baasanthi
- a sweet which requires at
the least one and half hours of care dedicated to it during its preparation.
The poor old woman of 73 years had been preparing it just because I had
complained that there were no sweets.
I had shouted at her
innumerable times for completely silly reasons. I had made fun of her innocence
whenever an opportunity presented itself. I had mocked her restless nature to extreme
limits. But the old woman never really cared about them and spent most of her
energy trying to make me happy.
****
Wrapped in a blue cover, he handed me the gift. Though I put on an
act of refusing it and said that there must not be any formalities between
friends, I was very happy within and accepted it from him. He told me to open
it after he left. As we sat chatting about our school-mates and their current
relationships, as we usually did whenever we met, I asked him slowly as to give
a clue as to what the gift was. He refused outright. I kept asking him what it
was but he never even uttered a word about what the gift was. And after he
left, I hurriedly tore apart the wrapper and looked at the gift. It was the
first time I had shed a few tears after seeing a birthday gift that had been given
to me. The gift was not something extremely costly. But only the both of us
knew what it meant – a miniature wooden bat with the digital signature of
Sachin Tendulkar.
I had not given him really memorable gifts for most of his
birthdays. I had not visited many places or watched many movies with him like
most close friends do. I had not even talked to him much after joining
college. But he, who never liked Sachin for
certain reasons of his own, gifted a miniature bat with Sachin’s autograph just
to make me happy.
****
My sister was seated, typing something on her mobile. I took the
menu card in my hands and started going through all the dishes served in the
restaurant. “What film did you see recently?” asked my brother trying to start
up a conversation. I never knew that that conversation was going to change my
life. Both of us had fallen in love with films and had decided to go in the
direction of film-making but that conversation as it continued was the one that
surprised both of us as it was the first time we realized that we shared the
same passion.
I started to write because of him. I got into photography because
of him. I had had love for both these fields but I never thought of getting
into them until I saw my brother creating magic with both. Apart from making me
take an interest in these fields, allowing me to add two beautiful things in
the ‘extra-curricular activities’ section in my resume, he also showed me that
a resume was just a piece of paper and there was more to life than a job and a
few thousand rupees in the bank account.
****
As I think about all these, along with the inexplicable warmth, a
lot of questions flood my heart.
What did I ever do to deserve such a patient and caring mother?
What did I ever do to deserve such a doting grandmother? What did I ever do to
deserve such a great friend? What did I ever do to deserve such an influential
brother?
There seems to be no answer but the questions just keep piling up.
What did I ever do to deserve having the greatest guys as friends
at college? What did I ever do to deserve falling in love with the most
fabulous girl I have ever met? What did I ever do to deserve being cared and
helped by most of the people I come across? What did I ever do to get all these good
things that have happened in my life?
No answer.
And I am pretty sure that I
might never get one.
But there is one question that you could probably answer. I wouldn’t
want to know the answer as certain things are best left unsaid. But I would be
happy if you could answer it to yourself. So, coming to the question,
What did I ever do to deserve a reader like you?
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteYou probably deserve all the relations and emphatically deserve crazy readers !!
ReplyDeleteFor...
You write,
from your heart and mesmerize us with your words so deep !!
You write,
from your soul and give us the right feel !!
You write,
with good flow of thoughts and no tinge of hesitance !!
You write,
and take every reader to their world of reminiscence..
One thing I wish you change !
It lies in the last line.From "a reader" to "readers" !
I heartily thank you for the very generous/lavish/slightly overstated praise.
DeleteAnd assuming that you have mentioned the last statement of your comment literally and not figuratively, I could probably change 'a reader' to 'readers'. But every single person who reads this is valuable to me and I want to address him/her personally and not as a part of a group.
But if the last statement is meant figuratively, then once again, a heartfelt thanks!
I regret I couldn't take it in the sense you wrote.Was perhaps overwhelmed by the former words ! But this time I am sure you made a mistake in the first line ! Welcome anyways !
ReplyDelete