In the End
I write this with the intention that
I would return to read it, time and again, to stay in close quarters with
reality.
My grandmother, aaji, is nearly 95. We
don’t know her exact age; she doesn’t belong to the generation that kept
birthday diaries. This is our estimate, and the traditional way of keeping age
has not been far from truth.
Aaji is the oldest surviving woman
of her village. She occupied a pride of place in her home turf. A dozen people
called on her through-out the day, and farm accounts and village grapevine kept
her busy. After 1993, when her husband and my grandfather passed away, she
assumed the role of the head of family. She managed ghar, and duaar,
located on either side of the village street, with elan. Called as a master
manager by my father, who has seen her toil through her youth to ensure
education for her children and status for her family, aaji was not a woman you
could fool around with. Diplomatic to the core, she rationed power in thrift
installments. Perched unquestioningly on top of the pyramid, she maintained
hierarchy in almost a government-like fashion. She kept information under
cover, disbursed strictly on a need-to-know basis. A devout believer in god,
she dedicated half of her day to holy rituals, and claimed to hear celestial
voices in her dream. Interestingly, these voices often directed her
daughters-in-law to do divine service to their saas. For someone who
learned to read and write after her marriage, courtesy her husband, her cunning
at saam, daam, dand, bhed was phenomenal. Chanakya could pay her royalty
to keep his neeti alive! We saw mothers and aunts hushed up in her
presence, none able to muster the courage to defy her stand. The gift of gab,
one of her utter talents, of which we are part inheritors, was her chief artillery.
If fired, it left the victim wounded for days, maybe years, unable to point out
the scars or even decipher the extent. People stuck in her barbs, gaabhi
in Bhojpuri, are known to have been nagged all their lives.
In the fond memories of our
childhood, aaji takes a lion’s share at the art of story-telling. I’m yet to
meet someone as convincing as her. She spun some of the most illogical tales,
with characters having no semblance with reality, and we lapped it up with the
credence that children alone possess. Not to mention that her weird
descriptions, many of which included stuff today’s parents will die to hear
mentioned before their children, led us to have scary notions about the human
anatomy. I still marvel how a grown up woman can tell the same story to the
same set of children ad-nauseam, and they laugh to tears every time she did so!
When she came visiting her children,
she came with an aide by her side. Not the one to be dominated by change, she
ruled the roost here too. Her hours of pooja were followed by equally
long and religious hours of TV. Matriarchs of soap operas were, predictably,
her favourite characters, and frequently her medium to convey indirect
messages. Though she never confessed to liking modern songs and near-nude
dance, we observed the spark in her eyes every time ETC was tuned in. For free-entertainment,
we children switched to Fashion TV in her presence, and enjoyed a virulent
stream of unabashed expletives! She even acted in papa’s plays, remembering
each dialogue of every character by heart, and basked in the fame of her
performance. Conventional in the village and modern in the city, aaji was a
queen of paradoxes who re-defined practicality. And like the weather, she paid
no heed to criticism.
Aaji was the one who taught me the
first tongue I learned. Bhojpuri. Shocked by my unending appetite for milk
amidst the mercurial expenses of a city-life, aaji decided to take me to
village when I was merely 1. She kept me there for a year before I was to
return to Bokaro. I’ve had my father re-collect those days a countless times.
My reaction on seeing the ceiling fan, for instance (ee kaa ha ho
papa…rel-gaadi? I’d said). Of course, I was too young to remember any of
that. But I do remember the earthy smell of doodh-roti that aaji would feed us
on our annual visits to the village. In the sweltering heat of Bihar, the taste
of thick, sweet milk, and rotis cooked on ghar ka chulha, mashed by aaji
with bare fingers, was an experience I will remain grateful to life for.
A pic from 2012 - papa and aaji |
I use the past tense in aaji’s
description, because it hurts to see that she IS not what she WAS then. Six
years ago, we brought her to Delhi to live with us after she broke her hip
owing to a slippage. It took persuasion and cajoling for a proud woman like her
to agree to this plan. Since then, year after year, we have seen the light fading
from her eyes. And it’s not easy to bear this sight.
A person who lived like an
institution, who weathered ages, who was feared and respected to a considerable
extent, ends up like a helpless little child in bed. The anti-climax of life is
devastating. One would rather have had her thumping her way to the exit, than
have her cowering in bed, in an unfathomable state of alertness and slumber.
For the last two years, the time that daily deterioration has been visible,
we’ve had the feeling that she’s at her fag end. Every day, there’s something
of her we lose. Her story-telling went a long time back. When her morning
bhajans stopped, papa tried to revive it by asking her to sing along. She
obliged, only to give up that faculty months later. Now she hears when papa
sings to her, hopefully, for we can’t sense an acknowledgement. For a long
time, she pulled on anyhow with the walker. When that stopped, we dragged her
on the chair. A month ago, that phase too, passed. Our latest attempt is now to
prevent her from getting bed-sores, which threaten in a big, bad way.
Her glorious face of youth, famous
for her fair complexion and high cheek-bones, has creased and shrunk. The voice
that would raise us from sleep by singing bhajans from four in the morning,
today only purrs in pain. Worse, we don’t hear her voice for days. But if and
when she realizes that we are cleaning her, or feeding her, all she says weakly
is this: phulaail raha (stay blossomed). Those once bright eyes remain
closed till roused from sleep. If her leg falls off the bed, she doesn’t even
realize it. Parts of her muscles have fallen detached from the bone, to which
she doesn’t react. A frail bangle, the only piece of ornament on her body, had
to be taken off for it bled her paper-thin flesh. A woman who once had an
elephantine memory, remembering songs, quotations and idioms like the back of
her hand, can’t recollect the number of children she has borne. Till some time
back, we all had nicknames. I was sona-jhari (who sheds gold), my bhabhi
was kanaiva-rani (the new bride) and my
mother, bahu-rani. Now, she addresses one and all as bahu-rani,
for deep within, she probably only remembers her chief care-taker.
Sometimes with humor, sometimes with
irritation, but mostly with a passive face of duty, I see my mother doing
back-breaking service to a woman she could settle past scores with. The rest of
us join her and support her in the toil, but when we children are in office, or
vacationing with friends, maa stays
back. To tend to a relationship where giving has been mostly a one-way traffic,
and continues to be so.
There are days when maa just stands
and stares at the whimpering figure on bed. She stares till she cries and begs
the almighty to have mercy on the old woman’s plight. How much more, good lord,
she laments. Tears of aaji’s pain have softened the core of each being in our
house. Without seeing each other in the eye, we all cry and pray for her release.
Outwardly, we turn old age into a humorous subject, for that is the strongest
tool in any survival kit. How else can you remain happy and driven, when the
end of life, the decay and devastation of slow death, reels before your eyes,
day and night?
Life has come a full circle. Now, I
mash doodh-roti in the bowl and feed aaji. I presume she likes the taste
because she half-utters blessings as she gulps it down. I fight tears. I fight
impatience. I fight the urge to plea for euthanasia. I implore destiny. I see
my family alternating between the same choices. And I hope and pray, that when
she is gone, we remember her by the only two words she uttered towards her end.
Phulaail raha.
PS – I finished writing this piece
at 3 am on July 6. The next day, on late evening of July 7, Aaji bade us a final
goodbye. Her last coherent words were addressed to my father. Repeatedly, she
said: Babua ho, liaa chala (Oh my son, take me away).
Superbly Written ! I haven't seen your Aaji but the picture of her vivid persona, the pain & trauma of the people taking care of her is so real and touching that it will have lasting imprint on the readers like us.
ReplyDeleteI wish you had personally interacted with her. Her charm was so monumental, that it is impossible to etch it in words. We partake her talent only in bits and pieces. Thank you for your compliments :)
Deletereally nani smile alive always with my mother smile
ReplyDelete