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Wednesday, June 03, 2015

Convalescent

Pain. It is a great enemy, a great cleanser, a great teacher. It has been my fate to suffer a very great deal of pain, of the body and of the mind, intermittently ever since childhood. I am currently going through yet another course of it right now. I vacillate eternally between thinking that I don’t wish it on my worst enemy, and that no one ever became human before knowing pain first hand: the kind of pain that sears away all dross forever, and turns you from Facebook and short skirts to God. And I can also feel a massive surge of despair, having lived long enough to know that there are lots of people who can get back to partying and mall-hopping within weeks of losing their ‘loved ones’…

And as always, it is a very great learning experience about what people are really like. You can never find out without being in extremis. Supremely above all I have had confirmation, if ever I needed it, that my daughter is so great a gift that I have forfeited all right to ask God for any other in this lifetime. And I am saying this as anything but a besotted father: I know for a fact that one dad in a million gets a grown up daughter that willingly useful and helpful and still cheerful for any length of time, especially in this country. As the song goes, ‘somewhere in my youth or childhood/ I must have done something good’!

At the next level, it never ceases to amaze me how many people of how many sorts are not only helping all they can but are only too eager to help if I’d let them. From doctors to rickshawwallahs, grocers to bankers, maidservants to neighbours… not to mention hundreds and hundreds of old boys far away and near. Doing everything from easing me into the car and cleaning up the cobwebs to offering me money and expressing willingness to go pay my bills to asking if there’s some special book or movie that they can send over to while away the terrible monotony. It takes my breath away to think so many people know me and care – me, with zero frndz on FB and no whatsapp connection! Especially when I contrast such good people with all the scum it has been my great misfortune to know: someone, one of the few I had personally called up to give the news, who simply forgot to respond for a whole week because he was oh-so-busy, and someone who knows perfectly well she has demonstrated over more than a decade she neither can nor really wants to do anything for me – exams and parents and job and marriage and ‘other social responsibilities’ and a very recherché coyness have always prevented and will go on preventing her from doing anything beyond losing things I valued, trivializing things I wrote because they were far beyond her grasp, and disobeying injunctions she herself had once pretended I had a ‘right’ to insist on as a teacher and father figure (few expressions bring me closer to puking: I am going to murder the uncouth pinhead who next applies that term to me) – sanctimoniously asking me if she could ‘do something’ for me. God save me from creatures who say such things because it makes them feel good without having to do a thing: I’d rather sleep with a cobra in my room. My lessons have all been learned the hard way.

Then there is the helplessness. I know it will be incomprehensible to people who have been petted and mollycoddled all their lives – I know someone who never visited a doctor alone until she was in college. I have slept alone since I was five, and did almost everything for myself since I was fifteen, and lived alone for a very large part of my life: what happens to a man like that if he loses the use of his legs? Christ, I even went to the toilet hobbling on a walker before the bones were set, despite the agony and the doctor’s strict warning against it, and I have continued to do so back home, for I have lived and want to die like a man, not a vegetable with a bedpan: may He who hears all prayers grant this one of mine. And yet there are a thousand things I can’t do. Funny they become so serious and urgent just when you can’t! I can’t climb upstairs, so I am being fed in bed after a gap of more than 47-8 years; I can’t clean the bathroom myself; I can’t go for a walk, I can’t exercise or swim or ride my scooter for many months to come. This is what purgatory means, I guess. Who could have imagined I’d have so looked forward to a mere elbow crutch so that I can hobble around a bit on my own again? The shame of it: I, who have been a help to so many in need.

I have gone back to work, of course. The doctor wanted me to stay in hospital for five days after the operation; I came home on the second. I was supposed to take ‘bed rest’ for at least a fortnight after that; the Tuesday after the accident I was taking classes, full schedule. It hurts, and it is tiring me out, but I still say ‘Thank God I can’. It is not yet time for me to rest, and besides, I’d have gone mad with boredom and guilt. I shall NOT become Piku’s father. I am waiting for the clamps to be taken out, and hoping the doctor will ask me to try walking soon, really soon…

How strange that the incident brought a large part of my scattered family together, at least for a bit. And how strange that people, even those who have known you all your life, care so much more about your body than your mind!  The most wonderful thing is that after I am gone, they will all be talking about my mind and what I did with it; the body will be gone and forgotten. If I were to be born again, I’d ask to be born in a very different kind of world.

And I am truly bemused to see the unbelieving, dazed look on people’s faces, young and old alike. ‘This can’t be happening to Sir’, they are saying with their eyes or sometimes even voices, ‘Everybody else takes unannounced holidays, everybody else has illnesses and accidents, not Sir!’ Only Pupu smiles and says “I said you were a Rock when I was just so high, didn’t I? Well, I am not the only one who is used to thinking that way about you. People are naturally bewildered when the Rock sways.”

And the prize goes to the lovely child who said in a whisper, ‘Sir, tomar accident hoyechhe shune amar khub koshto hoyechhilo’. God bless. I know how precious that is – and also how little it means in the long run. Such is a teacher’s fate. Take the cash, and let the credit go/ nor heed the rumble of a distant drum.

3 comments:

Shilpi said...

Dear Suvro da,

I have never read anyone writing that pain is a great teacher and a cleanser and a great enemy while in the midst of it. Mental pain (only) in retrospect feels that it may and sometimes does lead one to some meaningful awareness/clarity but physical pain usually doesn’t let one think. What you say about pain here is something that still makes me want to ask questions and has made me wonder since I read it first in your book for Pupu (and many times since then). Wouldn’t it take a particular kind of mind to turn to God...or even to feel pain? I shan’t bother you with more questions right now.

You’ve said what you have about your daughter here. I’ll only say I was more than relieved to read from her post that she was there with you from the time she was and is. May she grow ever stronger within and glow brightly on the out. I daresay that both of you are blessed to have one another in this world.

It is odd that along with the physical agony you’d mention the mind and the vegetable... It is what you mention in your fourth paragraph that started gnawing at me while I was reading Pupu’s post and even as I sent my previous comment. A mere sprained ankle is bad enough I used to think. I felt you’d experience a horrible helplessness and monotony in spite of doing your classes and pain given the man you are and all you do, and precisely because you have the mind you do. Yes, let God hear this prayer and may you be back in full force and soon.

That the good and caring people have been there for you, have done and wanted to do things to help so that you write about them here makes me feel grateful in spite of the other questions that do not go away. For one question, you’d answer with a single word, ‘Karma’ so I try not to bring it up even in my head. I won’t say much about the other type you mention apart from this: I am reminded of one of your favourite lines from The Old Book (and without any malice), ‘Vengeance is mine, said The Lord’. The lovely little child you mention who gets the prize made me smile in a sad way somewhat. It brought to the head the concluding lines of Vikram Seth’s poem from the poem-post of yours.

I can’t thank you enough for writing some of what you’re going through, here. I’ll end this comment for now. It’s gotten to be long enough to be a letter almost.

Take care.

Shilpi

Abhishek Anand said...

Respected Sir,

I was shocked to read the previous post. I must admit that I too exclaimed, "This can’t be happening to Sir!" after reading it. However, I am glad to know that you are better and have resumed your classes.

Pupu di has rightly written that things could have taken a turn for the worse on the highway, had it not been for your presence of mind.

To your credit, even in these painful moments, you have put up a post that leaves the reader with a wide range of thoughts and reflections on life. The third last paragraph of this post really intrigues me.

Finally, I pray to the almighty that the remainder of the pain may leave you, as soon as possible.

Yours faithfully,
Abhishek Anand

Anurupa Ganguli said...

Dear Sir,
I have heard about your accident. Sorry I couldn't call. I won't be making up any excuses of being busy but you've been in my prayers ever since.
I'm glad Pupu could be with you. I hope to meet you soon but before that I must call.
Get well soon Sir.
After months, I came online today and the first thing I did was writing your name in google :)
Love
Anurupa