Tuesday, September 22, 2020
Monday, September 14, 2020
DESTRUCTIVE LONGING TO BELONG- Confessions of a Teacher: 2
I WAS Chairman of Education at NID then.
One morning, the security guard from the main gate called me to say that a beggar wanted to see me and that he claimed he was my student. When he came to my room, I was shocked. He was in dirty, tattered clothes; uncombed hair, shabby beard, hollow cheeks and lifeless eyes. I could not recognize the beggar.
'I am Gafoor', he said.
My mind went back a few years. Gafoor Mohammed was a brilliant student when he was admitted into NID. The admission panel was amazed at his excellent drawing skills and superb aesthetic sense. He could not speak a word of English since his parents could not afford the costs of an English-medium school. His father was a mechanic in a small company in Pune. The boss of the company who saw the boy's wonderful self-taught drawing and painting skills encouraged his father to apply to NID, the premier institute of design in India.
Gafoor's poor family lived in a chawl, in a single room. Once his friends had visited him and half way through the conversation Gafoor had said, 'Hey guys, don't turn back. My sister is taking bath there.' That room was also the family bathroom, bedroom, kitchen and living room: all in one. They were so poor.
We admitted Gafoor as a first rank candidate and recommended conversational English classes for him to take. His first semester jury went very well and he seemed to have learnt some English. However, surprisingly in the next jury his performance suddenly dropped very low. We attributed this to possible initial problems in adjusting to his class here his peers were all fluent English- speaking, guitar-playing, party- going, smart and elite students. His counselor said that Gafoor would take time to mix with his peers but would pick up in time. We waited.
Two years passed and the teachers started complaining of his absence in class. He had no friends in the institute, so we could not get any clue about his real problem. He started missing fee payments saying his family was having financial troubles. The warden however found out that he was receiving money orders from home. We gave warnings but did not want to dismiss him from the school considering how the poor family's hopes were pinned on him.
One late night, the security of the hostel made an emergency call to me to say that, a bleeding body of a student had been thrown in front of the gate and the assailants escaped in a rickshaw. I rushed there and found Gafoor lying in front of the gate, in a pool of blood, beaten to pulp, bleeding and unconscious. We admitted him in a hospital.
Later enquiries revealed that Gafoor had desperately wanted to belong to an elite peer group. He could not learn to speak English or play guitar or dance but he fell easy victim to superficial short cuts to elitism such as smoking, drinking and before he knew it, drugs. He became an addict and started missing classes and drooling in stupor. He did not have the money even after spending away all the fees money for it. So he borrowed heavily and could not pay back. The drug peddlers beat him and dumped him.
After he was discharged from the hospital, I sent him to a psychotherapist but in vain. He would not go. He would slip away somehow even if I sent another student to accompany him to the therapist.
Finally, I had to give up.
I called his father to take him away from NID and to admit him in a good de-addiction centre. His father was heartbroken and fell on my feet.
After one year, I was seeing Gafoor again. His condition and his mumbled talk told me that he had escaped from the de-addiction centre and had come to hide here. He was starving and had not a single rupee on him.
I sheltered him at my place, till his father came and took him away. That was the last I saw of him.
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
The Flood : Short Story
The rain kept pouring incessantly.
The streets were getting flooded.
Through the threads of water, the world
was looking blurred.
What would happen if it continued even
more?
My mind raced back few years; to a similar
rainy night.
A phone call from my village. Far away
in the south.
Ramanamma’s desperate voice.
Madhubabu!!
He became the Head master of a High
school in Raajaam village and was loved by the village people. A person who
gives knowledge to their children and makes them earn a living is more than God
to the illiterate villagers. He was married to Ramanamma. The couple did not
have children for long time. After many vratams, visits to holy temples and
long wait, they were blessed with a son.
The boy was named “Madhu”, the honey. The
grandfather added “Babu”, an endearing word in Telugu, which means “Master” or
“Little Master”.
Madhubabu was pampered by everybody in
the family. The moment the child looked at something with interest, the next day
it would be in his hands, be it a sweet or a toy. If he threw it and broke it, which
he often did, the father would not scold him. On the contrary, he would hug him
and shout with joy “Look, Ramanamma. How my son is teasing me. He is simply
adorable.” If the child urinated in his arms, he would kiss him and say “Look.
He did abhishekkam to me! Such a
darling, I love him so much”.
Madhubabu was not sent to the school in
the village. Chee! Not the ordinary
school with ordinary kids. My son must get the best in everything. So, he
was sent to the most reputed Maharajah school in the town of Bobbili, two
kilometers away from the village. A cycle rickshaw was arranged to pick up and
drop Madhubabu.
Even before he reached teenage, an
expensive scooter was bought and given to him. It gave lot of freedom of
movement to Madhu.
He did not fall in love with a girl.
Not with a boy, not with a pet. He fell in love with the ‘larger than life’
image! He fell in love with a silver screen hero.
The members voluntarily promote Hero Chiranjeevi,
almost fanatically. They will treat well all those who praise Chiranjeevi but
beat up anybody who says even one word that is critical of him. To see
Chiranjeevi’s film on the day of its release, first day, first show, is their
religion. They block tickets en-masse for that show. During the show, as soon
as the first Chiranjeevi scene appears on screen, they throw garlands on the
screen, break coconuts, offer dhupam, deepam,
naivedyam and aarati as you do to
a deity in a temple. There will be more pomp and show, screaming slogans and
whistling and jump dancing. It is hero worship, literally.
One day, early morning, the mother went
to Madhu’s room with a cup of coffee to wake him up and to get him ready for
school. He was not in bed.
She called and searched all over the
house in vain. No one in the village knew his whereabouts. They discovered soon
that his rucksack was missing. Every relative and friend was phoned but all answered
in the negative.
Where is he? Is he fine? Why did he leave the house suddenly without telling anyone?
The whole family was drowned in grief.
Krishnamurty was shocked. He did not
bite a morsel nor had a wink of sleep the whole day. He begged every friend and
relative to search for Madhu. Enquiries were made at Bobbili Railway station
and the bus station.
After three agonizing days, an answer
was found.
The head clerk of the high school where
Krishnamurty was Headmaster came to him and produced a small chit with Madhu’s
signature for receiving 20,000 rupees. Three days earlier, as the head clerk had
to go out of station on emergency for a few days, he had brought that cash to
be kept in safe custody at the Head master’s house, as it was the custom.
Since he was in a hurry and could not
find Krishnamurty, he had handed the amount over to Madhu to be passed on to
the father.
The search was intensified. Ten agonizing
days passed.
Then there was news!
A friend of Madhu’s informed them that
Madhu was in Guntur, and that he could give the address. But his father should
not go to pick him up; otherwise, he would not be found at the address given.
The money he took away was spent and exhausted. He was afraid to come home and could
not afford the ticket. What was he doing
there?
“Don’t know, uncle” the friend said.
But after everybody insisted and threatened to hand him over to the police, the
boy broke his silence.
Krishnamurthy could not believe his
ears!
But first he had to rescue his son and
bring him home. He arranged a group immediately to go to Guntur and fetch his
son. But they were told to treat him very lovingly. No one should say one harsh
word to him. No questions must be asked. On the contrary, they should praise
his unique dedication to Chiranjeevi. Who
would dare say it was foolish and downright stupid? My son would never do stupid things! He was born to me and he is
special.
Madhu failed in class that year and the
next year too. The day when the results were announced, Madhu did not come
home. A friend’s parent phoned and said that Madhu was reluctant to go home and
face his parents, so he had pleaded to stay for few days with them.
Krishnamurthy met the high school authorities
in Bobbili and was told that Madhu had been bunking classes regularly. Failure
was inevitable. His name was being removed from the rolls.
Krishnamurthy sent a relative to persuade
Madhu to come home.
Neither he nor Ramanamma nor anyone else
would say a thing. He warned his mother also not to say a single word. Real love forgives everything, does it not?
I must be so nice to him because he is already depressed due to his failure. “We
should cheer him up,” he told Ramanamma.
After Madhu finally returned home, he
went to him and hugged him. He asked his wife to make his favorite dishes that
day. He brought home chocolate ice cream, which Madhu loved. While he was
eating he put his hand on his shoulder and told him very soothingly: “Madhu darling.
Do not feel bad. I am there for you. I love you. I support you even if you fail
ten times. I will put you in another school. If no school admits you, I will
teach you myself. I want to see you happy always. You need a vacation to
overcome this sadness due to failure. Seeing all your friends who passed makes
you feel terrible, I know. I will give
you some money. Go to your uncle in Ramavaram village near the hills. It is a beautiful
place with mango gardens and sugarcane fields. Enjoy the vacation well. Watch
movies. A change of place will do you a lot of good. Uncle’s family is very
fond of you. They will take very good care of you. You can do anything you
want. Ok?”
All the time he lowered his head. He
did not even nod his head.
Tears flowed from his eyes, quietly.
He was sent to an uncle’s place in
Raamavaram with enough money, dresses and sweets.
Madhu still remained quiet.
He was confused. His looks were vacant.
He wandered aimlessly here and there in the village. Uncle’s children took him
to the fields and to their mango garden to cheer him up. It was in vain. He
would not even go to see the movies. He would not touch his favorite dishes. Neither
the delicious ripe yellow mangoes nor playing with other boys and girls lifted
his spirits. Madhubabu seemed lost. He was listless.
Thus four days passed.
On the fifth day, in the early hours of
dawn, his body was found floating in the village well on the outskirts.
He had left the uncle’s place the previous
night, saying he would spend the night with a friend in the next village. The
police later recovered a suicide note, in Madhu’s own handwriting, under a
stone nearby. The note simply read:
“No
one except me is responsible for my suicide”.
PS:
“Dear Nanna and Amma, I am not worthy of being your son. Forgive me if you can.
Yours insincerely…….. (Signed) MadhuBabu”
Krishnamurty’s heart was broken. His loud
wailing resounds in my ears even now.
“What
have I not given you my son, to punish me thus? I always had forgiven you.
Never hurt you a bit. Have I not looked after you with unlimited love? Why? Why?
I already assured you about your schooling. Then? why? You could have told me
what you wanted!”
Pulin heard me fully and calmly. He
stared hard at me.
There was a brief silence.
When he replied, I was startled by the stark
brutality of the reply.
“The damn father killed the son.”
Before I recovered, Pulin got up and left,
to save me the explanation.
I was passing through a vast, parched field.
I was alone. I came across an abandoned well. I went nearer. A voice from the
well suddenly caught me unawares. The weeping ghostly voice said: “Dad, Dad,
slap me, dad, slap me. I want to live, dad. Please slap me.”
I fled from there: I ran through the fields.
The voice haunted me. I ran and ran. I kept running. Away and away.
…
…… …..
Lady Macbeth’s guilt is one kind,
Madhubabu’s another.
The Rain kept pouring incessantly.
The streets were getting flooded.
Through the threads of water, the world was looking blurred.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Saturday, September 5, 2020
Freedom from Mental Problems
(Prologue:
In 2019, few months after I left DJ Academy of Design; almost all the students,
walked all the way to my house to pay respects and talk to me. It was a moment
I shall never forget in my life, as we talked sitting on the floor of terrace till
late night. I dedicate this article as a token of my love to all of them!)
Let us start by looking at some real life
incidents which establish the mind-body relationship.
Case
1:
Readers Digest Report – 1985
In Germany, in a beautiful farm house near
Budapest lived a small family: A teen age graduate girl and her parents. The
father was a painter. Then one day the mother died and the father and daughter
continued staying. The house was absolutely safe and secure and they had a
hunter dog to guard.
After few months, a shocking incident happened.
Early morning the girl drove to the nearest police
station, in a battered condition, with grave body injuries and complained that
her father got drunk and repeatedly beaten and raped her. The police, on circumstantial
evidence arrested the father and put him in Jail. The father denied the charge.
But there was no way a third person could enter the house. A search of the
house and a thorough medical examination of the girl, were held.
The medical report stated that there was no rape
and the injuries were self inflicted.
The girl swore that she had no enmity with father and
she was indeed raped by him. She gave many details of the act. Re-examination
by another medical team confirmed the previous report. Lie detectors confirmed that
she was not lying. What happened then?
Case
2: Medical Report – 1982
Padmini was pregnant with her first child. We took
her to Doctor Anklesaria, the best gynecologist in Ahmadabad. After examining
her he said that there was a big, healthy baby inside. Padmini said she would
like to have natural delivery and not caesarian operation. Doctor Anklesaria
laughed and answered that considering her small stature, small vaginal opening
and the large size of the baby; it was absolutely impossible. God made her like
that. But Padmini was adamant. The doctor emphatically said that no doctor on
earth can do it.
We went to Bombay and showed Padmini to several
expert doctors. All had confirmed Anklesaria’s report. But Padmini was hell
bent on natural delivery.
Finally an old doctor Mehta pacified her saying
that he would try his best to fulfill her wish but she should leave the final
decision to him as a medical professional. Padmini agreed.
Padmini had labor pain few days before due date,
but it was natural delivery! A healthy baby Sourabh was born. All doctors
including Anklesaria could not believe this. How was this possible?
Case
3: Newspaper Report – 1972
In Kerala, a poor fisherman went at night to steal
fish from a fenced pond and caught many fish manually. What he did not know was
that he also caught a poisonous water snake, mistaking it to be an eel. The
snake bit him but he thought it was a crab. He went home, slept soundly till
late morning when his wife woke him up. He found the snake in the closed basket
and realized that he was bitten by a deadly snake. Within minutes, the poison
spread in his body and he died. Why did the poison not work for so many hours
and suddenly did?
Case
4:
I fast every Saturday and will not touch any food
at all. On all other days I feel hungry
and eat sumptuously but on Saturdays I will not feel hungry at all. How is this
so?
Case
5:
Science confirms that a non-medical pill called “placebo”
is administered saying it is the last word in the treatment of incurable diseases.
It is a lie but in most cases it cures. How is it possible?
Only one answer. Subconscious mind! Thinking has tremendous power and influence over the
body. Sexual thoughts cause erection; fear of a danger cause sweating or
urination; thoughts of favorite food cause mouth watering and so on.
I have experienced that if I have to wake up to
catch a flight at any time at night, I tell my mind clearly before going to
sleep when I should wake up and it always works. It is common experience with
many other people.
Based on my experience, I offer three types of
freedom practices to get rid of mental problems:
1. Freedom from Covering Up
Given the realities of social
media and isolation, some degree of mental problem is common in all people.
Some psychologists say that mental depression has become “addiction” and “fashionable”. Any addiction is harmful. One must realise
this and should not feel self pity or seek pity.
Like the “emperor clothes” story,
everybody is mentally ill but covering it up. The unexpressed emotion ferments
inside and turns into psychosomatic illness such as insomnia, head ache, rash,
fever or over tiredness, etc. If you are
afraid to talk to someone else, talk to yourself, write on a piece of paper
(destroy later); sketch, paint, play music, or do anything. Any expression is theraptic. I de-stress
myself by cooking sketching, writing or binding books. Of course, if the
illness is severe; you should take treatment like any physical illness.
2. Freedom from Inadequacy
The main reason of mental illness
is “I am not up to the mark” feeling. There is nothing like a mark. It’s just
media myth. Ignore it. Refuse comparison firmly. Dalai Lama could retain his
wonderful smile always because he refuses to compare; smilingly. Everything,
everybody is good, in their own way, Unique in their own way. Everybody is
liked by somebody; nobody is liked by everybody. Dalailama also never talks of
his beauty, his wealth or his super intelligence because these are superficial.
Why should we give them too much importance, just because of media hype? Your
name and my name are different but it does not mean your name is better than
mine. Comparisons are silly and meaningless. We all know that “Beauty is in the
eyes of beholder”. Don’t be a slave
to social media which is deciding that for you. Why should media tell you how
you should look, how you should talk, what you should eat, how you should live
and so on. It is unfair on you.
3. Freedom from Truth
This is hard to digest but all
the five case studies I cited at the beginning prove this.
Hide truth or go beyond it. Tell
your mind so strongly and affirmatively what you “want” and the mind will
miraculously make it come true through your body. Placebo is a lie but the mind
does not know, so works on the belief that it cures.
We don’t realize it but we are
constantly giving auto suggestions to our mind. Our subconscious mind is our
powerful servant which tries to mould you to suite whatever strong command it
receives repeatedly. If a child is scolded repeatedly by her uncle that she is
clumsy, her mind makes sure that she becomes clumsy; even if she is originally
not.
Even after many years, when she
is going on a bicycle, her mind reminds her that she is clumsy and make sure
that she falls or she cuts her hand while cutting onions which is a simple job.
You see, her mind is trying to follow her command given some time ago. “I am
clumsy, as my uncle said”. The mind is programmed and will keep doing it till
she consciously; strongly changes it. But if she tries to run away with “I will
not ride bicycle again” she is enforcing the command; “Yes. I am clumsy”.
A girl dominated in childhood by
someone grows up to invite predatory behavior in people around her. She is the
willing sucker. In group work she works the hardest, even takes pain but finally
let some others take credit. In her heart she feels bad but her mind is forcing
her “free will” to get dominated. Our mind is creature of habit; even if it is
hurting habit.
Over - admiring your friend as
“gifted/best” is a comparison and has a danger of telling yourself “but in
comparison I am a total shit” and the poor mind tries to make your wish come
true. Anything over done is negative and has influence on subconscious. This
should not be misunderstood as advising arrogance. Praising yourself publicly is
arrogance but praising yourself internally is confidence.
I used to wear glasses in my late forties but
I hated this extra gadget stuck on my face all the time. I very strongly and crazily
wished to have “eye sight without glasses”. A book by that name gave me the
confidence to even wish so. Many times we are afraid to wish because it was
never done, it was not truth. Our knowledge is pre-conditioning our mind.
But if you strongly tell and
repeat even a lie and the subconscious mind makes it truth. Mohammed Ali
shouted publicly “I am the greatest” and his mind made him so. My biological age presently is 76; but I can
read, write (I read & write a lot) and see without glasses! My doctor does
not believe it; but it is TRUE. I told my mind that I want to read without
glasses. Do you need further proof than this?!
So praise yourself and know that
if someone is praising you, he/she is doing good to you in building your mind
and body. All the Hindu ‘stotrams’ are nothing but praise of God. Even if it is
a lie, accept it as long as there is no vicious motive. Your mind will work on
it to make it true.
According to Dr.Bruce Lipton: Mind is the primary cause of illness on this planet. A gene is just a blue print but the reading of the blue print is done by electric impulses called thought. Human body is made of 50 trillion cells each carrying 1.4 volts of electricity. Since your mind is the government of your thoughts, it can change your biology. Since thoughts can be negative or positive, it is your belief that (ultimately) controls your body. If someone tells you that you are ill and you believe it, you become ill and vice versa. In Placebo effect, it is not the pill but your own positive thought that makes the body heal.
To
sum up:
Mental illness is not a big deal,
you are second to none, and you are phenomenal!
(Written
on Teachers Day, 05.09.2020)
DEATH OF MY FATHER
(Photo Courtesy: Joginder Panghal)
I was hardly five
year old then. Just started going to school in torn half pants. No shirt, no
shoes, no books, just a slate and a running nose.
My mother was
pregnant, due to deliver any time.
Like many good
farmers, my father had the habit of getting up at early dawn, with cocks crow
and walk to our rice fields and check the water flow in the canal, damage done by
wild animals and growth of the crop. I sometimes used to accompany him to enjoy
the cool breeze, sitting on his shoulders. But on that particular day I did not
get up in time. I slept with him at night but woke up only to find his side empty
and felt disappointed a little. Little did
I know that this disappointment is going to be a permanent one.
Ours was a joint
family of 16 members and as the dawn approached everybody went about busy with one’s
own duties.
I brushed near the
bushes in the backyard and about to go for an open bath at the big clay water
tub, when I heard a commotion and ran to the front door to see, half wrapped in
my little towel.
What I saw shocked me!
Four neighbor farmers
rushed in carrying my father on their shoulders. He was unconscious. He was
laid down on a cot in the verandah and my uncle sent people on cycles to Bobbili,
a small town 4km away to fetch a doctor immediately. There was no medical man
in our tiny village Gunnathota Valasa. Clinic was a far cry.
My mother, adding to
the trouble, started complaining of labor pains. My aunts and other ladies
prevented her from knowing my father’s condition but promptly shifted her to a neighbor’s
house on some pretext for having her delivery. An old, experienced village
mid-wife was attending on her.
As the day
progressed, my father’s condition became worse. Doctors from town were kept on
being brought, in Tongas and bullock carts. My village had no motorable road.
Doctors gave injections; people who knew administrated massages but in vain. There
was no improvement. The patient was not in a condition to be moved and taken to
the town hospital.
As a puzzled kid, I
kept running from father’s sick bed to mother’s delivery room in the next house
and was peeping through peoples legs; even though I got thorough scolding and
slaps for coming in the way.
Our small house was brimming
with villagers, doctors and those who came to see or help. Some women were
already sobbing!
I could not
comprehend a thing! I bunked the school but no one bothered. By evening, there
was a baby cry in my mother’s labor room and some aunt patted me on my head and
said that I just got a sister. There was no joy when she said it. Everyone was
so preoccupied. I could not comprehend a bit.
Minutes later, as the
darkness of night was looming large, there was a big commotion and loud wailing
of women. My father was declared dead. I did not cry. I did not understand what
it meant.
It was my first
experience of a death. It was also my first experience of a birth. What an
irony! One life comes into the world, another life leaves it. We blame the
irony, not appreciating the natures beautiful way of balancing life.
But at that age I was
too young to understand anything. “Will I sleep with my father tonight?” was my
only thought I had. My father was very helpful to all farmers and field
labourers and thus liked by not only people of my village but also people of all
neighboring villages whose fields were next to ours. As the news of my father’s
death spread, people from all neighboring villages thronged, filling our
courtyard and spilling on to the streets and beyond, though it was already
night.
Most of them came
walking barefoot; few came in cycles, bullock carts, holding oil torches,
hurricane lantarms, and battery lights. The village had no electricity. As it
was the custom, the body was moved to the front yard and put on ground on a
husk mattress. An oil lamp was lit on the head side in the direction of South.
Devotional bhajans were organized to keep the vigil through the night.
Dumbstruck and
totally ignored, I moved here and there thoroughly lost. Hungry but whom could
I ask? Exhausted and aimless I fell off to sleep in some remote corner on the
floor.
I felt like an
orphan.
I woke up at dawn
next day with the din of death ritual arrangements and increased loud wailing.
Some relative noticed me at last, hugged me, cried and gave a glass of butter
milk with starch water. I was hungry and gulped it without a word.
My mother was
heartbroken as she got the news, she silently and uncontrollably kept weeping
in the neighbor’s house. She was not allowed to see my father’s body. She was
in her twenties being the second wife of my father, who divorced the first wife
since she was barren.
Elaborate death
rituals started. Bathing the body, sandal paste application, new clothing, garlands
of flowers, bamboo stretcher, loud wailing, toms-toms, drums and mantras – the
diversions to grief took place. People competed in carrying his bamboo
stretcher on their shoulders. The funeral procession was the biggest I have so
far seen in my life. It was like the Ratha-Yatra of Lord Jagannath.
Some relatives held
me back from running after the procession to the cremation ground. I wailed and
rolled on the ground but in vain.
I ran to my mother’s
delivery room. My innocent baby sister was lying next to her but no one
bothered to even acknowledge her birth! I kept staring at the tiny bundle of
flesh. I was afraid to go near!
I overheard some aunt
condemning the innocent new born saying “This girl is born and, devoured her
father. What a devil? Chee!”
How cruel we are? I
felt like beating up who ever said that. But I could not. I simply ran away far,
far from that place!