An Ode to that Wrinkled Face
This is not a story. A
story should have a beginning and an end but this has only memories; distant
and vague. The sad part is, not many are left.
She would always recite
same stories; a story about some shepherd and his sheep or that about an
obedient son. I would lie down in her lap and would fall asleep while listening
to those. She covered me with her saree’s pallu, and I felt warm and secure. I have
never slept so comfortably at any other place.
She was short and
frail. Her hairs were silver and grey, and during winters she would comb them
in the sun while I dozed off in her lap. Her skin was wrinkled and formed parallel
folds. I played with the skin around her palm and face. It was so different
from mine and I still remember its feel. Her cheeks were hollow and there were
no teeth left. She had dentures and her face changed when she wore them.
I liked her hollow
face.
She wore white cotton
sarees and had two silver bangles. To amuse me, she would take them out and
rotate on earth. I close my eyes now, and I can see them spinning, two bangles with
blackened silver and linear grooves; I hear the metallic sound when they fall
flat.
I locked her in
bathroom one day. No one was at home and she kept on banging at the door. I cried
and cried, and my neighbours broke the door to release her. The first thing she
did was to console me. I still wonder why she never got angry at me.
She was my
only friend. My father and mother went out for work and it was with her that I
spent my entire day. We would start with Peek-a-Boo,
then she would chase me while I ran and after that she would colour my picture
book. She was my Aladdin’s lamp and no wish could remain unfulfilled. She got my
favourite toys, helped me bunk school and avoid eating vegetable curry that my
mother gave. She would quietly bring in chapatti and milk which used to be my
favourite dish. She would fly with rage if anyone scolded me and would pack her
bags to leave. My parents would invariably relent.
In the evening she took
me out for a stroll. I held her finger and she would fend off elder kids who wanted
to play with me. Some people would tease her that I was not looking great, but
she would defend me with all her strength. How could her grandson not look good?
She was particular
about doing all her work herself. She would wash utensils, clean clothes and
cook her food. She insisted on doing all this even when she was ill and this
resulted in frequent fights with my dad. No one would interfere and in the end,
both will not eat till the other had food. This banter is still fondly
remembered at our home.
I do not know what kind
of lady she was. It sounds weird that a grandson should know what kind of women
her grandmother is. She is just a grandmother, period. Today when I think about
her I do not remember her crying, I do not remember her laugh; I can only
recall her serene face. I try to guess if I ask her a particular question how
she would react to that. No answers come. I can only see a smile on her face.
I do not have her pictures with me. Her solo images exist, but we will discuss about that.
I was eight when she
left. She started falling sick and was admitted to hospital at frequent
intervals. When she was discharged, my parents behaved in a strange way. A
bottle of Ganga jal was always kept beside her cot. My father would sit holding
her hand, and at times his eyes were wet. I was not allowed to play with her
but they would ask me to listen to her stories. She was often tired and would
not recite them in her usual animated tone. I still remember the last story
that she told.
My parents never told
me that she was going to die. Somehow I gathered a vague feeling that she would
not stay with us for long. She had been admitted to the hospital for quite a
few days and I was alone at home with an aunt when a telephone call came. I
overheard that she was no more.
I kept looking
outside the window waiting for her arrival; my tears would not stop. A large
crowd gathered at our home. She was brought back in an ambulance; and when they
took her out I observed that they had put cotton in her nose. It appeared that
she was in deep sleep. My father’s eyes were swollen. Incense sticks were lit
around her dead body. Everybody cried and it was a sad scene. I had never seen
so many tears. I was asked to kiss her for a last time. Her cheeks still had
those folds.
I was quietly sent to
some other place and I do not remember much about that day. Her last wish was
to be taken to some particular ghat in Varanasi for cremation and my dad
honoured that. I resented balding of my head.
A photographer was
called and most of her pictures belong to that day. Other than that, her large picture, in which she is sitting on a chair in an
attentive pose, is present at our home. Probably the one who clicked it had an idea that it could be
garlanded one day. I cannot relate to that picture and she appears unnatural in
that pose.
Her void still exists. Why
did she leave me so soon?
I see my son playing
with my mother and pray that he is more privileged than me.
8 comments:
Wonderfully written with emotions ! loved it :)
Sir, does the last line need correction? -- I see my son playing with HIS mother and pray that he is more privileged than me.
Sir, does the last line need correction? -- I see my son playing with HIS mother and pray that he is more privileged than me.
@Kalyan: Thanks
@Anup: But the article was about my grandmother, did I fail to convey that :P
This is so similar to the incident that took place with me when my grandpa expired!!! I was with my aunt at home and i overheard the conversation. I wasnt informed about his death either! all i go to know that he was dead when his body with the cotton on his nose appeared in front of me!! I truly Miss him!
a good read! loved it
It almost brought tear to my eyes.
The best thing about your writing is it is "simple".
It almost brought tear in my eyes.
The best thing about your writing style is it is "simple".
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