We are definitely up for climatic upheavals. The Siberian forests are burning. Forest fires blaze for weeks in North America as well. These forest fires, within a span of few weeks, have unleashed as much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as entire India does, from all sources, in a year. Mother Nature is continuously sounding the alarm signal but we have taken it for granted. So here we are busy in petty fights over business, weapons, nationalities, alliances, religion, caste, politics, race and ethnicities.
Many rulers have gone to New York to attend the UN General
Assembly session. It’s a very nice outing at the most, especially after almost
two years of incarceration when they took virtual diplomatic potshots from the
confines of their residences. My advice is please don’t get too excited. Take
it as a nice break only. This world is far better with at-ease rulers. The
moment they get agitated, it’s we subjects we bear the consequences.
The ruling Talibs of Afghanistan are feeling let down
because their representative can’t enjoy a trip to the big place. I think they
have a big space to maneuver their way into the international body. It needs a
very little step. Appoint a woman UN representative for Afghanistan. Then watch
who has the guts to deny you entry into the UN. But probably they are even more
scared of the free, independent, educated Muslim women than the
idol-worshipping kafirs.
China is just round the corner of again getting angry at the
United States. ‘Why do they have the entire UN headquarter to themselves? We
also have nice cities and ready to host the UN sessions,’ the irritated
spokesman is just about to say any day. If they don’t say this, I would
compliment them for their patience and understanding.
You just cannot enjoy the show on other’s premises, nicely
smirking over the fence. The spectacles spread like wild fire, especially if
the spectacle-couriers are around. There are plenty in the village now, by the
way. Have you ever seen a good monkey? The term doesn’t apply to their species.
At least among the rhesus monkeys you can go to the earth’s end. You will
return empty handed. So the spectacles that I have been gleefully not only watching
but writing also creep to my premises.
There has been a very busy rainy season this year. Even the
ever-thirsty farmers are folding hands under the clouds to spare the paddy that
has been sloshed to the nostrils. ‘It will drown and die!’ they plead. Water is
everywhere, it’s there is puddles, massive village pond, in canals all around
the village, in paddy fields, you just name it and there will be some water. So
who is still crazy for water? It’s the big alpha rhesus rascal. His pride and
vanity has been propped so high, after producing many dozens of tiny rascals,
that it now feels itself entitled to bathe and drink A grade water. It’s a huge
monkey with plenty of strength in its hands. The broken water tank lid on the
roof is enough testimony to his strength. My neighbor witnessed the spectacle
today just like I had witnessed his best white shirt being turned into a retirement
piece. ‘After breaking the cover, he stooped down to drink some water and then
jumped into it to bathe,’ he repeated the delayed telecast of the incidence.
There I stood helplessly watching the scene of crime. At the
other end of the terrace, the bather shook off its fur to get into action for
some more acts of the same kind. Hadn’t he growled the other day, ‘I will see
you some other day!’ I should have remembered. A lot of work awaits me. The
tank has to be cleaned and the cover fixed. So thinking better of saving my
energies, I get to the task. What is the use of getting involved with such
hooligans? They are absolutely free to be ever-busy in petty as well as big
crimes.
I feel like giving in and work with a sad visage. I don’t
even have the spirit left to shoo away the offender’s kid, a tiny chit of a
monkey who must have clapped as its father showed him how to bathe in clean
waters, took away the sole guava, which I had seen early in the morning, well
hidden and promising a good tasteful bite. The rhesus brat rolled away with its
eatable ball.
My pride is wounded. Why carry pride at all if it gets
wounded? I reflect over this and decide to be more humble.
The peacock looks lithe and smart. It moves easily and takes
longer flight to land on the terrace. It has shed its plume. The burden of
love, the huge load of shiny feathers to woo ladies, gone and here it is
roaming around carelessly. It seems to be enjoying the real fun of life. Gone
is that tension and agitated sense of purpose. When it’s dancing with its load,
it does just for the pea-hens. Now it moves around of its own. Love seems to be
pretty burdensome as judged from this episode. There should a passion for life
in totality. Love is just a nice part of living joyfully. And don’t be crazy
about anything or anyone. I think a reasonable amount of self-love does wonders
to one’s quality of life. It’s the bedrock of all other expressions of love, be
it relationships, arts, hobbies, careers, everything in fact.
The jingling notes in the silverbill nest are higher now. It
means the hatchlings are plumpier. The barn-kitten has fallen in love with the
jingling music. It’s another matter that he wants to taste the music as well. I
hope his neck doesn’t get a sprain due to continuous upward ogling. The
doormat-kitten has turned lazier by several notches. There is a high risk that
if I take away the bowl, he will howl himself to death. He survives by
continuously looking at it. What a focus?
The neighborhood simpleton goes lumbering like a kind
elephant in the street. We call him Bo. There is no rhyme and reason why he is
christened as such. He is big in body and very light in head. A wonderful state
to be in! He looks so relaxed! His target in life seems to be the one who
smoked the most number of beedies in
life. So most of the time he comes along as a rolling, rumbling steam engine
puffing out smoke with the exception that he doesn’t give sparks. He has no
fire, he is so cool. O yes, I remember now. He gets some odd sparks sometimes.
There is another simpleton at the other end of the village.
Our simpleton gives spark the moment he sees the rival in our locality. He runs
after him, remembering that the encroacher does the same if he goes to their
locality. A war of turfs, I suppose. They have divided the village in two parts
and rule according to their simple, easy, relaxed guidebook of life.
Bo is a class of his own. He can continue eating without
realizing that one’s stomach has limits. His massive legs sometimes carry scars
of injuries. He just rolls up his pyjama.
That much he does, of course. The rest of the issue is handled by Mother Nature
as his scars heal like elephant wounds despite the entire spoilsport played by
fleas and all.
He walks with his hands crossed, not on his chest, but on
his back. He is not interested to take on anything upfront by crossing hands
across chest as most of the non-simple types do. He simply lazily lumbers ahead
and will see through you as if you are a ghost and he hasn’t seen you. Greet
him in the sweetest or the shrillest manner. It’s the same to him. He is unaffected.
But he has blessed me with some rare greeting a few times as we crossed each
other in the street. ‘Kya haal hai!’
he would say and move on without waiting for any return of expression. Well, he
is in a league of his own, just because we don’t know much about their version
of perception of the world, we call them simpletons. But who knows, maybe they
are more joyful than most of us.
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