The matter-like behaviour is a property of the cosmic mind, the universal intelligence throbbing as the energy. Mind, universal collective consciousness, is the primary cosmic constituent. The so-called matter is merely a manifestation of it, just a dependent property. Had it been the reverse, i.e., mind-type behaviour of matter, we surely would require the basic, unbreakable building blocks having intrinsic properties in terms of atomic and subatomic particles. But as we see it, subatomic particles have no intrinsic value and properties independent of the observer. With matter first, and mind just its behaviour, eternity would be mathematically impossible. However, a fundamental entity in the form of cosmic mind leaves an open ended, ever evolving field for the manifestation of matter in countless ways over eternal paths of creation. Simply because there is no intrinsic property or value to define and limit the material manifestation. Call it the cosmic energy or the cosmic mind. It's a dimensionless plane where any kind of material dimension is possible to draw out of nothingness. The limitless canvas. Wipe it, draw another. On and on. Is there any limit to imagination? No. Same is the case with cosmic mind's imagination. Eternal are its horizons.
The posts on this blog deal with common people who try to stand proud in front of their own conscience. The rest of the life's tale naturally follows from this point. It's intended to be a joy-maker, helping the reader to see the beauty underlying everyone and everything. Copyright © Sandeep Dahiya. All Rights Reserved for all posts on this blog. No part of this blog may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author of this blog.
About Me
- Sufi
- Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)
Sunday, January 21, 2024
Monday, January 15, 2024
The pointless point
To look for ultimate truth, or reality, or absolute knowledge, the body would need immense amount of energy. Because the normal levels of energy would be sufficient to sustain the normal, collective perception that conditions our mind to settle for base-level actualization of the infinite potential.
It’s mankind’s destiny to go for
truth, now or later, in this journey or the ones to come. It’s a natural
evolutionary flow, it cannot be avoided. In an unawakened state this energy
will go randomly, in dissipative ways, creating sweet-sour mischief, this
worldliness. But it’s merely a matter of time—the time spanning various
lifetimes—before it stabilizes, develops patterns of self-discipline to touch a
peak in that very individual consciousness. It enables the carrier body to look
for what lies beyond the simple perception-based reality. And the still
remaining stumbling blocks in body, mind and emotions have to fall along;
otherwise one learns the things in a tough task-masterly way.
This heightened energy finds different
expressions like bhakti (devotion). Gyan (knowledge), karma (action), art and
still much more that we don’t have a clue as of now.
The evolution in consciousness will
never hit a dead end. It’s a cosmic soup of infinite potential. What you think,
feel, imagine or act sets a new point of reality. And it goes on at every point
of existence.
Faith-based expression of heightened
energies is a very sublime form of expression. This dimension unfolds in the
corridors of bhaav. It’s very near the
soul, this channel. It’s warmly loving and draws warmth from the soul itself,
the high point of joyous realization in the individual consciousness. It’s so
easy to jump into the river of ‘relative bliss’ from this point because it’s
very near to the source profound bliss. But before that faith has to shine
bright in its purity and there will be tests through situations and
circumstances, just like there will be in other paths.
In its karma expression, this
energetic blizzard will sire a karma yogi in the carrier body. The carrier body
will express its energetic storms in setting up disciplined, righteous
energetic patterns (dharma) in the society around, like Rama and Krishna did.
In its gyan expression, the individual
consciousness in its carrier body will try to know more and more, observe
keenly, understand, draw logical conclusion in an effort to make a meaning of
this mystery and chaos. It’s an effort to cut the mind with its own tools,
using the basic faculties of the mind to undo its own framework. To allow mind
to run as much as possible in its pursuit of knowledge, so that finally it
stands helplessly, falls and sees a better expression across the cobwebs of its
constructs.
There is another dimension of the
expression of this energetic storm, a replica of the massive stars bursting
somewhere in the cosmos. It’s kindalini awakening. It’s the most tangible of
all the expressions. It’s a raw, naked force. It stands in front of you,
holding you in its grip with a direct maneuver. It doesn’t take any diplomatic
cover. It stares in your face. It shakes you. It’s nearest to the gross body in
its expression. It’s so near to the base level of ego identification that you
clearly feel its storm in the body as it breaks the obstructions in its path. I
would say it’s a mixture of all the three above mentioned expressions. You are
jolted off your safe zone at all levels of your existence. To make a meaning of
all these psychic reshaping, the reformulation of the nervous system, the remodeling
of the perception channel—which is usually tough with many instances of things
going very wrong—the carrier body takes help of bhakti, gyan and karma (randomly,
in various orders) as per the shifting surges of this psychic force in the
system.
Whichever way it happens in an
individual carrier body, I don’t think there is a final arriving. It’s an
infinite potential. The so-called ‘final arriving’ in itself a self-set
benchmark by the evolved consciousness who rose high, perceived far more than
normal people and agreed to a point. It’s just like space travel. You keep
travelling and never reach any edge and then accept a conceptually defined
reality: Ok, let’s agree to set up this point as the boundary of the space.
Sunday, January 14, 2024
A good journeyman
You feel lonely on your path and a stranger comes your way. You both walk and smile and become familiar. And at some turn both of you drift apart. Who won't like to go smiling all the way till the end? But still people drift apart because destination is rarely the same. Pain is natural. Memories also cast long shadows from behind. All one can do is to commit oneself to come as a better, more evolved person if at some turn on the path, faraway in future, you come to walk by the side of that same person. This is what I would say doing justice to one's past without wasting present and losing a sight of the future.
Monday, January 8, 2024
Nurturing a soulmate
I know we have an overestimated view of our own validity and suitability to be an idealistic soulmate, provided we come across someone suitable person for our pre-existing suitability to be a soulmate. Sounds a bit egoistic! In practical life, soulmateship is fabricated and carefully formulated with conscious effort. Soulmates are delicately worked upon relationships. We presume that we are a package and wait for the destiny to make us meet our soulmates. Well, guys it doesn't work that way. Soulmates are made. We never meet someone as soulmates. Don't expect to meet yours. Love, that initial attraction and biological pull, is just the first step. After that it's a long way to a careful walk on the road to turn someone's soulmate.
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Likes and dislikes
I
know it’s very difficult to like everyone around. We are primarily indifferent
to the strangers. And that constitutes the major part of humanity around us. Then
come those whom we know directly or even indirectly. Among these we have strong
likes and dislikes for someone. Let’s start with the ones whom we dislike.
Dislike is a pretty heavy value judgment. It leaves long shadows of emotions
and thoughts in our brain that eat a lot of energy, block the smooth flow of pranic energy inside, leaving behind
niggling tugs of restlessness at our being.
‘Likes’
also have their effects on us. Because likes change into dislikes as well.
Change is the ultimate law, we shouldn’t forget. We create a web of dislikes to
sustain our likes because the latter seem supportive to our identity.
Ultimately both likes and dislikes have to melt because they are two sides of
the same coin. But since dislikes leave direct negative impact on our
psychosomatic system, it’s advisable to start with dislikes. Cut down on your
quota of dislikes, gradually like a sculptor chipping away extra stones to
carve out a beautiful idol. Chip away slowly. The extra stone of dislikes is a
part of you. Accept it. But it needs to be shed to be the best version of
yourself. This is what I mean by ‘making of oneself’. You have the choice to be
the same monolith as you were born. There is nothing wrong with that. Just that
at the end of the journey you feel guilty for having wasted an opportunity. After
all, we have to pass in the court of our own conscience.
Try
to be indifferent to the objects of your dislikes. The perception of someone as
your enemy should dilute to indifference over a period of time. Once you have
no enemies, you will automatically get away from the weight of friendly
attachment. I mean you will still like those whom you consider your friends but
your liking won’t come from your needs and a fear of support. It will be free
of bondage.
Once
you become indifferent to your enemies, you become more realistic and natural
about your friends as well. You don’t hold too many expectations. Most of the
time, our expectations and needs of security pass as our likes and
friendliness. You still will have your core group of people who will stay
irrespective of your attachment or no attachment. And dear sadhak, as you move in the middle of the path of likes and
dislikes, equally distant from both, you don’t feel the rub and friction that
you feel on the edges on both sides. Start with being indifferent to your
dislikes. Then everything becomes the same over the decades of your life. It
breeds a sweet indifference. Enemies and
friends melt in the same pot.
I’m
no spiritualist preaching an all-encompassing love. That seems too idealistic
to a common man like me. I talk about what is feasible. My only problem with
scriptures of all religions is that they would straightaway ask one to be an
earthly version of god, an all-loving, smiling, godly entity. It makes you
guilty because you are human and would slip and the priests and scriptures
stare like tough teachers in your conscience.
I
try not to forget that it’s easy to say the most utopian things. But we are no
gods. We are poor earthlings and we have our little journeys, the journey of a little
species of nature. So my sadhna at
the moment is just to cut down on my dislikes for my enemies, whom I sometimes
feel like kicking at their bums for their errant ways, to a level of just mild
irritated grimace, then to a slight burn at my ego, then to indifference, maybe
later to forgiveness and who knows, if I’m lucky, even love them one day.
Dear
brothers and sisters, why be a victim of too lofty expectations based on
scriptural theses? I know I’m a work in progress. So why should I go itching
for enlightenment? I will take my time. I decide my pace and feel happy if on
the completion of another year on my journey I see some improvement. To be
joyful about tiny gains is a wonderful art. I for one feel like celebrating the
day when I am carefully walking and avoid crushing an ant. Why shouldn’t I
celebrate? If I don’t have it in me to save elephants, why shouldn’t I turn
joyful on saving an ant? Saving an ant keeps the hope of care and consideration
alive in me. I’m happy with my little quota of kindness for it saves me from
complete darkness.
Lastly,
never take life too seriously. What appears on the surface is just an
impression forced by our senses on the infinite pools of cosmic fluidity.
A walk on the countryside road
India
is developing very fast. The roads are being built at a hair-raising speed. We
see world class road building technology and engineering equipment at the
construction sites. They make roads very quickly, a smooth cakewalk like a
knife cutting through cheese. During good old days the money would start from
the ministry and it would trickle down to a measly percentage as the famished
tar and asphalt was poorly dumped. It would break up in the next rainy season.
It was a slow world carried by slow-moving files and still slower archaic road
rollers. Now it’s quick and lightning fast. The road-building machinery and
construction firms have taken the game to a new high. The roads are good. Any
give and take in the process, the subtle game between construction
conglomerates and ministries is beyond the understanding of common people like
you and me.
The
other day I was walking on the narrow countryside road connecting my village to
the neighboring village about three kilometers away. It’s a musty humid
desultory evening. The monsoon has been lenient so far. There is plenty of
grass and bushes by the sides, especially bhang.
It’s almost a monotony over the farm-sides at this time. And the poor people
who need to opiate themselves to forget the burden of life can have a free hand
at it. They expertly move their hands through the leaves and gather the dust to
smoke weed. Two old people are walking slowly and there they stand under a jamun tree. One of them, the physically
better one, shakes a bough and there is a drizzle of ripe purple juicy berries.
His still older companion gathers them in a little plastic bag. They will eat
to their full and carry the extra stuff for their respective favorite
grandchild.
The
road is in bad condition. It is far away from the direct administrative
scrutiny. Small-time contactors can take liberties as in the old days. A new
layer of asphalt gets washed away after just one rainy season. The farmers
hardly complain. Their tractors also don’t grumble about it. And there I come
across something reminding me of the good old slow-paced days: the old-style
road roller, a faded yellow iron elephant. They are repairing a little section
where the road has completely vanished. The triple drum roller—three drums for
wheels—slowly whines and winces over soil, gravel and concrete, trying its
level best to do its compacting job diligently like an old worker. It’s all
iron from head to tail. The diesel engine puffs and huffs, billows big bales of
smoke. In comparison to the latest engineering vehicles, it looks a rudimentary
horse-drawn roller of the last to last century. There is a lock on the fuel chamber.
There is another over the engine chamber. The iron elephant has to spend lonely
nights on a solitary narrow road at nights so its engine and fuel have to be
saved from the farmers.
When
I return by the same path after an hour, I find the iron elephant resting. Two Bihari operators are mounted under the
iron canopy and watching videos on their mobiles. A third workman is sitting
against the front roller, his legs spread out. I hope he hasn’t put up a
challenge that to move ahead they have to go over him.
A snapshot of future
For
the last couple of centuries we have been a knowledge-driven world. We have
been harvesting, inventing and discovering facts with greater speed with the
passage of time. So data, and their derivatives called algorithms, will be the
new god. A new religion, artificial intelligence, will replace all other belief
systems. In medical science the algorithms based on medical statistics will
equip the artificial intelligence tools to spin out diagnosis, recommend
medication and perform surgeries. The lawyers who used to burn midnight oil to
draft their papers on the basis of thick tomes of law books will get all that
done at the click of a button. The writers will be replaced by content
generation tools. Music, arts, painting, name it anything will see artificial
productions. Now the question arises, what will the humans do. We will be the operators.
Mere operators, not the doer of things.
See,
in ancient times a farmer drew furrows on ground with the help of crude wood
and stone implements. Then he used cattle to pull the plough. Still, later he
did it with tractor. Now, in the last one he is a mere operator of machinery. So
we will be a civilization of operators primarily. Drones, robotic soldiers,
unmanned military vehicles will be operated by the soldiers in office. The
politicians will operate narrative machines and brand management through social
media and other artificial applications of socializing and communicating.
Human
mind cannot stop at any limits. It has to continuously spin out newer and newer
realities. Virtual realities are a reflection of its urge to break all
boundaries and flow out, do more, acquire more, control and manipulate more.
The operating minds will be as busy as ever. We will devise more complex
structures, problems, institutions, authorities, industry and corporate to
adjust the new quantum leap in what we can accomplish. We have to be busy. The
population will increase and to adjust the cravings of billions of fresh minds
to do something, new avenues need to be set up.
What
about the human resource problem? Suppose a team of ten content creators is
replaced by one machine and its smart operator. What will the other nine do?
They will have to be adjusted in labor intensive jobs. But labor intensive jobs
will dry up over a period of time with unprecedented increase in the automation
of tasks and processes. I think the civilization will come at loggerheads:
operators (the new nobility) on one side and non-operators (the masses) on the
other. But it will be so easy for the operators to tame the latter or even
eliminate them.
Maybe
the institutions of marriage, raising kids, maintaining lineage will crumble
up. That might cut down population growth. Or even the operators will find
smart ways to check population growth and maintain it at a sustainable level.
The September coup
I
won’t term it as nothing short of a coup, September coup. The very same
fragile, see-through nest had another dove couple setting home and hearth. A
surprise—two eggs survived to hatch. Many factors contributed to it. One, the
yard was catless during this period. Only one feral cat spent time in the
garden but I doubt it ever hunted even a mouse. Even kittens would spank it. So
it spent most of the time hiding and begging a few pieces of chapatti from me when
hunger would break all limits. Fifteen days of shraadh also contributed. People left lots of eatables as
ceremonial offerings on wall-tops for monkeys and birds, especially crows. So
they were well fed, taking little interest in dove kids.
The
nest is so small and fragile that one of the hatchlings fell and died. It was a
plump kid. Then it rained incessantly for three days. The little one somehow
kept clutching at the tiny, tilted nest. The hatchling looked bigger than the
nest. Look at the seriousness of the parents in preparing a home for their
kids! Hitting a jackpot of luck, it grew to look like a dove. Then it went
missing on September 25, most probably served as breakfast to some predator.
But still I would consider it a successful hatching from the dove standards
because the majority of their eggs don’t survive. Here at least something grew
at last to look like a dove.
Climate Change
Time
sweeps the slate clean and draws a new picture, only to do it again. Climate
change has seen unprecedented droughts world over—and flooding—especially
Europe and America. As rivers and reservoirs dry, there emerge telltale
footprints of the largest animals earth has seen, dinosaurs. Weighing dozens of
tons and standing taller than even our buildings who would have imagined they
would be wiped out one day. A comet or meteorite strike off the coast of
Mexico—leaving an almost 100 mile wide and 12 mile deep crater—unleashed tidal waves and global winter. The dinosaurs
vanished from earth.
Presently,
as rivers in France and Germany dry up, we see hunger stones exposed—a kind of
famine memorial engravings—telling the tales of human sufferings. The engravers
left them as a mark of severe drought and famine that struck the region. When
the rivers dried up and the humanity hit the rock bottom of miseries, someone
engraved this message on an exposed stone in the river: ‘When you see me,
weep.’ Another famine stone has the message: ‘When this stone goes under, life
will become more colorful again.’
Grandpa's story
It was a tough life for Grandfather. His father was bitten to death by bumble bees when he was only twelve. Grandfather had three siblings, all younger to him, two brothers and a sister. Those were the days of family feuds over land. The extended family had lots of domineering males and fearing for her life Grandfather’s widowed mother left the scene. At such a young age Grandfather became the family head. A mother abandoning her children left a deep scar on his heart for which he perhaps carried a heavy grudge against the entire women race. They were so young and had been left to fend for themselves, so maybe he was slightly justified in his discomfort about trusting women in general.
Well,
they had to literally survive at the mercy of the clan members who tilled
Grandfather’s land. The children toiled in the fields and got survival crumbs.
Grandfather was very fond of studies but his life situation never allowed him
to go beyond class eight.
When
the boys came of age, taking possession of their land was a big milestone to be
crossed. A kindly but burly farmer stood by them as they, armed with hayforks
and sticks, tilled their first furrows as independent tillers of their share of
land.
From
the standards of the rustic society, Grandfather was almost a mathematics
wizard. The village patwari had to
depend on him to calculate and measure land. Grandfather loved playing with
numbers. It seemed to be his Ikigai.
He
once enrolled himself in the army. A very athletic and agile man he was making
a good mark in running and kabbadi as
a trainee recruit. His younger brother was also in the army and in the absence
of senior menfolk the wives and children faced a lot of problems back home.
Seeing their plight, one of his nephews, a zamadar
in the British army, got his name struck off from the roll, on the plea that
his uncle had run away from home, leaving behind his wife and children at the
mercy of fate. In this way, Grandfather’s army career was nipped in the bud.
He
was the only educated person in the surrounding area so he was then appointed
as a primary school teacher. He held his tiny school in chaupals, where he taught all the primary students gathered in one
group at a single place. These never exceeded a dozen or two constituting a
single class for all the students at various rungs of academics from class one
to five.
My
granduncle was serving as a jailor of Multan prison and my father in fact did
his schooling from the first to third standard from Multan. Later, Father would
boast of his Multan schooling and fondly reminisced that the prisoners treated
him like a prince.
In
1947 the partition-time tragedy broke millions of dreams including
Grandfather’s teaching career. There was an influx of refugees. Grandfather was
relieved of his teaching duties and his position was given to some poor refugee
trying to begin a new chapter here in India after the carnage.
A
tragedy then struck the family. Granduncle died of tuberculosis followed by his
wife shortly later. My own grandmother also died. So here was Grandfather all
alone with his own son (my father) aged around ten and two little sons of the
deceased granduncle, one aged five and the other just two. My second granduncle
set up his separate family. So Grandfather had the task of rearing three sons
singlehandedly. He stood up in his role as a crude version of father and mother
both embaled in one unit. He didn’t remarry, fearing the stepmother would turn
the life of the three boys very difficult. As I have said he had his own reasons
to look at women with apprehension.
He then
worked as a farmer and made several entrepreneurial attempts apart from his
farming tasks. One of these was brick-making. Those were rudimentary
brick-kilns where the bricks were baked in a heap under fuel wood, coal and
dung cakes. Being a mathematician he was more into numbers and calculations,
taking it as a big mathematical puzzle. His clever partners, who ran field
operations, easily duped him while Grandfather was busy with his calculation
books.
Grandfather
appeared to be farsighted for those times. He found that Bengal had hardly any
milk because their cattle were so small and famished. He mustered a band of
like-minded farmers. They chose buxom-most buffaloes and these were boarded on
a cargo train. The entourage chugged ahead on a long journey to Calcutta.
Little did they realize that the Bengali babus
hardly had a stomach for Punjabi lactose. They were, and still are, happy with
their fish and scores of cuisines coming out of their cultural box. As can be
expected the venture failed miserably.
Once,
a farmer owed some money to Grandfather. The said farmer and his clan migrated
to Pilibheet in Nepal terai and
started farming there on leased lands. Grandfather knew how to keep his debtor
still in sight. He followed them there with some calves. He thought that
grazing on their land would fatten the calves and this would at least cover the
interest on the money. The calves grew really well among the lush Himalayan
foothill greenery. But there were leopards and tigers ready to pounce and take
away their share from Grandfather’s debt recovery scheme. They smartly chucked
away Grandfather’s interest earnings that manifested in the form of oodles of
muscles on the growing cattle. Grandfather was left with one sturdy bull to
show some proof of his venture to the villagers back home. He thought if he
could transport that impressive bull to the village, it would help him save his
name as an entrepreneur. The journey was stretched over many parts including
walking and motor transport. During one leg of the journey the bull jumped from
the wagon and broke its leg. Grandfather arrived at the village with a
famished, limping bull.
Irrespective
of all his setbacks he maintained his passion for mathematics. Its ripples would
touch us till matriculation when he tried to solve algebra through his
arithmetic techniques because algebra was outside his domain.
Rasleela
In the untouched, unmoving majesty of this virgin forest, an old, pale banyan leaf snaps the last sinew of its twigged bondage and flows down to enter the slumberous folds of the dusty bed prepared by mother earth. An end? Or a new beginning? Maybe both. Maybe none. It just is. But it’s a leap into a broader dimension to be a part of another game.
Isn’t
there playfulness around? Beginning, ending, birth, death, life, living, all
connote a play. Be playful. Like Krishna! A series of playfulness from rasleela with gopis to killings for dharma in the battlefield and lastly his own
death by a chance arrow in a forest. A beautiful play! Embrace playfulness. Why
be serious yar? Let’s leave
seriousness for our weird, funny, scary, stony, sulky corpses once we exit this
avatar.
Tuesday, January 2, 2024
Human Touch
Being a bookish guy, I’m not much into physical activities. But walking on pilgrimages seems to add a different dimension of physicality and I’m able to surpass my individual capacity and surprise my own humble self sometimes.
I share a special bond with my brother
and we are here at Rishikesh at the yearend to say a bye of gratitude to the
year going out and greet the new year with hope in the lap of mother Ganga. We
bathe in Maa Gnaga’s holy waters early in the morning and start on the foot
track to the holy shrine of Baba Neekanth. The track passes through verdant
Shivalik hills of Rajaji National Park. It’s fresh and rejuvenating. At the
grossest level it’s a nice exercise for one’s legs and lungs. For those who are
looking for the nutrition of their souls, the names of Maa Ganga and Baba
Neelkanth do the task naturally.
We go on day one and return pretty
joyfully in the evening. The next day we again take early morning bath in the
holy water of Ganga Maa and suddenly feel so reinvigorated to start walking
again to the holy shrine. The same happens on the third day. And before we
realize we have walked to the holy place on three consecutive days. Our
schedule didn’t allow us to continue the walk on the fourth day, otherwise I believe
I would have continued for maybe a week at least. Bathing in Maa Ganga’s sacred
waters cleanses one of age-old sins. So getting one free of tiredness and
fatigue is a mere cakewalk for the divine waters.
Each day, an old woman would greet us
from a distance during the last stretch of the track to Baba Neelkanth. This is
the offseason for the pilgrimage and very few people hit the track. She peers into
the distances to spot some odd pilgrim. She is an old woman beaten by poverty,
age, circumstances. Almost beaten by life and its leela, she has a pleading
voice. It strikes you. Her helplessness and disadvantaged situation acting like
a speed-bump, pulling at your conscience, forcing you to slow down, look at her.
And that sometimes forces a few pilgrims to take out a coin or a ten-rupee note
and offer it to her.
On the way up, the first day, we have
given her ten rupees. She would continue showering blessings at your back as
you walked away. I heard her till the next bend and waved and looked back a few
times. On the way back, she again accosts us as fresh pilgrims. ‘Tai, you can see I know. We already met
on the way up!’ I laugh. ‘Yes son, I know. But beta I have to ask from you even on the way down because I have
collected too little money,’ she tells us very honestly. We give her a little
money again.
It gets repeated on the second day as
well. Somehow I felt very easy with her and talked and joked and she laughed.
On the third day, December 31, we decide to give her hundred rupees as a new
year gift. And what does a tiny currency note mean as a gift if you don’t sit
by that person and have a word of empathy and kindness? So today we sit by her
and offer her the gift money.
Then the spontaneity of those somber,
kind, holy moments created a simple reality of human-to-human connect. Its real
significance would strike me later and it does even now with a powerful effect.
As we held her hands and offered her new year gift with kind words of happiness
in the new year, the check-dam of her age-old emotions burst out. She started
crying. These were tears of pain, happiness, suffering, hope. All mixed in one.
She seemed a little baby crying for affection, for sympathetic human touch. My brother
is a spiritualist in practice. I have a very high regard for his genuine values
that he keeps on the practical platform of life. But what he does now even
stumps me. I see him putting his both hands on her head, his both hands affectionately
covering her head. He touches her like a father, like a son, almost like a god.
Her lifelong pains melt. She flows.
She cries profusely. I have no doubt ours happens to be the first human touch
of love, respect and dignity in her entire life. Her soul felt it. As a poor
begging woman, the best she can expect from people is some charity money even
from the kindest of souls. I felt she wasn’t prepared for this warm, genuine
human touch. The way she gave into it seemed as if it was her first experience
that made her realize she was also a human being. She is also something above
and beyond a beggar. I know there are people who would throw a thick wad of
money even without taking care to look how she looked. But will that enrich her
soul that way this touch did?
We move onto the holy shrine of Lord
Neelkanth. She is still crying with love and gratitude for that human touch and
we can hear her blessings till the next turn. On the way back, I can see that
she is peering into the distance to see us. As we reach her she greets us with
a cheerful demeanor and smiles. As we sit by her to have some more chat, the sweetest
fruits of human touch and kind words drop like a blessing on us. She opens her
soiled, torn cloth bag and opens a treasure of human love. We get the best new year
gifts by a devi. In our absence, she had hastened to a nearby pathside tiny tea
seller and bought gifts for us. She gives us our gifts like a kindest mother.
It’s a packet of Kurkure crunchies and a small packet of biscuits. We are the
richest people in the world. I’m not a fan of crunchies but this one I would
relish like a little kid. After all it’s a gift by a mother.
Did our few ten-rupee notes and one
one-hundred note opened this lottery of human affection? No. Money is too small
to buy human empathy and love. It was the human touch and kind words. Touch at
the closed stony gates of a poor human and see what treasures topple out, the
treasures that would have withered and died unseen if not for your touch.
We feel so indebted for the priceless
gift that we offer her some more money and she takes it with confidence and
faith like a mother receives her well-deserved share from her sons. She is very
happy and points to her tattered sari and says she will buy a new one with this
money.
As we get up to go and express our
hope to see her again sometime in the new year, she starts crying again and
says who knows she may not be alive by that time. Through tears she says that her
life might be over before we come again on this path. I can feel that she would
very much like to meet us—for that human touch. Thankfully there are enough
kind souls who would at least give a bit of money which is also necessary for
survival in this world. But how I wish there were more people who provide human
touch as well, a touch that reminds a poor person that she also is a human being.
We moved slowly on our path, her
blessings showering like rose petals from behind. It was a sad feeling, somehow;
leaving someone behind with sad tears—even if these are of gratitude and love—is
too much for a poetic man like me. I looked back a few times and waved and she
waved in reply. At the bend I turned again, had a glimpse of her waving hand,
heard a feeble reverberation of her blessings and moved on with the hope that
she will be there when I return sometime in future.