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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)

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

croakings of a Clumsy Frog -- 4

 

THE LAWS

HAVE

THEIR CLAWS

THAT FURTHER EXPLOIT

THE HUMAN FLAWS.

If those in power could take corruption to the extent of CWG, coal mines and 2G spectrum, thus writing it clearly on the wall at every nook corner that it’s how things are done. Everybody knew that corruption came perilously close to be synonymous with Congress. With the incentive of all this knowledge, the masses again voted these people into power in 2009. It proved that we aren’t just a poor helpless bunch of monkeys. We are in fact street smart guys who know how things get facilitated by creeping into the dusty corridors of governance through covert or overt means.

Manmohan Singh became the third longest serving PM of India after Nehru and Indira. It also proves that we Indians have a lot of digestion for the hereditary rule. If we are to believe in the system of royalty, Nehru the King and his royal family have long-standing prospects in our ruling affairs and rightly so. It’s as per our customs that we are comfortable with royalty and hereditary hold over knowledge, skills and rulership. Well, if it finds favour with the majority of my countrymen then a cribbing commoner like me should shut his mouth very tight. In fact, I’m keenly waiting for the Yuvraj to become the PM of India, which he will surely at least once.

When lacs of your own sons and daughters are taking pot-shots at you, think o mighty Hindustan think! Either you have turned out to be a very bad father or they are the worst of children.

I've an arrowed heart; its insensitive steel a check dam across the smooth flow of the river of my sensitivities. But more painful is the fact that the hands that pulled the string of the merciless bow are the hands of my own people. My Bhisma’s arrowed body with countless holes in it offers the outlets for the outflow of immeasurable sins committed by me and my near and dear ones.

It rains in the hills. Muck, shit, garbage, cow and people stink even more. But Ma Ganga gets a nutritious face pack. Its sediment-laden torrents gain victory over the errant child perennially shitting and pissing in its motherly lap.

While many an Indian PM delivered the costmary Red Fort speech, it has rained during the last leg of the monsoon season. It always appears to me that God pours water to wash some of our collective sins. Thank God, our cute to cumbersome PMs’ khadi appears spotless and clean.

We shouldn’t evaluate our status by analyzing shadows. Just because we have long shadows in the morning and evening doesn’t mean we are giants. If you think so then we are dwarfs at noon. So go for the substance fella. That will confirm the real status. It will puncture the ego, leak out extra air from the balloon of your existence and allow you to fly at a height where you deserve to be.

Croakings of a Clumsy Frog -- 3

 

Yamuna is up to a complete facelift this time. More rains, more torrents packed with hilly sediments. But the runnels of Yamuna rushing past the flood plains in Delhi still bear the marks of defecations on her holy brow. There was a time, as close as three years back, when two elephants played on the semi-stinking sand, raised their trunks to pay homage to the inherent holiness. The laws have their claws. They were dispatched to some sanctuary. The mother seems to miss its muddy roly-poly babies.

The lush green rippling pastures of yore are gone. It’s now a barren, stony waste stretched for miles after miles in my heart. The fiery sun bakes the sand and the sandstorms screech and howl. Joy only so little as would amount to some lone dewdrop on a singular blade of grass if that can survive. And the sufferings lay piled up like daunting sand dunes. They don’t change, they just creep invidiously. The rose that once blossomed and smiled when all this was a lively, joyful garden is now a dry thorny memoir. It stands there like a crooked garland of thorns draped around the heart. It pricks and lets loose a torrent of memories that nibble at whatever moisture lies there among the barren waste.

A lot many words have lost their essence in spirit. They survive half-alive in ‘letter’ only. They are no longer those perfumed living entities that their ‘spirit’ bestowed them. If ‘letter’ is the body, the ‘spirit’ carries the soul of a word. We have squashed the ‘spirit’ like a worm. To take our mechanical assault one step ahead, we are pummelling the ‘letter’ part now. The literal meanings of all the nice words have entered the obsolete book of poetic justice. Guys for the real practical meanings rub these shiny words till the blindfolding glitter vanishes to show you the more realistic stuff.

Institutionalised plundering has been the first priority of the political class in democracy. We aren’t saying anything about the outright autocracies because there plunder, looting and exploitation isn’t a mere ‘priority’, it’s an outright and sole ‘right’ of those who wield power. In a democracy, sadly our ruler has to come out of this breed only. Is there a way out? Yes, it’s the civil society. Guys cast your alternative vote. Join the ranks of the civil society movement. The civil society guys are basically a thorn in the flesh of the democratic autocrats. The world is yet to witness its first perfectly democratic government, by the way. Peep over the wall and see the massive bundles of lies, conceit, forgery, falsehood, loot and plunder that go through the legal machines of autocratic democracies. A slightly heightened sense of awareness is the eligibility to be a foot-soldier of the civil society movement. In future, the civil society would become the flag bearer of democracy in autocratic democracies. 

Life isn’t all about pursuing your dreams; it’s also about fighting for the leftovers lying in your plate after the hungry fate has satisfied its gluttony.

Croakings of a Clumsy Frog -- 2

 

The sea has but no option other than to feel its existence through each and every drop cradled in its immensity. Each drop has the very same code of creation as the entire sea. Similarly, the entire cosmos has the only option to feel its lively, enthralling expansion, its pulsating consciousness, through you, me and all of us around. Each sand grain, each particle in the air and the void itself bespeaks of the very same code of creation, the very same primal consciousness. When you know more of yourself and others and the life in general, the cosmos is in fact engaged in a sweet self-reflection.

Don't look down upon people just because they are poor and look dirty. Every type of soil has its own characteristics worth gold. We try to see in others what we ourselves lack. Before condemning and degrading someone else over looks, wealth, power and position, we have already condemned our own selves for lacking the same. How will you judge anyone without having been a thorough, bitter judge of your own self? The prejudice that we cast on others is first practiced within the workshop of one's own self. How will you hate anyone if you haven't been hating yourself secretly about your supposed failures, shortcomings and expectations?

We cannot avoid doing wrong. But we can at least try to learn to do wrong things for the right reasons.

A widow fleeing from a Taliban ravaged town in Afghanistan says: ‘When there are two girls in a family they take one to marry her to a fighter; when there are two boys they take one to make him fight.’

The bloody saga opens full throttle again in Afghanistan. And the outsiders go there to have their share of the pie and then leave. Superpower blocks cannot heal the Afghan soul. They have bled it too much for many decades. Any healing, even cosmetic in effect, has to come through the UN. Afghanistan needs a UN peacekeeping force. With strong Indian boots on the ground, of course.

Dogs, slums, shit, squalor, stray cows, filthy pigs, poisoned air, plundering rulers, dying truth, abandoned and obsolete god. And in all this, we the commoners lost like plagued rats. The rain lays bare the reality on our so called swank 21st century metropolitan cities. Flooded potholed roads convey the scars that we carry in our imagination. Dirtier than shit garbage lays the foundation of the karmabhoomi of wormish survivals. Salutes my cities!

The farmers are shedding blood of their will power for their mother earth. The very same earth whose maternity they have maintained through countless sweat and blood drops falling on her golden crystals. Land grabbers beware! They will stay. Want to test their stamina? Well, do it at your own risk!

The real skill of we Indians lies in mindless, reckless, profuse and enthralling procreation. It seems to be a full time job. We just love conceiving, even more than the ecstatic moments preceding the conception. No wonder, we are a big, buzzing ant-swarm now. Jostling and lost in its own directionless, blindfolding majesty.

Croakings of a Clumsy Frog -- 1

 

Well, well, well it has been worth it. The storm of course had steely nerves. But then it inspires the very same in you. Unstretched you are just a lethargic, spiritless loop of rope, waiting for the time and its agents to nibble at your sinews. Stretched you become a taut bowstring ready to unleash your potential into the existence around you. Unstretched you are a mere creation, a product. Stretched you are a creator, hurtling your potential on the ever-expanding canvas of creation.

Accepted that it was a blizzard worth its salt. A whirlpool of energy whipping up an expansionist storm. But then it also had every right for expansion like all things, phenomena and living beings. Importantly, it hardly left any visibility on the real creative stage of my life. Adversities are simply new avenues for the expansion of our potential.

Trying to see the way out, I strengthened the muscles of my will power and the eyesight of my inner self. I feel better with the iron in my spirit. Nothing goes waste fella. This is the law. Even the most unfavourable lot cast by the fate can’t overrule this. The most it can do is to take away the most common and expected result of one’s endeavour. And is that loss worth crying for and devalue the precious gain in the real substance of your existence?

Laughing at one’s own follies in life surely prepares one for gentle, solacing smiles at others.

He was a saint for he sat stoically among the garbage dirtier than shit. The dog saint, the holy friar of an unholy shrine. And me the follower, the dirty puppy playing in the filth. Now if I drive my soul mad to get enlightenment, do you think there can be a bigger fool?

A star shines in my eyes. It shoots off on an exciting, perilous journey, leaves a dusty whiz across my horizon and its remnants, instead of crashing into the sea, land on my head. I get a nice crater on my heart.

What is success after all? Is it beating others in their achievements? Or meeting others' expectations from you? Or surpassing your own dreams? Or a wispy, pleasant feeling at the day end, ‘Fella you have not been a mere weight on earth!’

The sun shines bright this morning. I raise my tired eyes and look across the desultory forlornness. A dream beckons from a distance. I just smile and turn my face away, ‘No more runs after the mirage, Fella.’

A spider's best chance of landing with prey lies in casting web and wait patiently instead of hopping around to catch one. Use your best faculty Fella, however mundane it appears to you. A mosquito has to be as proud of its tiny sting as a mighty lion is of its massive, cleaving bite.

All pigs are good. Unfortunately, we can't say the same about the humans. And all donkeys are elegant gentlemen. Again we can't say the same about we humans.

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Mists on the Moon

 

Your soul gets a healing touch once you decide to be healed and pick out a symbol of divinity as a representative of your faith. We ourselves are the primary makers and breakers of our destiny. Have full faith in a river-rounded stone and it becomes a symbol of Lord Shiva. Have complete faith in the alchemy of holy waters and you have Ma Ganga here to absolve you of all your sins and miseries.

Mother Ganges holds the beacon of my faith. I feel protected, blessed, pardoned and absolved of my little sins and big follies in life. These moments by the Ganges softly touch my bruised soul and softly whisper, ‘Don’t worry, all is well!’

It’s the gentlest and warmest of comforts to have a motherly presence in one’s life. I lost my mother two years back but Ma Ganga is a living motherly force that saves me from the painful pangs of this typical feeling of being an orphan. Losing both parents turns us an orphan even if we are middle aged greying ones ourselves. 

This is late November. The nights are chilly. A stormy wind buffets the valley as it glides down from the snowy heights up north. But the mid-day sun carries enough warmth to allow the bathers in the holy waters to shake off the freezing jolt that the mother’s icy waters give. It’s refreshing and rejuvenating. Buffeting cold and melting, balmy warmth side by side, succeeding each other as the inseparable twins of Mother Nature. How would we know the significance of one if not for the other?  

I take a dip in the cold water and run out to stretch out on the banks under the warm, bright sunrays like a tiny lizard basking on a stone in the winters. The noon and the afternoon pass in this sojourn with the sun and the holy waters. It is going on for the last one week I have been here at Rishikesh. 

As the evening draws the curtain for the dusk to sneak in, the strains of light and dark ripple in the lap of holy fluidity defined by the swift currents. Soft emotions surface in my heart as the soul's tears of joy. O divine mother, my main identity is that of being your son. I feel disburdened of some heaviness. I find the unnecessary extras of life just a dark, blank spot where the weird shapes of my ego play a little, funny, worldly game.

When I am not bathing or chanting on mother’s banks, I read a book. Reading a book against the background of the holy river’s swishy sermons voiced through rapid currents is one of the pleasures that I’m yet to find a suitable alternative for. And reading Ruskin Bond by the Ganges is as good as meditation. He simplifies the complexities of life with his simple, lucid sentences.

This day, I had just walloped in Ma Ganga like a farmer's dirty calf after reading these lines by Ruskin Bond:

‘I feel drawn to little temples on lonely hilltops. With the mist swirling around them, and the wind humming in the stunted pines, they absorb some of the magic mystery of their surroundings and transmit it to the questing pilgrim.’

I look at a small temple on a low hill at a distance. Like Bond Sahab I too feel drawn to little temples on lonely hilltops. I am lost in the misty canvas on which this little white temple seems to be painted for the visual benefit of the sinners bathing in the holy waters. There is a gentle tug at my sleeve from behind. I look back. Two sparkling eyes look up to me.

‘Uncle, buy flowers for Ganga Ma!’ she entreats.

It’s a small girl. Very pretty with her sparkling eyes, clad in a white and pink sweatshirt and dark grey trackpants. The clothes are well trodden but clean. How can the clothes on someone be dirty if that person sells flowers for mother Ganga.

‘No beta, right now I don’t need it,’ I try to shoo her away gently.

But she has consistency as well courtesy. ‘Uncle, Ganga Ma will fulfil all your wishes if you offer her flowers,’ she says.

‘Ok, I’ll, but you have to click my pictures with my mobile also apart from giving me the flowers,’ I propose my scheme.

I’m a solo traveller and that means I have to request someone to take a picture if I’m drawn to capture some memories of the place. So far I have tried a few times with the so called well-meaning people but either they ignored the request outright or did the job with such half-heartedness that it broke my heart after looking at their work.

She is all focus as she holds my phone and performs the shoot with piercing sharp eyes and the steadiest of hands. The phone is a rundown cheap model and the subject is a greying middle-aged fellow on the down-slope of form and appearance. But her seriousness for the job means that both the phone and the owner get a reason to draw a bit of solace and satisfaction.

I get my flowers and presentable pictures and she gets her 10 rupees for the little leaf bowl that has a few flowers, an incense stick and an oil smeared wick to be lighted for the brief moments the offering floats among the torrents before being sucked into the holy embrace.

Earlier whenever I floated the leaf bowl of flowers, Ma Ganga would suck it in after just a few yards of tumultuous floating. I ask the girl to perform the ritual herself for me. With her lithe fingers she expertly strikes the match, lights the little wick, closes her eyes for a brief salutation to Ma Ganga and leaves the bowl among the swirling waves. It’s like a little canoe caught in the Pacific Ocean storms. But the journey has started with such pure and innocent hands. The flicker of faith goes tossing among boulders and torrential ripples. It is almost miraculous how the little leaf bowl survives. The wick keeps burning. She claps with merriment and jumps on her little toes.        

Biniya is her name, a little girl of 7 who sells flowers on the banks of Ganga Ma. The peak hours of her business are at the evening Ganga arti time when hundreds throng the divine congregation. During the day she scouts for bathers like me who might try lighting their lamp of faith under the full glare of the sun.

Her parents stay at a little slum by the holy river down the valley. The lockdown means that she is in class 2 without actually having gone to the government primary school. Online classes aren’t the option. So she is full time available to help her mother in the flower selling business. Her father works as a daily wager on titbits of labour assignment here and there. The last year he was busy at the new bridge over the Ganges, a bridge that his daughter uses now to cross over from the western bank to reach here where the business is better because many popular ashrams are situated on the eastern bank.  

Now she is into side business also. She charges me 10 rupees to click my photos on my mobile. I shouldn’t complain because I had started this. She has now taken her job too seriously. Whenever she sees me on the banks of mother Ganges, she offers her photographic skills instead of flowers.

‘Uncle photo khichva lo!’ she says pretty adamantly.

She calls me 'photo wale uncle' as her mother informed me the other day. Today as I was wallowing in Ma Ganga's cold waters, she stood on the steps and waited for me to come out.

‘Go and sell your flowers. You are losing business,’ I try to shoo her away.

But she has better ideas.

‘Uncle today you have to get a photo. You have got your beard and hair cut very smartly, so it will be a nice photo,’ she has her argument in support of her side business.

I am helpless. She clicks another assignment. Hands me the phone and asks a review of the photo.

‘See uncle, I have made you look like a hero.’

Buttering, eh. And her so called hero type photo has bigger charges. She is an experienced photographer now and charges more.

‘Uncle 100 rupees for this hero type photo,’ she demands.

I am initially at a loss of words. There is an argument and then I save 50 rupees by standing my ground pretty soundly. Now the assignment charge has gone to 50 rupees, so I secretly decide that tomorrow onwards I won't take my phone with me and buy her flowers instead. Her little leaf bowl of flowers costs just 10 rupees. That would help both parties.

The next day I tell her that I forgot my phone at the room. She is disappointed. She turns serious.

‘You miss your fees today,’ I chide her.

‘No uncle, I thought it makes you happy on getting your photo. I won’t take money for it. Please, don’t forget your phone tomorrow.’

She walks away with her little steps, holding her little basket having flowers, leaf bowls, incense sticks and oil wicks. I feel sad for her and feel guilty for having commercialized a little child’s sentiments for a little game of taking pictures. Even the rundown low cost smart phone is a luxury for them. It shows from the delicate care she holds it. Even a worst gadget turns precious in such caring hands and performs far better than the capacity of its pixels.

She doesn’t approach me the next noon. I wait but in vain. I can see her walking along the bank at a distance. Realising my mistake, I start walking in her direction but she vanishes on her swift little legs.

She is not to be seen for the next couple of days. But I come across her at the dusk time Ganga arti. She avoids looking at me to express her disapproval of my remark.

‘Biniya, won’t you take my picture today? See, I have shaved and wearing new clothes,’ I bow down before her.

She looks at me with her sparkling eyes and explores any trace of pun or jest in my words. But I’m very serious.

‘You like photos, uncle?’ she enquires.

I vehemently shake my head in affirmative. She smiles and then gets busy with all her attention. We see the pictures. The pixels in the cheap camera aren’t sufficient to provide justice to her effort under the artificial lights. She is disappointed.

The full moon peeps over the ridge. A wispy cloud is sprinkled over its face.

‘Uncle, there are mists on the moon!’ she shouts.

It’s beautiful. The child’s pure smile is even more beautiful. She tries to capture the moment. There is just a shiny dot to be seen on the screen as we watch her effort of catching mists on the moon through the phone. She makes a face as if she has failed to catch the beautiful scene. But the moon and the mists linger in her beautiful, innocent eyes.

She has to give attention to her business now as the congregation is breaking up. I cannot now belittle her by offering money for something she thinks gives me joy. I purchase a leaf bowl. Give her 10 rupees for her provisions and a blessing on her head for the selfless service she does to me.

‘Today your bowl will float for a long distance uncle. Light it yourself,’ she assures me.

I have grave doubts because my efforts have always failed within a few yards. She looks on with full faith as I strike the match to light the wick and leave the leaf bowl in the swirling waters. There it goes cascading up and down but always staying afloat on the foamy little crests. She laughs with merriment.

‘Didn’t I tell you uncle?’

The little daughter of Ganga Ma then melts in the crowd selling her flowers and tiny diyas.