About friends,
friendships and patriarchy
“…It takes only one friend … to work miracles.”
- Henry Miller
World would indeed be a black hole of gloom but for
the balmy sunshine of friends who, we know, come in myriad avatars. I enlist a
few.
Some are langotia yaars and hum pyalas, the bosom
friends as we say. Before them we let our hair down and open our hearts inside
out without shame or blush; pour out our deepest secrets, share our highs and
lows and smiles and tears. They stand by you through thick and thin and their
friendship is a balm that soothes the nerve, unknots the heart, elates and
elevates the soul.
Some friends are intellectual, enlightened types whose
torch of knowledge and erudition removes the cobwebs of ignorance from your
minds. A conversation with them is a cerebral feast.
You get to hear some thought-provoking quote, an interesting phrase, a pithy
saying, some new insight into life/world … and so on. Your batteries are
charged up.
Then there are the tad avuncular types who revel in
dispensing wisdom – even a little admonishment – and try to keep your wanton
spirits in check by good counsel. They ensure that you don’t cross the
‘Lakhshman Rekhas’ and remain within your own skins as you script the
trajectory of life. Small rebels like me may not relish their company much but
their sincerity and affection to ensure for you a smooth ride in life is beyond
question.
My most beloved of course are the special breed: the
witty and humorous. These friends I adore. Wellsprings of jokes, wisecracks and
anecdotes, they tickle your ribs making the place resound with loud bursts of
hilarity. In the present stressful times when laughing our hearts out has become
a rarity, how invaluable such friends are can hardly be gainsaid.
We also come across fair-weather friends in life, the
matlabi yaars, who just befriend you to exploit your vulnerabilities, take
advantage and then vanish. However, in the bargain, you learn important lessons
in life sharpening your sense of discernment about people/world around you.
In today’s
AI-powered world we have a newly minted category of ‘virtual’ friends on social
media. This is a world unto itself and hard to describe for a poor me. Though
always wary, still, however, the temptation to venture into this cyber-realm is
irresistible – even indispensable – being
an easy, finger-touch way not
only to make friends but also to inter-connect, transact businesses and stay in step with daily life, risks notwithstanding.
And then – let’s hold our hearts and blush a little! –
there is the special class of friends of the opposite sex: the so-called
girlfriends and boyfriends– who bestow
the extra spark on our lives though with all the attendant highs and lows,
sighs and sorrows.
Lucky indeed are those who in the theatre of life find
friends and nurture friendships. And as you journey along and age, and the vile
fiend called loneliness begins to grab the private, sacrosanct spaces of your
heart and mind, the value of good friends comes knocking at your consciousness
more resoundingly than ever before.
*
In the inky dusk of twilight often when I sit sipping
beer in the balcony watching the blushful Phoebus kissing us goodbye, I fall
into a reverie. Blessed have I indeed been in having had friends almost of all
kinds, though those of the last variety have been either elusive or fleeting. I
am sure many of my generation would have been no luckier than me in this
respect. I blame it all on the patriarchy that reigned supreme in our
middle-class milieu – as it still does – compounded by the British-imposed
Victorian values/misogynist pseudo-morality drawing a wedge between man and
woman. So we grew up with labyrinthine tunnels of taboos, guilts and shames to
negotiate this gender-chasm. But happily, internet-empowered, now the women are
unscrewing their patriarchal fetters and man-woman friendships/relationships/
(‘live-ins’) have become routine and normal … and, dare I say, rightly so. For,
nothing warms the cockles of the heart and dissipates the lurking loneliness of
our holed-up lives (worsened by the present encircling political/climatic gloom
closing in on humanity) more than a hearty banter, a sly joke, a flirtatious
wink, gup-shup or a thought-provoking conversation with the opposite sex– preferably
over a small drink by the winter fire! It boosts the depleting dopamine levels
(if not the testosterone) of the old and the ageing and is a soothing balm despite
what the monotonous ‘monogamists’, misogynists, patriarchs, priests and ‘panches/sarpanches’
amidst us might say!
***
Many a time steadfast friendships do fade away with exigencies of time. Once many years back, I was lonely in my home and as ill luck would have it, I was taken sick and the ailment got the better of me with the passage of time. By dead of the night, the situation gradually worsened. Around 2 am, I couldn't help but phone one of my friends who came calling not alone but accompanied by a doctor!
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