“Na dainyam, na palaaynam”
In
the sunset years of life, we often dig up old memories from the caverns of our
lived history. They come in myriad avatars: some delightful and naughty, some
wrapped in sorrow and guilt, some sizzling with blush and shame, and some raring
to leap out to tweak your ears for foolish, silly blunders and acts of omission
and commission. But yet, what an interesting panorama they present on the whole
before you of the unfurling, flowering and then slow fading out of an
individual in the journey of life.
The
little story above (published as 'middle' in The Tribune, 21 Jan 2015; read the text below) is about a little misdemeanour engineered by me (with my
pals) as a schoolboy in our bid to awake to freedom, as it were, from the
well-intentioned but rather overzealous imposition of an extra class by our
math teacher. What had made it worse was his addictive love for the ‘rod’. And,
to complement and supplement it, his sharp, acid-coated tongue that could slash
and sting even deeper to singe your very soul by its abuse, taunt, jeer and
insult.
Part
an adolescent mischief no doubt, this small devilry, however, also bespeaks my
rebellious streak: the trait that came to me gratis as part of my inheritance
package. The ‘rebel’ has since inhabited a small burrow in some obscure isle
inside me, occasionally cocking up its eager rodent-head for a sneak peek of
the world… At times also to squeak, sigh, cry, wonder and laugh; and at times –
albeit less often – to gnaw or nibble.
This
puny creature, mostly meek and quiet, but sometimes restless and whelmed by the
bewildering chaos of the world going-going-and-gone andhbhakt and berserk, has
been my abiding companion through my life’s mediocre journey. At times I have
succumbed to its prods and punches and done its bidding. More often, however, I
have hushed it instead for cajoling me to do something, though seemingly right,
but too audacious for a timid me– born and bred in an orthodox brahmin home. In
my personal life, on social issues, as well as in my profession, I have mostly
trodden the beaten middle path under the searing gaze of patriarchy. A daring and
therefore nobler course has not been in my life’s menu– a bark and bite here, a
shout, scream or a whistleblow there, notwithstanding. But, as we know, barks
and woofs from a middleclass status quoist like me – feeble as they are – are
inconsequential to bestir the ‘Big Brothers’ of this world (mis-)guiding the
destinies of us– the ‘Les Misérables’.
Be
that as it were, even in ways small, this pesky little ‘fellow’ inside me has
been my liberating force. Whenever my pusillanimity has deterred me from my
karma, I have suffered loss, contrition, humiliation and shame–
materialistically as well as morally. Whenever I have heeded its whistles and
tweaks and done its bidding, I have found myself soaring high into new skies of
freedom and happiness…
Decades
have tiptoed by. From the balmy sunshine of youth, it is now the mellow dusk
crimsoned by thought, reflection, nostalgia and reverie. However, my ‘pet’ is
alive and kicking. Though rather than us being the arguing, feuding twosome, mostly
at loggerheads with each other, we have drawn our Lakshman Rekha and learnt to
live in symbiotic symphony like an aged couple.
Lastly,
a word, especially for the young: If you have to, better err on the side of valour
than vacillation or fear. Didn’t even Arjuna torn by contrition and ambivalence
to take up arms, had had to say: “Arjunasya pratigye dwe/ Na dainyam, na
palaynam.” (Arjun has pledges two: No cringing; no retreat too.) An Urdu line (never mind the gender bias!) too
says it beautifully: “Himmate mardaan, madade Khuda.” (A man with pluck earns Heavenly
help and luck.)
Fortune
favours the brave, don’t we say?
*
The Text of the 'middle'
'This dated back to the late 1960s when I was studying in a high school tucked away in a remote sleepy Kangra village. I must have been in class IX when this incident happened. We had an excellent maths teacher, known for being unsparing both with his rod as well as his invective-spewing tongue. Finding our class not coming up to his expectations in his subject, he started taking an extra period after school hours. This in a way meant an additional dose of cane-and-tongue-lashing over and above the usual quota during the actual school hours.
In 1960s it was truly a daring act to disobey your teacher.
ReplyDeleteSuch a captivating incidence.😀
Inmid fifties and sixties a few teachers in almost every school were known for beating students. However, they also patronized good students. We still remember our school teachers for their peculiar qualities. Let's pay tribute to our school teachers for their concern about our welfare.
ReplyDelete