April 15 – 30,
2004
By
Sathya
Saran

LAST week, I ran into an old friend. I was aghast at what she had
made of herself. When I had last seen her, she had been a young, slim, pretty
young thing, very earnest in whatever she did. She had about her then, an air of
being someone who was very much her own person, walking the path of life a
little apart from the crowd and yet interacting with it when the need
arose.
SHE worked in a bank, and was admired for her integrity, her
efficiency and her demure demeanour. I lost touch with her when she got married.
We used to earlier meet only occasionally, so I did not miss seeing her.
I HEARD that she had given up her job, when, after a troublesome
pregnancy, she became the mother of a bonny boy.
THE thought crossed
my mind when I heard this is that the bank had lost one of its best employees. I
wondered why she had decided to be a full time mom; I personally believe that
support systems can be set up by anyone, and any woman could be a loving,
efficient working mother if she so chooses.
BUT I kept my counsel,
knowing that many women do find the guilt of leaving a baby at home too strong
to let them continue with their work. I wished her well in my mind, and knew
that she would do a brilliant job of bringing up her child to be as dependable
and sincere an adult as she herself was.
YEARS passed, and then last
week, I ran into her quite by accident. As I said before, I was aghast at her
appearance. Always slim, she now looked thin, frail and weak. Her hair had
become frizzy and greyed considerably, and her skin, once luminous, had turned
dull and dry and I could see lines that were far beyond what was natural for
someone in her early 40s.
I COULD not help asking her if she was ill.
I must have sounded very rude, but she smiled back and said, she was as well as
she had always been... then, seeing the look in my eyes, she laughed guiltily
and said, yes I know, I look a wreck. She must have read my mind and seen in it
the question about whether her marriage was the cause of her looks. It wasn't,
she hastened to assure me; all was well, and she had a loving family. It was
just her way of totally immersing herself in everything that she did that led to
her neglect of self.
THUS it was that she had spent the last eight
years looking after her child, he was the sun around which her life revolved;
there was little time for anything else. She had not wanted any outside help,
and tended him through the nights of baby fevers, and days of wonderful
learning; she heard his first chuckle, his first word, taught him to stand on
his unsteady legs for the first time, and held him when he fell. In short, she
was a full-time mum, and loving every minute of it.
WHAT I could not
understand was the fact that she had to take last place in the priorities in her
life. I told her that this was a mille-nnium where even the unlettered knew that
they had to fend for themselves, and no one else would really care for a woman
if she did not care for herself, and she agreed with me...
I LEFT
her with the desire to invest a bit of her care in herself, but I wondered if
the habit of years would fall off so easily. And if at the end of it all, it was
worth it...
AFTER all, Nature teaches us that our young are not our
own, and when we negate self to bring up children, do we not then grow
expectations from them that defy the laws of Nature?
IT was a thought
that stayed with me for a long time... and left me with no real answer.