It’s
easier to let the mask drop when there is a chance of no repercussions, says
Sushmita Ray.
The train was speeding through the night. AS-4, the
air-conditioned three-tier compartment of a Mumbai-Bangalore train, had
surprisingly few passengers. In fact, the cubicle in which Radhika Menon had her
seat, had just her and nobody else.
No one on her side, nor on the
opposite, or the two sideway seats near the aisle. It made crying much easier,
really. She didn’t have to turn her face into the cold glass pane and peer
sightlessly into the dark night, to avoid being seen. She could curl up
peacefully in a corner, weep miserably, scrub her nose with her
‘dupatta’ and curse the men in the world.
I, ME, ALONE
She
had been doing just that for the last three hours, since the train moved out of
the station. Radhika would have continued to do so, had it not been for the
young woman in the next cubicle, also travelling alone.
Unfortunately, the
other woman had to share her cubicle with a group of loud male executives, who
had bribed the attendant into giving them some booze.
The liquor, the
shared wisecracks about common foes, and their office politics, was spicing up
their evening; it did nothing to lessen the nagging headache that plagued Sudha
Haldipurkar.
On her way to the loo earlier, Sudha had seen the empty
cubicle with only one woman occupant, and had made a mental note of it. When, a
couple of hours later, the cubicle still remained empty, she decided to move
seats.
Radhika frowned. This unexpected invasion of her privacy was not
acceptable at all. So far, she had finished cursing only half the men in the
world. Meantime, Sudha had made herself comfortable in the lower berth opposite
Radhika, settling down with Judith Krantz’
Scruples
.
It’s not that she
hadn’t noticed her companion’s puffy, tear-streaked face or heard
the sniffles. In fact, it was the irritating sniffles that finally got to her.
Finally, she asked, “Problems?”
Till the train chugged into
CST station several hours later, Sudha was all ears to Radhika’s several
hundred problems. By the time she stepped off the train, shoulders hunched,
weighed under the heavy baggage of unresolved issues, she was ready to
single-handedly fight her train companion’s battles. Whoever would have
believed that 24 hours prior to this, the two were perfect strangers?
TRUTH IS STRANGER THAN
FICTION
Confiding in strangers. Why is it so much easier to open your
heart out to a complete stranger? Often, most of us are guilty of stone-walling
people close to us. It could be some action of theirs that has bothered us. Or,
their apathy in a situation that is distressful. Whatever the outrage, the hurt
makes it impossible for us to open up and tell the person that he or she is
responsible.
Yet surprisingly, all the pent-up anger, the confusion and
the hurt can be channelled and retold with startling clarity to a stranger.
Says Dr Dayal Mirchandani, psychiatrist and psychotherapist, “This
could happen to anyone. Sometimes, it’s just the pressure of the burden
you carry that makes you want to share it with a stranger. This way, you are not
likely to be judged, unlike family or friends, where that fear exists. With a
stranger, your secret is safe.
In psychotherapy, we believe healing occurs
through listening. Similarly, confiding in a stranger provides us with an
opportunity to reflect on issues that are otherwise sidelined on account of our
busy lives. So, talking to a stranger, who is travelling with you, is the
natural thing to do.”
Says Delhi-based Sumita Dasgupta,
“It’s true. I think it’s easier to confide in strangers,
because the person does not know you at all. Neither does he know the people who
are involved with your story, so he hopefully will not be judgemental.”
Perhaps that’s true. But often when an emotionally burdened person
is off-loading troubles, it’s more because she has found a sympathetic
ear, than for any real hope of a solution. But, is this heart-to-heart dialogue
possible only when there is same-gender bonding? Or, does a woman find it
equally comforting to talk to a man?
My Mama Told Me Not To