
Issue February 1 - 14
It is a vocation that never
ends
When do parents stop being parents? I don’t know. Do you?
When our children are babies, we wait for them to grow up a bit. But come school
time, and there’s the rigmarole of picking and dropping, of uniforms to be
ironed, of books to be covered, and the daily genie of homework that needs to be
appeased. Mothers worry over results, ragging, and bad words learnt and good
habits forgotten. The worries are infinite...
AND it goes on. Right
through school and high school and college; even after, through the first job,
and after marriage. A child is always a child to its parent.
WATCHING two friends reacting to their children’s respective
performances on two separate occasions brought this home to me. One of them was
attending the school day programme of his six-year-old. The boy had a role on
stage, and even as he sat at work, one could see the father’s mind was
already a step ahead, waiting for the moment when his little boy would play his
part, and do his parents proud. He had even taken special pains over dressing
for the evening event, though it was mid-morning when I saw him.
PARENT number two was having labour pains of the mental sort. Her
son was showing his very first film — an hour-long feature that he had
written, directed and edited himself — to a select audience. The film
— about being young and confused — starred a man and a woman, who
were caught in a moment in time against the stark, brutal landscape that is the
road to Ladakh.
The young film maker was quite calm, despite the
fact that the equipment failed during the test run, and was miraculously
resurrected only in the nick of time. But the mother could just about contain
her nervousness and I could see from the way she looked around her, that she was
wondering if the hall would ever get full; if the audience would be pleased by
what it saw, if the apparatus would pack up again... I could see every imagined
horror as clearly as if she were recounting them to me.
Luckily for
all concerned, the film was not only a slick, fast-paced, thought-provoking
production, it also proved the young man’s talent quite beyond doubt. My
friend I think, relaxed only when the applause came at the end, as the lights
came on, and the critics came up to congratulate the director and the actors.
VERILY, parents live their lives all over again through their
children, and as long as parents remain older than their children (which is a
given, isn’t it?), there is always one more experience to be relived, one
more anxious moment to be experienced.
One Saturday, I joined a
group, 2,000 strong, to walk for Multiple Sclerosis. It was a pleasant morning
at the Race Course in Mumbai, and as we walked the oval track that usually has
horses thundering over it, the young made a lark of it, gym enthusiasts walked
purposefully, older women plodded along, and a bunch of young army officers
marched past at a clip that made us all seem to be dawdling. I walked one round,
and set off on another, despite the fact that the sun was blazing by then.
It was my gesture towards those who are struck by MS, and who have
to live with the affliction for the rest of their lives.
It was the
least I could do, having heard out young people who had MS and who had managed
despite it, to get through college with merit and who held jobs that demanded as
much from them as from any able-bodied person. I walked with great pride in the
fact that I was one of the few doing a second round. Then ahead of me, walking
painfully on her crutches, I saw someone who was definitely afflicted. I could
see that she was tired but not willing to give up.
I WOULD finish
my walk and go back home and forget all about MS. She would have her crutches
for the remainder of her life. To her spirit, I dedicated my
walk.
The Editor