"Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing
and rightdoing there is a field.
I'll meet you there.
When the soul lies down in that grass
the world is too full to talk about." ― Rumi
and rightdoing there is a field.
I'll meet you there.
When the soul lies down in that grass
the world is too full to talk about." ― Rumi
Seven months today. I continue to live. I continue to exist. I continue to strive for ways to make peace. With the days I live. And the
death I died. Seven months back.
Read an article a few days back, where an acclaimed physician in Haverhill, Massachusetts, Dr. MacDougall claims that a human frame loses 21 grams of its total mass at the exact moment of death. Implying that 21 grams is supposed to be the weight of the human soul. Can
something intangible like a soul have an accurate measure? You may think. Even I
did. But then, you never know when doctors from the most advanced nations vouch
for it.
So where does this cloud weighing
21 grams go once it leaves the physical frame? Hover around, fly away, become a
star, or simply merge with the air we breathe?
My search begins.
Seven months of a life that has
taught me so much about the world we live in. About the ones who really care
and love, and the rest, for whom my life has turned out to be an interesting
soap. Learnt amazing things about how losing a partner can give so-called
well-wishers, the liberty to speak shit (sorry for my language, but I couldn’t
find a word that would be more apt) about you. Learnt how to handle them alone,
learnt how to turn the tables, learnt how to keep a straight face when the same
well-wishers sugar-coated fake lines before me. Still learning. For I must.
And then, these seven months have
shown me a mother who did almost everything to help me smile. I can see the
pain in her eyes when she cooks for me, hear the love when she calls and asks
whether I have taken my lunch, feel the emptiness when she hugs her
granddaughter each time she says something funny. My mother, wounded, but not
ready to give up yet. Because of me and Guria. My mother … the rock I am
clinging on to. For the last seven months.
Often in the last few months, I would
wake up at odd hours in the night wondering whether I am still alive. It would
take me a minute or two to realize that yes clinically, I am still breathing
and hence, alive. The following few hours I would spend trying to figure out how this is possible. How is it that after such brutal stabs on my frail bosom, my heart
still works? How is it that in spite of all my anger, I am still in place? And then
my eyes fall on the one sleeping beside me … the prettiest angel sleeping with
hands folded, calm, serene, personifying bliss. And I understand how?
These months stand witness to my
search for places to hide during the daytime when most around me were expecting
me to get back to normal. Sometimes I even pretended I have reached the
acceptance stage of grief, and actually tried to make myself believe so as
well. But as night came, I was again a floating log after the wreck, a shadow
of the one I was. As night came, all my pretences removed, I felt lighter. Sitting
with myself, I could now cry. Till the sun rose again.
Yes, seven months of a life that is
both liberating and enslaving. For not only has it brought me closer to the
package that comes with the death of a young husband, but also, to the parcel
that comes with the life you have been granted to live, from the moment you see
him for the very last time.
‘Last time’… that’s the part that
brings me back to the deathless 21 grams of the soul. If all subtle consciousness
of life, gets concentrated in these transcendent 21 grams before a person dies,
then I am sure he is around. And watching. 21 grams of a life not lived fully,
of a life cut short by cancer, of a life that was integral for my family to be
complete. Now that he is above all basic human emotions, does he know that I have
not yet been able to accept that he is not coming back? Does he understand what
life has become for us? How we spend our weekends in malls with laughters
camouflaging tears? Do those 21 grams of abstract energy allow him to feel and
more importantly, do they connect him to what I feel? Or to his child? Do those
21 grams see me while I sleep, or talk about him, or simply stare at nothing?
21 grams. The measure of my
husband’s soul. Looming somewhere, but not visible. 21 grams of hope that he
might still be there, somewhere. But definitely not too far away from us. 21 grams of higher emotions that will, at some point of eternity, help him know
what he means to me. 21 grams of a faith that he shall patiently wait for me
till my time comes. 21 grams of blessings for the little angel he has left
behind.
I complete seven months today. Of
heart-breaking truths. Like I am a single parent. Like Guria’s father is no
more. Like penning a ‘late’ before his name. Like sorting things up with
photocopies of the official document stating his absence. In human form.
Numbing truths that started unfolding seven months back, with a flat, unforgiving
ECG, well past midnight.
Truths that will fail to hurt me one
day … when I find those lost 21 grams. Of my life.
Thank you for being with me in my
journey.
May peace be with you. For that is all you need.
you are truly gifted , truly spectacular , god bless u pupu
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Deletethank you rumpa di. love u too
Deletetoder theke response na pele boddo eka lage re. kichu na bolar thakleo kichu bolish majhe majhe. bhalo lagbe. muah!
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