There are times when a man takes stock. He looks back at the road taken, reflects on
the million what-ifs along those other roads that were not taken; either by
choice or circumstances, due to knowledge or out of ignorance; and says
‘hmmm…ok’. Or perhaps something
profound. Or else it’s all just such a
blur or is so bland that one reflects, blinks and moves on.
Like always,
she is present and absent,
in and out of me,
I speak her words,
wonder if my face mimics
manner and humour,
love and confusion,
and I remember the intensity of giving
equalled by an intensity of refusal;
she was proud and such a child
in her gifting and embrace, mother
and teacher, but such a student too.
And I,
I cannot remember the kiri-suwanda,
that baby time or her giving
for time-squeeze and event-mix arrived
with the curse of awkwardness
she left so did I
each to a specific banishment
each in a specific abhinishkramanaya,
and our returns never coincided
our orbits chose to slip and miss.
I was not her eka-pun-sanda,
not all the time;
but I was, I am sure,
now and then,
and that's all that matters
in the matter of thanksgiving.
Two hundred thousand words later or thereabouts, there is a silence in my life. And lessons that will be revisited. Again. And again. All these words amount to a thanksgiving. And a moment-to-moment resurrection. My mother worked. I too try.
This article was published in the Daily News on May 27, 2010. At the time I wrote a daily piece for that newspaper titled 'The Morning Inspection'.
There are no auspicious times for these reflect-now moments.
They can be precipitated by any random thought, a word, a phrase, a gaze,
intersections unexpected, longed for, forsaken.
Today I was made to look back by a casual question regarding this
column: how many have you written?
Using a computer helps.
I opened the relevant folder and counted. As of May 26, 2010 (that’s ‘yesterday’ when
you read this), I’ve written 200, beginning from the first piece on August 30,
2009. Counting an average count of a
thousand words per article, this is a road made of 200,000 words. By certain standards this would amount to
what some might call ‘a lot’. I looked
back and four things came to mind, the last being the source of the first three
and also referring to my favourite article among these 200. I will relate them.
ONE. I remembered
my favourite verse of Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘Gitanjali’ (the third verse of No.
79 of the collection): When I sit by the
roadside, tired and panting, when I spread my bed low in the dust, let me ever
feel that the long journey is still before me---let me not forget a moment, let
me carry the pangs of this sorrow in my dreams and in my wakeful hours. I owe this to Ravin Gunaratne, who
recited this to me in 1986, when he was a second year Architecture student at Moratuwa University. (We all
drink from other people’s wells and enjoy the shade of trees planted by unknown
people).
Thanks to Ravin, I learnt early in life that ‘achievement’
is a misleading word, that it is all relative.
There are high-points in a journey, landmark events, unforgettable
encounters, but there’s hardly enough reason to indulge in raucous laughter or
endless wailing. Take the blow, nod
head, move on. Acknowledge praise, forget
reason for praise, move on. Equanimity is the key word here.
TWO. A history-making
day. May 17, 2009. President Mahinda Rajapaksa arrives in Sri Lanka after an official visit to the Kingdom of Jordan.
He arrives in a land that has defeated a terrorist plague that had
caused untold damage to the country and its citizens for more than thirty
years. I was about to set off for an almsgiving in Kuliyapitiya. I missed the
television coverage of the President’s arrival. Did I miss ‘history’? The important thing was to contribute to the
process that culminated in such celebratory moments. I felt I had not been lax.
THREE. May 18,
2010. A question was put to me: ‘Are you
celebrating?’ The reference was to the first anniversary of the end o the
war. The answer: ‘Yes’. ‘How?’ The follow-up question was answered
thus: ‘I am working’. Could be read as
being ‘pretentious’, I know. Can’t
help. That was what I did, that’s what I
do.
FOUR. Something
happened on October 13, 2009. A
death. That of my mother. Indrani Seneviratne. Teacher.
Hard to please. I am yet to come
across anyone who gave as much as she did.
No, not to me. Others. Almost a month later, I wrote a piece titled
‘Death is a teacher’. (http://www.dailynews.lk/2009/11/11/fea02.asp). Celebration is work. History-making is about
working. Looking back is about looking
forward, knowing full well that I’ve hardly walked one small step, not for
myself and certainly not for mankind. I
think this way because of her.
Someone sent me an interesting quote about mothers and
children. Women, it is claimed, end up
like their mothers and this is said to be their tragedy. Men on the other hand don’t end up like their mothers and
this is supposed to be their tragedy. She didn’t teach us how to work or the ‘why’
of working. She worked. All her
life. Even on the day she passed away,
she was teaching. Two minutes before she
collapsed in a car she was calling an old student to get him to help the child
of a friend. She taught us in her living
and in her death.
I couldn’t write to her or of her for a long time. And I
will never finish writing her story.
Three months after she died, I wrote a poem for/about her:
THREE MONTHS LATER
she is present and absent,
in and out of me,
I speak her words,
wonder if my face mimics
manner and humour,
love and confusion,
and I remember the intensity of giving
equalled by an intensity of refusal;
she was proud and such a child
in her gifting and embrace, mother
and teacher, but such a student too.
And I,
I cannot remember the kiri-suwanda,
that baby time or her giving
for time-squeeze and event-mix arrived
with the curse of awkwardness
she left so did I
each to a specific banishment
each in a specific abhinishkramanaya,
and our returns never coincided
our orbits chose to slip and miss.
I was not her eka-pun-sanda,
not all the time;
but I was, I am sure,
now and then,
and that's all that matters
in the matter of thanksgiving.
Two hundred thousand words later or thereabouts, there is a silence in my life. And lessons that will be revisited. Again. And again. All these words amount to a thanksgiving. And a moment-to-moment resurrection. My mother worked. I too try.
This article was published in the Daily News on May 27, 2010. At the time I wrote a daily piece for that newspaper titled 'The Morning Inspection'.
Malinda Seneviratne is
a freelance writer who contributes a weekly column titled 'Subterranean Transcripts' to the Daily Mirror. Email: malindasenevi@gmail.com. Twitter: malindasene
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