['The Morning Inspection' is the title of a column I wrote for the Daily News from 2009 to 2011, one article a day, Monday through Saturday. This is the 232nd article in the new series that began in December 2022. Links to previous articles are given below]
When
do children cease to be children, I’ve often asked myself. Ask children
of different ages and they would probably come up with a range of
answers.
’18’ was an answer I considered when I was around 15.
However, three years was somehow too long to wait. Once, when I was
still just 15 I had a particularly distasteful argument with my mother. I
had to stay after school for Under 17 cricket practices, although I
wasn’t much of a cricketer. Anyone could try out and I was giving it a
shot.
I was upset, I remember. So I came up with a
justification for stepping out of adult shadows, especially those of my
parents. Technically, one could even be 13 or 14 and still try out for
the Under 17 team. I was 15. Legit. It was Under 17, so I told myself,
you have the same status as the oldest boy attending practices. That
still barely made me 17, but hey, what’s a year’s difference! I decided I
will not go home immediately afterwards.
Important decision
made, but no follow up. I didn’t know what to do next. I probably knew
trouble awaited me, for I decided I would go to watch the Chess
Nationals underway at that time at the YMBA, Borella. I went there
because my big brother was playing. There was, I probably knew, some
safety in that. His shadow was a nice place to be during all my school
years.
There are pluses and minuses, but I didn’t mind the
latter. Not all younger siblings are like that, I know. There’s comfort
in shade but the dependency isn’t always nice. One wants to be called by
one’s name. After a while one doesn’t want to be someone’s brother or
sister, someone’s son or daughter.
People can decide when they
are no longer children and affirm it without trying out tricks like I
did. When they start earning, when they are able to afford to live on
their own even in a rented room or house, they can think ‘out of their
shadow, finally.’ Parents’ shadow, that is.
Parents think
differently. They want their children to grow up into strong,
independent, capable adults. They remain parents and their children will
remain children. Shadows are not mentioned, but such there are.
There
comes a time, though, when roles are reversed. Age and infirmity make
parents dependent on the love, kindness and generosity of their
children. It is not that they diminish and their children grow so that
parents are somehow dwarfed by circumstance and forced under a child’s
shadow. Just as the adolescent asserts identity and seeks to step out of
shadow, an elderly parent can at times fight tenaciously to retain
agency simply because this alone secures meaning and relevance.
A
father-daughter shadow-shot, if you will, made me wonder about roles
and their reversals as well as objection and resistance at any given
time.
No one resides in a single citizen state. There are always
dependencies and reciprocities. There’s safety in the presence of those
who may know and have greater capacity, but sometimes true comfort is
not about relative strength. When I hold someone’s hand, that someone is
holding my hand too.
A parent would know how meaningful life is
when an infant clings on to a little finger. One feels the weight as
well as the privilege of responsibility, and yet, it is something else
as well; the comprehension that one is part of something precious beyond
description.
Generational issues get in the way. The world
moves. The young grow up in worlds their parents are unfamiliar with.
The eternal verities don’t change, however, and it sometimes takes time
to understand that for all the apparent differences, matters related to
the human condition are best treated with equanimity.
Such
things cannot be taught. Sometimes no one wants to listen because people
believe they have answers. Sometimes, however, they wonder. And that’s
when shadows come into play. You are shaded by something someone said
ages ago, an observation or lesson that was noted or footnoted. And
sometimes you realise, yes, the world has changed and those who have
grown up with the relevant transformations are best equipped to help you
navigate them. That’s when you see that your child’s shadow is big
enough to take shelter under.
We move in and out of each
other’s shadows. It’s a dance. A life-dance, really. In this instance, a
father-daughter dance that shelters me from an unforgiving sun.
malindadocs@gmail.com.
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