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Thought waves

When you grow old, you learn many lessons-

One I learned- I can’t correct the world,

I can’t correct my own children 

I can’t correct even my grandchildren ‘s home work

But I can do a great thing:

I can correct myself! 

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My Christian friends

I never see the caste, creed or religion or race of my friends. Friends are friends, though FB friends belong to a separate category, as most of them remain unseen. 

In fact, during my childhood, being brought up in a Muslim dominated area, all our neighbors, except a couple of people were Muslims and they were like an extended family of ours. Our neighbor Hamsa’s children grew on my father’s lap and my friendship with his son Siddique continues. Last time, when I went Palakkad, I stopped my car to hand over a few packets of ‘then kai’, herbal seeds to him. He is one of the two Olavakkode friends who call me by my childhood pet name, ‘Appu’. The other friend is Kamalam, our neighbor and my sisters’s playmate whom I met in New Jersey after a gap of fifty years. 

There were not many Christian families in our area and even during my school education, didn’t have many Christian friends- one person I remember was from Trichur, an egg supplier, who used to entertain me with his flock of ducks, in hundreds. He used to drive them into post -harvest paddy fields filled with rainwater and it was a pleasure to see the white birds swim , though their smell was oppressive. His name was Vargheese. 

C  M Jacob, whom I affectionately call Chakku, my long term colleague and bachelor roommate continues to be my best  Christian friend, though he is a nam-ke- vasthe Nasrani.

 He joined my field unit at Trichur in October 

1959, three months after I joined and  I remember his pose then before me, tall, immaculately dressed in white, neatly combed hair, soft spoken. We travelled together to Hyderabad, our maiden journey outside Kerala and lived in the same hotel for a few days before shifting to Panchavati, our bachelor palace. He remains a bachelor till now at 81,  and going by his nature, is unlikely  to find a Mary or Maria as a playmate, in the near future. I don’t talk about far future.

He is amazingly a simple creature, can’t make his coffee and walks to the next restaurant for food, though his health is not in the desired level . A simple and truthful man, though don’t know whether he ever visited a church for prayers. Matters little. 

Happy Christmas to you Chakku. Continue to remain happily till Jesus calls you up for His company.  He needs good guys like you.

I had another colleague and room mate, a much smarter guy, C M manual, whom we called Manachan, who left NIN to join Air India, married an Anglo indian girl, retired as Airport Station Director and joined Jesus to teach him how to love girls and live happily. He was a jolly good fellow, who too never visited a Church till he married. 

At NIN , I had plenty of Christian friends, a few migrated from Connor, like me and Chakku. Most of them have already joined their Yesunathar.

Ultimately what counts is whether you are a good human being or not. Fortunately world is still rich with them.

——————————————————————

When my cousin Ramki sent me this old family group of my mother’s siblings with their families, the head-cover patti, captured my eyes first, as I used to enjoy feeling her head with my hands appreciating its softness! She was the elder sister to my mother, whom we called Bhavani Periammai, after the river bank near Erode where she stayed when I was a kid. She was the last in our family to have shaven her head on becoming a widow. Though orthodox to the core, she was jovial and used to entertain me with her Thiruvathirakali dance and educate me with Samskritham hymns. Her body movements and claps while teaching me,

‘VeeravirAdakumAra vibho!’ dance, is fresh in my mind.

I remember her, every time, Shabhari express crosses  Erode junction. on my way to Palakkad.

She lived at Kanchi for a few years and was an ardent disciple of the Sage of Kanchi. She took me to Periyava and proudly proclaimed about my proficiency in Soundaryalahari and on AchArya’s advice I recited a slokam. . I had a habit of reciting loudly and despite Periammai ‘s prodding, I didn’t reduce my voice or speed.I used to move my body too like a pendulum while reciting and in total, it would have been a good Tamasha for the people around. Anyway, the Guru, blessed me placing his hand on my head. 

Recently while passing through the Kodambakkam Railway Station, I remembered her dish, Vathalkozhambu, which was unique in taste. I used to get down at that station and visit her as her house was close by and I liked her food. 

Last year when I went to Kalpathy Shivan koil, she came to my mind first . To spend Shivaratri night awake, she used to come with much preparation but slip into sound sleep soon aided by the cold river breeze.

I don’t remember when and how she passed away but it was peaceful death, I was told. What was important was she didn’t suffer putrasokam, as my mother had to and my first sister in under going. In all, she had a peaceful tenure in this world, though her family was living hand to mouth. Untimely that is important, I feel now, many living in luxuries have everything they want except peace of mind.’

 

 

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Shivaratri memories

Shivaratri memories 

On  Shivaratri, I remember two elders, my mother’s elder sister Bhavani periya ammai and Perinkulam Krishna vadhyar .

Periyammai, orthodox to the core used to prepare three days in advance for Shivaratri upavasam, sincerely do the fasting, Japam etc, manage to skip the afternoon nap, go to Kalpathy at night, with a grass mat in hand, wait patiently for the Kathakalakeshapam , enjoying the company of friends and unknowingly fall into sleep soon after the discourse started, encouraged by the cool wind from the Kalpathy river, transmitted by the big neem tree branches in the Kovilkundu, the site of the discourse in front of the Shiva Temple.

Like my father, Sri. Krishna vadhyar, was a Kathakali lover.  The Hemambika temple used to arrange Kathakali for nine nights, including the Shivaratri night, which I’m told is now reduced to three nights. Vadhyar used to come all the way from our village, have dinner with us and along with my father, go to Kallaikulankara Templ, enjoy the show whole night, have bath in the ponds next morning, worship in the temple and return. My father used to take me too and I remember our crossing the railway track and trek the hill to reach the other side, holding an indigenously made hand torch called choottu. Still fresh in memory the sparks from the hand torch moving around, in the darkness. So is the call for alms from an ‘untouchable’ Nayadi woman, standing far away, while we return the next morning. 

The unscrupulous builders have now completely demolished that natural hillock, just as they have molested the ever young Kalpathy river. 

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Consoling a relative who lost her husband

My attempt to temporarily cheer a parched soul :

 I entered the prayer hall at Chennai to pay condolences and allowed Jeyajothi Mami to pour out her  sorrow in words. Then I tried to pacify her :

“Krish mama, who had rich men at his hand’s  reach didn’t damage his kidneys or liver, heart or lungs, by drinking or smoking. More important- he didn’t do injustice to your faith deposited on him. I need not tell you how he could have done it…….

Didn’t i make you smile?

No chance. I did not give up.

I continued, ‘ok. You won’t smile. Look, for fifty long years, you were his loving jokey making that race horse to run mad and instead of kicking you back to Thoothukudi, he preferred to take his last shelter on your lap. Which woman would not love to have a husband like him? Will you smile now, please?’

She was still gloomy. I didn’t leave her. I continued :

‘My dead lady, all your people will go their way in a day or two and are you going to live the remain 2/3 decades of your life, keeping your face swollen like a pooshinikkai, in your language or mathan in mine, in English pumpkin. You are a charming woman, though a bit old. Smile, please!’

The simple lady of good heart, laughed heartily. 

While coming out of the meeting hall, I warned her, ‘be prepared to live alone but never allow you to be lonely. With whomever you live, your daughters or grand daughters or brothers or sisters, you will be alone but never succumb to the temptation of your mind to become lonely. It is my experience that gives you this advice ‘

Her face shrunk . It will never come back to the old blooming stage . Her loss is permanent .  Continue reading Consoling a relative who lost her husband

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A question of wives

‘Loppudu raavochaa, can I come in, Sastrygaru?’

‘You’re already 10 yards inside my house. And I’m not a Sastry or Sanyasi, madam’

‘From the day I came as a tenant in your opposite house, I wanted to ask you one question ‘

‘You came there just a few hours ago. Anyway what is that you wanted ask me? Want broomstick or drinking water? ‘

‘No Sir, you are a witty person’

‘No, I’m a dirty person to the neighbors who invade my house early morning. Your question please, old lady’

‘You’re young?’

‘You’re not old? Your question? ‘

‘I wanted to ask you why I don’t see a woman in your house ‘

‘There are three, all my wives. Sleeping in the top bedrooms.
Anything else you wanted to know?’

‘You seems to be angry . You’re perhaps hungry too. Shall I get you some food from my house?’

‘Yes, please get me chakkara pongal and chakkaravattu upperi . That is what I take for breakfast’

‘I haven’t heard those names even’

‘Then don’t bother me. I am waiting for an important guest’

‘May I know who he is? ‘

‘Not your concern. The visitor is a ‘she’

‘Then, I won’t interfere. I’m out of your way. Before I take leave, can I see your kitchen, please?’

‘Why not my bedroom? Why are you troubling me, madam?
On the very first day of our meeting, you have earned my dislike’

‘My intention is to say hello to your wife and not to trouble you, Sir’

‘Which wife? I have three ‘

‘No, Sastry garu. If you have three wives, you would have been talking to me nicely, softly, sweetly. Your eyes will be glittering seeing a new woman in the neighborhood and she, on her own will, approaching you to say, ‘hello’. You have only one woman and that is why you find life wanting in charm

Can I enter your kitchen and say ‘hello’ to your wife now?’

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A walk on the Harithavanam Park

‘Excuse me, madam. Are you new to this place?’

‘Are you a newly appointed watchman for this park?’

‘Me, a watchman!’

‘If not why do you bother who comes in and goes out? This is a public park. Physically you look Ok’

‘Mentally too, madam. I was puzzled seeing you here for the first time’

‘Puzzled ? Am I the only woman you have seen?’

‘Here yes, outside no.’

‘Then, why to get puzzled?’

‘Don’t know, it happens when I see some extraordinarily attractive ladies ‘

‘Are you mentally ok?’

‘I’m . Physically too’

‘Physically too! Hope won’t be proposing to marry me?’

‘Why not madam? ‘StreenAmcha chitham purushasya bhAghyam ‘

‘Oh, my God! You don’t know who I’m . You don’t know who my husband is. Your loss is going to be heavy’

‘I’m prepared to lose my life for a great cause’

‘You’re prepared to lose Ammalu too?’

‘Ammalu! You know her?’

‘I don’t know her. I just mentioned a woman’s name. Why’re you shivering?’

‘Who’ll not shiver in this colony after hearing her name?’

‘I’m not shivering’

‘You’re Ammalu, with a weight gain of 10 kg. So, you don’t shiver;
I shiver seeing you’

‘Where is the exit gate for the park?’

‘You’re coming here for the first time?’

‘Yes, I’m’

‘Thank you, that was the information, I was looking for. Come with me, please. I will take you to the gate’

‘No, thank you. I will find the way’

‘I’m the watchman here’

‘You’re not. You’re a specimen to be preserved in a museum, not in a park’

‘I’m not, madam. I’m your husband’s K P’s close friend and my name is SP’

‘But, my hubby told me that KP is a decent man!’

‘I’m a decent man. My acting before you was as suggested by your husband’

‘But, pray why?’

‘So that you will not hereafter step into this garden.’

‘But pray why?’

‘We the oldies want to be left alone for a short period here free from our women’

‘He could have told me. Why all this drama?’

‘No one in our group, except me, has courage to tell that to their partners‘

‘But, you were the one shivering when I mentioned the name of your wife!

‘Oh, that was due to my training, madam. Enjoy the evening hour alone at home.Even you need an hour for yourself’

‘I like you. You’re a decent man. My husband was correct’

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A podiarisi story

Some friends complain that they are not receiving adequate attention from their children living abroad. Some go to the extend of saying that their children were ‘good’ before their wedding, implying that they had become ‘bad’ after wedding!

I got vexed with one of them and asked, ‘pray, what is your complain against your sons? They are gems, as I know’

‘They are not giving green signal for my marrying a woman I like’, was the answer from a man of my age!

I jumped from my seat and was about to throttle his neck when Ammalu, held me back, but I did yell at him:

‘You can’t see without glasses, can’t hear with out aids, can’t walk without a sticker but you want to marry?’

‘That exactly is the reason,’ he replied and smiled. Ammalu too joined in his smile.

My children are very kind to me, too kind I would say. I know they will be, till I ask them for permission for—— .
No, I won’t. Ammalu will never let me go out of her grips.

Last week, during their daily FaceTime interaction, I casually mentioned that my podiarisi, broken parboiled rice, stock was getting exhausted. On the third day, I received a small bag of Kerala mattai arisi, through Amazon home delivery.

As per my usual practice , I searched and found out the price printed on the bag. Rs. 850 for 5 kg! .My blood circulation stopped for a moment. ( it restarted, as it can’t afford to stay immobile for long). For five kilos, I would not have paid more than 250 Rs. In our Malayali shop. The carton says the contents is an Organic stuff. Ok, another 50 Rs.

Three nights, I didn’t sleep ( of course, I slept during daytimes ).

I decided to yell at them for wasting their hard earned money , when they call next time, but my matured brain made me to do some minor calculations:

It was so nice of my son Srikanth to have told his wife Hamsa, about my need, by my just mentioning that my stock was depleting and it was so nice of her to have ordered Kerala mattai. Either my son didn’t mention the name ‘podiarisi’ in his hurry to fulfill my need or in her hurry to oblige him, she heard only ‘arisi’ or the ‘podi’ stuff was not available with Amazon. But for me, what was important was , my son without waiting for a minute, told his wife and she obeyed. Both are important. Equally important.

‘He could have asked me,’why podiarisi? Why not the Goduma arisi, broken wheat, you’re eating now?’
And again Hamsa could have asked her hubby, ‘you get an indent early morning from your dad( she would not have said ‘that old man from Habsiguda’, as my children think that I’m not old now and it will take many more years for me to become old)
and instantly pass on to me?’

And if I shout at them, they may not shout back ( as they were not face to face), but next time when I genuinely has a demand, they will give my indent a cold shoulder.

Considering all these points, I told them in the typical FB language, ‘amazing. You did a good job’. Then after a minute, added, ‘next time before ordering, please consult me’. So, my message was conveyed in a ‘polished’ way

Just because my children are extremely considerate, I should not take undue advantage. No father at my age can. As my friend Dr. Kidambi Vasudevan of Florida has proclaimed on the wall poster in his house, ‘be nice to your children; they decide your nursing home’

But, deep inside me that feeling that they paid more for the stuff, was irritating. So, after two days, I told them, 850 Rs. was a big amount to be spent on mattai arisi. It is after all mattai!

‘What does ‘mattai’ mean, appa?’, Hamsa asked. ‘Is it same as mottai?’. She was not born in Palakkad, not even in India and therefore, her doubt was understandable.

‘Mattai’ is ordinary, not high quality and ‘mottai’ is shaven head.

‘Mattai, why Appa? You said it is nutritious?’ Was her next question.
‘Probably because it is unpolished and therefore miss the outward appearance of polished rice’, I replied.

‘But, it is nutritious though it is unpolished!’, she exclaimed.

‘Yes, you’re right my child’, I said and added, ‘many unpolished things in this world are good, like me, though the external appearance may be unappealing, again like me:

‘Appa!’, intervened Megh, ‘you’re unpolished! How polished you were in telling us that the amount we paid was unacceptable to you!’

After a second, Sharath quipped, ‘Dad, a special Margarita treat in the Italian restaurant for you, the day you land here, for claiming that your external appearance is unappealing.
You’re more stylish than all of us’.

I’m stylish ! I’m sitting now with a ‘thorthumundu’ on my shoulder!

Yes, he has a point. Partially wet thorthumundu on the upper torso, is the stylish body cover for the sweaty Hyderabad now.

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An innocuous query on a woman’s wear

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We have a beautiful park near my house, perhaps the best in the Twin Cities. The senior members of the colony, mostly retired Professors, Scientists and others , all in the evenings of their life, all with some health problems or other, all having good credit balance in their bank account, but still grumbling, assemble there in evenings. I try to avoid them, as they never discuss about the topic of my present interest viz. ‘women and their smiles’ In fact, they never talk about women at all nowadays due to the MeToo fear.

Only once, I happened to be in their company. Due to my innocence and usual practice , I made an innocuous query about the colorful sari, a lady who passed by, was wearing.

‘Eamandi, athu Dharmavarama, Kancheevarama?’

Is it Dharmavaram silk or Kancheepuram silk(she wears)?’

For an inquisitive mind as mine such doubts, as you will agree, are not at all out of place. But, I had to face an instant attack from a co- bencher.

‘Vaayai moodum. Athu antha varavum illai, intha varavum illai. Ennodu Varam, ennodu samsaram’.

Polite translation in short : ‘shut up your mouth! She is my boon, my wife, not Dharmavaram or Kanchipuram.

((Please note that my comment was not about the woman but about her sari and he had no business to ask me to keep quiet)

I never expected the presence of a Chennai mama, there. He had landed in our colony, while I was away. Otherwise I wouldn’t have missed him, or to be more accurate, he wouldn’t have missed me.

‘I’m sorry, mama’, I said, ‘your boon is my boon too’

‘What!’, he got up from his seat, ‘tomorrow you’ll say, my wife is your wife, ngaa?’

‘Never will I, Sir, never. Your wife is your wife and will be your wife always’

He was satisfied.

Kasturi is his name, not because his wife is Kasturi, but for some reason, you and me are not bothered about.

Later, me and Kasturi became friends and he took me to his house and introduced me to his wife:
‘He is the one who complemented your sari, the other day, in our Harithavanam Park.

It was a wrong way to introduce an old man, to one’s wife, but I didn’t argue as it was too early for him to know about my attributes and achievements. I was scared that his wife would stare at me in contempt or even ask me to quit. No, she didn’t. In fact, her face turned to a Deepavali night.

‘After leaving the college, no one has commented on my sari. Pl. come inside mama, please’, invited the kind lady. Her husband didn’t appreciate the warm welcome she offered, as old men like only old women to be welcomed inside their house.

‘Komlam, actually he doesn’t deserve your appreciation as he didn’t appreciate your sari. He doesn’t even know the difference between silk and cotton. That day, you were in fact wearing an ordinary cotton sari and he was enquiring what type of silk it was!’

When attacked, even an animal won’t keep quiet, but I kept quiet, as my knowledge on women or their ware was really poor then.

But I explained my position to his wife.

‘Whether it was a cotton or silk sari, madam, you looked gorgeous in that dress. You looked Fantastic, you looked amazing. It is not the apparel but the person who donned it shone before my eyes and is shining before me, even know’

They lady was spellbound; the gentleman started shivering with anger.

‘What sweet do you prefer? I will prepare, tomorrow’, enquired the kind woman.

‘Jangiri’, I replied in a soft tone. When I speak to women, usually, my voice turns mellifluous.

Mr. Kasturi leapt before me, like a predator before its prey.

‘You think my wife was a charakku master, chef, in hotel Saravanabhava?’, he fumed.

‘Laddu is easier for me to make, mama’, said Mrs.K .

‘Welcome. Jangiri is like a wheel. Laddu like a ball’, I revealed my expertise.

‘Look, he talks about the shape and not about the taste. He doesn’t know the difference between the two. He is perhaps a diabetic and his wife has kept him a mile away from any sweet preparations’

‘Mr. K, all sweets are sweets and they taste the same’.
I replied and then turning to his wife said, : ‘all women are women but your woman is a class by herself’.

Mrs. K’s face became the New York Central Park, in the Autumn . And Mr. K’s face was like Agni nakshatram summer days, in Palakkad.
I continued,
‘Mami, you are a sweet lady. You are a kind lady. Whatever you give me will be sweet, for me, as your words are sweet, your heart is sweet, your hands are sweet’

‘Let us fall at his feet and take his blessings’, Mami invited her hubby to join her. ‘He seems to be a blessed soul. Saraswathy Devi stays on his tongue. See his face. It is glowing’.

K. didn’t, probably, see any glow in my face. ‘Che!’ – that was the only sound he produced and unwilling to stay there for another minute, he moved towards the the outer gate, from where Ammalu, was entering screaming at me, ‘where did you vanish good-for-nothing old man? I was searching for you behind every woman on the street:

‘Mama, who is this woman abusing you?’, enquired anxiously the Jangiri lady.

‘All women abuse me madam. That is my Fate. You’re the only one kind to me’.

K. Came back and wanted to kick me out and Ammalu wanted to punch my nose, but the sweet Jangiri, smiled at me.

‘Don’t think she is smiling at you in sympathy. She is smiling out of happiness that another woman too is openly harassing her husband’, blurted K.

Who can decipher the width and depth of the smiles of women?
I sang:

I can fly up or dip deep
To learn the sky’s width and ocean’s depth.
But to know the secret of a woman’s smile
I should be born again and again
And ask about her wear; not when her hubby is near!

Ps -in the picture, a discussion on fresh Kancheepuram saris, on the eve of two wedding in my family, in 2001.

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Kappi to Kathakali

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At times my brain works at abnormally high speed.
A recent example.
Time 3.30 pm. Vicha ‘s electronic clock woke him from his post-lunch nap, for a purpose.

‘Anna, kaappi’

Wait man, let me solve this Sudoku four star.
Minutes, one, two—

‘Shall I make kaappi?’ He turns restless.

I rushed into the kitchen. To make coffee you need just two things, decoction and milk. No sugar for thammudu. Where is milk? In the fridge. Very good.

Where is decoction? Filter empty. No problem. Srikanth has neatly labeled the dabbas. Picked up coffee -power dabba.

The holes of the upper mini drum were all blocked. No problem. Let me clear the blocks with a needle. Where is the needle ! Searched everywhere. Not found.
(There is a box full of insulin syringes with thin needles, but my brain, had gone for a Kerala hartal)

A flash inside. Brain wakes up like undesirable desires rising at my heart at times. Bad comparison. It is ok. Bad also is a part of life. Black makes white whiter. White is often forgotten; black stay longer. All the luxurious parties in star hotels forgotten; only #MeToo stays.

There is a solution for every problem. I switch on the stove and holding the percolator carefully with tongs, heat the bottom so as to burn the coffee granules stuck in the holes. The holes are meant for free flow. All holes.

The idea is not mine. Yes, it was Perinkulam Anantha
Iyer’s practice. Great man he was. The son follows the father’s footsteps. A proud father, he would have been excited had he watched my action.

Minutes, one, two —

The bottom of the percolator turns black. Doesn’t matter. It can be washed off. Some blacks can be cleared, not all. Some stains are immortal. Man goes, stains stay back.
But wait. Let the heated percolator be on the platform. Let me get milk from the fridge.
‘Don’t heat the milk now; let the decoction be ready’, advises the brain.

Very good, opened the coffee powder dubba, removed the powder and just lifted the percolator with two fingers. It was still red -hot! I forgot. It didn’t .

Ohoooooooooo! Two fingers got burnt! Ohooooooooo.
Rushed towards the tap to pour water on the fingers. Oooooo, pooooo!

Vicha sitting in the hall didn’t hear my screaming from the kitchen. He wouldn’t have heard even if I had screamed at his ears!

‘Anna, kaappi aacho?’ Is coffee ready?’

‘Unduraa. I will blast your head.’, I screamed. No problem. He wouldn’t heard that too. Disability is a blessings, at times- for others!

‘How difficult is the job of a house wife!’ I thought and praised mentally the woman who silently served coffee, 3/4 times daily, just for asking and even without asking for the whole family, friends and frequent visitors, for many years. She would have been appreciating seated on mango tree branch, somewhere. I would have said coconut tree beach, but that tree is too high for her. I don’t want to trouble her. Have troubled her enough before.

I praised my intelligence too.
‘Had I not used the tongs and directly held the filter in my hand and heated?’ Not two fingers, the whole hand would have been burnt. I was indeed a wise man.

P.A.Iyer, be proud of your son. He I didn’t blame his Fate or the star on the sky on the day of his birth for the mistake he committed.

‘Anna, should I come and help you?’

Oddu Raja, oddu. Your coffee is almost ready.

The burnt fingers continued to blame my foolishness- ‘you have no sense’, I passed on the blame to my brain.

‘If I’m senseless why did you scream, when you got burnt? ‘ asked the brain.

‘Kappi unda, illaya- are you going to give me coffee or not?’

Oh my god! The milk has boiled and boiled and boiled, overflown on the burner, putting off the flame, leaving the base of the vessel charred. I was standing almost touching it but didn’t notice the overflow of its anger. Not surprising- I was standing, not close, but touching a woman, but failed to see her overflowing anger. Anyway that was when I was younger. When you are young, you fail to see the face of your wife, see only her back and when the time comes to see her front, you see only her back, that too from a distance. No problem, I see her face from the wall opposite to me.

‘Anna—-‘ Thammudu reminds again. What to do now? No milk in stock. Shall I go out and buy a packet from the shop on the circle road? Poor Vicha is going dry with no kaappi which keels him alive, though limping.

At that critical moment, the embodiment of immense mercy,
Saraswathy Devi, who had abandoned me for the past two months, inspires my mind and I sing aloud, for the first time in the last two months, a popular Kathakali padam, loudly:

:
“ajitha hare jaya madhava vishno!
ajitha hare jaayaa maadhava vishno!
ajitha hare jaya madhava vishno”

Viswanatha Iyer, heard the third repetition and responded, skipping the next few lines, and sang, in high pitch. That is how that padam has to be sung.

“paladinam aayi njanum balabhadranuja ninne paladhinamayi njanum balabhadranuja ninne nalamodu kaanmathinnu kaliyalleruchikunnu
nalamodu kaanmathinnu kaliyalleruchikunnu”

He wanted to convey that he too, was like Sudhama, waiting long, not to meet Lord Krishna, but for his favorite kaappi

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An instant divorce case and in between, a #MeToo problem

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The moment I heard that Kavitha’s wedding didn’t last even 24 hours, I rushed to meet her, without wasting time even to put on a shirt.

When I reached her home, in the next street, her father Vembhu was settling the accounts of Usmaan, the flowers and garlands supplier.

‘Kavithaaaa’, I entered the hall sobbing and placing my thothumundu, (small towel on my shoulder) to wipe off the tears as and when formed. She was arguing with her mother about a ‘#MeToo’ report of a cook, Thankam. Though she mentioned the cook’s name more than once, and meaningfully gazed at me, I thought that was not the time to worry whether Thankam had served us anytime in the past. There are many cooks in the world by the name Thankam and why should I worry about any of them?

‘What happened uncle?’, enquired the sweet girl, ‘dust entered the eye?’

‘No, my child. My agony is trying to emerge in the form of tears’

‘Agony? Did you overpay a rupee to the vegetable vendor?’ That was her mother, who too buy vegetables from the same supplier.

‘No. My heart bursted when I heard that Kavitha’s marriage didn’t last even the first night. I expected you all in a sorrowful mood, but you are, thankfully, in high spirits’

‘In high spirits’, the desperate dad intervened,
‘ I am yet to settle the account of some of the service providers but my daughter is back home with the shocking news of the marriage – break’. Vembhu, like me, was almost in tears.

‘What is shocking about it?’, questioned his wife, ‘is this the first marriage – break in the season ?’

‘And you know, SP, the reason?’, asked my friend.

‘I’m anxious to know’. I responded.

‘Why you’re anxious?’ That was again Mrs. Shambhu. ‘Is Kavitha your daughter?’

‘Is she?’. I returned the question to her. ‘You should know better’.

She got up from her seat and shouted,
‘is there no one in this house to show this gentleman the way to our exit gate?’

‘Cool please, all of you’, pacified Kavitha.

‘Uncle I will tell you the reason. The cots in the hotel room were laid North to South direction. Kish said, it was not auspicious to lie that way. Head should never face North. He cited a slokam too, in support of his belief’

‘Oh, I know that slokam. ‘Venam kizhakkottu—‘, I offered to recite the four-liner of pure wisdom.

‘Stop it, SP’, screamed Shambhu. ‘Is it the time to exhibit your scholarship?’

‘But, Kavitha, you could have asked the hotel boys to adjust the cots and beds, as per his choice’, I suggested to Kavitha. ‘Should such a silly reason be the cause for the rupture of your wedding?’. I have a knack of asking good questions, which Ammalu used to praise.

‘Uncle there lies the difference between the thinkings of old and new generation people’, Kavitha clarified without any emotion on her face. ‘Had I surrendered my views just to save the night, I will be sacrificing my views, thoughts and rights allowing his stupid ideas to rule me throughout my life’

‘But, still my child, as an intelligent girl, you could have somehow solved that small issue and saved your marriage’.

Kavitha didn’t answer. Her mother did.

‘The only solution would have been for my daughter to allow Kish to lie on the bed with his head towards the direction of his choice, though may not be in alliance with my daughter’s. But, they were in the hotel for their honey moon and not for drawing a ‘T’ design on the bed’. She laughed mildly, enjoying her own joke.

‘’That ‘T’ formation would have, perhaps saved a marriage’, I wanted to ask her, but didn’t. A man of my age should be careful in discussing such topics with women.

Soon after reaching home, however, I wanted to talk about the topic with Ammalu but, hesitated. Instead, I asked her, ‘Ammalu, can I ask you a fundamental question about the first wedding night ?’
As I mentioned earlier, I have my own way of asking questions which my wife admires.

‘I forgot about our first night long ago,’ she replied, carelessly.

‘I don’t want to discuss about our first night’

‘Then, about someone else’s first night? You ask always foolish questions, but never before, once did you ask such an utterly foolish one, as the present one. Wonder what is happening to you, SP!’

She dampened my enthusiasm of asking my next question about the #MeToo madam. But, Ammalu, the super clever woman she is, guessed my question from my face and replied,
‘don’t worry. We never had a cook, Thankam by name.

In the file picture below from Boston, my brother in law Patchu wondering whether I really have any spiritual powers as I claim to have or I’m another Bogus Muni.

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A rainy evening at Habsiguda

Drizzling. Roads are wet, marshy. With a handbag on shoulder, I went to buy vegetable from the Friday market in the Sai temple complex, close to our house. My steps were unsteady, but not my mind. What will happen if my children happen to see me now, I thought. They never allowed me to go alone, even for an evening stroll inside our colony.

Scene changes

Olavakkode Padathu elementary school.

Walking to school through the narrow marshy path dividing two paddy fields. The school itself is in the midst of paddy fields. Rainy season is fully enjoyable. We jump into the fields, splash muddy water on each other, get scolding from HM Pankunni Menon and from Appa too, when back home.

Back to Habsiguda

Forgot my age and wanted to flash rain water stagnated , on the face of a lady fashionably dressed, going to the adjacent Sai Baba Temple. Try to lift my right leg. It pains. Realize that is the problematic leg and I should not play with it. I lift my left leg. The lady looks at my raised leg and stares at me.

Not safe. I should be careful with fashionable ladies.
I withdraw, honorably.

Scene changes

Going to High school by walk, through the old bridge near the Olavakkode Commonwealth Tile works, as the Kalpathy river is flowing in full force. Venu and another boy is with me. The ottucompany or Tile Works manager’s daughter is going to school in a kuthira vandi, or horse -drawn cart and we are following the cart. We are happy to follow the cart. She looks at us. I thin she is looking at me. Venu thinks she is looking at him. We both are happy for our own reason. The third guy is a manukku, a dull fellow. She won’t look at him. We are happy again.

Back to Habsiguda

Due to rain, the vendors come late to the market and are just unloading the vegetables from their carts. Have to wait in the rains or go back home and ask someone to get vegetables, later. Going back without finishing the job is not in my practice. I wait. Rain increases . I go inside the Sai baba temple.

The fashion lady comes out, after finishing her worship.

‘Kaal noppi ettila undhi, thatha?’, she enquires – Thatha, how is your leg pain? I woke up to the situation. I’m a thatha, old man and not an elementary or high school student. Very bad. I stare at Sai baba. No expression on his face. ‘Baba, I’m a thatha, you are a thatha’, I tell Him. He deserves it for keeping mum.

I see only old people everywhere. All the vegetable sellers are old, buyers are old, the temple visitors are all old, the poojai is old.
The fashion lady has spoiled my mood by calling me thatha. Is she taking revenge on me for my attempt to splash muddy water on her sari?

‘I can drop you at your home’, she offers a lift in her car.

Politely, I reject. I start walking back home. My dreams have totally ebbed away.. I’m an old man, limping back home and not the enthusiasm overflowing elementary school student or a high school student running behind a kuthiravandi carrying a girl wearing pavada, davani.

I enter home. Vicha in a chair, near the entrance, placing his bandaged leg on a stool.

He doesn’t bother to enquire how I managed to negotiate the rains as well as the marshy roads with an unhelpful leg and carrying a bag-full of vegetable. My children in USA would have come running to me anxiously and bombarded me with affectionate, hearty enquirers about my travail and also mildly admonished me for venturing to go out alone, disobeying their instructions.

Vicha, looks at me. He wanted to say something. I wait. He says, ‘ nalla mazhai! Chudukkanae oru kappi kedachal jorai irukkum’ – excellent rains. Will appreciate if I can get a cup of hot coffee’

I look at him. He is not an old man nearing 80, but a child of eight years or even less. I didn’t come all the way from USA , at the cost of their displeasure to shout at this eight year old child, who is worried only about his kappi and not about my discomforts.
I look at Vicha again. I see only the innocence of a child and not the apathy of an old man at my discomforts, which I’m undergoing solely for his sake.

I’m no more an old man. That fashion lady has no idea about my age. If my younger brother is 8 years old, I’m just 10 years.
I look around. There are no old and disabled men or women anywhere in my neighborhood. And at my central hall, wah ! My children and my sister’s children all are playing. My sisters, their husbands, other relatives all smart and young, enthusiasm bubbling and overflowing all around are moving around. Anantha Jyothy is ever young.

Vicha anxiously gaze at my face wondering what happened to his kappi request. Why am I standing like a statue.

‘Anna, kappi!’. He repeats his request.
I wake up from my dream state. The hall is empty, but not my heart, which is full of compassion for my disabled sibling.

‘Give me five minutes, Vicha’. I tell him and move towards the kitchen

In the file picture, my siblings Vicha and Meena
when Megh visited Anantha
Jyothy a couple of years before.A