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210 · Aug 2020
Lessons in the drizzle
It’s drizzling

But it doesn’t matter.

I am running,

Around the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium

At Kochi.

The ground is wet,

There are water patches around.

So, I take careful steps.

As I go around,

I see a young man,
In a hoodie,

And track pants.

He is talking,

On the mobile phone.

Standing beneath an awning.

Must be to his girlfriend,

Because he is smiling.

I think to myself,

‘What a wastrel. Do some exercise. Get fit’.

But he is oblivious.

During my next lap,

I see,

A friend has joined him.

‘Two wastrels’, I think,

As I start panting.

My middle-age lungs,

Are aching.
But I like the suffering,

Because it makes me feel good.

When I stop.

On my third round,

They are peeling off their track pants.

I run on..

The drizzle has eased up,

A cool breeze is blowing.

My perspiration-drenched forehead

Gets some relief.

Running triggers

Something primitive in me.

This is what man did,

For thousands of years.

Before the invention

Of the wheel.

I can hear the thud of feet

Hitting the ground

Behind me.

It sounds like heartbeats.

Then these two young men,

Whom I derided,

Whizzed past me

At high speed.

Smooth electrifying movements

Of hands and feet.

‘What?’ I exclaim silently in my head

My perception was

Oh so wrong.

They are athletes,

And they are swift.

And they splash,

Through the puddles.

Fearless.

So I had simply

Misunderstood them.

That’s what happens to all of us

We misunderstand

People.

Places.

Communities.

Religions.

Spouses.

Children.

Parents.

Relatives.

Is it any surprise,

Society is so fractured.  

I feel like a fool

Message to me: don’t jump to conclusions,

Ever.
92 · Dec 2020
Evaluation
A memory came

Of many years ago.

I must have been in

Class 7 or 8.

I was lying in bed

In the ancestral home at Changanacherry,

Had come there from Kolkata

for my summer vacation.

In the next room,

My mother and several sisters-in-law

Were chatting.

About their children

The chatter woke me up.

My mother said, “My son is quiet and well-behaved.”

Another woman said, “My son is the opposite.
Restless and mischievous.”

The other mothers joined in.

Talking about their daughters and sons.  

Today, when I remember this,

I think to myself,

From the time we are born,

Till the day we die

And even after,

People are always evaluating you.

First, it is our parents,

Then our siblings, friends and relatives.

Teachers and classmates.

This carries on

In college,

Professors and fellow students,

The University Board

All measuring your performance,

Ready to congratulate or condemn you

When you go to work.

Bosses, colleagues, subordinates,

The management

All assessing your work,

And your character

From morning to night.

And now since it is work from home,

From night to morning, too.

In the meantime,

Your wife and children

Are also evaluating you.

In this pandemic world,

They think: does the old man have the cash

To meet our expenses?  

You go to the hospital,

The doctor evaluates you

Not to forget,

At different times,

The dentist, the ophthalmologist,

The dermatologist,

The gastroenterologist

The cardiologist.

Depending on which part has broken down.

You feel like screaming

God, is there a single moment when I am

Not being assessed.

God is the wrong person to ask.  

Because He is the master of

The appraisal.

When you die, he is busy peering into your soul.

Is he a good or a bad guy?

Should I send him to heaven or hell?

And then you resign yourself

To the fact.

The appraisal will never stop.

And when there is an unnatural death,

Then it is the turn of

Human beings to cut open your body

And poke about,

Looking for this and that.

A post-mortem.

Ha, ha, no respite at all!

— The End —