“through the act of living, the discovery of oneself is made concurrently with the discovery of the world around us. . ."

Saturday, September 18, 2010

The Revenge



The boy, typical of his age, is restless. He runs the length of the aisle to and fro, climbs the steps to the upper berths. In between he shouts out songs. He interrupts conversations between the elders, asking –‘Which is this station’, ‘When will we reach Kochi’ – queries that are left ignored by them and wander about like the boy himself in the chilled air of the air-conditioned coach.

The boy is the brother of the toddler in my last post. The entire family is either talking among themselves or coddling the toddler. The boy is ignored except for an occasional rebuke – ‘Sit down, Naveen! How many times do I have to tell you not to run about!’ The boy is a child – 7 or 8 years – how could they expect a child of that age to sit? The grandma is crooning to the little girl – the boy breaks in and teases his sister and she sets off a long bawling. ‘Shut up, Naveen, go away!’ cries Grandma. The mother sitting atop the upper berth shouts a warning call – ‘NAVEEEEN!!!’ ominously. The father, pulls the boy and force him down on the seat. ‘Shut up, I say, SHUT UP!!’

The boy sulks for a while. After sometime he gets up and tries to play with his sister again. ‘Sing, sing Waka waka’, he asks her. He turns to Grandma – ‘Grandma, I’m hungry, give me something’. I had noticed a large food container with 6 or 7 sections being carried in. ‘You will get dinner when others eat’.

Around 2030 hrs, the family gets ready for the dinner. The large container is opened and the air is filled with aromas of a dozen kind; fried fish, chicken, vegetable curries and rotis. Paper plates are distributed. Grandma sets the toddler on her lap and feeds her little bits of fried chicken. I take a peek and my mouth waters; I have to be content with the three flaccid, cold chappatis and vegetable curry from the railway pantry.

The boy watches the little girl eating. ‘Can I have mine, now?’ He asks. ‘You can have it when the baby finishes eating’. ‘But I have been hungry for a looong time!’, the boy exclaims. ‘Shut up, I say!’ chides the father.

In time, his turn to eat comes. After dinner he is back in his seat having washed his hands. His elders are still eating. He looks at one and asks – ‘Can I have that Chicken leg?’ He bites into it and finishes it within seconds and wipes his fingers on his jeans. ‘You dirty, filthy little boy! How DARE you wipe your hand on your trousers? DIRTY FELLOW! Where are your manners? Go wash NOW!’ thunders the father, a doctor. I am pained. The boy looks so embarrassed and is on the verge of tears.

Later, the family sits relaxed and makes conversation. They say how much doctors are earning in the States. ‘3,00,000 dollars, I tell you, our Joe is picking, and he is only a dentist. See George, you are a cardiologist, Anna is in paediatrics, between the two of you, you can make MILLIONS!’ Anna, the mother of the children is still on the upper berth. I learn that she is going to appear for an examination for her MD.

Suddenly I overhear the young boy asking his father sweetly – ‘Dad, you know Karate?’ ‘No, I don’t’. ‘Vinu’s papa knows Karate. He is a Black Belt’. A pause. ‘Dad, you know swimming?’ Dad couldn’t care less. He says brusquely – ‘No’. The boy stands up and exclaims- ‘What? You don’t know swimming? You don’t know Karate, either?’

‘This Dad knows nothing!’ The boy declares to the world at the top of his voice. ‘See, my dad knows NOTHING!!’

I smile into the book and bury my nose deeper into Jeffrey Masson’s ‘Dogs Never Lie About Love’.

************* Balachandran V, Trivandrum 18.09.2010

8 comments:

  1. Oh how sad this is.......Almost borders on mental abuse and neglect. I wonder how they treated him when he was the only child they had. Hmmmmmm, as he grows older he will do many more things to get the attention he is so lacking... Thanks for sharing your varied experiences...

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  2. @Sandy: These are commonplace, universal scenes, Sandy. These seemingly ordinary incidents are keys to the parent-child relationships. What I intend to show by this post is the insensitivity of parents in the mad rush to make more money. It also shows how sibling rivalry is sown and corrupt innocent minds. Just an indicator to modern, young parents...

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  4. The little fellow will he turn out rebellious, belligerent?Poor Pop must have been peeved

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  5. My heart goes out to Naveen. If this the way an educated couple treat their child...alas.

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  6. terrific piece! very evocative.

    acquiring qualification and education are different things. such insensitive parents!

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  7. Scene is only too familiar. Have witnessed some myself. By the time parents are ready to listen to the kid, it would have been too late! Nice observation & point made :)

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  8. @KPJ: Sensitivity, to the 'knowledgeable', is a sign of weakness! :)

    @RGB:In such familiar, too common scenes, great truths lie, mocking at us!

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