Mummy
Mummy*
Mummy was the pivot of my life when I was young. As I grew,
she got relegated to periphery. I do not know how or when this process set in. I
woke up to it only when her failing health forced me to pay her more attention.
But now I often wonder about it.
I
Mummy cooked the best food in the world. This was as
obvious as the fact that day followed the night. Mummy was beautiful. My idea
of beauty grew from her. That she was short and fat did not matter. This was
how beautiful women were supposed to be. Mummy was intelligent. She could teach
me all the subjects. Well, almost all. Mothers were not supposed to know maths.
This was domain of fathers. She stitched trendy clothes. I flaunted these on
every occasion. Mummy had read the best books. I listened entranced when she
talked about Hindi poetry: Maithili Sharan Gupt’s Yashoda, Subhadra
Kumari Chauhan’s Yeh Kadam Ka Ped, Ramdhari Singh Dinkar’s Himalay,
Tulsi and Meera’s verses. She introduced me to writers like Munshi Premchand, Sharatchandra
Chattopadhyay, and Tagore. I read their books with wonder and relish.
Mummy could conjure solutions to seemingly
insurmountable problems. The night before the civics exam in my sixth grade is
one of the most dreadful memory of my school years. I realised on the evening
before the exam that I hadn’t read about half the book even once. Ensuing fear
made my blood run cold. Mummy sat with me the whole night and explained all the
chapters. She remained calm and patient throughout the ordeal. I did well in the
paper.
Mummy, soon after her marriage (Sketched from a photograph)
Best of all, mummy loved me like no one else. Hers was
the only unconditional love I came across in all my life. I knew she was there
for me always. There were times, though exceedingly rare, when daddy hit me
hard in anger. Mummy would press my head tightly against her bosom, all the
while wiping my tears and trying to soften the cries lest they anger daddy
more. I was just so slightly aware that she was trying hard to control her sobs
and biting her lips. This made me forget the pain and the indignation. But she
could confront even an infuriated daddy, at the cost of being rebuked by him,
when she felt that he had been unfairly severe in a paltry matter.
Mummy thought I was the most brilliant child in the
world. She believed I could never do any wrong. This spurred me to put in a
little more effort in the task at hand.
Mummy never gave me any reason to pine for more as far
as expectation from a mother was concerned.
…
Then I grew up.
Mummy could still explain the poetry of Tulsidas but
the social sciences in English were beyond her. Movies that mummy appreciated
were good but this was the era of new-wave cinema of Shyam Benegal and Govind
Nihalani. I noticed that she became silent when I talked about these. She was
overwhelmed with joy when results of entrance exams for professional courses, I
had taken, started pouring in. She had never had occasion to think about the merits
and demerits of different branches of engineering or the edge of a particular
college of medicine and the drawback of the other. She did not interfere in my
choice and only urged me not to worry about the expenses involved.
College life exposed me to wider ideas and things. I
ate out frequently and gradually I stopped associating the idea of good food
with mummy. I forgot too, feel of the clothes that had been stitched on her old
Usha sewing machine. I discovered the delicate elegance of Urdu shayari and
depths of spirituality in Mahadevi Verma’s poetry. I read more prose in English.
Poets and novelists mummy had brought in my life shrunk to a distant childhood
memory. When home on vacations, I found fewer topics to converse with her. She
fussed over me indulgently and I flinched at the touch of her demonstrative
affection. A world different from Mummy’s, now informed my perception of
beauty. She started showing early symptoms of osteoarthritis and hypertension,
likely effects of her round figure. I began to remind her, mildly and
evasively, of her obesity. Fat was after all not so beautiful.
…
I graduated and was commissioned in Air Force. Soon I married and my immediate family grew. I found more people on whom to shower affection. Contact with mummy was now limited to cursory telephonic conversations on couple of occasions every month. And all the while age was running her down. Every time I met her, after a gap of many months, I noticed how her limp had aggravated, her jowl hung more loose, grey in her hair had increased, her plait had grown thinner, her hearing had deteriorated further and her movements around the house were slower and more deliberate. She talked more about her health. I exhorted her, rather strongly, to take more interest in books, in the world out there, and other such matters of mind. She bore my admonitions in silence, seldom protesting meekly. It didn’t dawn on me that while my world had grown, hers had shrunk.
Advancing osteoarthritis of both knees– even after
knee-replacement– drastically reduced mummy’s mobility. She rarely left the
house now. Daddy suffered a debilitating fracture of hip bone and was now
confined indoors. This broke mummy’s last contact with the world beyond her
immediate home. They came to live with me.
With difficulty mummy waddled from one room to the
other. Her eyesight was failing but she spent most of her time reading
religious books, the book in her hands almost touching her nose. She became
more dependent on daddy, who was himself severely handicapped by the
complications of hip surgery. I saw that she felt miserably lonesome, but I was
too engrossed with life to think of ways to alleviate this. Occasionally she
would linger a wee bit longer, as she walked across the door of the room, where
I read a book.
‘What are you reading, Rajiv?’
‘Oh! This wouldn’t interest you mummy.’
She would hesitate a little, but then proceed to her
room.
Mummy gradually withdrew in a shell. Rarely a thing
about her– the faint fragrance of the talc she always used, emanating from her
clothes; the way she wound shed hair around her finger while combing, before
discarding them; her handkerchief tucked in the saree at her waist– reminded me
of the mummy of my childhood, but only for the briefest of moments.
Within a month, she slid behind an impenetrable wall.
Physicians said, this was dementia and gradually she may lose all her memory. Now
I could not reach her, however hard I tried. I wanted to get back to my mummy.
After decades, I hugged her unabashedly. She started crying. Was this in
acknowledgment of my affection or a random response of a muddled mind that now inhabited
the body where once my mummy lived? In vain I looked for the grand cook, the
wise woman, and the loving mother who was my mummy once.
II
Mummy recovered from the delirium but became increasingly morose
over next six months. She did not utter a word for days. Then one day she
refused to eat altogether. A new psychiatrist diagnosed her condition as severe
depression. He said she suffered from Anhedonia. Dictionary defines this as ‘A
psychological condition characterised by inability to experience pleasure in
normally pleasurable acts.’ I heard this word for the first time. She improved
with new medicines, but her mood did not recover completely.
She aged rapidly now. She would get up from the bed with extreme
difficulty. Daddy’s mind was failing faster than hers. Presently, he could not engage
in any conversation. Mummy’s only source of companionship was receding from her
life. She would stubbornly prod daddy to talk to her. He had of late become
irritable and would often snub her. Daddy took to bed in his last days. He was
then served food in the bed. Mummy would limp to the dining table alone. She
would eat food clumsily, disinterestedly and soon return to her bed. She stopped
coaxing daddy for conversation. She deteriorated alarmingly till she was unable
to get up from the bed. Both, mummy and daddy, were now bed-ridden. Daddy
expired in a few weeks.
Mummy had now stopped talking on her own. She did not demand
anything. She ate when given food, drank when offered a glass of water, sat up
in the bed when propped up and lay shivering if the air conditioner in her room
was inadvertently set at a low temperature. She answered in monosyllables when spoken
to. Occasionally she would point to her shoulders or knees if I enquired after
pain. She could recognise few of us whom she saw daily.
Soon she stopped eating solids. And in a couple of weeks she
wouldn’t touch even semi-solids. We fed her a cup or two of milk and some sweet
yoghurt, but with exceeding difficulty. For a week she subsisted on a little
more than water. She did not respond to me now. She would barely open her eyes
when I called her repeatedly. She lay in the bed without moving.
I had decided some time back that I will not admit her in a
hospital for terminal care. I wanted to provide her the security of a home and
the assurance of my company till her last moment. I did not want her to spend her
last days in company of strangers, with multiple tubes inserted in her body,
needles being stuck incessantly, while the critical care physicians treated the
laboratory reports and mummy lay lost in this intimidating atmosphere. I felt
this would only prolong her agony. It was a tough decision to withhold life
support from her.
I do not know, if in the end, mummy had any perception of home or us.
Her gradual decline to oblivion was heart-wrenching. It was my private grief:
unbearable yet incommunicable. I often sat with her in the deep night when
others in the house slept. I caressed her forehead gently. I do not remember patting
her thus, ever in my life. She would open her eyes but I did not see any light
of recognition in them now. I wanted to ask her if she agreed with my decision
to let her breath her last in her own bed. But she was not around to ease my
dilemma. All my life I had witnessed her blind love for me. Till a few weeks
back, even in this advanced stage of mental and physical debility, a faint shadow
of contentment would spread on her withered face, when I sat with her, holding
her hand. I wondered, could the solace of my company give her the strength to
withstand the profound agony she might be suffering now? A deep pang of longing
for mummy pierced my heart. I put my face next to hers and muffled the sobs
rising from within. A medley of images flit across my mind, mainly of my
childhood. I hugged her. She kept breathing heavily.
Mummy died slowly in front of my eyes. All her life mummy had been
a god-fearing, kind soul. She never hurt a person knowingly. She believed in an
infinitely compassionate, ever-loving God. I witnessed the working of her
unsurpassably benevolent, just, and omnipotent God, as her body and mind wasted
slowly. I wished her a speedy death that would not come.
On 8th August 2018, mummy breathed her last as I sat by
her side, a few weeks short of her seventy ninth birthday. I knew it was the
end. She had been breathing irregularly and with extreme effort for hours. I
held her thin hands in mine. Gently, I stroked the dry skin over her sunken
cheeks and forehead. She lay flaccid, like a hurt animal. She gasped, ever so
lightly, and then she was no more.
Mummy had always acquiesced in all my decisions willingly. She was
witness to my change of belief – i.e., abandoning of faith – and never seemed
perturbed by it. I felt, like everything else about me, she had accepted this
too, unquestioningly. I could never be wrong. A few close relatives gathered for
the last rites. I kept the ceremony bare. Early next morning, I went to the
cremation ground, on the banks of Hindan river, to gather her ashes. Pyre was
warm even after fifteen hours. I immersed the ashes midstream, in a swift
flowing Ganga at Garh Mukteshwar.
Mummy lingered in her room for a while. Every time I passed by her
door, I reflexively looked at her bed, half expecting to see her sprawled
there.
Mummy will be in my thoughts for long, popping up in situations
that were associated with her when she was alive. She would live in my memory
till I die. She would reappear in her descendants, piecemeal, through her genes, as long as her lineage continues.
* I wrote this in two instalments. First, when mummy suffered
delirium and then soon after her death.
Sir this article touched my heart in many ways, I can completely relate to it as I have seen them and have witnessed their ageing process to some extent.
ReplyDeleteYes. These are universal experiences. Our memories will fail too, so will our bodies. Our kids will then wonder where have the captious, pernickety, book-fiend parents gone?
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