Ode to Love – Confessions of a Book-Fiend
In the beginning it was a refuge from the world outside; a world that began where home ended. Playmates made fun of your clumsy attempts at games; you couldn’t dodge the opponents as they ran after you, you couldn’t throw the ball straight, neither hit it hard, you couldn’t outshout mates in the wild horseplay, nor pull them down in the mock show of strength. Your face turned crimson on hearing lewd invectives being bandied with abandon and you would cower in shame. But you could effortlessly finish the homework in the class itself. You could not help but answer the teacher's queries when the whole class was mum – they were so unimaginatively inane. You were mocked again for your thoroughness with academics.
Books brought an escape from this
reality. They took you to lands where this bullying didn’t exist. You met kids
like you, who shunned the clumsy ways of the world. In stories you found
friends you had always yearned for. Books taught you to dream. They widened
your imagination and nurtured it with tenderness. Library hour was the best
time in school.
Over the years, dalliance with books
transformed into obsession. You read two-penny potboilers, you read the lurid
tear-jerkers, you read the macabre tales of illicit love and murder in the
shady magazines. Soon, unbeknownst to you, you were reading classics in Hindi
and English. When you discovered poetry, first in Hindi and then in Urdu, it
was like meeting your destiny. You knew, you had to come to its shores. As your
inner world swelled, the need for companions in the outer world shrank.
You were growing. Much vicissitudes of
the human condition, a lot of all men, lay ahead. There came a time when
insuperable melancholy filled the days and the nights. Each dawn unfolded the
interminable tedium of a day. Each dusk announced the sleepless moments of the
night to follow. There was no succour in the mundane activities of daily
living. Every company was unbearable. Attempts of some to dispel the ennui only
aggravated it. There was no hopelessness, no anxiety about the future. Sorrow
had passed. In its wake was a paralysing indifference to life. You wanted to
get on with living desperately but felt like a fledgling who has yet not
learned flying.
Books provided gentle support, silently
and unostentatiously. They were the much-needed companion who eschewed
gratuitous advice. For hours every day, you escaped the stupefying lethargy of
life and entered a new world. You discovered that you were still capable
of feeling sadness, elation, laughter, longings, curiosity and eagerness; The
eternal poetry of life. There was no moralising, no promises of a vibrant
future, no calls to forsake the gloom. Just a clear picture of life in its
various moods. You realised, perhaps then, that the present dullness was just a
shade of life and will pass like everything else that had.
It did and in no time.
Shock of unthinkable destiny, as it
befell life unannounced, had anaesthetised the mind, benumbed grief. When mind
recovered, it felt the changes past events had ushered. It grieved. Books
whispered a soft melody in your ears. You discovered a new elegance in poetry, its breath-taking ability to mirror emotions in their vast spread. All with a
spellbinding brevity. These books gave words to your feelings and ironically
enriched life; celebration of grief, in a language discovered anew.
Happiness docked at the shores of life
once again and brought peace along. In the serenity of newfound pleasures, you
remembered the dark days of the past and feared the transience of existing
contentment. Queries that had flitted across your mind randomly in the past,
now became persistent. Why life? Why joy? Why sorrow? Why the universe? Why the
world? You courted your one love of life more ardently. Thus dawned another
phase of enchantment with books. They became a necessity; not only
life-enhancing but life-giving. You read entranced. You read
possessed; possessed of a love. A love that demands nothing, only proffers
joys.
You have been in the embrace of this
passion for decades now. Books have answered, with elan and unbelievable ease,
queries that seemed inscrutable a few years back. They have brought a quiet in
life which is born of acceptance of your self, with its numerous failings and
little virtues. They have shown you the place of men in the world. They have
offered you a suggestion as to why you are the way you are. Unpretentiously,
they venture to answer the imponderable query; What is the meaning in it all,
this universe and this life? In the exuberant company of this forever youthful
friend, every day brings newer discoveries, newer freedoms; freedom from
ignorance, from the shackles of hidden dogmas stifling life. Freedom to look at
the world square in the face and enjoy it warts and all.
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