Ageing Spine – Harbinger of An Unyielding Nature?
Neurophysician, whom I consulted
for backache, ordered MRI scan of the spine. Scan threatens to reveal much more
than I had expected to learn.
Spine is the seat of a man’s
character. It is subjected to superlative praise and humiliating slanders in social
parlance. Ignominy of being called spineless – although, often behind your back
– chafes endlessly. A ramrod spine hugely elevates the stature of the person.
Spine bears the weight of the body and the spirit, alike.
My changing spine might presage remodelling
of my nature. This worries me.
Radiologist said, my spine has
lost the natural curves. Does my straightened spine foreshadow a staid, unchanging
behaviour, robbed of its naturally meandering nature? This condemns me to an
insipid life of inflexible dreariness.
Wise aver that chameleonic
personality is a blessing in our world. Gottfried Willhelm Leibniz, German mathematician,
and philosopher of early eighteenth century, opined that we live in the best of
all possible worlds. Human nature that has seamlessly adapted to this perfect
world must be flawless. A rigid spine threatens to disturb this delicate harmony
in my personality and deny me the fruits of a protean nature.
Physician instructed me to avoid
activities where I must bend. Now, I do not like the creepy creatures. And do not
recommend their form of locomotion when required to merely bend. But to bend
gracefully in the mild breeze of societal demand is a trait that lends beauty to
life. This appeal in my nature, I fear, will now recede.
Doctor also informed that changes
in my spine would have taken a long time to develop, perhaps decades. In this insidious
beginning, people in family have discovered the cause of my occasional intransigence;
‘No wonder you are so obstinate, so opinionated. It is in your bones. MRI does
not lie.’
Friends are delighted to find
newer reasons for my scepticism – that I have sharpened after decades of
reading popular science – ‘You had it in you to be so intolerant of alternate views.’
‘These are degenerative changes. A
little early perhaps, a little more severe, but quite run-of-the-mill at your
age.’
I have not only been condemned with
a degenerate unwavering stance; but am being denied the solace of ruing that my
spine has aged prematurely. Changes are in sync with my age.
‘You need to exercise your back,’
advised a spine-surgeon.
Do I? I am sceptic of this advice.
I have lived successfully for nearly sixty years. But for the back, no organ of
my body is exercised more, as I weave my way through the vicissitudes of a
work-a-day life.
‘Do not flex the spine. Controlled
extension may be beneficial,’ further adds the surgeon.
Flexion is bending forward and
extension the reverse. I am not averse to leaning forward to garner gains for myself.
But bending over backwards to please others? At my age? My spine plans an
ignoble dotage for me.
Surgeon looked at my glum face
and offered a hopeful advice, ‘If there be need, we can fix the errant vertebrae.
It is a safe surgery today’.
My spine would be steeled in a
fixed, uncompromising posture for life. Would it steel my character too? And deny
me the gains of a flexible back in a world that values timidity and a pusillanimous
bearing.
I fret my future as I bemoan the loss
of my supple back.
What a right up . Haven’t read Mrs Funny bones yet but this one sure did tickle me up till my bones 😁
ReplyDeleteLovely! As always. Didn't realize the social implications of a degenerative spine. Keep them coming Rajiv.
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