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  • Live as one

    Live as one

    I have been listening to the talks of Mr Eckhart Tolle a lot over YouTube. I find his way of speaking as also the content mesmerizing, very appealing, and best of all, calming. I used to find a similar peace in listening to Ms B K Shivani as well.
    Tolle’s idea of oneness of spirit is ever so relaxing. It puts all the complaints and egocentric thoughts of anger, jealousy, like and dislike towards other human beings to rest in a jiffy. Think about it, if you and the others, if you and the people whom you are surrounded by are just different manifestations of the same energy , only at different levels of consciousness- there is really no ‘You”, ‘me, ‘him’, ‘her’ etc. We are all energies in various states, forms, however one may like to perceive it, manifested in the now. Once this thought sinks in, the mind calms down, anxiety dissipates and people seem a lot closer to us, each one feels like the self. Loving becomes easier because loving or liking oneself is not hard if one decides to, the tendency to compare oneself with others and thereby to feel less or more than them automatically wanes – when an understanding that they are just you in another form dawns. Whether we may realize it or not, we as humans tend to forgive ourselves and ignore our own weaknesses in an oblivious absent-minded way but highlight in our minds the same about others – most of it being a by-product of learnt behaviour and an over-active mind.
    The experience of now, as Tolle talks at length about and of “pain body”, are such reasonable ideas. When I identified my self-defeating thoughts, ideas and the “poor me” as my pain body ( perhaps Tolle’s word for Sanskar), as I observed my “pain body” taking over and consuming me, my self revelling in it, it brought a deep sense of relief, a release from guilt , a burden lifted off my shoulders. Combine with it the fleeting experience of Now and of being in the moment, life seems simple ,not “an inevitable incessant tangle of problems” which it is not even meant to be. The mind needs to learn to be in a state of empty space as against being in a state of constant thought, the plague of the human mind, source of all disease and conflict. Seeing the now for what it is , stripped of thoughts – those emerging from the ‘pain body’, those stemming from one’s ego, those from events associated with the past and those which relate to the future. Rid of all these thoughts, of constant evaluation of the content of the moment, the now is probably very light in nature and probably worth living . A life made-up of only such “nows” would indeed be a life full of happiness and lightness.
    Not sure how far my understanding of this concept is from the actual concept propounded by the Gurus but putting such theories to test and experiencing blips of pristine thoughtless Nows every now and then is already helping me live lighter and a bit more content.

    March 25, 2020

  • The power of here and now

    Everything has come together. It just had to happen. Some universal energies are pushing me out of abysmal despair to shiny hopefulness of a hitherto unknown realm of positivity.

    Those who have contributed to this change in me are countlessly many. A few very important names are listed below : Girish, Bharti, Rini, Sushma, Anand, Rhea, Arnav, Jayanthi, Archana, Shaila, Shital, Selam, Kirti, Mrunalini, Reshmi and last but not least, Anshika and now, Arti. I am full of gratitude towards you.

    May 10, 2018

  • Spring cleaning

    It feels squeaky sparkly clean! One has got to experience this with one’s inner eye. A clutter-free space all of your own, all for yourself where creativity and happiness can go skipping hand-in-hand till eternity. It just feels so light and floaty like the dandelion clocks in spring. I am loving it so much that I am loving myself because of it, a bit more every moment. Life seems worth living. There’s finally place for me in my own world – a world previously cluttered with the unwanted – putrid garbage of aeons which I decided to shake off one fine day. And am I glad !

    What ? Where ? How ? All that suspense!

    What happened was that that beautiful morning, though I woke up quite like usual, a new light shone on me. A transforming thought ran through my head and revealed to me a place of love, comfort and worship. I have been seeking this space for time immemorial and somehow that day it just dawned on me while basking in the sun on our worn-out couch that morning, while doing nothing in particular. My moment of truth. My metamorphosing moment. The thought was simply this – that my mind is mine, a part of me and I can manage it. I can control what it thinks and I can control whether it thinks negative or not, I can manage my thoughts and actions and not allow this machine sitting inside my head take me at will to crummy dark alleys and to, sometimes , points of no-return. And so, as a first baby-step, I absolutely barred it from feeding into itself negative thoughts, about anybody and any situation, as input. Believe me, it feels so much lighter without it. It has only been a couple of days since this resolve and I already feel so much lighter, so much brighter, and beautiful from inside. No baggage! Like those tourists on the hop-on hop-off city tours, ending their days feeling fulfilled as they guzzle down beer with local delicacies and delight themselves in the sights and sounds of that place, relishing their holiday, their break from the humdrum of life. And now, that I started seeing things for what they are, being in the moment, I can so clearly see the games my mind has been playing with me ever since I came into existence. Every time I notice that my old ‘habit pattern’ (credits to Shri S N Goenka for that term) of generating negativity from the most insignificant (in the big picture) of incidents, events, statements is kicking-in, I am able to nip it in the bud (you mean mind of mine!), and move on without allowing it to take hold of me and grip my whole self with a sense of desolate nervous desperation.

    For now, it’s a resolve to keep my mindspace clean, for my own sake and fill it up only with that which is worthy of being there. After all, it’s the most special place in this world.

    May 10, 2018

  • Synapse

    Left out in the cold

    my mind in deep freeze

    snow flakes melt on my nosetip

    water my being

    Light-like they fall

    torn and scattered

    and pierce my conscience

    every minute…

    April 13, 2018

  • Nature in contrast

    Have a small collection of pictures which I love for the sheer contrast they bring out as seasons change. Same scene, different colors (not photo-shopped).

    1. Backyard cherry tree

    2.The clump behind our house

    3. Living room window view

    4

    4. Sunrise from R’s window

    January 25, 2018

  • Of the snuggly mouse and her man

    Woke up to a very stiff back and neck, all nauseated and what not. A hobble to the bathroom followed by an abortive attempt to put myself together, “Oh come on, it’s only a stiff painful back, just a bent-over-forwards-back, you can make it – just dish-out a couple of Utthapams, dodge a couple of sweet but bizarre back-and-forths as you serve those to your pretty pre-teen, fill-up a 15L kettle for warming up drinking water(that’s what a 1.5L kettle feels like to a sleepy mouse with an achy back and shoulders), chew chew chew flax seeds, pack a snackbox, bottle, bag, grope for a dress in darkness, take a shower, get bundled up from head to toe, fish-out house keys from the messiest drawer in the world and finally venture-out in the darkness of a wintry morning – all this with a stiff back bent forward.”

    No, I can’t. Not today. Mrs. X, my well-meaning peering-deep-into-my-eyes coach at The Institute would yet again be disapppointed. So be it !

    Plop! Back into the bed I flop. A shuffle, a snuggle, take my little boy’s delicious sleeping hand in mine and ache away in a lying position until you-know-who wakes up, notices and helps out. I wasn’t going to wake him up to another day of “G, this is happening…”, “G, that is hurting” and ” I can’t… “. It was a long wait until he did.

    Notwithstanding, you-know-who does really help me out of this ‘I am a disaster , I need urgent medical help’ mode every time. Though having to accept that nothing that serious has happened wasn’t easy(what with an ego irrigated by the Internet-of-Hypochondriacs), what really got me going in the end, was the fact that when he did wake up, he sat me down, fed me, gave me water, tea, a hot water bottle for my back, a phone to call whichever doctor I wished to for an earliest possible appointment.

    This one person is special in more ways than one. I feel loved when he’s around though I may not always see or understand and appreciate his ways(but that’s my limitation, not his). Never demands anything in return. He shows me how to love unconditionally everyday.

    January 22, 2018

  • Kalawati

    I met her first in the summer of 2013 in Bijapur, India. Of a diminutive frame, of a pearly white smile and cute dimples, this lady made an immediate impression on my mind. I was drawn to her, probably to her strength of character. She came home to wash our dirty dishes and dirty laundry twice a day and to lend a helping hand in other household chores when needed.

    This time when I visited Bijapur, six summers later, I met Kalawati again. She shone. She was resplendent, exuding more charm than before. An air of being in control – control of her finances, of her daughter’s education, of her status in society, a quietly glowing confidence which comes from knowing that the worst is now behind us, that when difficult situations come and go, I have the wherewithal to battle hardship and be on top of it.

    My stay in Bijapur this time was fifteen days long. Other than my heroine Kalawati, there were two other women, their lives being no mean feat either, who worked in the house. One came in at 9am, left anytime at or before 5pm. Kalawati was the primary support for my ailing, almost immobile mother-in-law. A young lady of 28, she kept her company till as long as she was around and brought some cheer into an otherwise sullen life of a person hoping to walk again some day, hoping to be useful all over again. Then there was a truant cook – a lady who ran a canteen at a small local hospital. What I found truly inspiring was how each of them was a statue of self-discipline, a symbol of strength that makes a woman and how their self-confidence, their zest for living and making the most of what they got, didn’t get marred by day-today ups and downs, their poverty-stricken lives or by the people who make up their lives.

    The fortnight that I spent in Bijapur was almost all indoors. In hindsight, I do regret very much that I didn’t make my most coveted, most charming foray into Gandhi Chowk, the main market area in Bijapur. It has such an inexhaustible array of small shops, dusty roads full of history and character that is so typical of a small town. There are small businesses everywhere on those streets – there are multiple cloth and clothing vendors, for example, selling safari suit material, salwar kameez pieces, blouse pieces, local Ilkal sarees and exquisite cutwork, embroidered sarees, night gowns , children’s baba suits, clothes for little girls and boys swaying from hooks adorning the exteriors of these shops. Then there are shops selling aluminium, steel and brass ware , kitchen utensils , pots and pans, shops selling plastic just- about-everything, small and medium sized jewellers selling gold and silver jewellery, silver lamps, anklets which make the sweetest tinkling sound, small black and silver beaded bangles for new borns, hardware shops, hair salons , beauty parlors, chaat and mithai shops, grocers etc. Among other such shops, shops which completely cover all possible daily needs of the human kind of Bijapur, there was what I have come to appreciate a lot (after living in Europe for more than a decade) – the local Farmer’s market which sells the freshest of green leafy vegetables , okra, eggplants of all shapes and sizes, fresh spices, green and red chillies both fresh and dry variety , pomegranates, gooseberries, other seasonal fruits and vegetables. I do go quite gaga when I see such a fresh green spread out on the streets in Bijapur in many pockets of this town. The farmers are of a warm and friendly disposition. They are respectful, honest and lively.

    That was a bit of a digression. Have I told you already that Kalawati has magic hands? She’s a top-class masseuse. With these hands, which are both deft and firm, she can make many a pain and strain vanish. It feels safe to be in her hands. Her touch is calming, I find the same soothing effect in it like in my mother’s. The great cracking neck twist – it felt like years of stress had been snapped out of me in a jiff. The day after I had uncontrolled diarrhoea and I woke up with a very bad stomach-ache, a stiff back too, our lady K instructed my husband exactly which area around my backbone could be massaged and how to relieve those symptoms; and it worked! She knows. She knows a lot of home remedies for common ailments. She knows how to keep her hair soft, black, thick and shiny. She knows how to keep her teeth from decaying, ” I brush my teeth with salt every morning. Nothing but salt.” The teeth, they are white! Then there’s so much one can learn from her just by pure observation. She’s an inspiration, a lesson in how to handle an authoritative, at times foul-mouthed boss at work, still holding fort, not giving in, not letting emotions get in the way of work. Kalawati knows how to laugh it off, she knows which battles to pick and which ones are not worth it, she knows how to filter the chaff from the grain and that grain is precious and chaff is not, she knows that judging is not for her, not for her to put people up or down .

    She told me she stopped going to school, still less than ten years of age, because she didn’t want to be the object of teasing after having lost all her hair to a three-month long tryst with the deadly typhoid fever. Her parents, Kalawati said, not being too educated themselves, didn’t really push her against her wishes.

    I later came to know from my mother-in-law that Kalawati is a widow. At a very young age, perhaps less than 20, a bride of three years, she lost her husband to a stroke. She has a daughter whom she chose to adopt from her brother, who apparently had one too many children.

    Adversity must have shown it’s face at every step from then on. She fought it unfazed – not getting bogged down by anything. Luckily, both her husband’s family and her own offered support when needed – not that she ever went seeking support. She earned a living, eking out a little life for herself and her daughter ( whom she insists should get at least a college education ) and saving up for building a little house, some day, for herself and her daughter. Today, she’s a proud owner of a little housing complex of sorts, four small rooms with two bathrooms on the outskirts of Bijapur. Two of these rooms and a bathroom are rented-out while she and her daughter share the rest.

    A fearless explorer – that she is too. She has been on week-long trips, sometimes two weeks, to other parts of India up north, touring around with, perhaps, total strangers, hooking-up with her ethical Guru and other like-minded people.

    I loved the way she has raised her daughter. The twenty-year old came to meet us before we left. She has a calm and contained demeanour, is well-groomed, has a quiet confidence, a sense of righteousness and seemed to have her head fixed firmly on her shoulders. She’s studying for a Bachelor’s in Commerce at a local college. She chips-in with her bit at home – helping out her mother with daily chores, cooking dinner every night. That same evening, our last before we left the next day morning, Kalawati carved another little niche for herself in my heart, another act of generosity and thoughtfulness. She sun-dried and roasted some twenty different spices, ground them together into what is locally called Masaalpudi. An addition in almost every culinary preparation in the land, this spice mix enhances the taste manifold and of course increases the goodness, the health benefits of it; that being inherent to the spices . This aromatic and hot spice mix is one tangible legacy of Kalawati which I brought back with me, the rest I carried deep within.

    She continues to take care of my mother-in-law who fortunately cherishes her wise company and knows that Kalawati will stand by her through thick and thin.
    I also brought back a sackful of respect and love for the women of Bijapur, those who know that life is about living it as it comes, the situation and conditions that come with it may hamper your lifestyle, make life look hard and trying but there’s emancipation in living it, riding the rollercoaster than standing by the wayside and watching it rush by. My love and prayers for all of you.

    ( A page out of my yet unwritten tribute to the housemaids in India)

    January 22, 2018

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