Skip to main content

The Sails of Charon

It is 6.45 am as I type these words. At this time last year, my father was taking his last, ragged, ventilator-aided breaths in an ICU hospital bed. Outside, a few well-wishers held vigil, lost in their own thoughts, murmuring to each other, or stealing occasional, anxious glances at me as I paced the corridors, taking phone calls, making arrangements, my demeanour waxing and waning between stupefaction and frenzy.

Life goes on. Maybe it’s the first, hardest fact to accept; that nothing dramatic actually happens to commemorate the moment. The sun rises, vendors slowly set out their early-morning stalls, vehicles crawl out of narrow by-lanes or wide society gates and everywhere, strangers go about their day.

But my father’s days were done. Never again would he taste the bittersweet first filter coffee, crack a fresh fold of the newspaper, check his messages or plan for the day ahead. His passing left an astonishing number of plans incomplete. Truth be told, I should not have been surprised. My father had thrown himself into vast numbers of goodwill projects, many concerning the education and wellbeing of children, some in his native village, others across Maharashtra.

I struggled with what had occurred. Not his death but the suddenness of it. Not the loss of a parent but the absolute absence of benevolent authority. Not the person but his reassuring presence. Not the silence but the words forever left unsaid.

Death offers no comebacks or second chances. Only regrets and memories.

This year has ticked over with the support of family, friends, many sessions of therapy and my own fortitude. I am learning to accept change, to let go of the disappointment of frayed friendships, to embrace imperfection in people and circumstances, to understand who I am and who I can be, to find equanimity within. That I needn’t be so hard on myself because life is hard enough.

All of these are conceptually fine. I know the ideas and applaud the end goal. But I wrestle with how tough they are to imbibe. I rage at absent friends, at the lack of morals in people my father supported, at my helplessness in situations, at luck or lack thereof. It’s all in my head of course. That part is the hardest to come to terms with - that I don’t feel in control of everything but I can choose how I feel about it. That I can be ruthless, dismissive, indifferent and selfish - for the sake of self-preservation - but I choose to disregard these options in many situations, often to my detriment. Or to my credit as a person.

You can’t always get what you want but you can always choose what to give.

What is ‘adulthood’? Turning 18 or 21? Having sex for the first time? Realising that every-little-thing-of-every-moment is a choice… your choice? Accepting, not that life is unfair, but that the universe is indifferent? Filing tax returns?

At this exact moment - 7.45am - on October 29th 2022, my father laid down his weapons and passed on. I was 39 years old and had no parents or grandparents. My mother's death in 2004 was a punch to the gut, air driven out in an instant. On the other hand, my father's death felt and feels like a long, slow exhalation.

I thought losing both parents was the true end of childhood and the cornerstone of adulthood. It’s something I’m still figuring out.

Song for the moment: White Dove - Scorpions

Comments

Anonymous said…
So sorry for your loss! Losing a parent at any age is hard. Hope you are doing ok?

Love the way you write by the way.
G said…
Hi Anon. Thank you for your kind words. As for how I'm doing, some days are good, some not so much. But I'm working on it.

Popular posts from this blog

Longfellow Serenade

Dear reader, A conversation in a buzzing bar over a mug of beer got me thinking on today's theme; the writing of a letter. As with many of the shared contemplations I've had, we spoke about it for the sake of the flowing idea, the peculiarly gentle glee in being able to use what have commonly been referred to as 'big words' in actual conversation without having the threat of perplexity hanging in the air. Perhaps you have & enjoy these moments yourself. Mayhaps, you have debated the same theme ? Nonetheless, I often ponder upon the march of time & technology that has left me regarding life with some ambiguity. I appreciate technology & how it has made living easier on many levels. I do not hanker for the b/w television nor for a computer with 16 MB RAM & the large floppy disk. I thank the heavens for air-conditioning & the photocopier. I use the internet a lot. The Dark Ages or in India's case, the years up to the 1990's, had their moment in

Many the miles

Some time ago, I decided to cut down on the whining that seems to be a major theme on this blog. After having written a couple of short story posts and one interesting challenge, I found that more commentary on life, its machinations and assorted tomfoolery just did not interest me. For the moment, at least. That also thankfully means that I can't talk about the Indian cricket team's test saga. Anyway, in recent weeks, a new trend has taken root in that fragment of the 'gang' that lives in Pune. Instead of meeting up and hitting the tipple every now and then, we meet and they discuss trekking to various forts in and around Pune. Notice how I'm not in these councils-of-war. Although I've played sports in school and college, I've never been a fan of physical toil. All these talks conjure up are images of waking up at some ungodly hour before sunrise, scooting to some random hill / fort and huffing, puffing, slipping & scrabbling around in near darkness w

Love and Happiness

The year was 1950. Having missed a prestigious Government position in Delhi by the proverbial hair's breadth, a 24 year old youth from the south of India began to look for work elsewhere. In this land, destinies were & are made in Bombay. Fate decreed that this boy, called K, had been gallivanting around the backwaters long enough and directed him to the city caressed by the Arabian Sea. Once he'd begun to work, his family wanted to check off the next thing on the list - a bride. K bluntly told his father that he was not interested in an arranged marriage, practically scandalizing everyone in the vicinity and a few ancestors for good measure. Predictably enough, his wishes were ignored and the hunt for a suitable girl began in earnest, culminating in a small town in Tamil Nadu. K was tersely informed about his upcoming nuptials and although furious, he acquiesced. Which should come as no surprise, really, as young men and women do so even today. The bride-to-be was 20i