Nurungukal…
This is the eighty first year, I am
celebrating Vishu. Always with variant degrees of flamboyancy. As a kid I was
an exuberant spectator. In my teens I was an exhilarating participator, while in
adolescence a matured organiser. Parenthood made me a level headed
manager. Now, as I hold the baton to
cover the last lap, has once again slipped into square one, as a silent
onlooker. But in none of the previous episodes I have experienced the stress and
strain of a looming threat as of this time. My daughter is held back at a
distant place, although my son managed to join us with his family. The dynamics
of the pandemic have once again silenced and doomed the proceedings. The
atmosphere is silent and dark. No crackers, no sparklers. While the women folk
are trying to satisfy our culinary demands, children are busy with their little
gadgets. The air is devoid of any sound,
except for the occasional clang of the utensils from the kitchen and the hush
hush conversation. I am like a dog in the manger, a misfit to any company. In
order to kill my time once again I tried to scan through the news paper. It was
full of reports on curbs, curfew and covid 19, debauchery and political
activism, a mishap in the deep sea and the loss of some fishermen who were on
their livelihood hunt. Then as a solace, a true story of an eight year old girl
who found a novel way to pool a substantial fund by selling kani konna flowers, to give a helping
hand to a kidney patient. Gradually the
boredom dragged me into a deep slumber, propelled by the diabetes.
………Holding a skeleton key stolen from
the key bunch of my mother I was busy trying to fix its bow on a piece of
bamboo. An iron nail tied on rope was
inserted into its hollow barrel. My younger brother was busy in scraping the
bud of a match stick. I hurriedly filled the barrel of the key with the
chemical. Inserted the nail and gave a hard hit to the wall. There was a loud
cracking sound. From nowhere mother appeared and held me, snatching the
improvised implement and the regular smack followed. My brother as always escaped the punitive
action as he had already deserted the scene, anticipating the consequences……..
A tap on my shoulder and I woke up
from the nap, much to my dismay. I very much longed to prevail in that dream
longer because past is always a nostalgia..The lunch was ready, a mini feast
with the customary menu and followed by a siesta would down the curtain of this
year’s Vishu celebrations. A long wait for the next, then next, then another……hope
never ends….
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