Wednesday, 21 June 2023
Nurungukal: Nurungukal…… A licensed Medical Practitione...
Nurungukal……
A licensed Medical
Practitioner, a Judge, a few advocates, some Gujarati merchants, traders,
teachers, a church etc and the schools in which I had the education were all
that I could claim as part of my childhood social fabric of Ponnani, my native place,
during 1940s and 1960s. Among them our doctor, a family friend stood apart on
several counts to me. He was gentle, soft spoken and very humane. Even a mere
touch or caress by his feather like fingers soothed you and kept the illness at
bay. Every day on our way to school he would be seen negotiating the country
roads in his black car with dexterity and pride. He was on his usual schedule
of visiting some of the elite families. The black framed spectacles balanced
down on his nose, could catch any ones attention against the background of a
rosy face. He was one of the few who wore pants and shirt those days, apart
from a few advocates, who preferred to be in their drab black and white. Whenever somebody fell ill we used to go early
in the morning to his house to request him for extending his morning visit to
our house. Simultaneously we have to request a rickshaw puller to bring him, as
there was no motorable road in those days to our house. We used to wait for him
at our gate, casting our eyes on the other end of a paddy field . As soon as he
was sighted we rushed to carry his bag in which there used to be some essential
medicines and stethoscope, thermometer, torch, etc.
I very vividly
remember the way he conducted the examination. A look at the protruded tongue, then a peep
into the throat with the help of the torch light, reading the temperature by
inserting the thermometer below the tongue while counting your pulse rate were
his usual symptoms analysis. Then one or two taps with a folded forefinger on
the back side of the palm, placed on the stomach and back at vital points.
Our mother
will be going on narrating the illness lucidly, often distracting the attention
of the doctor. In the case of our father, he will answer in mono syllables to
the queries of the doctor. Once his
observations are over, he would take
down a yellow pad and scribble one or two medicines after a subdued briefing. On
several occasions I had struggled hard to make out the contents of what he had
written but in vain. It was a coded communication between him and the
dispenser. He would then excuse himself without waiting for mother to complete
her narration, with a nod to my father, who by that time might have adequately
compensated the expenditure of his advice.
It was our duty then
to rush on foot to the only medical store which was a few miles away. The
compounder on seeing the prescription would without any hesitation disappear
into the next room, in which were wooden racks full of big bottles and clay
jars, containing basic chemicals. He would come back with one or two green cut
glass bottles with full of colourfull medicinal mixtures. On reaching home it was
our duty to paste strips of paper in order to apportion the contents according
to the prescribed doses.
Looking
back now, I wonder how he managed to arrive at his choice of cure, by a mere
tap or touch. In fact the other day when I was hospitalized with a fever and
body pain, the doctor’s decision to arrive at the treatment came after an analysis
of the functioning of my whole system. It was a safe and sure procedure. It
reveals the extent of advance which the medical science has progressed over a
few decades. The young doctor and his enthusiastic team who attended me worked
like a well oiled engine, leaving nothing to be over looked before arriving at
the correct decisions. I always keep their services in high esteem, considering
the volume and variety of diverse cases requiring a large amount of comprehension
and understanding to maintain a level of balance before arriving at the course of
action in each case to be adopted. Comparing its challenges, it’s a service par
excellent. To acquire a degree of acceptance among their stake holders requires
perseverance and tenacity of purpose clubbed with cost consciousness and
constant awareness of their commitment to the society. I offer a big salute to the medical
fraternity.
Then it was kaipunnyam
Now it is Naipunnyam
Saturday, 3 June 2023
Nurungukal: Nurungukal……… ...
Nurungukal………
A miniature easy
chair sent to me by my daughter a few days ago rekindled my memories about a
bigger version, which was adorning the front portico of our majestic
Naalukettu. Of all the names we have given for a seat, like “stool”, “sofa” or “chair”,
I think the most apt one was “easy chair”, when we consider its purpose and
utility. Although it has disappeared nowadays from the list of essential piece
of furniture, to a few like me it still holds a covetable place, because it was
in such a one my father enjoyed to spend most of his day time, either reading a
news paper or in conversation with others. It remained proudly in our front
portico for many years till recently a plastic chair replaced it, to my utmost despair.
An easy chair, left
alone is not an attractive piece of art.
It is a folding type wooden
chair, with an armrest which can be elongated to keep the legs while intending
to take a deliberate sleep. It may not even capture a position in the list of
an antique. Yet it attains a pinnacle of glory depending on its occupier. Many
writers have opted for its comfort to roll out their best creations. So were
many political leaders. I have seen my father reclining on it to devourer the “Hindu”
news paper or in a deep siesta. I can even today visualize how he used to rest
his head on the thump and little finger and forking the nose with the middle
and pointing fingers. None of the youngsters in the house usually ventured to
rest on it when our father is in the house. It was his exclusive abode,
revered, sanctified and proud status symbol. The positioning of the chair
enabled him to police any movements and nobody could pass the portico without
his notice.
Its position
would change as the sun lowers down in the Arabian Sea. For him, its time to rest
a while under the old tamarind tree in the courtyard, whistling a few stanzas
of Kathakali Padams. By dusk, he will
once again move up to share the company of mother and Chathettan, our neighbor
and a distant relative of mother to sip a glass of warm soup. On rare occasions
we used to squeeze into their company. Relaxing on the arm chair father would occasionally
make some harmless and sarcastic comments about the proceedings in which mother
and her relative would be the active participants.
A cry of the mottled wood owl from the
nearby sacred grove would alert father to call it a day and the trio would
slowly disperse gently to meet again next day. These sessions made a great
imprint in us to take stock of the important national and local events which I
feel has contributed much to mould our character and social commitments. Thanks
to the easy chair and the one who had designed it.