Relentless & Endless suffering defines perdition, isn’t it?
What is the worst karmic punishment? Born blind??
Muscular dystrophy?? Deaf and dumb??? Spastic??? Autistic???
I make a case for “Being born to a
mentally retarded parent” for the emotional damage is often permanent and
suffering prolonged.
The
tale is so gory. So let me keep it absolutely short and crisp. Bare essentials
and no frills.
My
father’s side of the family were simple, honest Brahmins. The menfolk studied
the vaidika sastras for a living while the womenfolk supported them by cooking
and raising kids. Those days – say until mid-1980s – families were large, cohesive,
and a set lifestyle. Faith, piousness and rituals summed my grandparent’s
generation.
My
father was a simple man, a calm temperament, soft spoken and measured in conversations.
Besides he was intelligent and capable of clear thinking too. Born in 1930, he studied till SSLC (10th
grade by today’s standards), toiled extremely hard for four decades and died
prematurely.
My
mother side of the family were not ritualistic Brahmins but landlords and
highly educated. My uncle was an IAS, influential in the corridors of power.
But there is a sinister dark side in the gene pool, high on geniuses and
evilness for a sickening combination.
My maternal cousins are world-class
talents: One son an observational scientist of worldwide eminence, daughter a
classical dancer of rich fame, another son an IIT educated engineer, and last
son a Chartered Accountant; something none in my father’s side can ever boast.
But this high intelligence came with a heavy price: these
were rigid people prone to lifelong grudges and resentments. The genes never
accommodated kindness and compassion for a genetic defect at source.
The behaviour of my maternal uncle
(the IAS fellow is still alive and kicking at 92) amplifies the dichotomy of
evil and genius side by side: His eldest son married a woman of his choice in
the 70s. The son was thrown out and
boycotted socially. Even the news of his
sudden death in sleep four decades later did not soften the hearts of the
parents. Another son married a Christian divorcee and he was similarly snapped
and estranged. My mother – his sister
whose mental dumbness may not have a reference even in our epics – was sternly
told off on her wedding day in 1961: I have done my job
in finding a groom. Now get lost and don’t ever show your face; you’ll be
thrown out if you ever step on my doorstep. This admonition from a brother of the bride
in full view of the groom’s family; my father was horrified at the vehemence of
hatred. His genetic makeup could never
understand this “cut and snap” in family ties.
My mother is a prized idiot: deaf
(another genetic characteristic), natural arrogance of stamping down people,
and in her case the genes took a turn to genius dumbness. Hopelessly unlettered, zero social skills,
loud mouth, high pitched energy which began every sentence with a “ayyo” (most
inauspicious word in the Tamil language) made her a stand-out pain in every
company. Soon others ran away from her
path and sight. Loneliness and social boycott is a feature of that genetic
side.
My mother did not work hard to drive
my father to an early grave: her lashing tongue from those messed-up genes was
as venomous as a cobra. She nagged him to death with her daily cribs provoking
the poor man into banging his forehead in disgust. It takes an evil genius of a mind – one
exclamatory word in high pitch screeching voice to pierce every armour of
tolerance and target the heart with pinpoint accuracy for maximum damage. I saw my father die inch-by-inch; none strong
enough to cry halt the daily warfare.
My father lived with his wife for 27
years on a daily supply of high decibel squeals and threats and “ayyos”. His
body ran out of gas and will to live before he turned 60 years. My mind rebelled and condemned to moodswings
at I entered my 21st birthday.
Even at 21 I knew there would be no
romance, no marriage, and see how far I can go without being a nuisance. It looked a suicide script to me before 30,
before 40, whatever. Reaching a milestone as the 20s or 30s was a huge
achievement in endurance.
What made my mother such a genius
monster that no man or beast could stand?
With her
around, any human would feel being in a battlefield. When my second sister was
born in 1964 the mother refused to breastfeed the baby for a week. Her mind
reasoned: not a girl child again!!! Once as a two year old baby in 1967 my second sister insisted on swinging the cradle standing up for
better bounce from inside a cloth of a saree for a family folklore that survives to this day.
My mother reacted by banging the head of her infant daughter inside the
cradle to the wall. The baby turned blue and breathless and rushed to quacks
for first aid and treatment. My mother
was equally outraged and ranting: if the baby does not
listen now; will she not turn out rebellious later on? That child grew
up shy and diffident until she found a husband 22 years later for some
semblance of normalcy.
As
to the torture she inflicted on me, they are heart-rending to this day. Even a male child was not spared. Her violent savage nature would keep me
wailing in hunger as a one year old. The feeding bottle would be sterilized
upon my squeal, milk heated, and later to cool down under the fan as the child
bawled out of the skin. 30-45 minutes from the first sign of cry would peak to
a crescendo when the feeding bottle got ready. Again no words of solace instead
abuse, slaps, and threats. Imagine a
baby being breastfed with taunts and a volley of harsh abuses in a high pitched
voice on a daily basis.
As I grew older, I kicked the feeding bottle
to ground to register my protest at the inordinate delay. It was met with more
kicks and abuses. That same rationale prevailed: if the
child does not mend now, when?? I
still recollect going with an empty stomach, sobbing my heart out and my chest
in spasms. My mother’s tongue knew not
one word of kindness and sympathy instead a rich vocabulary of abuses and threats
and ayyos. Even while feeding solids,
she would throttle it down my mouth yelling to my tiny ears (remember she was a
lot deaf): if you don’t eat, crows will swallow you up.
Or I will complain to the police and they will beat you black and blue.
I grew up in this putrid air of the worst verbal and physical violence any
child can stomach. I grew up listening to this daily litany: you are useless, worthless; you will not amount of anything. I turned out exactly similar.
It was during the MBA days in
Ghaziabad I found to my horror these stored-up hurts were activated when thrown
in the midst of a happy boisterous crowd.
I used the maternal side of my genes to hunt a name for the disorder in
the library; while the paternal side counselled patience and endurance. I
realized before my 21st birthday: I had contacted a high grade
mental disorder and it would take a lifetime to set right the wrong, and if
that it is at all possible.
I entertained little hopes of a
career; I had a heart surgery at 29. I discovered a passion for walking
especially on Theosophical Society lawns.
I also found weekend Spiritual discourses a soothing balm to the
tortured mind. My aspiration never rose higher than feed myself and support the
devil and even address as “Amma”. I was on “mood balancing” drugs for decades
now. Though I had a lot of friends, I was a loner and painfully shy in
boisterous party atmosphere.
Life treated me as I treated life: I
walked in the side alleys; I never got into tangles, and zilch career and
romantic aspirations for myself and think dying thoughts for solace. My personality was a hybrid mixture of my
dad’s side – honest, simple, hardworking, and not outreach my station in life –
and my mother’s side on talent, resentments and grudges.
Suffering needs actors and events to
generate tales and drama. In my case
nature had earmarked my suffering to a lonely one. My father dead when I was
21, both the sisters got married and left the nest before I turned 20, and the
family was now reduced to “perpetrator” mental MOTHER and “victim” Mental
SON. At 38 I realized that two idiots
can’t be in the same house and a very accommodating eldest sister taking
responsible of the old woman.
The diagnosis
was Bipolar or mood swing is the medical jargon to account for those childhood
tortures. In simple language it meant “continued and sole exposure to
hate”. Few lives on earth are condemned
to such depths of emotional poverty and deprivation.
Failures cause fear; fear causes
hatred of oneself, which in turn manifests as extreme diffidence and impending
disaster at every turn – I kept losing jobs at frightening frequency unable to
blend in an office environment. With
each failure I withdrew into a shell like a tortoise at the first hint of
danger to avoid more failures.
The hate sowed in baby state by an
evil mother was now reaping the whirlwind. The worst of bipolar is: Your story
reads a like a movie script playing on the screen; you know what is going to
unfold couple of scenes later yet immobilized to alter a line of the sub-plot
of the script in your favour. Suffering
in ignorance at least gives birth to false hopes and misguided efforts that
suffering in knowledge deprives: you are reduced to awaiting death and sober
prayers: God, end this misery quickly and give me a new
innings. I want to be a human being again minus this family, minus this bipolar.
Right from my 21st birthday I knew the
gravity of this disorder caused primarily by rotten genes and terrible
upbringing. This is “multiplication of
misery” – any genetic defect can be rectified in a loving and caring
environment affirms a BBC documentary.
Even if you are born with normal genes, continued exposure to my
mother’s level of rants and high pitched wolves howling noise would cinder a
human mind – which is after all tender, impressionable, fickle especially a
mind of a tender child- to dysfunction and go out of operating range.
I had to
find my own medicine and in this I spared no effort.
I ran to every astrologer, every faith
healer, yoga teacher, decades of listening to Swami Paramarthananda and
Vipassana. I had consulted a dozen of the best psychiatrist the metropolitan
had to offer. I had the mental strength of a man who will make his own road
even if it meant tunnelling through oceans and mountains. I have an endurance
not seen in either my father’s or mother’s side of genes. If god made me a donkey, I had its heart to
bear the load.
Every search for mitigating bipolar
was a hopeless one; each gave a momentary relief but no lasting remission until
I discovered Mindfulness and Eckhart Tolle.
One is so engrossed in healing the mind that one forecloses the
possibility of going beyond the mind.
But those came in much later before
life threw in a surprise as I turned 38: I got a writing job after a decade of
strenuous search and I fell in love with a woman of my dreams. I felt destiny was showering roses at long
last and my plane finally take off.
But nature
was still not through with me. I kept getting hammered and knockout defeats
fighting Mohammed Ali in the ring which we shall see in the next part.
As TM Soundararajan sings to Kannadasan's lyrics and MSV's music: Sothanai mel sothanai pothumada saami. Vethanai thaan valakkai endraal, thaangathu bhoomi. Meaning: Lord! enough of piling sorrow upon sorrows. If living is only about misery, the earth cannot endure.
Post Script: Every
human being causes happiness to someone at least once in a blue moon. Amma is a constant
negative kinetic energy of fear, distrust, stubbornness and not an atom of
gratitude to even the hand that feeds.
There is this repulsive reptile feel to the woman – scared and scary at the same time, hyperventilate, deaf, stubborn, and firmly set in her ways to cause storms
and turbulence in every encounter. She was hopelessly sick with those terrible
genes. When the cause is rotten the result is only sorrow. And those genes were taking a heavy toll on me.
As TM Soundararajan sings to Kannadasan's lyrics and MSV's music: Sothanai mel sothanai pothumada saami. Vethanai thaan valakkai endraal, thaangathu bhoomi. Meaning: Lord! enough of piling sorrow upon sorrows. If living is only about misery, the earth cannot endure.
Heart rending. I wouldn't wish even my bitterrest enemy to experience this living hell. There's always light at the end of the tunnel.I hope and pray you find peace and happiness.As a literary work it's a masterpiece.
ReplyDeleteThanks G! One of my good fortunes of my life was meeting you in 2005. Prabhakar, you mean so much to me. Thank you!!!!
DeleteTouching - Mother only as a biological one is not easy to imagine,. She not only give the elements of your body but contribute in the making of he psyche. What you describe makes one feel sad - It should not happen to anyone. But as long as you carry the hurt, it is not her problem but just "YOURS" alone. Throw this behind and walk out of the shadow - there are ways to get back neutrally to the tormented and tormenting world - Everyone has his or her share of issues - if someone empathises with you, then that is the guide to redemption
ReplyDelete