Love is all that will remain

I have just returned from my hometown, Kanpur, after severing the last remaining physical link with my parents, with the tangible legacies of my dad and mom. My mother passed away in 1994, my dad joined her in 2017. He left behind a lovely flat in a multi-storey development, in which he had spent the last years of his life, lonely most of the time, but content and at peace in his otherwise downsized world.

This flat contained the possessions he and my mom, and we (as children), had accumulated over the years, and not one of them was less than 50 years old! These included British time crockery, a Gerard music player with vinyl records, hundreds of books (mostly mine), furniture from Calcutta and Assam, an assortment of walking sticks. He had hoarded them lovingly, getting them cleaned and polished regularly, for would his children not inherit them some day? They were precious to him, not just because he had laboured to acquire them over a lifetime, but because they would go to his children after him.

That was never going to happen, of course. The flat was being sold, and we all had enough bric-a-brac of our own, accumulated over our own lifetimes, for our own children! Where was the space to take over my dad’s stuff in our metro flats in Mumbai and Noida, where each square foot of space cost Rs 100,000 and Rs 10,000, respectively? So we gave everything away — the records whose music had once suffused the flat with lilting tunes, the books which had made holidays in Kanpur so pleasant and relaxed, the table on which I had prepared for the civil service exams, the dining table on which my mom used to serve the delicious ‘atte ka halwa’ and ‘gobhi ki subzi’ which were, and still are, my favourite fare, the harmonium on which my late younger sister learned her music.

All big slices of our past, all indelibly associated with my mom and dad and our childhood. All gone now. I have retained only a few books, one of Papa’s walking sticks, his battered briefcase, and a set of crystal Johnnie Walker glasses, which I had bought for Rs 15 from the Jama Masjid Sunday market in 1971 and had gifted him on his birthday. They will have to suffice till I retain my memory of him.

The compulsions of ‘modern’ life have no time for the sentiments of the past; these are weaknesses that detract from our algorithm-based, market-driven vision of a material Valhalla. And that precisely is the point of this piece — there is a lesson in my experience for all of us, all those adrift in the 70+ boat, most of us in sight of the harbour, or the reef, as fate would have it.

As parents, we spend too much time, resources and emotional capital, and deny ourselves, in collecting things to leave behind for our children. It’s a waste of parental love, a mortgaging of present needs for an envisioned but uncertain future. For, nothing we leave behind will endure — the house will be sold (if not fought over), the money in the bank will be divided ruthlessly by some chartered accountant or lawyer and spent on trips to Bali or Biarritz, the clothes will go to charity, everything else will be given away. Nothing will remain but loving memories, and it is on those that we twilight dwellers should concentrate. I am reminded of these haunting lines from an anonymous poet:

If I take nothing with me,

May I leave behind something

beautiful —

A memory, a kindness, a warmth

in the hearts of those I’ve met.

So that, even when my road ends,

Love remains.

Post script: I make it a point never to end any piece on a sombre note, lest the reader fling himself off his 22nd floor balcony in despair; and so I must confess that I did take one other object from my dad’s flat — the album of photographs of my marriage with Neerja. (That was in 1977, I think, but I can’t be sure since my long-term memory is no longer what it used to be).

There were no digital albums in those primordial days, no smartphones; only ‘still’ photos which had to be pasted in bulky albums. I’ve appropriated my wedding album not just for sentimental reasons, but as an abundant precaution to prove my marriage with Neerja. In these days of ‘certificate raj’, there is no saying when proof will be demanded that I am not living in sin with her. Hotels and OYO have already started demanding this, and the time is not far off when banks, landlords and RWAs shall follow suit.

‘Marriage vigilantism’ will be the latest addition to cow and citizenship vigilantism. Didn’t someone say that eternal vigilantism is the price of freedom? Better to be prepared, no?

But I’m taking a big risk bringing this album home and reminding Neerja about our marriage. She has had many second thoughts about these nuptials over the last 48 years, about the wisdom of having plighted her troth to me in an LSR moment of weakness.

How will she react to my bringing home documented proof of what she sometimes considers the “biggest mistake of her life”? Maybe I’ll hide the album under the dog’s bed. As they say in Pakistan — “Better to be Saif than Suri”.

— The writer is a retired IAS officer

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