Wednesday, 30 November 2016

LOVE STORY

                                             "LIKE IT NEVER EXISTED"



Rising.
love-short-story-eyes-womanRising.
Rising till it finally mixed with the air. Leaving no trace.
As if it never existed – the smoke.
Wow. He marvelled.
Like it never existed. He took a long drag again, and exhaled slowly, giving rise to the dancing white fumes again.
“You smoke a lot.”
“Yes.”
“It’s bad for health.”
“You’ve told me that before.”
“But you never stop.”
“Right.”
He stubbed the cigarette butt on the window. His gaze never shifting from the forest of buildings outside.
“Can we talk?” She said softly.
He knew she meant it. He knew she didn’t want to crib. She wasn’t the cribbing type. He knew if only he’d sit down and talk…..
If only he sat down.
He didn’t. Why? Wish he himself knew.
She got up from the bed and walked to him. He felt her coming towards him. Even with his back towards her, he could feel her. Even when her light feet didn’t make a sound he knew exactly when and where her next step fell.
She was behind him now. He knew the exact look on her face – one of worry, concern, and helplessness.
“I don’t want it to go this way,” she finally spoke. Her voice faltering.
He didn’t turn back.
More smoke mixing with the air.
Like it never existed.
He felt her breath. Uneven. Unsteady.
He felt his own heart sinking. He could just turn. Embrace her, like all those times when she used to get angry but this simple gesture would instantly mellow her down.
But he didn’t do anything.
More smoke.
“I’m going to a friends’ place,” she said.
He nodded.
She stood there for a while. Lingering. Maybe, just maybe he turns. But he didn’t.
She turned. Picked her bag, and with those light steps and sad face she left. The door closed softly behind her.
He still stood there. A tinge of moist water in his eyes. A sudden urge to run. Run towards her, hold her in his arms and apologise.
Relax! She’s just going to a friends’ place! She’ll be back!
No! This is symbolic. How can you let her go like that? How can you turn your back on her?
Two voices inside his head.
Both equally strong. Both equally convincing.
A ripple in his heart.
Just the phone in his shirt pocket vibrating!
He took it out.
Where? I’m waiting.
The text read.
He kept the phone. Reverted back to his cigarette. The smoke rising again.
He quietly finished it. Three in a row. He turned back, put on his shoes, locked the house, and left.
Only to return at midnight. She was asleep. He looked at her face. A million thoughts crossed his mind. He could no longer seem to look at those eyes when they were open. Those questioning eyes. Those eyes which at times seemed to shun him. But most of all, those eyes which at all times seemed to be confused – why? He felt them asking him.
Why? He didn’t know. He desperately dodged it. But he knew he would have to spend the rest of his life with this “why?” He could escape her eyes but what of his own eyes which he met in front of the mirror each day?
You can change things.
No. It’s too late now.
You’re being a coward. She’ll forgive you, you know that.
Yes. She will. But what of my own eyes? How will I face her everyday?
These are just excuses……….
His phone vibrated again. A loud buzz. She woke up with a start. In his trance he’d ventured too close to her. He jumped back. Just in time. She got up. Faced him. Their eyes met. Her intense gaze, even from those sleepy eyes, with a tinge of softness. Why? Why the softness? He would have loved to see a loathing, a brewing hatred in them. He turned his back. Checking his phone.
Goodnight. J
He looked up from the phone. She still looked at him. Did she know? He turned a dark shade of crimson, his ears burned. She knows. His mind said. She knows. If only he could just run away.
She looked. A tired gaze this time and eventually turned back and went to sleep again. Or that’s what he convinced himself into believing.
After replying to the message he changed. He’d had dinner. He no longer remembered when was the last time he had had a meal with her. He slowly got into the bed and careful not to touch her in any way, made himself comfortable.
He slept in snatches. Woken up, periodically, by her continuous shifting and shuffling.
Life carried on for a while. Her pleadings eventually stopped, as she finally felt that the end was inevitable. Throughout the Court proceedings there was an eerie silence at their home. She didn’t speak. He smoked.
It was a comparatively easy separation. They didn’t have any kids. She didn’t want anything from him.
Simple enough.
When the separation was given the last go-ahead, they had to go to the Court for some final formalities. Incidentally both of them got ready at the same time and walked out of the house together. She didn’t so much as glance towards him. Simply walked towards her car. Even in such a grave moment he couldn’t suppress a smile. He remembered how they always, somehow fought before going out, and how she’d walk up to her car and drive alone.
The engine of her car coughed and came to life and in a swift turn she backed off the car and headed towards her destination. Their destination. Like it was just another fight.
All through the way he kept an eye on her car. Out of habit or care, it was difficult to differentiate even for his own self.
The formalities got over much earlier than he expected. Wasn’t divorce supposed to be a lengthier procedure? Peoples’ life depended on it? He mused.
Outside the Court he took one last look at her. She resolutely looked away. His anticipation grew. Just one last look. He thought.
She turned her back.
She’ll come back to collect her stuff from the apartment. His mind comforted him.
Damn! Why did this one last look mattered so much to him?
When he reached his apartment he was surprised to find the entry door wide open. Inside, a man and an elderly woman were packing things in huge cartons.
Her dads’ servants.
They had packed her clothes and were now packing her books. In silence they worked. Grimly. Not looking at him. Within ten-minutes they were done. Within ten minutes they polished off every speck of her existence in his apartment! Wow. Easy enough!  He thought.
They got up to leave. He started off with some formal conversation but they ignored him completely.
For the first time it hit him that the separation wasn’t only between him and her. Many other ties had also snapped with it.
He nodded to himself. The house lacked any signs of her existence now. Just a lingering emptiness which somehow was the biggest reminder of her than any of her material belongings.
So, he’d lost his one last chance to look at her.
He lit a cigarette.
The fumes still rose in the air.
It’s almost 6 months now.
He has absorbed himself in his work. Vartika is proving to be a good wife. After work, he is greeted by her smile in the apartment. She has used all the empty space to fill up with her stuff. The apartment has undergone revolutionary artistic changes. Vartika takes an uncanny interest in interior decoration. He is proud of her.
Today is Vartika’s birthday. He has ordered for a huge cake garnished with judicious amounts of chocolate – Vartika’s favourite. He will himself go and fetch the cake. She is special to him afterall!
In the evening he takes Vartika out. Coming out of a restaurant Vartika finds some of her old friends. After formal introductions, he starts feeling left out amongst the chatter of women. He walks two- three steps away and lights himself a cigarette.
The cigarette tucked between his index and middle fingers he passes aimless glances at life outside. The usual hustle-bustle. People running. People walking. Life in all forms.
And then there, talking to someone –  a pair of eyes!
Smiling eyes. Soft eyes. Which had looked at him so many times, but had evaded him that one last look.
She is standing with a tall man. No matter how he tries to avoid it, he can’t help noticing his fingers slithering on her waist.
A snake rises from the pit of his stomach and raises its head on his throat. His throat simultaneously feels the burning of its venom and the sickening caused by it.
He suddenly wishes Vartika was with him. He would show her how well he was. But why was he thinking of it? She didn’t even know he was looking at her!
His eyes seem to fix on her. An intense hatred intoxicated him. He wanted to walk upto her and humiliate her publically. Words, which he had never ever dared to bring to his tongue now seamed effortlessly in his brain. He stared at her. On purpose. So if she looks, he would make use of all words he had in his mind.
He looked. With hatred. Rage. He didn’t call it jealousy. He did not realize it was jealousy. Blind hatred. Just that.
After some endless moments, she finally happened to look at him.
For a split second his lips parted and some word tried to slip out desperately.
But no.
She looked away as if he was just a stranger! Someone, whom she just saw on the road!

He didn’t expect those soft eyes for which he longed so much, but an acknowledgement? Even a hateful admission that he had been important to her for some time in her life?
If not, then even that questioning glance? Those eyes which seemed to ask him – WHY? Even they would’ve been familiar to him!
But no.
Has she really seen him?
Vartika was walking back towards him now. She excitedly talked about things which mattered little to him. He nodded, smiled occasionally. She didn’t seem to notice and happily talked. He smoked furiously. She didn’t like the smoke.He smoked. A futile effort to get back at her. Did that tall man smoke? He wondered.
He drove towards his apartment in complete silence. Vartika is still talking.
Once back, he hurriedly absorbs himself in his work. Vartika doesn’t mind. She’s used to seeing him as a workaholic.
Late at night, when Vartika has gone off to sleep, he is still in his study. Smoking. The fumes dancing in the atmosphere. Slow, uneven movements. And then, they simply diffuse with the air.
He gave out a small laugh – like it never existed!
They say, he still clutched the cigarette, when they found his lifeless body in the morning.
__END__
                                                                                                             SOURCE BY-FICKLE
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM

LOVE STORY

                                                            "SIX YEARS WOVEN"





White Flower Wedding BowHis heart is beating fast.
Very fast.
There is chaos just about everywhere and nothing makes sense at all. He feels a hum and he stops. He puts his pen down and looks from his cubicle.
Nothing.
Business as usual.
He picks up his pen and starts to write again.
“I am sorry but I cannot do anything anymore. Love, Donna,” said a note on the door. She left. She left him. One year, five months and a week more. She leaves. And there is nothing he does. He simply picks up the note from the door and slides it underneath his bed to lie quietly forever. He switches off the bedside lamp and the colour of the room changes from orange to black.
He shuts his eyes.
But he cannot sleep. He twists and turns in his bed, pushing the weight on his chest, trying to swallow the sob. He cannot sleep. He just lies there, listening to himself breathe and feels the tear trickle down his unshaven cheek.
He shuts his eyes.
The day breaks. He opens his eyes; he is awake. He doesn’t want to be, but he is, it hurts. He feels the other side of the bed– it is awfully cold. He opens his eyes and pulls himself up. The room is in the same way it has been– she hasn’t come home. There is only one toothbrush by the sink and only a bottle of shampoo and no conditioner. She has left.
Nothing.
Business as usual.
He picks up his pens and writes what he has to. Obituaries, that is what he writes. He writes the sordid footnotes for those whom nobody loves. For those who have been deemed forgotten. Who are unimportant. For the unloved.
“I loved her,” he says to himself.
And six years just pass him by.

His heart is beating fast. Very fast.
She is standing right in front of him. Some new girl, her name is Mary. She is waiting for that kiss. Her heart is beating fast. He feels the inside of his hand sweat and his heart beating so loud she could probably hear it. She smiles at him and he feels nothing but blankness. He closes in, cups her chin and kisses her. On the cheek.
He still lies awake, he hasn’t slept in years. He has shut his eyes to dream and yet remembers nothing. He hasn’t slept. He is staring at the ceiling when he feels a shiver. He gets up, and then falls down back to the bed.
Nothing. Dread as usual.
The next day, he makes up his mind. He is going to quit. Get out of this cubicle and get away. Travel or something. Or maybe just shut himself in his home and crawl up in the corner to lie for dead. He is going to quit. The boss is angry, “Derek!” he screams, there has been no notice in advance. He yells and asks the man to leave.
He is back at his cubicle, he stares at the things on his desk– the pen holder, the scraps of paper, a picture unrecognized, post-its, and withered flowers. The man in front of him tells him he can leave but not before he finishes the day’s work. He is handed a sheet of paper. Only one sheet of paper to finish it all.
Wide eyed.
He is running.
Faster and more lost by the minute. He has no direction. He is running. It is raining and he is running for shelter. His heart is pounding– not from the run but from emotions repressed. He can’t breathe but he cannot stop. He mustn’t stop. He is shielding, not himself but his jacket. A blue suede, old and unremarkable. He is protecting it from the fury of the rain.
“No, no, please don’t,” he is saying to himself.
The water must not touch the jacket. For then, it would release him. It would set him free of the madness of his love.
The water must not touch the jacket.
The rain would wash it all away, the last of the woman he had once loved. Her scent, woven elaborately into the fabric from the time she hugged him for the very first time. Her tears and her emotions, captured into the threads and buttons of it. Of the woman who disappeared with his heart. Who left him six years ago, with a note to suffice. And who still haunts him like ever.
The next day, the papers came in, monotonous as usual, with the last of it all, his job and his life.
She was loved and cherished and supported by all the people around her. She had a thirst for life and accomplished all that she believed in. If you knew her, you would tell the same. I knew her, and I can vouch for it.

Donna Kyle, 1987-2013
Obituary by Derek Laine, The Telegraph, Obituaries.”
__END__
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM

FAMILY STORY

                                                       "RUDE AWAKENING"



father-daughter-back“Baba…” She screamed in fright closing shut her eyes bumping on that invisible, transparent wall. The storm was gaining momentum…! The cyclonic destructive roaring storm was closing on her from all sides. Any time the storm would engulf her…! Her knees gave way. She collapsed waiting for her last moment. She didn’t even know how that moment would come…!
She felt a strong hand on her shoulder and jumped up in his protective arms. He picked her up patting on her back. She held on to him locking her arms around his neck.
“Open your eyes…!” he whispered. She shook her head not wanting to see the destruction all around. “Open your eyes… and see the world..!” he again said wrapping his arm around her. She hesitantly opened her eyes to see the butterflies and rainbows all around. She looked around in disbelief. “Baba…!” she hid her face on his shoulder. He turned his back on the rainbow for her to see the beauty. She looked at the world mesmerized over his shoulder. He brought her out to explore….!
“What was that?” she asked bewildered, not finding the smallest trace of the destruction…. He had taken it head on, on his chest and brought in the best of the world for her. “Baba?” she asked him clutching around his neck. He looked at her smiling. He still had his back on the beauty of the world….
“Nothing..!” he said putting her down. She walked out of that invisible protective wall in the beautiful world…!
****** ***** ******
“Shuuu…. stop it! Behave yourself…!” reprimanded her mother in that classy restaurent… She ignored and continued playing around… Her father kept a watchful eye on her… her mother tried to hold her hand and make her sit at one place, looking around sheepishly. She was a brat… her mother kept on warning her and the inevitable happened. She toppled the table brinding down everything laid on it…. Her mother yelled in anger… he got up with a jerk and picking her up in his protective arms asked… “Are you hurt?” She looked at the mess around and cried in guilt.
“Its ok!” he said stroking her head, gesturing the staff to clean it up. She looked at his face and he smiled faintly. “I am sorry…!” she was really sorry for what she had done. His assuring gaze said it all.
*****   *******   ******
“I know… he will come… he will never let me down…!” she was mutterring, pacing away from her group of friends.
“He won’t come now… Come on! Let us plan something else…!” one of her friends pulled her into the group again. “No!” he will come. She looked at the time. It was too late…!
“Its too late… we would miss it anyway…!” her friend said practically laying the board. Her eyes filled with the feeling of let down… and the bell rang. She dashed to open the door… there he was with the movie tickets and a hugh box of her favorite plum cake.
“Baba…!” she hugged him happily and he took her inside. Her birthday party was the best one. She had slept peacefully surrounded by all the gifts, boxes, baloons, toys and stars glittering all around. Away from her room, in his bedroom her mother was mending his wounds … he had had an accident while coming from the office with all her wish list fulfilled.
**********
“I know you can convince her… She can do really well if she takes up this course…!” her mother was trying to convince him. He shook his head solemnly… “No.. I won’t impose my decision on her… Let her decide… though I would like her to take up this line…!” A broad smile appeared on her face. Finally she was allowed to do what she wanted to… Her mother was not happy but she didn’t oppose….! She had decided to work hard, to prove herself and make her Baba a proud father….!
“Baba…!” she looked down not able to bear her father’s gaze. “I want to do it…!” she gathered her courage…! “No way… you are not doing that play… not with the boys… ” Mother ranted. “Look at our social status… what will people say… you are not doing theatre… not in my lifetime… ” Mother went on. She had no words to convince her mother. She had taken part and won many prizes as best actress in her school. But in the college? No way! her mother would never allow her to do theatre. Her conservative family wouldn’t accept…!
“Are you sure, you want to do this?” Father asked finally. “Ye..Yes!” she said looking up.
“Yeah.. She wants to do this… apply that gaudy makeup… dance on the stage… with some strangers… and bring fame to the family…” mother went out of bound in rage. “B..But they are not strangers… they are all my classmates… we are participating in the competition…!” she said weakly, aware that her mother is not going to buy this argument….
“Ok!” father said and her mother’s mouth fell open. “What? Are you allowing her to…wh.. what will others…” her mother gave a pale, shocked look. He nodded. “Yes..! I trust her…! She is not a wayward adolescent…!” She jumped with joy. “Baba.. I promise…I won’t let you down…!” she promised….!
***********   *********
“Now That is your family and she is your mother…But remember… this house is always yours…!” were his parting words when he gave her hand in her mother in laws hands and her baraat left her house. The two families merged with the weblock and she was showered with the love of two families ….!
With every oncoming rough and hostile storm, she remembered the butterflies and rainbows her father had shown her taking the storm on his chest and protecting her in his arms….! He gave her the strength of withstand the rough patches, the bumpy roads…!
“Life is the series of rude awakening…!” He always quoted Bartram Russel..! He made her tough enough to open her eyes of this rude awakening…..!
*************
“Mother… why are you crying?” her son asked her cupping her face. “Grandfather never showed his sorrows on his face, we never saw him depressed, …!” her son turned her face to show her hospitalized, ailing father. “Look at him, Mumma…! He is still smiling…. with that Nasogastric Ryle tube… as if its tickling him inside…! Look at him mother… !” her son showed his smiling face even in the ICU, in that semi conscious state…!” She looked on… his shrivelled face was still so assuring that a sense of being protected brought a faint smile on her face.
“He would never like it, mother… he always looked at the brighter side, leaving the shadows behind…!” her teenage son brought her to his bed. She couldn’t bear his piecered body with IV needles and tubes…!
“Look at him, Mumma… he is smiling… thinking about some funny incident…!” her son pulled her. She touched his cheeks with tears rolling down her cheeks but her lips smiling…!
“Mumma…. he always smiled… even in his distress… !” her son wiped her tears….
“Bu… but I can’t face the world without his protection…!” she cried silently feeling weak and vulnerable.
“Your protection was his soul, mother… he has already given you and Mamu that protection….! you and your brother… my Mamu have a part of his soul… and me too…! He has given you the legacy…. !” her son held her tightly. She felt the same protective arms of her father… She felt his soul in her son….! His legacy was carried to her son….!
“Yes… !” she wiped her tears with determination… “Why do you think I would cry when he is in me…He is always with me…. Always….!” and she smiled…
The monitor gave a long beep to indicate his last breath….! She still had a smile… his soul had given her the strength to be prepared for that series of rude awakening….!
His freed soul…. must be waiting for another series of rude awakening…. called life…! His lifeless frail face was still smiling….!!
__END__
                                                                                                             SOURCE BY-KF
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM

STORY OF FATHER AND DAUGHTER

                                            "THE UNSUNG HERO"



father-daughter-walking-lonepathShe got out of the rickshaw , eyes wide open , looking around for familiar faces , while clutching her bag , lest her books drop off. Her mom had just stitched the bottom of the bag,this morning, to the best of her ability. Her father, a small diminutive man, who worked as a helper in the ICU unit of a private hospital, thanked the rickshaw driver and paid him the fare. She saw him staring at the school building like he had never seen a building in his life. She called out to him”Baba, come quick, we don’t have all day. Lets cross over.”
He replied “Hold my hand , there’s traffic,its not safe”.
Seeing him limp across to her, she almost shouted.
“You better take care of yourself, forget about me”. He reached her , stretched his hand out and then they crossed the road ,frightened like squirrels, as the vehicles zoomed past by.
It was a parent-teacher meeting ,that day at 9.00 am ,and the fourteen year old had felt a certain numbness a couple of days back , when the teacher had announced that she would meet the parents to discuss the academic progress of the students. She had just joined the school five months back and this was new to her. She had gone home, that day and told her mother ,who was busy washing clothes. Her mother in turn would tell her father, later that night.They had discussed this in hushed tones as she fell asleep on the bedding on the floor,next to her parents bed.
Their’s was a small one room unit ,where she and her five year old brother lived with her parents. Life was a constant struggle,and more often than not, she never got the things, she saw her class mates have. She had been asking her parents to buy her a new bag for a while now but they always said she would get it soon. That soon, of course, never saw light of day. Every time ,she mentioned the bag,her mother would frown while her father would give a reassuring smile,which frustrated her no end.
Now,as they entered the school corridor,she saw her classmates,strutting around with their well heeled mothers and fathers.The ladies were looking ever so beautiful,like the ones, she saw on TV, with their expensive perfumes and clothes,while most of the fathers looked dapper in their smart shirts,trousers and glares.She stared in awe of them.They had all come in big expensive cars,whereas her father did not even own a bicycle.She felt a flush of embarrassment and looked down at the floor.She hoped to God,no body would see her.She slowly walked towards her class ,glancing back, to see her father ,limp and straighten his shirt and collar,at the same time,comb his unruly wavy hair.He had an air of curiosity and in credulousness about himself,this morning.
They sat down on one of the chairs near the class entrance.None of the chairs were occupied though, since they were the first to reach.Her father sat down with an air of expectancy,eyes wild with excitement.She looked at him and asked”Baba, are you all right?”.
“Titli” he replied” I never knew your school was so big. The school ,I went to, was a one room set up,where more than seventy of us would squeeze ourselves.Of course, most of our studies happened on a slate with pieces of chalk and here you are,I am so proud of you.”
She looked at him ,almost feeling sorry for him.”Ok,Baba,the teacher,Mrs D’costa ,could tell you how I am faring in my subjects and give her opinion”.
“Thats fine,Titli ” he remarked.
“But what can you contribute,you don’t know anything about what happens at school” she blurted out.
“Titli,Don’t you worry,I will have a detailed conversation with Madam.A father needs to know how his daughter is faring.After all ,we are paying so much money for you to have a proper education” he surmised,looking all business.
She looked at him with her mouth open and shook her head.
Slowly,the parents and children started assembling around the class and occupying the seats,around them.She looked at them,feeling as if their eyes were boring into her.She saw them look at her and look at one another.A man sitting next to her Baba,puckered his nose and got up with a sigh,shaking his head.Her Baba sat with his eyes closed,slowly humming a tune.He opened his eyes to find a lady standing ,looking for a place to sit.He promptly got up and limped to the lady ,hands folded in a namaste and gestured to the lady to go and sit in his place.She looked at him with utter disdain and looked away.He came back with a smile on his face, closed his eyes and started humming again. Titli saw him and an anger enveloped over her.How did he even dare approach the woman?What did he think of himself?All this ,only to get insulted?
“Tell me ,what do you like most to learn,Is it learning languages or playing with numbers”he whispered to her.
She looked at him and said “Its biology,I like to read about the body and its parts ,I find it fascinating”.
Her baba looked at her and said “Our daughter is going to be a Doctor, eh” and started giggling,much to her embarrassment.His giggle turned into a full blown laugh and suddenly he was holding his sides as he launched into an uncontrollable frenzy.The people around him,looked at them in fascination ,most of them, suppressing a smile.
“Baba”,she noisily whispered,”Can you please behave .People are watching us”.
He looked at her and slapped her hand playfully,”Ok tell me,what are the most important body parts”.
She looked at him and his inquisitive eyes “Many of them, the brain,the heart ,the liver and the kidneys”.
“Ah,the kidneys “,he remarked”.”The kidney is the answer to many questions”.
“Yes, it performs several critical functions for the body’s well being”she agreed summarily.
The teacher had started calling the parents,one after the other.The routine was that, only the parents could meet the teacher ,while the ward stayed out of the class.They waited for their turn. She looked around, at the people and felt small.She did not belong here.How did she get here in the first place?and that too,in a Jesuit convent, of all places. She had asked her father many times but had always got one answer.”Titli ,you are the chosen one,God is kind ,make us proud”.
She was almost as good as the others in studies,but she often wondered,how much more she could progress.She was old enough to know that her father didn’t earn very much.He had to work odd hours to make ends meet.And her mother’s frequent complaints and soft cries in the dead of the night,were not lost on her.Her father was the opposite however,always,a smile on the face.Most people called him simple and stupid.She loved and hated him in equal measure,because of this.Now ,today,he was again making a fool of himself , slowly but surely.
“All people are good,beneath their skin,not above,only they don’t like to believe so”,suddenly he whispered to her.
With that, he got up and started limping towards the farthest corner, where the rude man who had cringed his nose, was sitting,working away on his mobile phone. Baba stood before him with folded hands as her eyes turned low towards her lap,fearing what was to follow next.She slowly raised her eyes to find the people in front looking towards her Baba’s direction.She followed their cue to find that both men had their hands intertwined with each other,talking softly.
After sometime,she saw her Baba stand up and put his hand on the man’s shoulder while,the man kept looking at the ground.He turned and look back,pointing at her.The man looked at her as well and waved at her,with a kind smile.She waved back gingerly.They both hugged then and her Baba hobbled back with a smile on his face.He sat down as she kept looking at him.”Baba,what did you say to that rude man,What just happened?”.Baba just sat there ,quietly smiling away.
After a few minutes,Baba spoke again. “Titli,you know people get angry with people because they are generally angry with themselves.You should let them be.”
With that he got up again and slowly walked to the lady who had refused to sit ,when he had offered her the chair.She looked on in amazement as Baba folded his hands,respectfully.The lady looked like she was going to explode in rage but as Baba started talking,suddenly her face went numb ,then tears started flowing through her eyes.After what seemed like eternity,the lady calmed down and gave a hint of a smile. Baba pointed at his daughter as the lady’s gaze followed him with a smile full of affection. Baba folded his hands and bowed down slightly before he started to walk back to his daughter,who continued to gape at him.
It was now time for their turn,as Ms D’costa called out her name.She was now beside herself with worry “Baba,just nod at anything she says. She does not understand Hindi very well and you won’t understand her , so please do not spend much time.”
Baba looked at her and smiled “Titli,I am here to know how you are doing and that I will. Don’t worry,the heart doesn’t need language .It can make the dumb speak and the deaf hear”.
He went in slowly as Ms D’costa regarded him carefully.She peeped in through the door to see silence at first, followed by Ms D ‘Costa smiling and then talking in animated fashion.Her Baba was all attention.After a while Baba got up ,followed by the teacher ,who tapped him on the arm in appreciation. Baba slowly walked back ,a smile on his lips,as his daughter beamed away in absolute delight. She excitedly clasped his hands,looking at him,her eyes asking questions, as they began the walk to the school gate,a job well done.
As they passed the Principal’s office,her Baba stopped and walked across to the attendant and said something to the attendant.At first,the attendant looked at him with suspicion and then grudgingly walked into the principal’s office ,as Baba waited.She was left aghast as she saw the Principal,Father Dias walk out hurriedly, looking earnest.He found Baba standing there all by himself and rushed to him,calling out his name.They embraced and the Father held him by the shoulder,talking and hugging by turn.Baba was overwhelmed too,as she could see clearly.
She stood there thinking about what she had just witnessed.Her Baba,a mere commoner ,whom she had only embarrassment for, had turned it completely around for her.She now saw strength and power in him like never before.She couldn’t help but love him more than ever, as she ran into his arms.They bade farewell to the Principal,who had good things to say about her and then walked out of the school premises,smiling and laughing.
As they waited to board the bus home,she asked her father in excitement .”Baba ,what did you tell the rude man?”.After taking a deep breath ,he said “Nothing,my child,I reminded him that he was once in the hospital,I work in,dealing with extreme pain,after an accident and that I had sat through three nights with him,holding his hand,as he kept crying through his pain.He remembered me then and was very thankful for the time we had spent together”.He’s absolutely fine now”
“As for the lady,she lost someone dear to her heart ,at the hospital .Call it coincidence,but I happened to take care of that someone, while she was away.By the time she knew,it was too late.I remembered seeing her there,grief stricken.I just told her that she should not feel responsible because she was forgiven and that I was witness to that forgiveness being given.That was probably the cause of her anger and what I told her ,may have given her relief,Thank God”,he smiled sadly.
“What about Mrs D’Costa?,she asked, eyes wide with expectation to which Baba replied “I just told her somehow, that my daughter is extremely worried, I will embarrass myself,and then she would feel let down,so for my and your sake, if she could please spare time and act as if we were having a meaningful conversation.I want her to be proud of me,I told the kind lady”.She was quite surprised at my request but the nice person ,she is,she smiled at me and said,”I will do anything for the two of you as no one deserves it better.”
Amazed but feeling happy she asked him again, “Baba,How do you know the Principal,of all the people”.Baba looked at the distance and slowly responded. “Titli, Father Dias is the man who gave you admission in this school ,otherwise we are small,uneducated ,poor people.He was very ill some years back,when you were a toddler.He had bad kidneys,I needed the money so I gave him one of mine,very simple” he smiled.He is man of God,didn’t forget me ever and returned the favour,by allowing you to study in this big school. Kidneys have all the answers,you see” he chuckled.
She kept looking at Baba with a new found admiration and love ,as he closed his eyes with his benign smile,lightly humming, as the breeze blew over them.She would go home and tell her Mom and brother, that her Baba was no mean man.He was their unsung hero.
Not before long, she lay her head happily on her father”s lap ,with a content smile on her face,feeling the love and pride,she would forever have for him,as the rickety bus led both of them to sleep.
–END–
                                                                                                SOURCE BY-ASHISH NAYAR
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM

FAMILY STORY

                       "WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU ARE                                               OVERAMBITIOUS"-FINAL PART



pink-flowerI think till now you might have gone through the first story. In this story the parents were overambitious about their daughter. The school where she studied from nursery to class ten was in no way lower than any highly reputed school, but even then the parents withdrew their daughter and admitted her to New Delhi’s school in anticipation that she would perform the best beyond imagination which can help build her career excellently after twelfth. Here the daughter was attending her school in the morning by school bus and coming back in the afternoon every day. The parents loved her like anything and the daughter also love her parents immensely. With the sunrise their love and affection starts with but even late in night it continues till the daughter did not go to bed and sleep well. She was in well guidance and supervision of their parents, so to say under their eyelids whereas in New Delhi she was far – far away from the sight of her parents . Whatsoever the reasons might be, the story ended in tragedy, resulting in unbearable loss to the family of Mr. Mallick.
The second story is just reverse of that i.e. the first one.
Shashikant was a student of class ten in a village High School. He passed tenth class with very good marks. His parents were very pleased with the result of their son. There were many options for admission of the boy. Someone advised to admit him to Saint Xavier College, Ranchi, some to Saint Columbus College, Hazaribagh, some asked father to admit him to New Delhi’s school.
Father heard everyone patiently, did not displease any one by opposing face to face.
The parents were of the opinion not to send their eldest son anywhere, but to admit him to a local college.
One day father called his son and wanted to know his view also. His son replied briefly, “what you think is acceptable to me. I will do better irrespective of what of standard college is.”
The college was only eight kilometres from his house. He used to attend his classes regularly. His father sat with him, asked how he was pulling on, how his classes were held, regularly or irregularly, so many things were discussed between the son and the father.
As soon as the boy passed twelfth class, he was admitted to the same college.
The boy expressed his desire to take B.Sc. ( Hons.) in Mathematics.
Father said to him clearly, “ If you be a school master, I will be the happiest person, I have the least desire, you must too, but work so sincerely, so hard that you can compete one of the toughest entrance examination of the country, side by side you will have to plan properly and prepare for both the examinations at the same time. I know you will have to work very hard, what of that, one day it will repay you, and you will forget what you sacrifice now. We are here, myself, your mother, your elder sister, your younger brothers – all will help you in your study as well as in your sports and games which you like to play after you feel monotony and be free from your study. You can relax whenever you are tired of work.”
When the boy passed B.SC. ( Hons ) in Math. Part – I Exam. and obtained 89% in Math., the highest marks in the college, his father asked him what entrance exam. he wanted to prepare for IIT only.
“ Well! as books are the best teachers, I can buy necessary books for you. Make efforts from your end to get all necessary syllabus, question papers etc. for the last few years or so. By that time I am registering your name as an external student to Brilliant Tutorials, one year postal coaching, it will help you and guide you to a great extent for preparation. You can join three teachers for three different subjects for tuition also. The names that you have proposed are of high repute, so I allow you.”- his father said to him.
The boy himself sought for a lonely place in the house for study. It was in first floor. Mother used to go there with a glass of milk or Horlicks every morning and evening.
In B.Sc. second year he obtained 78% marks in honours papers.
He appeared in IIT JEE but not competed when he was in second year. He didn’t lose heart and once again appeared when he was in final year of B.SC. ( Hons )
This year he was selected for admission to IIT, Kharagpur. His AIR was around 1500.
Here is the Turning Point in the story.
He studied for 4 years, selected in campus, joined an MNC. He guided his younger brothers, helped them financially in their admission to engineering colleges. When his father retired from services of the company, he took the whole charge on his shoulder and made the parents free from household anxiety.
The son works in an MNC and holds a key post but far – far away from his father nearly 2000 kilometres from home – his native place. But not too far as the distance has shrunk to the nearest one with the development of science & technology in communication inasmuch as mobile, smartphone, internet,video conferencing are readily available for whole day for use. The parents and the son talk to each other and share their views regularly.
When the son arrives home, father goes one step forward and embraces his son with love and affection that he deserves.
My dear friends!
Now you have read both the stories. No doubt in it when we are overambitious, we will have to pay for it. And when we think of the least, exert utmost for the best, there are favourable chances that we can pave the way to achieve our goal.
***
                                                                                              SOURCE BY-DURGA PRASAD
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM

FAMILY STORY

                             "WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU ARE                                                      OVERAMBITIOUS"



three-white-flowerMr. and Mrs. Mallick returned happily after admitting her daughter in New Delhi’s school. They bought almost all things her daughter wanted from them while leaving her in the hostel. Everything was settled so nicely that the parents as well as their daughter looked extremely happy.
Whosoever asked from them about their daughter, they replied that she was alright there and doing well.
Every day at night they used to talk to their daughter over telephone by turn about how she was pulling on. She said, “Everything is OK, nothing to worry at all.
Days were passing on their flying wings as pleasantly as in Fairy Tales.
“Now we are free from one anxiety – about the career of our daughter, she is in one of the best schools of New Delhi, no worry about her higher education, she can compete any joint entrance examination after twelfth, no doubt in it.”- Parents were so confident that they used to say to their friends.
The parents whenever got time proceeded to New Delhi to see their daughter also. So much love and affection they showered till they lived with their daughter that while departing with the daughter their eyes were filled with tears, they had to hold them inside. With sheer smile on the faces they saw off the daughter at the hostel gate.
Here is the turning point in the story.
I was extremely engaged in auditing of books of accounts in the office. The statutory auditors were sitting in front of my table and busy in work. It was about eleven O’clock in the morning. Just then Mazumdar Babu, Accountant entered my chamber and to his utter surprise said to me, “ Do you know, Sir! A very sad news!”
What has happened? Tell me clearly.
You know Mr. Mallick’s daughter?
Yes.
She was reading in New Delhi.
I know it also. What has happened, tell me.
She is no more.
How? She was alright. What happened and how died?
She committed suicide, she was found dead in her hostel room. Just now I received the news over telephone from Mr. Sinha, one of my friends in Head Quarter.
We were stunned to get this sad news. The auditors stood up and stopped the work. I said to Mazumdar Babu, “ Let us go to his bungalow.”
We rushed there and the scene we came across was very tragic. A large number of well wishers were in and around the bungalow. Mrs. Mallick was senseless to hear the sad news and admitted to hospital. Mr. Mallick was surrounded by his colleagues who were consoling him but it had no effect on Mr. Mallick’s mind. He was at a loss to decide what to do then, no charm in life, everything gone!
He cried bitterly since he heard the sad news, his was not ready to believe in the news. His eyes were dried up, no tears to shed any longer. What he thought of and what happened, now what for his life was, meaningless without her, how and why occurred, what wrong he had committed in life that he was punished so cruelly by God…
Too many mouths, too many comments.
Someone said, “ Mr. Mallick should not have withdrawn her daughter from here. She was doing well here, not at all necessary to admit her to New Delhi’s school.
Another commented, “ New Delhi is not a good place for us. Students from different states join the school and one is jealous of another, can do harm to anyone.”
Mr. Mazumdar asked me, “ Sir! What is your opinion about Mr. Mallick’s decision?”
In my opinion it was a wrong decision to withdraw the daughter and admit her to New Delhi’s school. Mr. and Mrs. Mallick shouldn’t have become overambitious about their daughter.”
“Only one daughter the parents have, they should not have kept her far away from their eyes.” – one of his colleagues gave his views.
“Very unfortunate!”- said D (F ) and asked his secretary to extend all co-operation and assistance to Mr. Mallick’s family.
“Let the situation be normal, we have decided to proceed to New Delhi today. We want to see the Principal and want to know actually what has happened and why?”- one of the Mallick’s relatives said to us.
One by one the people left with the heavy hearts, only a few were present there to take care of Mr. Mallick, his wife and other kith and kin.
So many things appeared and disappeared in my mind one by one, the whole matters from beginning to the end before my eyes, I could not come to a conclusion what fault was there either with the parents or her daughter that resulted in such an unfortunate end.
***
Second Story: Will continue…
                                                                                             SOURCE BY-DURGA PRASAD
PUBLISHED BY-OURHELLO.COM