Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Yudhisthira and me

The war at Kurukshetra. They say it is a mythical war. 

What if Kurukshetra is nothing but our inner self? 

Peter Brooks Mahabharata is a very short 5 and half hour dramatised version of a spectacularly big epic. Shorn of all distractions of costume, glittering 
sets and excess verbiage, the succinct words have a way of penetrating deeply.

I first saw this version of Mahabharata nearly two decades ago, and I remember it for very different reasons. Perfect choice of actors, minimalistic sets, and terrific screen play. 

I watched Peter Brooks version over 2 days, completely mesmerised and taken in by the sheer magnitude of the lessons embedded in the poem.

The entire poem comes together in the last frame. When all are dead, Yudhisthira finds himself alone with his dog searching for the gates to heaven. When he is taken in, he is appalled to find Duryodhana and his brothers in heaven, and asks to be united with his brothers and wife. He is then taken to a dark and dingy place where he is informed that he will find his family. He is horrified. He prefers neither heaven nor hell; chooses to sit outside. 

At the point, Vyasa tells him that there is no hell or heaven, and that it "this" was his last "illusion." 

Isn't the war of Kurukshetra a war that we fight every single moment of our lives. 
We are not "all good". We are not "all bad". That, at every turn, we are confronted with situations that call for actions. Some motivated and some not. 

 And when our actions do not have any ulterior motive, we experience harmony in ourselves.  And when they are, we experience discord, disharmony within ourselves by way of fear, anger, jealousy. 

Yudhisthira is but a metaphor for you and me. The war that will be waged within us and the lessons that will come to us from various actions, and the choices we make.  

To do and not be attached to the results. 
To see and not be attached to what we see.

FG







Slow motion death

I am not quite sure where to begin. 

Someone I knew died recently. A friend's wife. I knew both. The husband first and through him, his wife. She had just turned 40. Young with 2 children, aged 12 and 8.

I remember feeling shocked, when he called a couple of years ago to say his wife had cancer.  I recall not being able to react; what to say in response. The same thing happened when I visited them, and he said with his typical matter of fact manner accompanied by a smile, "this had to happen; her mother too had cancer." 

Those early days, I met them every now and then.  And as time went by, the visits became less frequent, and around occasions, Once in a while though, I went by casually, as if everything was just fine. 

What made me not want to ask the nitty gritty questions? Her state of mind. His state of mind. Their financial situation. How were they coping as a couple. How were the children coping? Did they want any specific help? Did they want me to take the kids out occasionally? Did she want to simply chat? Did she have any desires that I could have helped with? How were they looking at the future? 

Denial is a funny state of being.  

What was I afraid of? More importantly, why was I afraid? May be, I didn't want to offend them by asking such questions or even remind them of their situation. May be. Or may be that if I did not ask them, the situation would go away; disappear. And everything would be just fine. 

I ask myself if I was deluding myself. May be that's the real answer. May be I was just running away. The occasional visits ended with a swishy "bye, see you, catch you later" happy that she was doing "good."   

One day, I stopped running. Again, do not know when or what made me but I stopped. This time, we talked. She walked, she spoke, I listened and listened some more. 

She has had a relapse. The second one came and went in a breeze. She had never looked better. The third one came on quick and fast. A certain finality had crept in. A certain acceptance. And also a definite resolve to fight. 

Sadly, by the time, I stopped running, it was more than a bit late. 

There were so many things that I thought she should do, could do, should attempt but now it all came down to clutching straws in the wind. A little bit here and little bit there. Oh, and some just slipped away in between. 

Just the way she did one fine morning, leaving me staring at the straws. So many thoughts remain with no beginning and no end. 

It taught me a lesson - that I should look in the eye and ask without hesitation. Whether sharing some pain will help; whether crying will lighten the overburdened heart. 

I learnt the lesson through cancer. I hope to be useful and reach out more. To be there. To actually see. See beyond the facade. To not be afraid of rejection. To everyone around me.  

I hope to never ever feel that I am clutching straws in the wind again.