Sometimes, sometimes often certain individuals, long gone come
into our thoughts. They come in like gentle whiff of fresh soothing air, and
tickle ones hair pits, one’s heart and soul. Goose bumps all over! As the
native Indians, the Sioux say, “The heart soars like an eagle”! Perhaps I may
be too enkindled about the feeling the thoughts bring forth? Nevertheless they
bring sweet memories in an otherwise cantankerous, perfidious world of people.
In this world nothing comes free and everything has a price
more than value and altruism is a premium trait, if not a dying or a dead
aberration perhaps noticeable in a few. In such a society this man who I must
call as P, for the shortened version of his name and his relationship to me (he
was my father’s first cousin and elder to him). I called him “Perappan”. He was
an exception, insofar as I knew in his relationship to me and my sister at
least!
Memories of him dates back to my very young age of about six
or seven and he lived with us , which was then a joint family of sorts .He was
unmarried and died a bachelor boy well into his eighties. He was an early riser
and used to engage in serious manual labour. The vegetable garden which was
then a prideful thing was his creation. He used to gather about fifty odd
buckets of water from the perennial well to water his favorite garden. Spinach,
Egg plants, cucumber, gourds, red chilies’, bananas, and yam the list was
endless! Then the cows- the baths he used to give them (some days, I in tow as
an assistant of sorts) by the well.
I remember walking about with him questioning and
inquisitive about his work here and the one he did there. Sometimes he would
relent and let me do the little job when I was petulant about his refusing to
let me do something along with him.
He was a craftsman .That didn’t mean he sculptured femme
fatales, charming princes and abstract forms raved by the vain. He was a simple
tailor. A sartorial expert- maker of men’s formal wear, the tuxedos and suits
and he was quite well known in a small elite circle for his exceptional skills
in tailoring. The patterns that dissolved into ones symmetry, that coalesced as
a second skin!
If I had had tasted the little things in early life that a
child holds close to his heart they were from him. He was in a way my God of
small things.
The first Chandamamam ( Ambiliammavan) monthly children’s book magazine till they ceased
publication , the occasional matinée movies, the circus , the fairs , the visits to the zoo and the beach, the
overwhelming journeys in the then admired double decker bus that were grand
relics in Thiruvananthapuram, the refreshments and short eats out in restaurant, the Parry’s chocolates and
toffees, the peanut chikkis, the regular supply of shirts and trousers, the
unfailing supply of firecrackers for Deepavali , the little doles ( Vishu
kaineetam) for Vishu, my first shuttle
badminton racket…...! Thank God! God! If there is one, he was the one, the God
of small things, things that now I feel made my life as a little child. They
now tower larger than what I have possessed in adulthood thus far. Seem to be
huge, very big, priceless and of incalculable value. Things that all the
bullion may not suffice to square off. Things that are priceless but are
invaluable the most.
I remember him desolate when I strayed a while in my early
teens and in shady group of accomplices. Shiver me timbers!
Years later when he was living with his nephew (his sister’s
son), I used to go to him often when I was in Thiruvanathapuram, sit with him
for a while. He was always pleasantly thrilled to see me and perhaps he also
may have sighed that I did not disappoint him as he once may have feared I
would. When I bade bye to him at the end of each visit, I used to leave in his
palm one hundred Rupee bill. I often noticed a glint in his eyes, a shimmer.
Gradually when he was ploughed under by dementia, he used to just sit in the
chair and smile when I held his hands. The familiarness, recognition and the
glint in his eyes ebbed not too gradually. They became washy from age and I saw
he was surely going down, the smile too. The last time I saw him, he was not
smiling, but sat with a void look into the distant, or was it into the blank
vapidness of the white wall in front. The eyes were of living dead – no glint,
no shimmer, and was foggy.
My God of Small Things!