“Bye Mom!” Riya
called. She doesn’t get any reply. She didn’t expect it though. Not this soon! But
she said it anyway, as she was leaving for her work. She works in a private
firm under Human Resources Department.
It’s been
a month she last talked to her mother. Well, let me rephrase it. It’s been a
month that her mother last talked to her. Why? The reason is so typical of an
Indian Mother. She wanted her daughter to get married soon. And Riya wasn’t
ready for it. As in, she’s never ready for a marriage. It’s been only Riya and
her mother who made their little-family since she was 10. She doesn’t want to
hurt her mother in any way. She did every possible thing to make her mother
proud. And trust me; making her proud isn’t an easy task. Every Indian mother
is so stubborn with their rules when it comes down to their children’s life.
Given that Riya was a Girl and she was the only daughter of this only mother,
the expectations had really high bench marks. Yeah, they were all for Riya’s
well being. Of course!
But then,
Riya never wanted to get married. She considered “To get married is to get
Trapped”. Most Indian marriages (any marriage, for that matter) will tell
you so. And she doesn’t want to get trapped in a virtual cage for her whole
life. And the worst part is no one sees it that way; they just accept it as
granted.
She wanted
to be free. She doesn’t want that kind of idiotic-morale-fate to change her
course. And if – by any mere chance – time has different plans, she would
tackle when it happens. But no! Now is not the time. She tried explaining this
to her mother. But she wouldn’t understand. Or she couldn’t take in something,
which is against her (typical) morale. As a result, she did what
mothers-always-do. A sentimental attack!
She said, “I’m
not going to talk to you Riya. Keep your rubbish talks with yourself. And don’t
call me Mom one more time”. Hmm…Riya was prepared for that. Both were stubborn.
And the silent-war started its reign.
And
meanwhile, about six months back, Riya published her debut book, “To let go
is to Love”. Though she gets paid well in her usual job, Writing is her
passion. And that’s her first try. The response for her debut book was good,
given the loads of Romance-fiction books in the market. Mmm, she was motivated
there!
I got a
reason to mention this, here. Riya’s mother is a typical Indian woman, as we
now know. She has studied only up to 9th grade. And that too in her
native language as a medium. She had this dream when she was…um…a teenager. She
wanted to learn and speak in multiple languages. The village, in which she had
been living then, was an historical place. So, tourists are common there. All
those foreign people she had seen; she always wanted to talk to them…just to
know how their place and lifestyle was. She admired them silently. Their
freedom, their way of living…every aspect of their life that she had witnessed.
You see,
she never got to fulfill her childish dream. Life throws steep turns,
sometimes. Trick is that, you don’t even realize that you’re falling until you
hit your head hard against something! And here, without her even realizing,
there she was, in this wide and large world with a ten-year-old to take care of
- ALONE!
And as it
got impossible to fulfill her own dreams, she fed them to her daughter. And
Riya was witty enough. She shone in everything she did. Riya’s mother felt
proud of her daughter. She felt herself living those moments with Riya. She saw
her dreams come alive through her.
As Riya
published her debut book, her mother was so proud. But Riya’s mother couldn’t
read it herself. She couldn’t bring herself to ask her daughter to narrate it
too. She wanted to surprise Riya, by quoting back her lines. She thought, “I
should understand it myself. That would be the right gift for my girl”. And
so she started to learn English. It was tough for her. Agreed. When Riya leaves
for work, she would take the book, a notebook, pen and then English-Tamil
Dictionary. She would translate word-by-word and note it down. It was a tedious
work and the translation was clumsy too. But she kept trying.
“
Giving up
is never even a least option for Mothers in terms of their children! Is it?
“
Though
they weren’t talking now, she just couldn’t give up on her daughter. Mothers
are always like that.
She still
had few pages to go, now.
A few days
later, (of course, after Riya left for work) the translating work was done. And
she started to read it from the very first word. She kept reading.
That was a
love story. The love story which spilled pure emotions in every word. And the
love story which didn’t have a happy ending. At least, not the happy ending
that most would expect – the union of hero and heroine! But the sole theme
story can be consolidated in a few words. And that reminds me of my favorite
dialogue in the Hindi movie “PK” – “He loved me enough to let me go!”
Yes, Riya
concluded with – “To love is to not let go? No, I say, To love truly is to
let go. As free as wind! Caging a person isn’t the translation of Love. True
love should be the one generous enough to LET YOU GO and give the freedom
everything ever seeks”.
As Riya’s
mom decrypted that in her own way, she couldn’t help but think of herself and
what she has been doing to her daughter. All she ever wanted was Riya to be
happy. She didn’t want her daughter to be as alone as she was left. She herself
longed for that pure love. But it never stayed an eternity for her. But putting
in the way as Riya did, she saw what she had been doing. She had been caging
her!
Oh, she’s
a Mother and hence the definition of Love. How could she not let go of Riya in
her own way now?! And so she did!
But I still
hope that Riya would find the LOVE of her life which is true enough to let her
go in her own way and may even walk beside her; truer enough to make her fall; which
doesn’t cage her; which wins her. For all of them! After all, this is Earth
we’re living in…the source of love and care. Wouldn’t she offer one to Riya?!
Wishing,
---Sp---
good job dude... loved the conclusion...
ReplyDeleteReally?! Thank you! It's better than the draft right?
Deleteis that a doubt.?
Delete:-) Thanks!!!
DeleteSo thought full da...Nice work ��
ReplyDeleteThanks VP! Glad you like it ;-)
DeleteCouldn't be better....kind of sunk into it for a moment...keep it going
ReplyDeleteSure, thank you :)
Delete