Monday, December 12, 2022

The anatomy of grief

 I recently had the chance to relish Zakir Khan's new stand-up special titled "Tathastu". It was sublime to say the least; it had witty humour, immaculate storytelling but, most of all, it had a soul. That is what you get when a philosopher does stand-up comedy I suppose. And, having lost both my paternal grandparents in the space of eight months earlier this year, this one ended up being extremely close to my heart. When Zakir asked how people can just go away so suddenly, I felt it because that is how my grandmother went - all of a sudden one night. When he talked about how his father felt, I instantly visualized my own father in tears when my grandfather finally let go.

Why - the quintessential question

Both my grandparents were doing relatively well till April. They were both in their early eighties and were marred by a bunch of old-age issues, but neither of them had any signs of anything life threatening. Then, one April night, my grandmother left us in her sleep. Needless to say, everyone was distraught but none more than my grandfather. After all, losing a partner of more than six decades must be truly devastating. He wasn't the same man since but he was trying his best to rebuild till a mysterious infection landed him in the hospital in October, from which he could not recover. 

In both these instances, all those left behind had an overwhelming sense of loss and also a plethora of questions, primarily "how", and more importantly, "why". I suppose the "why" is more confounding - the bigger question to the cosmos on how the terminal point of a life is determined. How do the powers that be decide to pluck away a living, breathing, vivid person in an infinitesimally ephemeral instant? What of all the desires they still had? Of the places they wanted to see, of the people they wanted to meet? Of the smiles they still had to smile, of the tears they still had to shed? Why is the yardstick different for each individual? That is the nature of grief though; it is accompanied by an entire range of emotions and thoughts that one has to work through. Some believe there are seven distinct stages to it, but then, academicians are prone to reducing the most chaotic things into symbols written in ink on paper. What it feels like is chaos - a tumultuous whirlwind of emotions bearing down on you in constant fury.

I wish…

Amidst the storm of emotions, there is a hailstorm too often too - a hailstorm of regret. There are always a bunch of things we wish we would have done or said before a person went - if we had called the person one more time or met them once more or shared one more meal with them or had not broken their heart that one time. In my case, I had not called my grandmother the evening she passed because I was occupied with some office chores. And, no matter how many office tasks I accomplish now, I would never get the opportunity to talk to my grandmother again.

My grandfather was in the hospital for a while. People say that those in touch with the divine know when its time to go; perhaps my grandfather knew it was time. After all, he was as devout as any person can be. The night before he passed, he grabbed my shirt and pulled me close, almost as if to plead to take him off the machines and drips because he wanted to go in peace. Neither my father nor I had the heart to accept it and make that hard call. I will regret that - not being able to give my grandfather peace in his final moments.

I just wish that regret has a silver lining. So far, all it is is a constant burning sensation at the core of my soul that smolders away incessantly. There is no Ctrl+Z to life.

Ephemeral immortals

There is something inexplicably life-altering in seeing the lifeless body of a person you were close to - witnessing their ever-sparkling eyes without any traces of brilliance, their ever-warm hands incomprehensibly cold to the touch, their often smiling face inanimate in a morbid expression. If you are a person with any trace of practicality, you realize that what lies in front of you is not the person you loved but a complex carbon-based form. The last rites of Hinduism further drive home this very concept - the burning of the body, the bursting of the head, the collection of the remains. But, no matter how practical we become, our emotions take time to accept this transition; we still feel the pain of the searing skin, the heat of the dancing flames, the crunch of snapping bones - and the meltdown of every conceptual element associated with the person. It takes a significant amount of time to dissociate the person from the carbon-based lifeform no matter how practical you are.

In those moments, we often contemplate on the nature of life and how we live it. Collective wisdom states that human life is extremely fragile and yet, individually, we each live like immortals. The only indicator of mortality we perhaps accept is life insurance; other than that, we are slaves of providence, ever in pursuit of providing sustenance across generations.

The void

The loss of a loved one does not set in till life returns to normal after all rites and rituals; it is when you think of things like "why has grandmother not called today?" and then realizing she is no longer around that you feel the void created in your life. Our lives, as they are, are a complex structure of blocks constantly being added and removed; the core, however, is made of a few important blocks set up early in our lives. When one of those blocks is removed, the structure still stands but it has a visible void that is apparent every day, in everything we do. There is no replacing the block, no way to fill the void. How do we cope with this? How do we keep living knowing that a hand that shaped us is no longer there?

Coping and growing up

And yet, we live on, don't we? The key is knowing that we carry a part of them with us - the rhymes they taught us, the lessons they gave us, the joy they shared with us, the pesky little habits we picked up from them and, the human beings we became because of them. But it takes months to reach this level of acceptance, through tears and pain. As we trudge out of the other end of this tunnel, we know we are not the same person that entered the tunnel. In passing away also, our loved ones gave us a few lessons, and laid bare the threads of life itself, how it is spun and how we adorn it with frivolities hyped as necessities.

Perhaps the academicians weren't all wrong - the cycle of grief ends with acceptance. But then, does it really end? This loss reminds us that we are just dust animated by magic and the moment the magic leaves us, we are but dust again. Seeing a loved one turned to ashes and dust in front your eyes sets things in perspective - what is important, what is not, what is soulful and what superficial. It allows us to re-evaluate priorities, relationships and habits. The loss of a life is a reminder of life itself.



Sunday, February 13, 2022

Tick tick...no boom?

Have you watched "Tick Tick . . . Boom"? Yes, the movie where Andrew Garfield brilliantly portrays Jonathan Larson. The movie is based on the autobiographical musical dealing with Larson's anxiety about turning 30. Now, for someone who is already on the flip of 30, the movie is a non-saccharine reminder of the anxieties tied to what can be termed as the demise of youth and the onset of the second half of life; it is a reminder that if you were a radioactive element, you probably hit your half life and turned from Uranium to Thorium - you are no longer the same overzealous, under-careful little pain is the neck that you used to be. But, what can a man in his 30’s take away from the movie?

Yardsticks for measuring success

One of the key, if not the key, concern that Larson contemplates as part of the musical is success. Given that each one of us is running a different race yet all of us seem to be running on the same track, how correct or incorrect would it be to measure everyone using the same measures of success? A songwriter who doesn't have a musical on Broadway by 30 can be labeled a failure; a corporate employee who is not earning a salary in six figures by 30 is probably a failure too. Or probably not. That is where the essence of individuality comes to the rescue of humankind. As individuals, we have the liberty of choosing our own yardsticks to measure what success looks like for us. Probably one may not be earning a six figure salary but has time to volunteer or has time to help their kids with homework and that constitutes their measure of success. Of course, that stands directly in contrast with our needs and understanding of how a social construct works atop common shared beliefs. Individualism does not bode well for existing social constructs in general and individualizing something like measures of success is a blow to the societal fabric at large. Yet, for the sake of the lives and mental peace of innumerable people who struggle to meet prejudiced criteria of failure and success put forth by the society, it is paramount for us to believe in our own goals and our own success.

The definition of love

How can love not be part of an autobiographical piece? The 20's are as good a time for romantic intrigues as any. Young men often pursue fleeting crushes like their everlasting happily ever-after to end up heart-broken, just to start anew as soon as another turns up. They actually made this concept into a neat little sitcom which is the claim to fame for Neil Patrick Harris. The game of love in the 20's is akin to snakes and ladders - progress, frustration and repetition. By the 30's, there are, more often than not, stories of deep-seated pain from a love that was lost and the contentment of a love that was found. The very definition of love and the inextricably linked excruciating heartache is something that accompanies the 30's like a bit of gray in the hair and that odd pain in the back - it is quintessential and typical. Our minds, emotions and hormones are not mature enough to comprehend love or heartbreak in the 20's. Of course, many claim to find love early in life and many more still proclaim to have been in the throes of heartbreak at a young age. Yet these are mere shadows of the actual thing, a low quality Xerox of what it actually feels like. It takes a pinch of aged wisdom to truly love a person and it needs an abundance of understanding to lose a love. It takes an understanding of how the fabric of lives are woven to understand how they intertwine and how they diverge; that is meant for eyes not with the furious passion of the 20's but the raging calm of the 30's.

The fleeting nature of life

Another theme brought up numerous times was the ephemeral nature of life. How can we live with planning and providence when we have no assurances of the continuance of our lives the very next instant? What keeps us doing so irrespective as a species, day after day and not nose-dive into a nihilistic doomsday cult? Perhaps the answer is 'Hope'. We wake up each day with new hope and then build on it throughout the day, day after day, hoping to see the payout of the term deposit we initiated, hoping to see our kids grow up, hoping the seeds we planted out in the garden would turn into trees. The alternative, honestly, is not too intriguing; if not hope, then the other explanation tends towards god complex or megalomania, both of which are reasons enough to drive humanity onwards but neither could be pervasive enough to drive an entire species. Or could it?