An Ode To Father
I was a shrewd child.
A maverick by birth. Being youngest among the siblings, I had a devil-may-care
attitude. Reckless and fierce I would often put my parents in an embarrassing
situation as I had mastered the art of dropping a clanger. But I had a thing
for adventurism too. So much so that if a Mark Twain lived nearby Tom Sawyer
would have had a strong female competitor. Besides this Sawyerishness, I had a hint
of Robin Hood also. I would rob from the kitchen gardens of the rich and give
it to....Neah! I would eat it all! That is why I said ‘a hint’ of Robin Hood. As far as my way at my School is concerned, I
am sure my kindergarten teachers remember me as an epitome of mischief, a child
who was acerbically quick-witted and uncontrollably canny. I was brazen-faced
and my remarks would leave them stupefied. Poor mother would always have to
listen to my seditious stories. I call them escapades though. The standard childlike
purity would bore me to tears and I always did things at my own sweet will just
that the results were not saccharine but tart. My neighbourhood would dread my evil spirit as
I was always equipped to bulldoze whatever came in my way and being impenitent
was my pleasure! I was a devil by default and I would thoroughly enjoy my
mischievous sprite. Specifically I had a theatrical childhood full of antics
and I loved to clown around. I was born to be an outlaw but I couldn’t be one.
Howsoever out of the line,
I have always been an apple of my Father’s eye. I am his “Darling Cherub”. As an
individual he is princely profound and lavishly liberal but at the same time he
is an austere disciplinarian. At an appropriate time he figured out my
outlandish behaviour and he knew it was time to cage his ‘Darling Cherub’ and
that is what he exactly did. To his advantage, I was a rebel with a difference.
I was not indisciplinable so it was easy for him to clip my wings and curb my
eccentricity. He is an opulent charmer and knows very well how to cast a spell.
He was determined to set me straight and thus the devil was cooped.
Father is a feminist, an effortless libber .He has seen
women being abused and he detests the fact that most of them, in spite of being
gifted and artistic, don’t say a word in their defence. When I was a baby, one
of his young female colleagues committed suicide as she had a failed marriage
and could not handle the stress. The incident had a deep impact on him and he
became worrisome about his daughters. An anxiety had germinated inside his
system and he did not want to think of a situation where his daughters would succumb
under pressure. He thus took charge of our lives and decided to train us, make
sure that we grow up a cut above ordinary women and he knew what exactly he had
to do. As a Professor of English he was confident about the maxim, “Reading
maketh a complete man” and as a father he strongly believed, “A well read woman
is a dangerous creature”. He might have had a dislike for my devilish attitude
but he didn’t want to obliterate it completely. He thus started the makeover
charismatically and he had results.
A Sun-day now was a Sad-day. On sunny spring Sunday
afternoons when all my ‘Merry-Men’ would be basking in the glory of the Sun, I
was made to read Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Talk about adding salt to
injury! Reading a book was double Dutch to me and I hated the ambience of the
room where Father and Sister would be enwrapped in their respective books and I,
on the other hand would always be struggling to concentrate. Talking about my Sister,
she is a born genius. I believe she was born before her time. At 10 she could
speak Elizabethan English. She knew all the Shakespearean tales and she sang
all Wordsworthian songs. She has always been a voracious reader and has read a
lot of literature. As a child too she would read a novel and a course book with
the same ease and I would watch her in awe. Nonetheless, we never had sibling
rivalry but unknowingly she was the cause of my misery as Father wanted his
‘Darling Cherub’ to be mature, firm and unassailable like his elder able
daughter. Undertaking her duty as an elder sister she would try her best to
read the Russian folklore to me while I kept looking outside at the birdies,
fledging on a shoot of the plum tree. How I would desire to be one among them
and fly away to a distant land where there were no books! But that was like
asking for the moon and I would thus pretend to read and also act innocent as if
butter would not melt in my mouth. Intermittently I would snooze. Lo and
behold! Elegantly attired as an Arabian ‘Hoor’ I would verbalize ‘Open, O
Sesame. Open, O Sesame’ and scuttle to play outside as the door would be swung
open .A strong blow either by Sister or Father would wake me up.
Days and months had gone by, my Sundays were still
lacklustre and Dad too wouldn’t give up. At that time I ostracized his
stubbornness but now I am glad he was persistent. One bright sunny afternoon
while staring at one of the tiny story books, I realised that I enjoyed going
through the animations. The sketches started to dance in front of my eyes and I
laughed in conjunction with the laughing caricatures. I started to insist that
my sister read to me the stories of The Tsar and she always did. I would now
enjoy going through all the available books and I knew what I wanted to
read. The change had begun. The devil
had been tamed and Father could sense the alteration. His little girl was
growing into a sensible one. I,now, clearly understood the power of being well read,
the essence of holding the treasure of literature close to one’s bosom and I
could foresee the change my new-found love would bring in my life. I started to hate playing outdoors and would
instead enjoy a game of carom with parents and sister. The neighbours couldn’t
believe their stars as no more property damage would happen and no one would infringe
their well maintained kitchen-gardens. I was now prolific and would not damage
anything. The teachers were the happiest lot. They started to pamper me, not
because they had been longing for me but they dreaded my canniness and never
wanted the feature back. They were happy that I had mellowed down and so was I.
Time passes very
quickly while the change goes on at its own pace. By the moment I finished
college, a lot of water had flown under the bridge. I would take books from the
library and read as many as possible. I was not erudite though. I would spend a
lot of time dribbling on the basketball court and hitting hard on the badminton
yard but I knew the importance of being widely read and never missed a chance.
All glory to God, I stepped out as an entirely different woman on completing my
edification. Strong but not boorish. Daring but not impish. Naughty but not
devilish and contemporary but not offensive. I fell in love with the ‘New-me’
and I still am. I learnt to stand up for myself, speak for myself and have my
back straight, come what may. I might not have achieved much but as much as I
have I owe it all to Father. The man who taught me to be on my feet and be so ,gracefully. The man who orchestrated my education and conveyed to me the
difference of being educated and being literate. The man who transformed me from a child who
hated even the most colourful story books to the woman I have grown into, a
woman who cannot live without the feel of paperback. The man who taught me and my sister to stand against any kind of abuse and not to be in a situation where we will have to compromise on our being. The man who will stand by his daughters when they stand upright against social evils.Unquestionably, the best man in my life, Father today is a happy fellow and so are his girls. Having trained us well, he can take pride in being the architect of our lives as his daughters are now brutally independent women marching the corridor of life
fearlessly.
Thank you Dad. Cheers!
Your prose rhymes like poetry.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written, absolutely beautiful flow - I didn't realise the length of it, until it was over. That's fantastic writing - and having such beautiful people to write of - must have been pure joy to pen. My respects to a man and sister who so influenced you to be who you are today, masha'Allah :)
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Thanks much Khalid :-)
ReplyDeleteAnd Beebo! You are a beautiful person and as usual you are thus being kind. Thanks much :-) Yeah,am glad that you liked the piece and I shall convey your message to Dad and Sister.God has been kind to me :-)
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