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Is trust just a listed word?

Deccan Herald. Sunday, March 15, 2009 (ref: Full circle )http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Mar152009/artic20090314124029.asp

A love-struck adolescent dished out 45 rupees for a single stalk of red rose. There were more in line for larger numbers and even gallant bouquets. Some others hovered ever so romantically about their belles while I simply watched with a smile in my heart. Inadvertently, though, I was also darting my eyes around protectively, just in case there was a vile party pooper, eagerly waiting for his hapless victims to make the first mistake.

To my relief, even the black cat decided against crossing the road and walked tamely along the pavement. What I also saw was an undeniable fear relegated to an external cache, certainly not accessible for that day.

In another part of the city, the Aero India show zipped ahead. The crowds on the ground thronged with a gusto overwhelming enough to match the daredevilry of fighter pilots manouvering their supersonic toys through heart-stopping flips and loops in the skies above.

Stringent security cordons ensured that all roads were safe and all checks secure. All hell, would have to wait for another time. But over the last few days, the more I’ve talked to people, the more I’ve heard of how many more would have liked to strut their charm and how many succumbed to voices that kept them wary of large or media-covered events, however tempting and fantastic they might have been.

I can’t but take my mind back to the new year’s eve party that I dared to attend – the crowd was unsettlingly sparse for an evening like that. I would mark it as the start of a year that spells continuous fears from various threats and equally consistent fight-backs to banish them. Inspite of the impenetrable security inside, outside the Ball, the unnatural quiet that heralded 2009, the general lack of enthusiasm to change that and others’ surprise that we chanced the venture out, testifies a rather sadistic victory.

And what makes this victory so very dangerous, is that it has paved the path for more such. Mumbai was not enough for these mongers of hatred; we now have to deal with a self-styled moral police with their most backward and outrageously sexist agendas. Our enemy is, again, the ill-informed religious fanatic, rooted in misguided faith, propagating monstrously deformed objectives.

Screaming out is one latent truth: a lovingly nurtured social framework, has come unhinged.

This realisation makes me sit tight and listen when my parents fondly reminisce about the times when I was growing up. Like a child at bed-time, I lose myself in far-away tales and mental pictures of well-attended picnics, walk-in neighbours, outlandish-houred dinners-on-demand, ten people in one kitchen fretting over the precise boil in the pickle on the hob, multiple attendants at a sick friend’s bedside, impromptu stay-overs and streets bustling with familiar chatter. A time when smiles rode over and above hurt. A time when people brought over other people just because they were around. A time when trust was not contemplated, it simply happened.

That was the time ‘communities’ thrived. Communities of people who shared interests. Communities of children who played because they were together. Communities of well-wishers who stuck by the other. Communities where everyone knew each other and if they didn’t, a new friend was quickly made.

C o m m u n i t i e s. Not ‘communal groups’. Not ‘ethnic affiliations’. Not ‘religious factions’.

“… finally, in response to India’s dossier of evidence. India refutes …”, runs the news channel’s bottom line across the television screen and the past instantly recedes into its designated crevice in memory. One order of gun-totters took it upon themselves to make a statement to the entire world. One body of ‘patriots’ retaliates with more bloodshed. One wing of moralists resorts to assault. India suffers anew.

As one line of division shows signs of erosion, another erupts afresh. The larger picture condenses to fit the microcosm of our little lives. Trust is just a listed word. Our neighbour stands suspect. We are watering a snake-pit under our organic turf. But think about it. How often do we find the pesky rodent in a well-tended garden?

Our busy lives, our exclusive lifestyles and our secluded life-scopes have left little room for anyone else. Within our unit-living, how much do we know about each other? What is our teenager thinking? Why is the spouse ill-at-ease? Who is talking?

I so often hear ricocheting claims of how members of the same family, living at the same address, catch mere glimpses of each other. So when does any productive exchange happen there? And when was the last time you looked into the adjacent garden to enquire about the ripened strawberry?

Our self-contained, high-walled existence has not only removed us from the larger world we live in, it has also made us disdainful of it. Anyone asking after our wellbeing, is an interference. Someone else walking on the same pavement, is an infringement. That friendly offer to alleviate trouble, is audacity.

This is our day. And this is what we learn: you are nice because you are not good enough to be bad, you are helpful because you don’t value yourself and if you value another, it’s because you don’t have a life!

When I moved to London, this level playing field of sorts gained more plinth. I was advised against any contact beyond basic courtesy – it would seem too desperate. When new neighbours moved in, I was to refrain from cordial welcoming – that would be intrusive. If that same neighbour got locked out, I was warned against assistance – it would be downright offensive!?

Policy: Live and let live. Method: Solitary confinement. Duration: Life.
Did I change that? Of course, I did. Was it appreciated? The people, who continue to wish us from across the seas on our special days, are the ones who were thrilled to share an afternoon over a cup of tea and smile while at it. What worked? Natural instinct, channeled pleasantly.

Back home, I look across and find that we (specially the current generation) are now at that point in the circle from which the West is quickly moving forward. While they have waded into a new circuit, we are dragging along the curve where our insular lives have rendered us susceptible to detriments of our own making. The West has lived it, suffered it, seems to be learning the lessons and is moving ahead. We need to head back.

Blame history, but in spite of it, I have found that there is little aversion to knowing the other. What there is, is fear. We are afraid of what the response will be. We are afraid of offending. We are afraid of defending. We are afraid of mistaken integrity. We are afraid of intention. We are afraid of who our new acquaintance could turn out to be.

It is not just the lack of time, then, that is the culprit because a quick ‘hello’, takes but a second. It is the uncertainty of what we don’t know. But how will we know, if we shy away from knowing? In the little community that I have around me, I smile at someone and they know me. Together we talk about unfamiliar faces and choose to let them know that we are there.

And terrible as this comes across, not for companionship, not for camaraderie but for sheer safety, now more than ever, we need to share the sugar bowl with those that are close by. It keeps them in check and keeps us aware. Who knows, this awareness could well re-build a cohesive and inclusive society where motives become selfless. Where humanity binds us once more. Where community takes another birth and we actually start caring for each other. And again, all ends well.

I live in that hope. I dream of a place where my child will delight in pleasures of the togetherness that I enjoyed. Maybe one day, in the future, when I tell the tales of him growing up, instead of drawing contrasts with elders, the way I do now, my child will be laughing ‘with’ me.

I am glad we’ve shown the courage to join in and enjoy our happy occasions. I am happy that unhappy hauntings failed to draw any victory on the psyche of at least the few of us that were out there, either regaling or serenading. I am grateful to the police and the defence forces for maintaining ‘normalcy’ inspite of the grave threat and foreboding uncertainty that hangs in the air.

In the last few days, we have refuted fear and beat those that perpetrated it. We need to do it again, as discriminators and merchants of hatred plant new seeds.

Beauty-crown-winning and easily understood as ‘world peace’, the only way forward lies right here, within us. It is as ancient as time. It is as persistent as life itself. It is as inevitable as childhoods of a few decades ago. It embodies itself in the tapestry of ‘community’. It is defined in the words: respect, compassion and regard. Throw in love, and we have laughter back in our lives.

~ http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Mar152009/artic20090314124029.asp

Comments

firstly... congrats on the article... if shakespeare were around, he would no doubt get inspired by the eloquence with which you command the language - like many a successful battle weary general who has lasted to tell the tale.

you speak of the tapestery of community of the days gone by... times are indeed different, but its my firm belief that life moves ever forward and not backwards.

communities exist today, but constrained mostly by physical neighbourly love, they are not!

in eons past, could one have imagined being in touch with the world's best at something... (take the creator of the "perl" programming language as an example)... for us mere mortals, that would have been an impossibility. Today however, for thousands of us, hundreds of thousands in fact, we count ourselves a community... a community unbounded by the chains of space (if not time).

Friend's exist that i have never met... and support structures where one would have never dreamed. There are communities all right, but the event horizon is a difficult place to escape from... possible if we are to believe some experts, but difficult all the same.
ambersun said…
Hi

I'm from Tasmania, Australia.

I loved your post - well written, evocative and thoughtful. It is interesting to me how people from other countries see things.

Tasmania is a small island at the bottom of Australia. We only have half a million people.

people here, on the whole, are friendly and trusting. They strike up conversation on the bus, in shopping centres and at markets.

It is not unusual for me to see half a dozen people I know when I walk down the street.

It is all just so lovely.

I pray in thankfulness regularly for the place I live and love and the people in it.

Amber
Tejuthy said…
lesser kudu, firstly, welcome to my page :) your kind words are appreciated.

yes, you are right - communities exist, but their nature is different from what i believe is the need today. you speak mostly of 'interest' based communities where there is calculated and organised give and take. my focus is on that aspect of community-living that is more face-to-face and the give and take is not a rule. interest is in the next person as a human being and not on gain or problem solving. the emphasis is more on what one can give. the returns will follow - yes, today things are not quite so. and my dreams seem utopian now. that's the problem.

through this article, i intend to generate thought in line with my thinking and bring about a change to what was. i believe, in doing so, and embracing those selfless sentiments, we will be indeed moving forward. ever more.

the criticism is solely directed at the selfishness of emotions and lifestyles today - not on scientific progress and evolution of kind.

i strongly believe in the positivity of a genuine hug and depth of a heartfelt smile. >:D< and :) are electronic compromises -effective when away, unnecessary when close.

thankyou for the debate- i look forward to more. see you again :)
Tejuthy said…
Thanks for visiting, Amber :) i have friends in Tasmania and we share a lot in common.

it is the gentle erosion of improptu mingling and resultant discomfort with familiarity that scares me about my country today. because that's what lets trouble in. we are intrinsically a very closely woven people and too large a population to sustain divides.

but forces are targetting the very bonds that keep us as one.

your visit and observation leaves me happy to know that people from other cultures can understand where my fears stem from.

i wish you luck, happiness and peace.

do visit again :)
ambersun said…
Thanks for your response to my blog and my comment.

All the best for promoting unity and community.

I look forward to your next post.

Amber
hi tej,

you mention that i claim: "you speak mostly of 'interest' based communities where there is calculated and organised give and take." ... there are such communities/interest-groups, there is no doubting that... however, there are many many true communities that give without thinking... take the "open source" community for that matter... individuals at large give and give and give... torrents are another community where giving is very very common!

Some of course are leeches, no matter where they are... but is that really different to how things were?

you mention that your criticism is solely directed at selfish emotions and lifestyles today...

there are undoubtedly things that are worse today than they were in yesteryear... however, on the whole, i think things are a lot better... its just that newspapers and mass media sources sensationalise, and people are addicted to gossip... bad news travels on a rocket, while good must be dug out! It does not make the good deeds in life any lesser in number or strength... only that we do not realise or discuss them as often.

Kids today i find are generally polite, selfless, helpful, intelligent; but now as opposed to yesteryear, they also have confidence and a strong constitution which is wonderful evolution.

a genuine hug and heartfelt smiles are all around... the utopian dream you mention is here right now... i experience it every day.... come spend a day in the life of the "lesser kudu" and you will see :)
Tejuthy said…
'lesser kudu' hmmm... i am intrigued. though our viewpoints are hued differently, i think we are on the same page.

a day in the life - do i already know this life, 'lesser kudu'?

- tej :)
ah but tej, no matter what our hue, when the wheel of life turns, we all see the same shade.

as for the lesser kudu... you do know this animal... usually found in the grasslands of africa, but these days, the lesser kudu is busy riding the auto around town :)
Tejuthy said…
now we are in total agreement :)

and would that auto you're riding be brilliantly hued then? and would it have gained easy entry into the oberoi/taj? or would the valet have had just the slightest hesitation?
we are? and i was trying to be disagreeable... damn! ;)

as for the auto, it is indeed brightly hued and never have i had trouble getting in to the likes of places where self-appointed social icons frequent... however, getting the valet to park it has been a challenge at the best of times, with the excuses aired being: "sorry, but this is not a vehicle any of us has the skills to drive!" (yeah right!!!) :)
Tejuthy said…
gotcha! autoraja, you :)))
hey! ess ess gee told me you blog too- where?
darn! i am undone! there goes another flamebait potential :)

as for my blog... its rather crass, but if thoust has time to kill a mocking bird, you can find it at http://questForTheHeartstone.blogspot.com/

what i do spent a bit more time on... is my photos :) still very amateur, but still up at http://flickr.com/photos/c0t0s0d0/ :)

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