Sunday, January 23, 2011

The unbearable randomness of being

The colours life has shown me in the past one year... From the muddled, matt, stinking colours of grime and grey, from the hopeful light green colours of a new-born leaf, from the vivacious red of a newly-married woman's sindoor, from the promise of the pink and orange of a satisfying sunset, from the bright yellow of laughter, from the white of the blank wall staring me in the face, yes, I have seen it all. White, let's talk about the white of the wall that stared back at me as I lay thinking about nothing and everything all at once. White conceives within it the entire sphere of colours and thus, emotions. As I lay thinking, blaming, hoping, loving and forgetting, that white created a thousand different possibilities that future was to bring for me. And I gave in to the unbearable randomness of being*.

Random. Life is random. When time freezes and you have no hope left, you stare at that blank white wall and cry. And as those tears sparkle in the light of the bulb, as they soil the book you are attempting to read and make the pillow uncomfortably wet, you are shaken back into a mortal existence of money and materialism in spite of all your precious, sacrosanct emotional turmoil. "O, that book cost me Rs. 395!" And "O, I hate sleeping on a soggy pillow". The triviality of such mundane worries that can find precedence in your life even in the time of some profoundly disturbing moments makes you smile. Trivia remind you to take it easy, to go with the flow and keep the faith.

Unforgiving. Life is unforgiving. Your past is etched in iron, it won't change. The person you were shall be, safely frozen in the abyss of time. It's up to you to be the person you want to be. Lock your past and lose the painful key for tomorrow is another day. And tomorrow will be better, tomorrow you will be better. Life is unforgiving for a reason: it wants you to be your best every single waking moment, every single sleeping moment.

Loving. Life is loving. No matter what past did to you and what disasters you inflicted on your past, life still loves you. It calls you ever so softly, ever so warmly, inviting you to live. As I write this, I remember a friend from college who killed self. Jumped into a river after parking his bike by the highway. His body was fished out some days later, all eaten up by fish. If I were to meet him today as a ghost in that rotten body, I would slap him tight. He had no right to go. Life was waiting. Don't go. Even if you think no one loves you (and you are grossly mistaken there if you think so) life loves you. Life is loving, don't go.

Colours. Let's get back to colours. The colours of songs, of lyrics, of those words written by strangers hundreds of miles away just for you. Let's talk about the colours of hope, of wait, of denial and of shy acceptance. Let's talk about everything in between life and death, day and night, you and me. Everything happens for a reason and it is not our business to be Sherlock Holmes to get to the bottom of that reason. Leave reason be, make your own poetry in free verse.

Woman. Let's talk about being a woman, a lover, a mother. What would this world come to if it were not for the feminine? What the world were to be if it were not for our tenacity to soak pain and indifference, digest unfairness and inequality, gulp down chauvinism and abuse with a smile that hides it all? All the violence, sex and massacre- both physical and emotional- would multiply many times over if it were not for those sacrificed women who kept on taking blow after blow for only one reason: their gender and the paramount expectation of strength that comes with their sex.

Today, I am happy. Tomorrow, I shall be so. For I have moved ahead from fantasizing the mushy colours of the rainbow to accept and respect the lovely colours of life. Matt, dull, glossy, vibrant, hopeful, mauve and pink, red and blue, beige and golden- all colours are mine today. I am sinking in the unbearable randomness of being.
-Gauri Gharpure
Title inspired by Alexander McCall Smith's book 'The Unbearable Lightness of Scones'

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wonder what Richard Bach meant, when he said, “You are always free to change your mind and choose a different future, or a different past.”

This post is beautiful. It is colourful throughout - not just in the "Colours" paragraph.

Gauri Gharpure said...

Atul, thanks.

For sharing this quote and for reading the post, it's close to me.

baruk said...

thank you!

couldn't agree more about life. couldn't agree less about death.

Shilpa said...

The unbearable randomness of being someone else, sulking and cursing life for being crude, dwelling into past and collecting rotten memories of unpleasant events, the nothingness of life- we all go through these emotions so many times, but the ones who pick up pieces of the puzzle called LIFE, they see it's true colours. As they don't expect anything, they have just embraced this unforgiving life----

Love your posts and thoughts!!

Shilpa

girish said...

A lovely, intense post.

Gauri Gharpure said...

Baruk, I trust you to make me think differently everytime. :)

Shilpa-- What a beautiful way to put it all. Thanks!! Do keep reading, and more importantly, letting me know how you feel about the posts / poems / etc.

Girish-- Thank you! Sorry, I have been busy and not very much into reading blogs of late. Will check your space pretty soon.

YOSEE said...

A beautiful bunch of thoughts, Gauri and so lyrically written.

Randomness is what makes life interesting and vibrant. We can choose not to think of it as "unbearable" !
I second your proposal "Leave reason be, make your own poetry in free verse.", not because its daunting to dig for reasons, but because of the tantalising possibility that things don't necessarily have to have a reason !

( Have you read Milan Kundera's " The Unbearable Lightness Of Being ?" )

Gauri Gharpure said...

Yosee, thank you.

Unbearable to me, when i wrote this, was that feeling you get when someone is tickling you, you laugh and laugh, you are happy but that tickling is painful, unbearable.

I shall, however, choose to not take the word 'unbearable' in the negative sense if and when life deals me those cards in future.

Poetry in free verse, yes. Exploring the tantalizing possibility of things that happen without reason, most definitely.

Again, thank you.

Gauri Gharpure said...

O and yes, thanks for the Milan Kundera bit. Will read him, can start with Ignorance that's lying on the bookshelf now. I had not heard of this title before, it's a McCall Smith inspiration all the way. :)

Nino's Mum said...

While the title reminds me more of Kundera's book, I know how McCall aces at making the everyday routines life salvaging. Beautifully written Gauri, I felt every word. Here's to more colours. Love.

sangeeta said...

Beautifully expressed and i know how our eyes take time to detect colours when they have been in the darkness for long...but at the end of the day , colours are beautiful.

Gauri Gharpure said...

Thanks A, here's to more colours :)

Gauri Gharpure said...

Sangeeta-- I can understand tht taking time to adjust to sunshine, both literal and otherwise- after a dark period. It takes time, but if you hang in there long enough, no one can stop colours from reaching out to you. :) Thank you!

Joe Pinto said...

My dear Gauri,

Revel in being, forgiving, loving.
Now you have taken the first steps to -- finding yourself.

Peace and love,
- Joe.

Gauri Gharpure said...

Dear Sir,
Thank you! I owe you.

justaroundme said...

the unbearable randomness of LIFE in it self is well portrayed in this post...lovely