Calliographic Ode to a Kanakambaram Flower
“Vatsa stop watering rose pot. Too much water would drain the
nutrients, water these tomatoes instead” shouted Sarala Paati (my grandma). I
was playing with garden hose, experimenting different water fountain patterns
with thumb. I must be 7 or 8 years old then. “Bring me that chisel and dig right
here” she ordered. I was always the chosen minion amongst the bunch of cousins
spending summer at Sarala Paati’s home. I would dig until my hands pained and
dirt crept up under my finger nails. I
longed to go back to playing and asked “Is this ok? “, every few seconds.
Invariably, without lifting her eye from pruning the plants, she would reply “dig
a little deeper”. She must be awfully bored to do this, I thought.
By afternoon most of the adult napped providing us enough time to do unsupervised activities. We did everything from shooting vegetables to setting fire to the trash pit with powder from old fireworks. I made a bow and arrow for shooting vegetables. The string was made from rubber band and arrows were sticks from broom stick. My favorite targets were the hanging bottle guards, tomatoes and plantain trees. This is how I took revenge for gardening chores. She would shout “How can you be so cruel to my plants, my eyes bleed looking at the torture you have done to my babies”. I even remember getting lashes from my uncle for this act.
There was another side to Sarala paati that I really
admired. Everyone in the street she lived, knew her by name. Anyone who passed
by admired her garden which was full of flowers and vegetables. I have witnessed her
giving out saplings, seeds and flowers freely, to anyone who asked. From milkman to our
grocery shop owner everyone spoke good things about her. She baked cookies and
cakes in makeshift sand filled vessels and hand fed us at night. And When it’s time to leave home, she would meet
me in garden or in front yard, to pass me some money secretly. She did this with
grace. She would pass the bundled up notes hidden in her palm to mine as if she
were shaking hands with me. “Don’t give it to anyone”, Get something for
yourself “she would wink.
Last time I went home, I had the chance to walk by the
street where Sarala paati lived. It looked nothing like what it was before. No garden, no known neighbors and no Sarala
Paati. Sarala paati passed away one
silent afternoon without any trouble to anyone when I was in college. After she
was long gone, the home was sold to a builder. Now standing there is an eye
soring apartment, named “Sarala Home”. It felt like I walked through her cemetery
and forgot to pay my respects.
I look back at Sarala paati : dark skinned, uneducated, poor and
unexposed to the worlds of great ideas. She wore kanakambaram (firecracker) flowers
in her oiled up hair and carried her curves with elegance and swift. She taught me to garden, to work hard for
something, to weed out the bad and nourish the best. She taught me to save up,
to socialize, to provide without expectation and to keep secrets. She taught me
to live like I am the lover of life. She
taught me, 'that which lives after us' is what we should be living for.
Comments
Thats too much to even digest :) thanks so much for the words. I surely learnt a lot from her, whatever is my best comes from my family and great leaders, and whatever is my worst, just comes from myself hehe.
I am no super human, I try to be human most of the days.
@Ragavan
yes I am sure its already filled with some. loved the way you put it.