From
my childhood days, I have been always fascinated by magicians. Their tricks
always puzzle me, and make me wonder how things get vanished or replaced from
my naked eyes. At the unfolding of any new
trick or game in a magic show, I always try to keep myself as much alert as
possible to catch the magician in wrong foot, but consistently failed in all my
past endeavors, which left me perplexed and overwhelmed in a confused state of
mind. The earliest show that possibly I attended when I was as little as to comprehend
my age or days around. Only image that still haunts me is that it was an
evening show in an open ground. There was a large gathering. I was possibly
held on the shoulder of my father watching from a great distance the acts of
the greatest magician of the world (that’s what my father told me), senior P.C.
Sorkar (that time he was simply the great Jadukar
P.C. Sorkar) in a well-lit make-shift stage. He was having the famed turban
over his head. I have no memory of the games or tricks he played in that show.
Possibly, I was frightened on his intention to cut a girl through and through
by his magical sword or to vanish her from a wooden enclosure by the touch of
his magical wand.
My
first school was situated about a kilometer and a half from my home. For first
few days I was accompanied by my father, and possibly by the maid working then
in our house. But it was becoming very difficult for my father to bring me back
from the school, as it clashed with his office time. The service of our maid
also became very irregular. My mother
was very busy in her domestic work. She had to attend my little brother also.
It was not always possible for her to make herself free to receive me from the
school gate. So, after a few months I was habituated to return on my own. In my
second year of schooling, I gained the complete freedom of my movement from
home to the school and returning back.
There
were two different routes for walking to my school. One was along a railway
track, occasionally used for shunting goods-train in this long track. Sometime
a lone coal engine would visit us along the track to fill water in its boiler
from an overhead tank. Many a time we used to visit that place after hearing
their shrill whistles. Years back passenger trains used to ply, as the railway
station was close to my home. This place was also near the river side. But now
the station is shifted away from this place, and it is quite near to my first school
I attended then. In those days, no passenger train used to run along that
track. Following this railway track we
could reach my school by a shorter path. The longer route was along the main
metal road through the town. My parents preferred the latter for my
self-commuting. They considered that the metal road was safer as there were
more commuters in the day time, and advised me to always use the sidewalk
beside the road. While returning I used to pass by my father’s place of work.
He worked then in the Criminal court. His office was in the first floor of the
building, and the window behind his seat was at the side of the road. So, while
returning I always shouted at the top of my voice calling him and waited with
excitement to see his face through the window. He would wave his hand to acknowledge
my call. It was almost a daily ritual that I used to enjoy.
There
were other added attractions too. The
court premise was a large area throbbed by a multitude of petty shopkeepers, tea-sellers,
cheap book sellers, food vendors, hawkers, typists, copyists, astrologers, and
many other colorful characters apart from black-hooded lawyers, their clients,
clerks and other staffs of different trades connected to our justice dispensing
system. My school was in the morning hours. So, on my return; I used to find
the whole arena jostling with murmurs, excitements and occasional shouting of
all these people. The astrologers, showcasing a framed photograph of Goddess Kali anointed by red vermilions, would
plead passing travelers for seeking their advice, and sometimes they would sit
with their preys in a trance and with an occasional look at their palms. The
random rhythmic sound of type-writers would continuously hum in your ears. But
the most exciting part was the trick-shows freely offered by various hawkers.
Some of them used to sell tooth powders, medicinal ointments, herbs or
extracts, etc. Even if you were fortunate you would get a snake-charmer selling
a type of herb-roots for driving away snakes with a live demonstration of
various snakes and their movements around them. They would play the flute and
speak intermittently with the snakes and also with the audience. Sometime I
could also watch tricks with monkeys and bears in this open show. But these were rare events. Mostly I passed
the gathering without any interruption in my journey. My mother also instructed
me not to interact with any stranger on my way or make any stop or delay.
However, only on those rare treats, I used to join the crowd around it, and
take the liberty of enjoying a break not lasting more that a quarter of an
hour.
On
one occasion, I was put into an embarrassing situation. That day I was
attracted by the sound of dugdugi (an instrument of making fast beating sound)
played by a lean, thin and dark person raining incessant stream of words in a
high pitch modulated rhythmic voice. He was promising to show many tricks with
full of fun to the people around. Not only that, he vouched to teach those
tricks to the open gathering. Within a moment, a good number of people
encircled the place centering the show-master. I also joined them and placed
myself at the front of the encircling crowd. The man was accompanied by a boy a
few years older than me. For quite sometimes the senior person continued
playing dugdugi shouting his words of promises to the viewers, till he got
satisfied with the numbers around the show.
Then he brought out a pair of iron rings, attached with each other, from
his jhola (a bag made of
clothes usually carried by hanging on the shoulder). He announced, “If
any of you can make this couple separated, I will give you a reward of five
rupees.” His much younger partner
approached the spectators for trials. A few tried, but of no success. I also
made an attempt, though he was not eager to oblige me. The trick-star separated
them without an effort. Again, he passed the separated rings and asked whether
we could chain them again. No! No one could do it. He restored the bonding of
the two rings. Next, he with much eloquence demonstrated how to pull them out,
and how to attach them together. Things were getting interesting for me. I lost
track of time, that I should spend there. This was more due to the fact that he
promised to show us a very interesting trick, which none in this world can do.
Only his late guru taught him this amazing trick. Saying this he brought out an
apple from his jhola and a bottle, made of glass, with a very narrow opening.
He placed the apple on top of the opening. It was pretty big enough compared to
tiny opening of the bottle. But he declared he would make the apple go inside the
bottle through this opening before our naked eyes. He would also teach each of
us this wonderful trick at the end of this show. By saying this he started
canvassing for a tooth powder. Intermittently he kept on reminding us about the
trick that he would be performing. I was patiently waiting for this wonderful
fit to be performed before me, and did not keep any account of the ticking
clocks at that noon hours. I did not know how long it went. The trick star went
on selling bottles of powder, and after each successful endeavor he would
return to the topic of the apple going inside the bottle. At last, there was
none but me waiting to see his wonderful trick. So, I went to him and asked to
show the magic. He gave a big smile and rewarded my patience by presenting the
apple to me. I was too disappointed to accept his token of appreciation and
hurried towards my home, as I realized I spent more than an hour in that show. On
my way, I met my mother. I could see her from a distance. She was walking back
from my school along the railway track. From her appearance, I could see the
trauma she went through that hour. She came out from our home without changing
her dress. With untidy hairs, she was walking without any purpose, and with an
empty look. When I called her, she was unmindful to make any response. But
moment she saw me, she came almost running, and asked why I was so late. I told
her the truth. Surprisingly my mother did not utter a single harsh word to me. She
only told me not to make any such stop and delay for any reason whatsoever
while returning back. I had a good lesson from my mother and the street-charmer
as well on that day.
…
I
was attracted to science as it has that magical touch in my childish
imagination. The earliest encounter with such wonder was a radio set. I should
be around the age of three then, as I was always at my home and did not start attending
any school. One day, my father bought a radio set. I could distinctly remember
the model ‘Bahadur’ made by Phillips. This set was small, and not a big valve
set of its previous generation. I was
amazed by the talking, singing and playing machine with the rotation of its
dials. At its back, there were tiny rectangular grills. Often, I wanted to see
through it whether really there was someone speaking from such a small place! Of
course, my father explained me that it was a machine and invented by
scientists. In particular, I came across of fame and name of Jagadish Chandra
Bose connected with its invention from my very early childhood. So, when the
opportunity came to make a radio set with only a blade, safety-pin, variable
condenser, a long wire and an ear-phone, I got very much excited! I was then in my sixth grade and a friend of
mine brought a torn page from ‘Kishore Bharati’ (a magazine for the kids),
where this wonderfully simple circuit was sketched. My friend was very
proficient in model making. He was also of my age, but was very good at making
paper toys, cars with card-boards, in short, he had a pair of skillful and
artistic hands. So, both of us decided to get started with our project radio
from safety-pin and blade. We had almost everything. My father took us to one
of his acquaintances, who was knowledgeable in repairing radios. From him we
could collect a resistance and a variable condenser. But we faced an uphill
task to get the earphone. It did not exist in our town. Once again, our parents
came to our rescue. We went to Kolkata with my father, and walked a few miles
in Esplanade east to get a piece of ear phones in various shops in the New
Market. Finally, we could manage to get it in one of these shops – a little
white piece, a real treasure to us. We returned with a lot of excitement. To
our utter dismay, the circuit failed. We could not get a single sound from it.
We read that page over and over again, but could not make it. So, we went to my
father’s friend again, who gave a broad smile and told us that he knew that
circuit would not work. He gave us a relatively simple circuit with a piece of
transistor and diode. Even with that circuit we struggled a lot. One evening my
friend got an idea. We hanged a long stretch of wire in our roof and made it
the aerial of the set. It worked! We could listen to the magical sound of
Vividh Bharati by tuning with the variable condenser and played across the ear
phone. A magical moment indeed!
My
fascination and imagination with scientific experiments and inventions have
been growing steadily. I could sense that science is the key to my magical
world! In the first year of my middle school (in my fifth grade) I came across
of a list of inventions and their inventors. I was eager to know magic behind
them! Those inventors were my heroes then! Once I asked my father who was the
greatest scientist in our recent times. He readily named Einstein. But I did
not quite agree with him. His name was not included in my list. I thought he
should have named Thomas Alva Edison, the greatest hero to me in those days.
I
was hungry to get a feel of those inventions! I was mostly an outsider in this
world. It was partly due to my age, partly due to my socio-economic constraints
and underdevelopment of my country. We had no electricity at our home. There
was no television set around us. Hardly could we find a telephone receiver in our
neighborhood! My hungry eyes would keep looking at flying aero-plane over the
sky. I longed to see working of X-Rays, television tubes, cameras, microscopes,
periscopes, telescopes, like so many different gadgets. So, in their absence, I let my imagination
fly and dreamt about a magician who would see even the tiniest object or watch
an event from a farthest corner of this world, could travel at the speed of
lightning, or make himself invisible among the multitude of people.
My
interest was further nurtured by my school. In the beginning of the session in
my eighth grade, one day our Head Sir called me and asked me to join a few of
my seniors to participate in a science quiz competition, which was to be
organized by Birla Science Museum at Kolkata. The exciting part of this
participation was that we made several trips to the Museum accompanied by one
of our teachers. In my very first visit, I was enchanted looking at large
portraits of famous scientists including Galileo and Newton. We were asked to
note every bit of facts from the galleries for preparing ourselves for the
competition. It was exciting to see working models and their live
demonstrations through active participation on pressing a button or switch and
observe its working and effects. I was very much thrilled by watching a model
of Geiger counter and listening to the beeping sound as it was making during
the movement of the sensor and getting exposed to radioactive particles. The
most exciting part of our visit was a live demonstration of a Television studio
and the live video transmission that we could see over the screen of a TV. That
was the first time when I could watch a TV. In the later part of the year,
first TV transmission took place through Dooradarshan in Kolkata and adjoining
areas in our state. Incidentally quiz competitions were held in this studio and
visitors could watch on a TV outside. Though we were eliminated in the second
round, it gave me exposure to various facets of modern science, and gave me the
taste of several gadgets I was eager to know about and watch their workings.
In the same year, I was encouraged by our Head
Sir to participate in a competition where a seminar to be presented with charts
and models on a topic on the quest of new energy sources. He told me to go to library and search for
relevant books and magazines to get ideas. There were a few popular science
books in our library, though they were in English, which was not my medium of
instruction. There was also a Bengali science monthly. From them, the closest
realizable model that came to my mind was of a windmill. No sooner I spelt my
idea to my Head Sir, he called Kalipadada, our teacher of work education, and
requested to help me in making the model. My school had excellent facilities of
workshops. It housed three sections, smithy, carpentry and lathe machinery.
Kalipadada was in charge of the lathe workshop. He designed the whole model. I
was almost a spectator, while he did the machining and built the model of four
bladed windmill, which drove a small rotating magnet using pulley and shaft
mechanism. A voltmeter was connected to
a coil of copper wires, encircling the magnet. One afternoon I was put on a van-rickshaw (a human driven tricycle
with a wooden platform to carry load) with my model for participating the
event, which was held in my home town, about 8 km away from my school. My
excitement knew no bounds, when with the speeding rickshaw, the blades of the
model were also rotating fast and the rotating magnet was making cracking sound
(as we find in the generators) shooting the needle of the galvanometer to its
extreme right positions.
…
Now
we are living in such a magical world, that I lost my sense of surprise at
knowing or hearing any sort of human accomplishment, which were thought to be
impossible even in early nineties of the past century. The boundary of science
fiction of our childhood days and the real-world happenings is getting blurred
day by day. I bear with great fortitude my passive submission to this magical
world. But I never imagined the greatest trick that was waiting for me in one
sunny morning, which left me stunned and dumbfounded.
The
morning was bright and full of sunshine. The festive mood was prevailing
everywhere. Durga puja, the greatest
annual festival in our state, was knocking at the door. In my morning shower, I
was humming a popular Bengali tune, “Ek
jhank pakhider moto kichhu roddur … (A beam of Sun-rays spreading their
wings like a flock of birds ..)”. I would be visiting my mother who was
recovering from her broken ribs. She had to be admitted to the hospital in our
campus. The doctors advised her complete
rest. She had to wear a specially molded guard made of a synthetic fiber
wrapped around her chest to keep the broken ribs fixed. Initial hurdle was to
get the wrapper done. As during the measurement for making the cast of wax, my
mother was so restless, breathless, and writhing with pain, that she had to be
admitted to our hospital. Even in that condition she was objecting vehemently
by waiving her hands, and was reluctant to lie on the stretcher. That was about
ten days ago. Later she got stabilized and the chest guard was finally made.
She had been using it, and feeling more comfortable in her movement. In that
Morning, she had to go through an USG test of abdomen. She was having breathing
problem and the doctors were not able to find any diagnosis of that condition.
She had a chest X-Ray the day after admission. But the X-Ray was not very clear
due to some movement during imaging. It was planned also before taking her to
the diagnostic clinic, which was around 2 Km. from our hospital, there would be
another chest X-Ray for her. As she was having occasional breathing problem, an
ambulance fitted with oxygen cylinder had been arranged for her. Usually I would
visit her early Morning as I was used to carry her breakfast and tea from my
residence. In that Morning, she needed to be with an empty stomach. So, I went
to visit her after getting ready for my office. I planned to go to my office directly
from the hospital. My young friends, Chhotu and Shashaank, would be meeting us
in her cabin. They would accompany my mother to the diagnostic clinic. My wife
is a doctor. She works in a hospital close to the clinic. She would be joining
them from her hospital. Everything looked to me in order and under control. I
was in peace, and enjoying the freshness of morning air and sunshine.
For
past three weeks, my mother went through terrific experience due to a fall from
her bed while sleeping. She told me, she had a sweet dream, and went to her
younger days playing with two of her friends. One of them pushed her, and she
found herself on the ground wrapped with the mosquito net. Initially she was
reluctant to tell anything to anybody. My parents lived in their own house at
our home town. My sister with her family also lived quite nearby, and they would regularly
visit my parents. For three days, my mother did not mention anything about the
fall. She was hoping for a natural remedy. She was always reluctant to visit a
doctor and run through a series of tests. Even my father did not know for a
whole day. He came to know a day afterward when he noticed my mother was having
difficulty in movement. She admitted that she fell from her bed, but asked my
father not to tell anyone. She had a dominating personality, specially over my
father. So, my father kept quiet. Only when the pain became unbearable, she
disclosed it to my sister. My sister immediately called me, “Where is Boudi (sister-in-law)?”
Jhuma
was in Kolkata for puja marketing that whole week. I was alone in my residence.
It was a Saturday. Next day, I would be going to Delhi for taking a PhD viva
examination. I told, “She is in Kolkata. Why?”
“Mother
fell down from her bed. She is moving with a lot of difficulties. I am telling
her to take rest and engage a cook. She is not listening. She is not able to
sleep. Not able to lie down. Yet reluctant to visit a doctor, to get the X-Ray
done.”
I
told her to give the phone to my mother. My mother responded meekly with a sound
of hello. I told her, “Oh! You fell down! Are you feeling pain? Is there any
fracture?”
She
tried to assure me, “It should be okay. When I move, or stand, I do not feel
any pain. Only when I lie down, it is paining too much. I am not able to
sleep.”
“Please
go to a doctor and get X-Rays done.”
“I
do not think, I have anything to do with a fracture. My problem is that for
last three days my bowel is not getting cleared. It is so uncomfortable. Only
if it gets cleared, I should be completely fit. I tried all kinds of totkas (traditional remedial measures),
Isabgol’s husk, Nature Care, Cremafin, nothing worked! I need a good laxative.
That is why I asked Mana (my sister) to call Jhuma.”
“Go
to a doctor. Get his advice.”
“I will. Today Laltu (my brother-in-law) would be bringing glycerin
tube. If it does not work, I will go to a doctor.”
“You need to take rest. Keep a cook. Do not cook by
yourselves.”
“I cannot. I feel better working.”
“Do not be stubborn. When you will not be able to move at
all, what will happen? Keep a cook immediately and take as much rest as
possible. You might have a fracture. Get the X-Ray done.” I insisted.
I asked my Sister, whether I should cancel my Delhi trip. She told me, “I do not think that would make much difference. We will be taking her to a doctor. The only problem is that she is not willing. I hope now she will cooperate.”
I asked my Sister, whether I should cancel my Delhi trip. She told me, “I do not think that would make much difference. We will be taking her to a doctor. The only problem is that she is not willing. I hope now she will cooperate.”
I
also called Jhuma and apprized her about the situation. She told me that she had
talked with my sister and asked them to get her admitted in a nursing home. She
would be visiting my home town before returning back to Kharagpur. I also
called my brother. He was quite upset to know about it.
He said, “None told me so.”
“I got it just now. Mother did not want to bother us.”
My brother told me he would be going home next day to visit
my mother and take care of her treatment.
…
We
had planned to visit Andaman that year during Puja break with our parents. My
parents were very much excited about this trip and were collecting information
from all sorts of magazines about those beautiful islands. Occasionally I would
get some of those tips from my mother. So, when I heard from my sister about
her fall, immediately it struck to me that our trip to Andaman was under a big
question mark. It was not that we were apprehensive about such a scenario. But we
never thought it would be due to my mother. We were always worried about our
Father, as he had his occasional complaints of dizziness and unstable movement.
We noticed, before any such trip, his complaints would take a serious turn and
he would be pleading to cancel his tickets. However, with some encouragement he
would agree to join. But, we had no worry about our mother, as she kept herself
fit by doing regular Yoga and Pranayama in the Morning, which usually
ran for a session of more than an hour. My mother ardently followed Baba
Ramdev’s programs in TV channels, and had complete faith in Pranayama’s
preventive and even curative effect in keeping her fit. She had been practicing
them for more than ten years, since when she had to go through different tests
and was put into several nursing homes about a month. I was abroad in that full
year. When I came back, she told me that it was a terrible experience for her.
She was almost suffocating in those cylindrical drums of CT and MRI machines. All
those tests were unnecessary, as they could not diagnose any disease in her. They
were all money-making ploys. By resorting to Yoga and Pranayama, she could lead
a normal life. I advised her still to go for regular checkup with the doctors,
specially the cardiologist she was consulting then. She did it for a few years,
and then declared even the cardiologist acknowledged the fact that she became
more than fit, and did not require that many frequent visits. Later she
switched to one of our local specialists, who was also a friend of my sister,
though her visits were infrequent. As she did not complain any other ailment
and carried on with her usual energy in daily activities, we were also less
worried about her health. Our worries were mostly centered around our father as
he had a major complaint of vertigo, and at times he had to be admitted to
nursing homes for a day or two in past few years. Moment I got the news of my
mother’s fall, I apprehended that our trip to Andaman might have to be
cancelled.
The
day after my mother agreed to go through the checkups. She was admitted to a
nursing home, and consulted by an orthopedics. They did X-Ray on her back, but
apparently could not find any fracture. In the nursing home, they took care of
clearing her bowel and she was feeling okay. So, they released her. I came to
know the details from Jhuma, after she returned to Kharagpur. Eventually the
orthopedician advised rest, and suggested a belt around her waist, which my
mother should put on for a few weeks while making any movement. Over the phone,
my mother sounded relieved, and even asked whether it was possible for her to
join the Andaman trip. I assured her, given the doctor’s advice we would take
all necessary measures in the trip.
In
the following weekend, I went home to visit my mother. I found her seated on
her bed wearing the belt and gossiping with my sister in a lighter mood. Seeing
me the first thing she asked, “Will I be able to go to Andaman?” I told her,
“Sure. Why not? As there is no fracture, you should be recovering pretty soon.
You need to take complete rest.”
She
laughed, “The person who came here to deliver the belt, told me “Didimoni! ( An address to a female
teacher. My mother was a teacher.) Do not listen to anyone’s junk advice. I
checked your X-Ray. Nothing to worry. No fracture. Even you may not require this
belt.”
I
warned her, “Still you need to take rest and wear the belt.”
She
told me, “Only problem is that I am not able to lie down. It is so painful.”
I
asked, “Still now!”
She
nodded. I was quite bewildered. I had already planned to take her to Kharagpur,
where she could be put in proper rest, and if needed, we could easily admit her
to our hospital. I told her so. But she was reluctant. My father looked very
much worried. He told me, “She is not listening. But she requires a thorough
checkup. Get her admitted to a good hospital.”
I
told him, “I am planning to take her to Kharagpur. One of Jhuma’s colleagues is
a reputed orthopedician. He should be able to treat her. Jhuma also can
supervise her treatment. We would carry out all the checkups there, and if
needed, get her admitted to a hospital in Kolkata. It appears, she only requires
to be rested for a considerable period.”
That
night I could see how my mother was writhing with pain and did not sleep at
all. Many a time she had to go to the toilet with great effort. Next Morning,
she herself told me that she needed to be admitted to a hospital. She would not
be able to manage on her own. I asked her, whether it would be possible to
travel by a car to Kharagpur. In that case, we would be able to look after her better.
She readily agreed. So, I called the travel agency, from whom I used to hire
cars. They sent a car in the afternoon. I also asked my father, whether he
would be coming with us. He told, “I have some pending works in the bank and
post office. I will join later.”
Before
leaving, my mother told my father not to worry, and asked him to come to Kharagpur
when his pending works were over.
…
Finally, the orthopedician in Kharagpur informed us that there
were two fractures in her ribs. He consulted the same X-Ray plate taken a week
ago in our home town. For some reason, previously the diagnosis was not proper.
Even the belt suggested by the orthopedician at my home town was of no use, as
it was not protecting the ribs fractured. So, she was advised to wear a guard,
to be molded specially after taking measurements on her body, that I already
mentioned before. I wanted to get my mother admitted to our hospital directly
for providing her complete rest. But the superintendent doctor told that without
any concrete reason, it would not be possible to get her admitted. Providence
must have been listening to our conversation then. Within a day, we had to admit my mother as she was
becoming breathless and restless, when the team, assigned for making the mold,
came to our residence and tried to take measurements of her chest and ribs.
Since then, my mother was in the hospital. My daily routine was to visit her
thrice and carry her food prepared at our home. She got quite friendly with two
Aiahs (female assistants to a patient),
who were looking after her round the clock. First few days, she was put under
an oxygen cylinder. My mother told me, “What I require is this cylinder. I feel
so better with it. I should have a few in our house. Then I need not come
here.”
Her pain got reduced, and was having good sleep in most of
the nights. In the meantime, the team again visited her cabin and could take
all the necessary measurements and prepared the cast of wax. Three days later,
we could get her chest guard. I asked her whether she was feeling better with it.
She told me, “I am having good time here.”
She looked quite happy. She loved to talk with my sister,
her brother, who lived in our hometown with his daughter and son-in-law, and a
few of her close relatives and friends. She talked with her cousin sister, who
lived in the place where she spent her childhood. But her communication with my
father was very cryptic and rare. In fact, my sister advised me initially not
to inform my father about her admission as he would be very much worried and
nervous, which I obliged for a few days. Then I told her to apprise him about the
situation and ask him not to worry. I
also called my father to assure that everything was under control.
…
That day I was about an hour and a half late from my usual
visit to my mother in the Morning. As I was climbing the stair case of the
hospital to visit her cabin, I could find my phone was ringing and my mother
was calling me. She was quite eager to see me, “Why so late?”
I said, “As you are not taking breakfast today, I came here
after getting ready to go to my office.”
She told me, “There is a good news. Tania (my cousin sister)
has a baby son.”
My cousin sister in my hometown was expected. My mother was
quite worried and enquiring every day to her brother about the progress. Last
evening also she was talking to him and told him, however late at night it may
be, he should inform her. She was feeling very happy. I asked her, “Did you
have a good sleep?”
“Very much. Actually, I had a happy dream. I dreamt my
mother last night. She was caressing my hair.”
Then she became quiet. After a while she hesitantly told me,
“Probably I will not be able to go to Andaman. You should cancel my ticket.”
I replied, “I have already cancelled our tickets.”
She got very upset, “Why so? All of you could have made the
trip. I thought of asking Mana to come here, and stay with me.”
“We do not want that. Rather all of us will spend here Puja
together. All of them will be visiting us here during puja. That is the plan.”
Still I could see, she was feeling very sad and guilty for
the cancellation of the trip.
I told her, “Chhotu
and Shashaank would come now to take you to the diagnostic clinic for USG. Before
going to the clinic, there will be another chest X-Ray here. Are you ready? Do not forget to wear your chest guard.”
She laughed, “It looked like an armor, as if I will be going
to fight a war.”
Then she said again, “Is it necessary to go? I am feeling
quite okay. I should be able to go back to your quarter soon.”
“Your trouble with breathing is worrying the doctors. They
could not diagnose the cause. They advised this investigation. We should follow
their advice.”
My mother smiled at me, and accepted the verdict. Chhotu and
Shashaank came a few minutes later. I gave them the money and bade good bye to
my mother, “I will come during the lunch time again.”
I got absorbed in day’s proceedings. I had a meeting with
one of my students and a colleague. About an hour later, I called Chhotu, “Is
the USG done?”
“Not yet. Jethima’s
(aunt) bladder is not full. They gave her water to drink, and we are now
waiting for the turn.”
After half an hour Jhuma called me, “Her USG is done. It appears
there is a problem in her chest X-Ray done today. So, the doctor is suggesting
for a CT. But mother is not willing to go through.”
I told her, “If she does not want, do not pressurize her.”
A few minutes later, she told me, “We are bringing back to her
hospital. Will you come?”
I told, “Now? Okay I will be there.”
After a while, Shashaank called me, “Sir, I am with the car.
Please come downstairs.”
I apologized to my student and colleague with whom I was
discussing, “I have to leave. My mother is in the hospital.”
They were quite surprised to know, as I never mentioned it
before. I told them, “She is doing fine. She had broken her ribs, and now she
is recovering.”
Shashaank was driving me quite fast to the hospital. I asked
him to slow down, “You should not drive with this speed in the campus.”
I found the ambulance was at the step of the hospital, and
the doctors were waiting there. No sooner my mother was carried into the
emergency room, they rushed there. A green curtain was drawn, and the doctors
were treating my mother inside. I was sitting in the bench outside. I knew this
procedure. Ten days before my mother came for admission. She was taken to the
room, and was performed preliminary investigations then. I was waiting for the
curtain to be drawn open, and my mother would be taken to her cabin. Jhuma was
inside. A few minutes later, she came outside looking very troubled. She told
me, “I do not know what will happen? Her condition becomes very critical.”
I was dumb founded. I rushed to the room, and found a doctor
was frantically giving message to my mother’s chest. There was a machine where
a red dot was jumping here and there. I was looking at that dot and hoping that
it would show all the energy of resurgence. But it did not. It became flat and
dead.
When everybody left the room, I went to see my mother, still
warm sleeping in peace without any sign of pain in her face. Probably my mother
had no idea that she was leaving this world without a word of good bye to
anyone. Within a few minutes without giving any notice, the great magician
vanished my mother, and left me mesmerized. He turned my world upside down – a
world without my mother.
10/9/2017