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Monday, September 22, 2008


The <http://rajivndesai.blogspot.com/2008/09/acrid-stench-of-death_22.html>
Acrid Stench of Death 


Grief Eases, the Smell Lingers


On September 21, my mother would have turned 86. She died five months ago.
But lest anyone thinks this another obituary, I want to make it perfectly
clear that it is not. Rather I want to talk about the phenomenon of death
and how it hits you in the face, even while you are busy making a life.

To begin with, there's no escaping it. We are all on some supernatural death
row from the minute we are born. Certainly, we give our lives meaning. We do
amazing things: we build nations, machines, welfare systems, philanthropic
organizations; we do astounding research in medicine, physics, chemistry; we
sing songs, play guitar and make it snappy; we write symphonies and operas,
novels, poetry, even columns like this one. It is our only shot at
immortality. Buried, burned or otherwise disposed off, our mortal coil is
just that: mortal. Remember the root of the word is Latin for death.

It's not my intent to be a Woody Allen and obsess about death. We don't need
that because the fear of death is programmed into our DNA. We eat healthy,
we work out; we give up cigarettes, booze and the libertine lifestyle. All
in the hope we get a few years more on this planet. That desire drives
people who live in sylvan estates or in deplorable slums; the investment
banker who lives on 95 and Fifth in Manhattan as well the tribal in basic
Africa; the person on a luxury yacht in the Mediterranean as well the
illegal immigrant stowing away on a cargo ship.

Nobody told me that death is the only certainty in life for all the years I
spent in respectable educational institutions. In school, there was an
unstated belief in God that the Jesuits pushed; university life was girded
by the Calvinist ethic of hard work, burning the midnight oil. After that,
the job was the Holy Grail. You must find one, keep one and rise in the
ranks. Better homes, nicer cars, club memberships, business class travel and
various other diversions take your mind off from the inevitability of death.

So we build the tangled web of ambition and relationships. It diverts our
minds, stuck as we are on this wonderful death row that we call life. I have
a sunny disposition like Louis Armstrong, who in 1967 sang What a Wonderful
World, a song that was written for him by the legendary jazz impresario Bob
Thiele. Its opening lyrics went like this:

I see trees of green, red roses too
See them bloom for me and you
And I think to myself what a wonderful world
I see skies of blue, and clouds of white
The bright blessed day, the dark sacred night
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

We enjoy this world: springtime in Chicago, autumn in New England, a night
in Manhattan, a drive on Pacific Coast Highway from San Francisco to Los
Angeles, (corny though it sounds) an evening in Paris, a drive through the
English and French countryside, a Beatles number, an Ellington tune or some
good old Hindi songs by Rafi, Kishore, Mukesh or Geeta Dutt; even more
mundane experiences like a drink at the retro bar in the air force station
in Ayanagar on the Delhi-Gurgaon border, dinner with friends in Bandra, a
singsong at our house, a great movie, a good concert, an absorbing play, a
stirring opera. And for many of us, the satisfaction of work and the
concomitant rewards, both spiritual and material.

My personal preference remains Goa in the Monsoon. There are trees of green
and flowers too. But the skies are grey; the clouds are black and ominous;
the night is indeed sacred and dark with sheets of rain and gale force
winds. Contemplating the violence of nature, I am reminded that we are
mortals and we can be swept away by the sinister forces of nature.

These experiences define our lives. Otherwise there is a void, a few lonely
years in a death watch cell. We seek love and solace. When we get that, we
are immortal; others want more and they are Shakespeare, Blake, DaVinci,
Einstein, Gaugin, Van Gogh, Mozart, Beethoven, Edison, Burke, Jefferson,
Voltaire, Freud, Marx, Gates or any of the IT pioneers. People like them
advance civilization. The rest of us just enjoy the fruits of their genius.

In the end, there is no greater comfort and joy than sharing a daily dinner
table, a weekend lunch in the garden or Christmas with the family. These
experiences run for a good 50 years or so in an individual's life until the
children, both us and ours, grow up and move away, sometimes physically but
always emotionally. We enjoy it while we can and then contemplate the sunset
years. Some of us are lucky to have friends to brighten up our evenings and
weekends; and work to keep us busy through the day.

Into this cocoon of happiness that we build and protect, sometimes the
reality of life creeps in. This happened when my mother died and left my
father with us, Alzheimer's and all. The grief has eased but I cannot get
rid of the stench of death in my house. It is an acrid smell that no amount
of Lysol, scented candles and room sprays can get rid off. It hangs in
there, dismal and irreversible: a sinister prospect of death. My father, who
shared his birthday with my mother, turned 89 on September 21. In his
dementia, I can hear the ticking of the mortal clock.

 
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