Sunday, 6 February 2022

Little Hearts

Who does not like getting gifts? Unwrapping them, some carefully, to preserve the wrapper as a memory, and others, just ripping apart in anticipation of the real thing inside. As I start writing this piece, the irony of my thought makes me laugh- I love surprises but I hate being unprepared…really, talk about being confused! But that is not something new- in 2007 I was sure I was going to study literature before I opted for PCM and B; in 2009 everything lead to Electrical  and Electronics Engineering in BITS, Pilani before I announced that I had decided to be a doctor; in 2015 I was, almost, on my way of becoming a Paediatrician before I, suddenly, took a U-turn towards the eye and in 2018 I was working my way to be a Paediatric Ophthalmologist before I switched to Ocular Oncology. 

And so Ocular Oncology it was. February 4th is World Cancer Day, not to celebrate the Emperor of Maladies but to create awareness. And as I was going through the photos on my phone to select an appropriate one for the occasion, I found pictures of the many gifts I got during my Fellowship. So here are some of them…

 

The Gift of Confidence

During fellowship, we had with us an emergency phone, called the Fellow Phone, where patients would call, message and send reports. It was passed down from fellow to fellow, and with it came great responsibility. One evening, I saw multiple missed calls from a patient. Like majority of the times, the number was unknown and I called back and found out that it was the father of Piku, a two year old child with retinoblastoma (eye cancer). He was calling from Patna. She had been given an injection of chemotherapy in the eye (intravitreal chemotherapy) the day before and she was refusing to open her eye since then. “She seems to be in pain,” he said. I hoped against hope that it was not what it seemed like. Endophthalmitis or infection inside the eye is one of the most dreaded complications for any eye surgeon. It can happen after any eye surgery including injections inside the eye. “Take her to the nearest eye doctor in your city and let me know what they say,” I told him.

I had given her the injection. That night, I lay awake retracing over and over again my steps during the procedure. This was not the first time that I was doing it and I knew the aseptic precautions to be taken. But Piku had only one eye, the other eye had advanced cancer and needed eye removal. This was her only seeing eye, though the cancer was gone. This injection was supposed to be her last one, like a good luck injection to take care of any subclinical active disease. And now, because of the injection that I had given her, she may lose vision in that eye. I got up and wrote down the steps and paused at each to think where I might have made a mistake. I could not figure it out. What did I miss? Doubt has an uncanny way of growing rapidly like a weed. By next morning, I had formed a plan about how this needed to be treated. Throughout the clinic, I kept checking the Fellow Phone to see if there was any news of Piku. Once clinic was over, I decided to call the father before going to Sir to apologise and tell him that I should not be allowed to give any more chemotherapy injections in the eye for the rest of my fellowship. The phone rang for what seemed like hours before he finally answered.

“How is Piku? Did you visit the doctor?”

“Piku is fine, she opened her eyes later at night. We did go to the doctor today morning, he looked at the eye and said everything was fine.”

“Is there any redness? Is she still in pain?”

“No, she is absolutely normal, eating, playing like any other day,” he replied.

“Ok, that is good. But you could have at least told me, I was waiting for a call from you the whole day.”

“Oh sorry, we just forgot about it, I should have informed you.”

So, I did know what I was doing, I did not miss anything, I thought to myself, before falling asleep that night. But since that day, I repeat the steps in my head before starting the procedure. I make sure I do not hurry up, I double check the needles, the drugs and the doses…and I trust myself. 

 

The Gift of Wisdom

"My girl’s coming for examination under anaesthesia today, please tell me when she is here," I tell  Subbu Sister on one Tuesday morning. 

Mishti was now four, but she was just nine months when she was diagnosed with retinoblastoma in both eyes. She was treated with intravenous chemotherapy where the drug goes through the whole of her tiny body, intra-arterial chemotherapy, where the drug is injected directly into the artery of the eye, multiple intravitreal chemotherapy, laser to the tumours in the eye and cryotherapy where the tumours are frozen to kill the bad cells. She was doing well, her tumours were all regressed and she was being followed up every six months. 

I confess, she was my favourite. I always went to meet her in the waiting room before she was taken in for anaesthesia because every time she came, she would bring with her a new story book and a new toy. And she was like a doll herself. Unlike most other kids who were carried into the examination room by Krishnaiah ji, crying and screaming, Mishti would walk in holding my hand and with her book in the other hand. 

“Doctorji, Mishti has come,” Subbu Sister and I winked at each other as I ran out to meet her. She was wearing a unicorn mask with a book open on her lap. “Mishti, which book is it this time?” I sat down next to her. Her mother smiled, holding her stuffed puppy. She knew me and each time I would tell her that we may not meet again when Mishti came back next time, but COVID made sure that I was still around! And I am glad for it…

“Noddy,” she replied. “I love Noddy, and Big Ears and Mr. Plod!” I said, remembering my Noddy collection gathering dust in my bookshelf at home.

“So, what did you do during the holidays?” I asked her.

“I became intelligent!”

My mask just about hid my jaw drop! I was stunned! If only grown-ups were this sensible. I gathered my wits and as I walked back with her into the examination room, I realized that this time, it was the four-year-old kid who was actually leading me, I could only follow. 

Before she left that day, I took some pictures with her because I knew for sure that the next time I would not be there. “No, do it like this,” she told me, puckering her lips into the perfect pout. 

“This is for you. Bye bye,” she left me with a pack of Little Hearts, while she took mine with her.



 

The Gift of Warmth

“Doctorji, Priya has diarrhoea and she is vomiting. She has not been eating since the last five days,” the father was talking hurriedly over the phone from a village in Uttar Pradesh.

“Since five days? Why did you not call me before? Have you shown a doctor? Did you get the blood test done after her last chemotherapy?" I asked.

“No, not yet.”

I told him to take Priya to a paediatrician immediately and sent him a list of tests to be done. 

Priya was eighteen months, her right eye had retinoblastoma which had recently recurred. She was started on a high dose of systemic chemotherapy. Most children tolerate the chemotherapy well. There are some precautions which need to be taken, blood counts monitored, and regular follow ups with us as well as the paediatrician. But this is, often, not possible for the patients, who come from interior parts of the country.  

That evening, the father sent me the blood reports. They were severely low. “She needs to be admitted immediately. Do not waste any more time. Take her to a hospital that has a paediatric intensive care unit. She needs antibiotics, blood transfusion and injection that will increase her white blood cell count. Tell me her weight, I will send you the doses. Show it to the doctor there. I will speak to our Oncologist, Dr Reddy, and let you know if anything else needs to be done.”

She was admitted in a hospital in Lucknow. I was talking to her doctors almost twice a day, getting her daily counts and updates on her condition and treatment. She was not doing well. 

Doctor bol rahe hain ki haalat bahut kharab hai. Doctorji kuch kijiye (Doctors are saying she is very ill, please do something)," the father pleaded over the phone. What do you say to a father, 1200km away, when you already know from the reports that the situation is grave? 

I tried my best to console him, “The doctors there are doing everything they can. I am in touch with them.”

I remember the next ten days and nights, talking to Sir, our oncologist, the doctors in Lucknow, the parents…and the situation was just getting worse every day. 

It was the tenth night, the father called me, sobbing uncontrollably. “They are saying Priya will not survive, they are saying we should take her home. She is our only child, we will die if something happens to her, we cannot live without her.” Then he handed the phone to his wife. The mother only sobbed on the phone, she said nothing. I do not know how much time passed when neither of us said anything. Then I started talking. It was a blur, I do not know what I said but I kept consoling her. Later I spoke with her doctor. And I was going to call up the father again when my co-fellow stopped me. “Stop it, you have been doing whatever you can for the last 10-12 days. Sometimes you have to let it go, this is going to happen, you cannot be so involved with every patient. Why are you getting so affected by this?”

“I don’t know. But I have to talk to them,” I just went into my room and shut my door. In the last seven-eight months that the Fellow Phone was with me, three children had died. They had very advanced disease that had spread to other parts of the body and every possible treatment had been tried. We were all prepared. But I knew their names, I knew their families, I knew what they looked like, I knew the tumours in their eyes, I knew their smiles, I knew their charts and I knew every word I had written in them noting their death and cause. I cannot have another one. Priya’s parents always came on time, they never missed an appointment; they were poor but they always kept the child neat and clean; they were soft spoken and this should not be happening to them. I spoke to the parents multiple times that night.

Day 12, her counts improved. By day 14, she was accepting oral feeds and talking again. We had survived. 

It has been over one year now, Priya is doing well. After one examination under anaesthesia, the father came to me, “I have got something for you, I have kept it in the counsellor’s office. I did not give it to you directly because I knew you would not take it.” Before leaving the hospital that day, I picked up the packet from the office and opened it after reaching home.

It was a red woollen sweater with flowers knitted on it. I immediately called the number that I only knew too well. “Kya hua Doctorji? (What happened Doctor?),” the father sounded surprised. 

“I loved the sweater, thank you so much.”

“Oh, thank God. We got scared when we saw your number. We thought it was about Priya and that we had to come back for something, we are in train now,” he said. “My wife made this. Did it fit you?” 

“Perfectly. But there was no need for this.”

“You saved Priya. Our daughter is our world. This is the only thing we can give you, we don’t have much.”

“I did not do anything. It was all because of Sir, Dr Reddy and your doctors in Lucknow. All I did was talk on the phone.”

“You were there for us when we had nothing to hold on to. We can never forget that. We trust you.”

 

The Gift of Joy

Sujit was four, had retinoblastoma in both eyes, a Bong, wore round glasses and talked non-stop. His left eye had been removed elsewhere before he came to us. The tumour in his right eye was highly resistant, and had recurred multiple times. He had received every form of chemotherapy, laser and cryotherapy. He had been stable for more than a year and a half now and we had shifted him to Saturday schedule, when we would examine all the stable kids. On one such Saturday, I played with him in the waiting area for a long time. He recited poems and we recorded his video. He showed me all his toy cars and told me about his friends in school. 

When I started examining his eye under anaesthesia, my heart sank. No, no, please no. I went back to the pictures of his tumour taken in the previous visits. There was no doubt, it was a recurrence. Sir was in a conference in another city. There were only two stable kids scheduled for examination that day and he knew I could handle that. I messaged him the pictures and told him I was going to laser the area of recurrence. This was the relatively easy part. Then I had to go and talk to the parents. I spoke to them at length in Bengali. I explained to them that it was a small area of recurrence and could be treated. 

The next couple of months, Sujit was treated with laser, intra-arterial chemotherapy, intravitreal chemotherapy and, finally, plaque radiation, a form of local radiotherapy. For all these examinations, I made sure that I did not talk or play with him in the waiting area. “You don’t go out there, every time you play with someone, that child gets a recurrence,” I said to myself. 

Then during one such visit, I was outside checking the file of one of the patients. Suddenly he came running to me, “Didi, it is my birthday tomorrow.” Why, oh why, are you talking to me now??? “Really? How old are you going to be?” I asked, trying not to look at him. “Five!” This is really hard when he’s holding out his palm, showing his five fingers. I turned to the mother and we smiled nervously at each other. 

When he was being put under general anaesthesia, I could feel my pulse racing. I took a deep breath and put on the ophthalmoscope to examine him. 

It was gone, his tumour had regressed. He was fine!!! I had never felt happier. 

While Sir was examining him, I slipped out of the room to the mother who was sitting outside with her eyes closed and hands folded in a silent prayer. I held her hand gently and she opened her eyes, “He’s fine,” I whispered quickly and went back in before Sir came out to talk to her. 

“Doctorji, Sujit is leaving,” trust Subbu Sister to get that news to me. I went and caught them at the door. “Hey big boy, happy birthday! What do you want for your birthday?”

“A big car, and a BIG cake,” he spread out his little arms open.

I gave him a tight hug as he gave me the biggest grin! I was ready to play in the waiting room again.

 

The Gift of Peace

Devrat was ten when I first met him. He came to the OPD, with his father. He smiled and wished me good morning. When I looked at his file, I came to know that he had undergone enucleation (eye removal) of both eyes when he was just an infant for advanced retinoblastoma. Before I could help him take out the prosthetic eyes, his father said, “He can take them out and wear them himself. Devrat, take them out, beta.”

Devrat took them off effortlessly. As I was examining him, he started talking. He went to a boarding school. He had come home for the summer holidays but missed school and his friends. He liked mathematics, learnt classical music, played the harmonium and tabla. 

When I went out to keep the file for Sir, before he came in to examine him, I saw him smiling. He had been listening to our conversation. Devrat was his old friend. He told me that it was a very difficult decision and it was the only option at that time for such an advanced disease. The father  had understood. His mother committed suicide when she got this news. 

What is it that keeps them going? What power within pushes them to jump over all hurdles and emerge winners? I think the day you stop fighting with yourself, you are at peace and are ready to fight any other battle that comes your way.

We went back into the room. Sir finished his examination and asked him to come back after a year.

“Can I sing something?” he asked. 

“Of course, I would very much like to hear it,” Sir said. He started singing “We shall overcome” in Bengali, Hindi and English. I could not help but sing along with him. 

 

The Gift of Optimism

It was January 2020 when Tibby came to us from Zambia with his mother. He was two and a half years old and had a sudden history of bulging of his left eye and eyelid swelling. He was the last patient in the OPD and even the clinical photographer had left for the day. So I had taken his clinical pictures on my phone and I still have them. Tibby was a force to reckon with. He was so playful and energetic that it was difficult to keep him still for the examination. If I remember correctly, he did tear out the cover of the handle of the examination chair. But he was superiorly intelligent for his age. Over the next few days, we met several times as he got some scans done and then underwent a biopsy. This turned out to be a Rhabdomyosarcoma, another common and deadly cancer in the orbit of children. He took the first few cycles of chemotherapy in India and then went back to Zambia for the next two cycles. We sent the chemotherapy protocol to the doctors in Zambia. He was supposed to come back to India for the last cycle of chemotherapy followed by surgery and then radiation. But nobody was prepared for what happened next- COVID-19.

Tibby was stuck in Zambia, there was no way that he could come here. And the further treatment could not be done there. Being an international number, I always communicated with him using my personal number. It was the beginning of the pandemic and I sent letters to the Indian embassy at Zambia for his travel exemption on medical grounds. But there was nothing we could do. We decided to continue him on chemotherapy till he was able to come back to us. At that point we thought it would be within a month or two. But alas, that was not to be. All this while, his mother would keep me updated about his condition. And I would send the chemotherapy protocols according to his changing height and weight. The mother would send me his pictures, he was growing up. All his pictures had a bright smile. Whenever I spoke to the mother, she always ended the conversation with, hopefully we will be able to travel soon. Yes, hopefully. It was as if she was assuring me rather than the other way round. 

They, finally, made it back to us after almost six months. Since then, he has undergone all the necessary treatment. Little Tibby had grown up and I would always end up cheating to get his chart in the clinic, making sure I got to meet him. While in the OPD room, I had to keep him engaged in some sort of game so that he would let me examine him- thumb fights, hand slaps, arm-wrestling and so on. But strangely, he was always docile when Sir would examine. I wonder why? Did he see me as an easy target to try his tricks or did he have fun with me like I did? 

When they first returned from Zambia, after travel restrictions were lifted, his mother had got two gifts for me- one a beautiful traditional top, and another a cup with the map of Zambia. For me, the colourful top is a reminder that a long winter is always followed by spring. And the cup I will fill up with fallen stars for a rainy day.

 

Eye cancer is real and can happen in children and adults. What is important is that parents, paediatricians and general ophthalmologists know the common signs and symptoms of an underlying ominous condition for timely referral, early diagnosis and optimal management. A white appearance of the pupil, especially in flash photographs and in sunlight is the most common sign of retinoblastoma. This is a form of cancer that can be treated successfully with excellent life salvage. 

Call it accident, whim, serendipity, or fate, I do not think I have been able to give a strong reason for any of the decisions I made to even myself. But I like to believe that I had the privilege of choice and the independence to choose and, for better or worse, I have only myself to thank or blame for it. It may have been a winding road, but I found my calling and I am thankful for it and for all the gifts that I received on the way.

 

MS

Saturday, 29 January 2022

The Trinket

Savita, I am going to the bank and don’t know when I will be returning. You finish your work and shut the door on your way out. I have the keys to the house in my bag.

Ok.

Don’t rush with your work today. Diwali is round the corner so please clean up the places like under the beds, almirahs and desks where you normally don’t do. Once a year is not too much of an ask, I suppose.

Theek hai Bhabhi…will do.

Savita was all alone in the house and this would happen very often. She had been a regular in this house for over twelve years now and she had earned the trust of the Sharma family who even gave her keys to enter when they went on holidays to water the plants in the house. Diwali meant a month’s bonus which Bhabhi would give her and that was a good sum each year. She was determined to clean the house spic n span in the next couple of hours which may possibly get her some extra bonus this year.

As she pulled out the suitcases from under the bed, she bent low and entered the vacated space with her broom. There was so much dirt that she had to put her saree pallu on her nose to stop inhaling the dust. She also saw the cobwebs in the corners under the bed. As she came out from beneath the bed, after having swept out the dust, her eyes fell on a small shinning object. She picked it up and saw a beautiful gold earring with an emerald stone embedded.

Oh…this must be the earring that had gone missing almost six months ago when Shefali was getting dressed to go to her friend’s wedding. How much we searched for it then…we looked for it everywhere for so many days but just couldn’t find it. Mrs Sharma was so angry at her daughter for having lost one of the earrings for this had been given to her by her mother-in-law. She will be so happy when I give it to her.

Savita completed her operation clean-up and went home with the earring safely kept in her small purse which she always carried. She did not want to leave the precious thing on the dressing table. She wanted to see Bhabhi’s face as she handed it to her in person….Ufff…I am certain my bonus will be a minimum double…two month’s wages would really light up the Diwali.

Savita reached her home after doing the work at another couple of house in the same building as the Sharmas.  Her daughter Urmila had cooked a simple lunch which they both sat on the floor and ate. Urmila went to the living room to do her studies while Savita after a while lay on the bed for an afternoon siesta.  Usually, she would drop dead the moment she would hit the bed for all the work since early morning would tire her out completely. For some reason today, she just wasn’t able to sleep. There were many thoughts that were going through her mind. The war had just begun…

Keep it said one voice. It is been six months since the earring was lost. The Sharmas have already accepted that the thing is irretrievably lost. They don’t miss it anymore and no one will ever suspect her of anything.

Don’t keep it. It is not yours said the other voice. The Sharmas have always been good to you so you should return what is not yours.

Arrey pagal Savita. If you take this to the goldsmith you will get nothing less than thirty to forty thousand. For the Sharmas that is nothing but for you, it is so much. Keep it, sell it and forget it.

No,  Savita, no. In life you need good people. For twelve long years, the Sharmas have been so good to you and your family. Have they ever denied you leave…no. Have they deducted any money towards your absence including long leaves when you go to your native village…no…never. Have they ever been late in giving you your monthly money…no.  Have they not given you a raise each year…yes they have. How can you cheat such people?

Don’t listen to her Savita. You lost Ramesh last year to Covid and now have no one except yourself to take care of Urmila. You don’t need good people, you need money to live a life. All that stuff about payments and no deductions is just to poison your mind. They paid you well because you worked hard and well. They did not deduct any money because if you had turned away from them, they would not have been able to manage their home. They need you more than you need them. You can always find many other people who will give you work and pay you even better.

Stop your rant immediately. It is not me who is poisoning Savita’s mind. It is you and that too with evil thoughts. Don’t listen to her one bit. Trust is the most valuable thing you earn in life. Money comes, money goes. It takes ages to build trust and reputation but you can lose them with one small act. Never ever think of staining your years of spotless reputation. What money you will get wrongfully, I know you will never be able to reap its benefits. This is true since time immemorial. Go and return the earring to Bhabhi and earn yourself an extra good will, love and respect which no money can buy.

Yedi hai kya…Urmila needs fifty thousand for her admission to engineering college in two months from now. Ramesh hardly left you with some money and whatever little is there will be needed when you get your daughter married. Think again. This forty thousand will be well used for Urmila’s education. For the Sharmas it would mean nothing more than a few dinners at five star hotels and a bagful of designer clothes. Living in a SRA quarter, on a hand to mouth existence, all this gyan your other holy inner voice is giving you about trust, reputation and what not, is not applicable to you. For you the fight for existence is critical. Nothing else matters.

Savita, think for a moment whether Ramesh would have approved such an act? No, never. He was such an honest man and a sincere worker that after his demise the factory owners made sure the office quarter was transferred permanently in your name. That is the power of being good and doing good. What will you tell Ramesh when you meet him up there that you stole something and cheated a good family….how will you ever face him? We have a life now and a life after and we live them both on this earth. The good that we do and the evil we do in this life, have an impact on the next life.

Who has seen the next life? She is fooling you. When you return this earring, the Sharmas will become richer and you poorer by the same amount. This is your chance to bring down the inequality. There is nothing called after life. Ramesh is no more than ash and dust now and you will never meet him or anyone. These stories are spread just to deter you from improving your life. You need money, Urmila needs money and as a mother it is your responsibility to make sure she gets the education she deserves. When you meet Ramesh in the so called after life, you can tell him that his daughter is now an engineer and not just a technician like him. He will be overjoyed and will never ask you about the means. Be practical and keep the earring.

As the war within went on unabated, Savita saw her darling daughter through the parted curtain, studying seriously. Urmila had always been a sincere and hardworking student and Ramesh would proudly tell everyone about her exam results which had consistently been good and definitely better than all other children in the vicinity. Yes, she deserves to go to a good college and without adequate money, she will end up in an regular science college doing graduation and end up no better than her father or me. Savita got up from the bed and straightened her saree, took the purse and a grocery bag in hand and went towards the door.

Kya Aayi, you didn’t sleep today? Where are you going now?

I am going to the market to get some vegetables. I will be back in some time.

Savita went out and quickly picked up some veggies and then walked into Vishal Jewellers showroom. This is where she had been gradually buying small jewellery items for Urmila’s wedding. The people there knew her well. She sat down as one of the salesmen came up to speak to her.

Tell me sister what can I show you today?

No, I am not here to buy but want you to tell me how much it will cost to make a pair for this earring. She took out the single piece and put it on the velvet cloth before her.

Vishal took it in his hands and looked at it closely and spoke softly….I don’t think we can make such fine jewellery any more. This design is something my workers will not be able to replicate plus this stone is quite rare. It must be very old.

Yes. It belonged to my mother- in- law who had given it when I got married to Ramesh. When we shifted from our village to the city, we lost one piece. I thought of making the pair and give it to my daughter for her wedding. Anyway, now that making a pair is not possible, can I sell it and get money instead? How much will I get?

Vishal checked in fine jewellery and weighed it and did some calculation mentally….ahhh, I think I can give you about thirty five thousand at best because I too will need to melt it down and make something else instead. Maybe, I can add a few more thousands for the stone as well.

Let me think it over and I will come back to you tomorrow, said Savita as she put the earring back in her purse and walked back home.

That night she could not sleep as the war erupted again…to keep or not to keep. Both sides had good solid arguments and she was more inclined towards selling it before catching a few winks. She got up  early, did her household chores and left for work to the Sharmas house. It was a Saturday and Mr. Sharma was there to open the door with a big smile as usual and then he went back to reading the newspaper. Savita went into the kitchen where Mrs. Sharma was putting poha on two plates for breakfast. She then placed another plate and put a heapful of the hot food and offered it to Savita.

Eat this first before starting your work.

Bhabhi, yesterday while cleaning the house, guess what I found….I found this earring under the bed.

Mrs. Sharma saw what was in Savita’s hand and opened up her arms wide as she embraced the maid tight and started weeping aloud. Hearing the commotion, Mr. Sharma came into the kitchen and soon found out the reason. He threw the newspaper into the air and took Savita’s hands and started dancing in circles.

Thank you Savita. You know how much I wanted this earring back. I will call up Shefali now. It is still late evening in the US now.  She will be so happy. How much I cursed her for having lost it then. I am so happy today.

After the video call with their daughter, Mrs Sharma said…We too have some good news for you. Bhaiyya will tell you.

Savita went to Mr. Sharma and stood before him. He had a white envelope in his hands.

You remember we had filled up an application for a scholarship for Urmila some time ago? My close school friend happens to be the big boss of the company that offered the scholarship to children who had lost any of their parents to the pandemic. He has sent me this letter yesterday confirming that Urmila’s education will be taken care of by them till graduation and if her scores are good, they will continue for higher education as well. Call the bright girl now and let me hand over the prized letter to her in person.

Savita started crying. As tears swelled out, she bent down on her knees, put her head to the floor in the direction where the Sharmas stood.

Arrey nahin Savita. Don’t do this. Your daughter has earned it. And if she needs anything else, we are there to help. Shefali says she will also chip in now that she is working there in a good place.

That afternoon Savita could not sleep yet again but there was no war. There was only peace.

SS

Sunday, 23 January 2022

The Philadelphia Diaries: H.E.L.P.


                                                                                                                             January 22, 2022

 

Dear Diary

 

I left Mumbai in 2015, lived in Delhi, then Hyderabad and now Philadelphia and somewhere on the way, grew up. It’s been seven years now, and I am quite comfortable managing things on my own. But to be very honest, I do not think anybody is ever fully prepared to leave home, it is only how well you put up your brave face…which after a point becomes a part of you, and you do not really have to try. Over the years, the façade becomes taller and stronger with the concrete of experience and cement of memories and gets a beautiful coat of paint by the social media. 

 

I also think that the times you miss home the most are either when you are very happy or in big trouble! But here is my second honest confession, the places I have been to, Delhi, Hong Kong, London, Scotland, Hyderabad, LA, and San Francisco, have all been very kind. And the last six months in Philly have been equally so. From a new phone number to taking me shopping and lending their own things, from making sure I try every new cuisine and not miss any place worth visiting, from sharing passwords to celebrating festivals, friends have always been there. But friends are family. It is when help comes from the most unexpected places that you feel a different kind of happiness. 

 

“Help will always be given at Hogwarts to those who deserve it.” Albus Dumbledore

 

Today, I will not tell you about a new place, but the people who have, in their own way, made me feel safe and at home!


Paper Clips 

 

“When I was so much younger than today 

I never needed anybody's help in any way
But now these days are gone 

I'm not so self assured

And now I find I've changed my mind 
And opened up the doors”

 

Help! That was what was playing in a loop in my head in the Reading Terminal Market as I realized I would have to figure out a way to carry my groceries back. 

Rewind to an hour ago. 

I had picked up the week’s grocery, some chocolate truffles and the most refreshing lemonade from an Amish store that I had, finally, found today after failing the last couple of weekends. The Reading Terminal is huge, and for a direction dyslexic like me, it’s like a maze where I never find the same shop twice. As I was walking towards the billing counter, my shopping cart slipped out of the grocery trolley where I had kept it. As I picked it up, I realized one of its wheels was missing. 


“Oh darn!” That wheel had been giving me trouble, coming off the last couple of weeks and I would have to slide it back in position. I had ordered the cart on Amazon and it was quite helpful in getting the weekly stuff. Then began my search for the missing wheel under the numerous stalls of fruits and vegetables. Michael, one of the men from the shop, came to help me as he saw me searching for it. “It couldn’t have gone far, the cart just slid out and fell right here. It’s a white wheel, like this one,” I showed him the other wheel of my cart. He moved the stalls to look under each of them. Finally, the shop manager started checking the CCTV to see if the wheel had been there when I came into the shop. We saw that it was actually missing when I entered the shop! “It must have fallen off at some other place, it is impossible to search for it. I’m sorry for all the trouble,” I apologized to Michael. “Oh, don’t worry at all, moving the crates and stalls made me realize that the floors need cleaning! Now, how are you planning to take all this stuff back?” he asked. “I don’t know, I’ll just carry them in multiple packets, or carry some now and come back again for the rest of them.”

“Wait, let me see if I can do something, I have an idea,” he said. He told me to wait for ten minutes. 

 

“Help me if you can, I'm feeling down
And I do appreciate you being 'round
Help me get my feet back on the ground
Won't you please, please help me!”

 

It continued to play, as I listed out scenarios in my head, 1. Return this to Amazon, 2. Get a new cart, 3. Keep some things here and come back later for them, 4. Just carry everything somehow. 5. I should have gone to Whole Foods. 6. Why did I buy so many things today? 7. I should just carry a backpack. 

He came back and got to work. In five minutes, my cart had a prosthesis fitted. An old, smaller, black wheel he got and just attached it by winding a metallic paper clip around the spoke. “This should get you home,” he smiled. I thanked him profusely. “Don’t put too much in the cart and pull it slowly. It should hold. Have a good day!” he added. 

I have been using, for the last five months, this cart now, with a white wheel and a black wheel, and  neither of them coming off ever! Since then, I have gone to Reading Terminal Market several times, and each time I have tried looking for Michael. Sometimes, I don’t find the shop and at other times when I do, Michael is not there. But I won’t give up, I will find him and thank him for fixing a broken wheel and making me believe in the power of paper clips!



The Taxi Driver

 

“So, when you're near me
Darling, can't you hear me, S.O.S.
The love you gave me
Nothing else can save me, S.O.S.”

 

The best part of being in Pennsylvania was being close to Uma, my best friend, my soul sister, the godmother to my future child! We were inseparable since class six and after all these years, nothing had changed. Every chance that I got, I would book an Amtrak ticket and go off to her place, a regular weekend, Thanksgiving and New Year. Her husband, Ramstein, was a gem of a guy and had come to accept our eccentricities and idiosyncrasies, it felt like I had known him all my life! 

On one such weekend, we decided to make a day trip to Washington D.C. Uma and I laughed, sang and talked incessantly in the car, as Ramstein chipped in with punch lines and sassy one liners. It was the most wonderful day, bright, sunny with a nip in the air. We walked around the city, soaking in the sights and sounds, the Lincoln Memorial, the War Monument, the White House, Smithsonian Natural History Museum and the Capitol. By the end of the day, we were tired, and Uma booked an Uber to the parking lot where the car was. Yasin, the cab driver, was a well-built, quiet man and I only saw the back of his head from the passenger seat. In the cab, Uma was talking to her sister on the phone, Ramstein was thinking about a place for dinner and I was sending Uma the photos I had taken that day. I put my phone in my jacket pocket and sat back, looking at the city lights. We reached the parking lot and were walking towards our car. Involuntarily, my hand slipped into my jacket pocket, reaching for my phone…and it was gone! 

“It must have slipped out from the pocket in the cab, I am sure I had it there.”

Uma started looking in the Uber app if the driver’s number was there and Ramstein called my phone.

“It’s ringing,” Ramstein said. No answer. “He would not have gone too far, I’ll keep trying.”

“My battery is low, 2% and I don’t know if it’s on silent…it usually is,” I stuttered.

 

“When you're gone
How can I even try to go on?
When you're gone
Though I try, how can I carry on?”

 

My phone has all my information! My photos, emails, contacts…I should block the number quickly, how do you track an iphone? Breathe! Breathe! My phone has all my information!



“Hello?”

“Hello! We were just in your cab, my friend left her phone there. Can you please bring it to where you dropped us?”

“Alright, wait there, I am coming.”

Ramstein and I rushed to the entrance of the parking garage. Yasin was there and he handed me my phone, as I felt the air rush back into my lungs and my heart pounding against my chest!

I am not sure how coherently I thanked him, but I genuinely do from the bottom of my heart…

 

Chicken Soup for the Soul

“Achoo”

I sneezed for the millionth time. The dustbin was overflowing with tissues. A cold, a sore throat, headache, body ache, nothing new for me. It was a flu, (not the notorious virus doing the rounds) and I would be fine in 2-3 days. This too shall pass, I told myself as I reached the hospital for work. 

“Here, Mark made this. Heat this up and have, you will feel better,” Andy, my friend at work, handed me a big bowl. Mark, her husband, had made chicken soup for me. “I always like it when I am sick,” said Andy.

 By the end of the day, I was feeling horrible and just wanted to go home. Today was the worst. I will go home and go straight to bed. If I call home, D, S and S will immediately know that I am sick. I’ll just send them a message. They will worry unnecessarily. I will be fine by tomorrow… But I wish Ma was here. 

 

“How do I feel by the end of the day?
Are you sad because you're on your own?

No, I get by with a little help from my friends
Mm, get high with a little help from my friends
Mm, gonna try with a little help from my friends”

 

I reached home and somehow got myself to change. I don’t want to, but I should eat something, I told myself. And then I remembered about the chicken soup. 

I heated up some of it. I took the first sip and I can’t tell you how good it felt. It was the most comforting concoction. I think I almost finished the whole thing that night! I have asked Andy and Mark for the recipe multiple times, and they say, it was nothing, it is the easiest thing to make. I do not know if I would be able to make it as well as Mark, but if my chicken soup can make somebody else feel as good as it made me feel, that is enough for me. I prescribe medicine, I had already started medicines for myself, but the chicken soup was what really cured me! 



New Year’s Eve

December 30th, 2021, 6:30pm. 

The train was delayed. I was going to Uma’s place again. I finally boarded the train at 7pm. In the train I was thinking the last time we were together on New Year. 

 

8:40pm

As the train pulled into Harrisburg station, I jumped off, looking forward to a great weekend. Ramstein and Uma were on their way from the State College to pick me up from Harrisburg. 

I couldn’t wait for them to reach. I recognized their car and I walked out of the station. Even though we had met during Thanksgiving, Uma stepped out of the cab to give me a big hug! 

“Let’s go, you guys can hug at home!” Ramstein chuckled from the driver’s seat.

As usual, we were engrossed in conversation, planning our weekend, and then ultimately deciding to just chill at home! 

 

10:30pm

Amid the talks and the music, we had reached home. 

“Uma give me my phone,” Ramstein said as he got out of the car.

“I don’t have your phone.”

“I gave it to you to hold,” he said calmly.

“I don’t have it,” Uma said as she rummaged through her handbag.

“Let’s check the car,” I said. I called his number, it was ringing, but neither could we hear, nor feel it vibrate or light up.

 

11:00pm

We had searched every inch of the car. His phone was nowhere to be found.

“Did you stop anywhere on your way to the station?” I asked.

“No,” they both said together.

“You got out of the car at the station, it must have fallen off at that time,” said Ramstein.

“I think one of us would have realized if a phone fell down while we were hugging,” Uma said.

“But that is the only possibility,” he said. “It has pictures of my research project, I have not backed it up for the last two weeks.”

“Let’s go back and check at the station,” Uma said, considering for the first time, that she might have dropped it on the streets of Harrisburg.

“You guys stay, its late, I will go,” Ramstein said.

“We are all going together, you are not going alone” I said decidedly.

Uma took the car keys and said she would drive. I messaged home that we had reached and bid them good night. I will tell them tomorrow, if everything works out, I thought.

On our way, Ramstein and I were searching for ways to track an android phone. 

“It is ringing. If someone had taken it, they would have taken out the sim card or switched off the phone immediately. We may be able to find it” I said. 

Uma and I stole glances at each other. Ramstein was changing the passwords to his different accounts. 

 

“Rescue me before I fall into despair, oh

I'll send an S.O.S to the world
I'll send an S.O.S to the world
I hope that someone gets my
I hope that someone gets my
I hope that someone gets my
Message in a bottle, yeah.”

 

“I will block my number,” he said.

“Wait, let us see if we can find it. We will call on the number when we reach. If we don’t find it, then you block,” said Uma.

“Your pictures will be backed up on Google Photos, don’t worry, you can retrieve your project pictures,” I said.

“No, I had not turned on that feature,” he said.

We tried tracking the phone through Uma’s phone. The location it showed was their home, battery 54%. 

“It is not at home, I had it with me when I left,” said Ramstein. 

Even with multiple attempts, the battery remained at 54%. “I don’t think this is working, how can the battery level not change,” he said.

Somehow the drive back seemed unnaturally long. The fog was creeping in, gradually becoming denser. Uma checked the gas level. “There is some food, cookies, chips, croissant. Eat,” she said.

We did not touch anything.

 

December 31st 2021

12:45 am

We reached Harrisburg station. As the car turned to the road where they picked me up, all three of us craned our necks…hoping against hope that we would spot a phone lying untouched on the road.

This is not school, this is not a problem which will just solve itself tomorrow.

We parked the car and got off. An empty police car was parked at one end. The three of us started scanning the road, the pavement, the bushes. A solitary man in a cycle passed us by. 

Ramstein went inside the station. The Police office was closed. 

After a while, a taxi drove up. It drove around the station and then stopped. Uma and I started walking towards the station to go in after Ramstein. He came out shortly. We spotted a “Lost and Found” with shutters down.

 

1:10 am

“Let’s go back now, we can come back on Sunday when we come to drop you off,” he said.

Dejected, we started walking back to the car. Uma and I held hands. What were we expecting, a miracle? Were we so naive? 

“Entry only for staff” said a sign on a door leading to a room that had the lights on. The three of us stopped, staring inside. We could see a table, with lots of papers. Many shelves with papers. What were we looking for? All three of us were hoping for the same thing, without saying a word to each other.

Suddenly there was a sound from inside the room. “Somebody is there inside,” gasped Uma.

Ramstein started knocking on the door. We pressed our face to the glass windows. 

A man came. He opened the door.

“Can I help you?” he asked

“We are looking for a cell phone? We dropped it on the road, about two hours ago?”

“What phone?” he asked. His face had no expression. Uma and I just held our breaths.

“Samsung Galaxy S7.”

“What did it look like?” He asked again.

“It had a purple cover,” Ramstein said.

“I think I have something for you,” and the man disappeared.

Nobody moved.

He came back and handed Ramstein his phone.

“Thank You, thank you, thank you!!!” All three of us gushed!

“Have a good year,” he smiled, locked the door and went back.

Ramstein looked at his phone, battery 53%.

 

2:45am

The three of us were sitting on the couch, eating noodles and just thinking of how lucky we were.

“We never asked him his name,” Ramstein said.

We will always remember this night…how we lost a phone in the most obnoxious way, how we went on a wild goose chase and how miracles do happen! I am just glad we were together!



There are a lot of things that are not right, that should never have happened. The world is cruel, mean, selfish and unfair…but that is only a small part of it, it is not the whole world. Small incidents, trifles in the large scale of things, restore your faith in the world of men (read humans) …even in the days of Armageddon.

 

“That there’s some good in this world, Mr. Frodo. And it’s worth fighting for.” Samwise Gamgee

 

Love, Joy and Peace

Philo in Philly



MS


(P.S. the names have been changed, but you know who you are!) 















Sunday, 16 January 2022

Avalanche Express

It was Army Day yesterday and I remembered how my mother, who worked in the Ministry of Defence for over thirty-five years, would every year, on this day, carry a small box to all our friends in the neighbourhood, shopkeepers in the colony market, and passengers in the DTC bus she would travel in, and collect small coins and notes. For each donor, she would pin a small flag on the shirt or top. Most people, she approached, would put in small amounts happily and felt a sense of pride in having the small paper flag adorning them. Today, it is sad we neither put these pins, nor anyone cares about making any donations and not many of us think of those brave hearts who are there in the frontline other than when natural calamities strike our homes or when the enemy is at the gates.


Then there was this WhatsApp forward which made fun of Mumbaikars shivering in their winter at thirteen degrees and compared it with the temperature at Siachen around the same time…only minus forty! So here I am connecting the dots and repeating a piece written about six years ago when an avalanche came dancing down the mountain.

 

We are Ten, Ten Bravehearts
Sentinels on the snow
We walk out on days and nights
With temperatures always so low
Minus ten is comforting to us
Below forty is when you miss your toe
Sunlight, frostbite, hypothermia
Welcome to our abode in snow
Welcome to Siachen.

We are Ten, Ten Bravehearts
Out on a special mission
To stop the raiders from across
Coming into our nation
Walking in snow so deep
When we heard a huge commotion
No, it wasn’t the guns booming
But the rumbling of snow in motion
Come later to our abode on snow
It’s too hot right now in Siachen.

We are Ten, Ten Bravehearts
Sensing our biggest killer
With nowhere to hide
Didn’t run hither & thither
T’was coming down the mountain
Crushing all beneath, this road roller
Just minutes away from us it was
We stood still, we held our hands together
Death was roaring and laughing at us
But we never let go of our hands
For us it had always been
All for One, One for All

Now this will be our abode forever
Never ever to say Goodbye Siachen.
We were Ten, Ten Bravehearts
No one else will know our names
But for our mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters
And our wives, sons, daughters, friends
Who will come to know of us much later
After days when all the searches are over
They’ll never find us, for we are lost
Lost forever, together us Ten Bravehearts
Sleeping soundlessly,….frozen forever.
Soon another set of Bravehearts will take our place
Welcome to Siachen, Mates.

We were Ten, Ten Bravehearts
Who will soon be forgotten
Wiped away from your memories soon
But not for our own families
Who wait at the station to receive us
As the Avalanche Express comes chugging down
Coming with our empty coffins
Wrapped in saffron green and white
Lying ten feet below, with unfulfilled dreams
Dreams of goodness and joy
Wondering how Genesis would have described us
From Dust to Dust or From Dust to Snow
Zara hatke, zara bachke, yeh hai Siachen meri jaan!

And in the end imagined myself singing
John Lennon's immortal song, slightly altered
Hoping they will someday come true
Imagine there’s no countries, It isn’t hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for, And no religion too
Imagine all the people, Living life in peace
Yo hoo oo!!
And there’ll be Siachen No More
You may say I’m a dreamer
But I’m not the only one.

Jai Hind!

 SS 

Sunday, 2 January 2022

Happy Budday

Some people take a day off on their birthdays but I never miss the opportunity to go to work, meet friends and colleagues and cut a cake or two there and return home for another cutting ceremony at home. In short, ‘hum cake ke liye kahin bhi jaa saktey hain’.  The problem with having a birthday at the fag end of the year is that you first wish people on Christmas, then we have to say thank you to the same and more people wishing you on your day and finally the aggregate of the two days of Whatsapp reaches it culmination on New Year. My usage of the mobile is at its peak during this one week, not to mention my posting the family blog to almost the same set of people once again.

The day started with a very early call with my darling now in the US of A and a round of brisk morning walk. Pulled out my antique clothes…yeah antique you heard it right. D presented me with this check cots wool shirt about 23 years ago. She bought it from departmental store called Snow White during a winter sale at Delhi. I wear it on all my foreign travels and often on special days in winters. This shirt is so special to me that my first passport issued in 1998 has me wearing it, the renewal in 2008 and then in 2017….ageless shirt and an aging man. Hopefully, I will have the same shirt on in 2027 on my fourth passport as well. Can you beat it?

Wishing on Whatsapp is the in-thing and these started pouring in right from the time the sun rose in the Australian continent and continued till folks in US and Mexico went to bed. We are all part of some WA groups and all you need is one of the people starting the chain and then the rest follow. The problem is whether to reply individually or wait till the day’s end and write a nice thank you note to all. I chose a middle path of responding in groups of twenty names per thank you after every 3 hours. This is easy but what do you do with the telephone calls? A couple of years ago I decided that for some really close friends and some colleagues, I would call them up to wish them on their birthdays.  These friends were touched by the personal gesture and now almost all of them made it a point to reciprocate. The calls went on and on, had to excuse myself from digital meetings to speak to these good souls who were making this extra effort and since you were speaking after long, the conversation could in no way be brief. Try picking up the phone next when you get such an opportunity and see the magic happen for the person on the other end.

Messages, too, can be magical. One boy from the Bangalore office recorded a song in Kannada. While every word he sang did not register but surely the essence was a beautiful birthday wish for me. Another lively boy created a card with a collage of pictures. A colleague from Raipur created a video message out of my WA display picture. Then there was this brilliant lady called Rux from Chennai who penned a poem that I must share:

Shibu dear friend may your journeys continue
With your followers who are in vicarious retinue
May God continue to keep you healthy
And fill you forever with your innate sensitivity
Humour and mischief lace your nostalgic forays
Bring some smiles and tears to our dreary days
Taking us back to the days of yore
When on our sleeves, our hearts we wore
And in the present, your humaneness and understanding
Weaves a gentle quilt of loving and giving
What would one wish from God for you?
More of the same and plenty of happiness
Success and prosperity and above all joyfulness
May your wandering feet take you on journeys galore
May your roving eye find the birds and flowers to pen your lore
May we continue to read and rejoice
And bless for your lovely voice
Reflected in each line that you write
Which brings to our hearts, a bright sliver of light
There is hope in the world, we are assured
By all that you write and generously shared!

Speechless I stood and blessed I felt.

Then there is this girl whom I have known since she joined as a trainee and has now turned into a fine lady, who reminded me every day for a month in advance that I must continue a tradition started over a decade ago of getting Bengali sweets for office folks. And so it was, I ordered a large quantity of kheer kadomba, shankh sandesh, shingara and vegetable chops for office. As soon as the parcel came, the team members invited me into a meeting room where a large number of them had gathered. I was presented with a nice bouquet of flowers and a cake to cut. This was no ordinary cake brought from a shop but a homemade marble cake baked specially by a colleague for the occasion….can it get any more personal? Of course there was the traditional birthday song sung aloud which attracted more people into the room and the celebrations got bigger.



As colleagues started pouring in to enjoy the goodies, I took a box full of sweets and shingara and gave it to the housekeeping staff who were having lunch in the canteen. Sharing happiness with these men and women who work all through the year, cleaning all the muck we leave behind at our workstations, canteen and elsewhere, gives a different joyous feeling. The love and appreciation they express with unspoken words is to be felt. And if you thought I would run short of goodies in having passed on a large portion elsewhere, then you are mistaken. The moment I returned to my work station, a chocolate cake landed up, sent by my team members in Gujarat...as they say good begets good and khushiyan baantne se bardti hain (happiness increases when you share it with others). One of the happiest memories is of a birthday about fifteen years ago when all the other staff had left for home, the guards in the office came to my cabin and gave me a small bunch of flowers and a card so beautifully written in Marathi…these memories are life’s little joys you never will forget. I still have that birthday card in my house, preserved forever.

I ended the day early and drove back home. When everyone asked me the usual cliché question, “Where’s the party tonight?” and I would reply with a smile on my face… Flat 1701…. As I entered my residential building, I realized the power company had declared a long shut down that evening. The choice was to wait at the lobby till they resumed supply or walk up….I took the second. With an office bag pack on my back and a tiffin carrier on my shoulder, I started walking up the stairs. Slowly kept moving up, one floor after another…I even thought of resting in between but decided against it….finally reached the 17th floor….not bad....climbing over 16 floors at the age of fifty eight! After a while the power came on and the two of us enjoyed the loveliest dinner made of all my favourite dishes with loads of love….luchi, alur tarkari, mangsho and nolen gurer payesh.

Aye  zindagi tuhjse aur kya chahiye….Life is beautiful. I get reminded of a beautiful poem by John Paul Monroe, a few stanzas of  which I must share with you.

Drinking From My Saucer

I’ve never made a fortune,
And I’ll never make one now.
But it really doesn’t matter
‘Cause I’m happy anyhow.

As I go along my journey
I’m reaping better than I’ve sowed
I’m drinking from my saucer
‘Cause my cup has overflowed.

I don’t have lot of riches,
And sometimes the going’s tough
But with kin and friends to love me
I think I’m rich enough.

I thank God for the blessings
That His mercy has bestowed
I’m drinking from the saucer
‘Cause my cup has overflowed. 

Wishing our readers a Happy 2022 and may your cups always overflow.

SS