Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Dear Baba

I often talk about my mom. When I was around my parents I used to think that I am the upgraded version of my mum’s personality. Away from home, I realize that I am not exactly everything that she is.
There are a lot of things that I inherit from baba. I think my positive attitude and hyperactivity is all baba-given.
My dad has a surprising innocence about him, which many people find around me too. I think it is due to the fact that both of us have the ability to retain the kid inside us.
My dad used to play games with me when I was a kid. I made up really creative games with me playing an insecticide and he playing the cockroach. We used to call it the “Cockroach Game”. The insects were replaced with new ones that I found spookier as I grew up.
On Saturdays, baba used to be off from work and we went to the zoo. During that time, I was obsessed with zoo animals and I did not mind spending hours in front of the tiger cage or watching a deer or a peacock. All this while my dad patiently waited around, even encouraging my descriptions of what the animals were doing and telling me stories related to them. He came home and told my mom how I make cute mispronunciations of their names. As a grown up (well, almost a grown up) I really admire his patience with the zoo. If I had to take someone like me to a zoo, I would be bored and angry in no time. I was a really dreamy kid. I took hours to appreciate things and made up my own little stories as I went about it. It must have been really hard to take that.
On our way back from the zoo, we bought a lot of junk food that consisted primarily of the two-minute noodles that came in a cup and something sickeningly sweet. That was my only opportunity to have a go at food “with no value” like my mom calls it.
In summers or around my winter vacations, he took long breaks from work to spend time with me. He read me stories (sometimes with little enactments of the characters) and got me songs. He taught me how to work in the garden and plucked tuberoses for me. He introduced me to Rabindrashongeet when I was around four years old and I learnt the songs by heart without even knowing the language. I can still sing all those songs and that has given me a lot of Bengali friends ( not that it is a prerequisite but they are all long lasting friendships).
The most memorable dad-daughter thing we ever did was the bicycle. He got me a brand new bicycle on my 5th birthday and he was determined to teach me how to ride it. I have never seen anyone so ambitious about something that parents usually would never pay attention to. I was really scared of riding it for the fear of scraping my knee (which I did anyway while doing a lot of other things every two weeks). He used to hold on to the back and run behind me. He is fit as a fiddle and he was really athletic back then so he encouraged me to ride faster while he ran behind me. Our bike lessons were not one of those de-caffeinated ten-rounds-around-the-playground things. I rode my bike right in the middle of the city traffic. Starting from Tilak road going to Navi Peth, LBS road and sometimes even across Mhatre Bridge with my dad running behind me like he was running a marathon. I wondered why everyone on the streets had an expression on their face that said something like, “Aww sho shweet” but now I know why. As we passed couples with pot-bellied husbands, in the flash of moment on my bike that let me observe, I could see the wives nudging their husbands to do something like that for their kids too. Those bike lessons are something that makes me feel really proud to have him around.
I spent about twelve years of my life learning Indian Classical dancing. It has added a lot to my personality and it really opened up my imagination. My dad used to take me to my dance classes and he did not just drop me and pick me up. He knew all about my dancing. He knew how to read a story when I told it in dance, even with my limitations as a dancer. :)
At school I always won prizes for my oratory. My dad wrote all my speeches for me.
A lot of research went into his writing. Even though it was just a school thing.
He did some basic conditioning on me. I owe my reading to him, even the fact that I cannot stay without reading the news everyday.
He made sure that he showed up for my parent-teacher meets and he was very popular amongst the teachers for coming up with really creative study solutions ( which for some reason never seemed to work on me).
Whether it was trying to find out who the Prime Minister of U.S.S.R is or picking mangoes from the backyard tree, my dad was always there with me. It was one of those pretty places in my life. The one that you keep going back to when your present has turned into a reaction that has gone rancid!

As a person, what amazes me about him is his happiness and positive attitude. He was diagnosed with diabetes when he was twenty-four. That is how old I am right now. I have seen him turn his diabetes into something really good that he has for twenty-five years. I grew up watching him run, sprint, run the half marathon, go to the gym and eat healthy ( sometimes even to the extremes I must confess). I have seen people drop their jaws when they met him first and then were introduced to me as his daughter. I really felt very proud on such occasions.

Life is full of clouds and every family has it’s share of nebulas but when you see someone like me flying paper planes through them, you have got to be sure that it is a side of my personality that comes from my dad. He is the kind of person who will sing in the bathroom even after he comes back from a funeral and that is not because he does not grieve. That is because he puts it all on the pyre, pays a sincere condolence and moves on.
As my readers must have already noted, he reads and comments on everything I write and sometimes even embarrasses me by praise. I don’t know if I really deserve all his adulation, but he definitely deserves more than this.
Thanks a lot baba!!
Miss you!
PS: I intended to write this for Father's Day but I realized that there are too many Father's Days around the world.
And it IS Father's Day when you actually end up thinking all of that!! :D

11 comments:

sam said...

this blog just brings dat advertisement in front of my eyes where the little girl proudly says 'MY DADDY STRONGEST'...haha:)
i guess its the case with most daughters,they do share some anonymous bonding with their dad which actually sons dont n its strange dat u find sons being on the fair side if caught in a situation where ur dad is proved wrong but the daughters manage to stick with their dads against all odds such is the unusual,biased yet special bonding between them.
saee u are no different but ofcourse in ur case kaka's given u more than many reasons to be proud of him...well i only got to know u two better :)tata luv ya.

Alien said...

Nicely written... touching! esp if one reads it when one is really lonely!

शिरीष said...

Thanks Sai! I was in tears while reading your post but these tears were special and nostalgic.They appear in one's eyes seldom in life time. They were valuable.

Sai in fact I owe you a lot for bringing those joyful moments in my life. I have kept these memories locked in my heart.They still give me the necessary impetus in my life. One more thing ,you have still retained the childhood innocence!

Thanks again my little daughter!

Saee said...

@Sam.. :)
Yeah I guess thats the rule. Daddy's girls. :)
@Alien
Yes, being away from home has added this dimension to what I write..I don't always like it, but then this is definitely something I like.
@baba
I forgot to mention so many things too. :) I guess I WILL have to write a book. :D

Deepti said...

:) Ultimate Saee...
Pan nakkich tu khp sarya goshti tu lihtana wisarlya asnar.. jase kakanche omlettes ( :)) 2 eggs wale ) , tzya exams madhle kakanche tula aanane, sodane...

Kharach tu kakan war bool lihi...
Saeee.. too good :)

Saee said...

@ Deepti
Wow you have become a regular here. Thanks for the comments. Yeah loads more to write..maybe there will be a baba part 2 :D

Unknown said...

Sai
You have projected so beautifuly whole personality of Shirish in front of me through your sweet article.
Nice. Simply wonderful.
Sudhir kaka.

Saee said...

@sudhir kaka
Thanks. :) I am glad you like it. When I miss home, I write about all the things that I miss so that I can go back to it whenever I feel like. :)

RJ said...

hey...once again...amazing yaar...I think coming own under has helped you a lot with your writing...just that you have to do it so much more when you are so far apart....my Dad has always been away...working and providing for the life we have lived and continue to live...sometimes I have been angry...that he never was around when I needed him...but I guess I was naive...I think its goes like this...he was...with me...all the time....I just didn't see him....

But good on ya....you were privileged to turn around and see your dad...right behind you...
Great work...
Cheers,
Ranjeet

Saee said...

@ Ranjeet
Yeah..every situation has something missing. I guess going away from home lets you take a bird's eye view of your own past. It sets everything in perspective!

Meera Rao said...

very very sweet and touching - special Dad and lucky Daughter :)