Saturday, February 22, 2014

Photograph

There is a scene in a Hindi movie that I remember. The suicidal hero talks about his previous love to a random stranger he met on a train. She convinces him that he would feel better if he took a photograph of his former love and burned it prior to flushing it down the toilet. After draining the remnants of the photograph, said hero flashes a brilliant smile and proclaims to the woman how fantastic that crazy act made him feel. Watching that scene in that little house in Mysore, I never thought that years later I would try to enact something equally ridiculous in real life and the tragic unfunny outcomes it had.

Because when you are with someone for the better part of a digital decade, you don’t just have a few photographs conveniently placed with matchsticks adjacent for that burning ritual. You have albums and photos strewn over a digital wasteland of Google albums, hard drives, pen drives, phones and emails. And trust me, deleting a picture from a computer, is not as satisfying as burning one up.

My digital clean-up was such an extensive activity. It started off with me carefully selecting pictures of her and us from albums and patiently deleting them to avoid loss of photos of friends. However this sieve-through process had the additional disadvantage of forcing me to relive those long-gone happy memories and watch the smiles, hugs, laughter and happiness that seemingly dissipated from my life.

10 minutes of painstaking and pain taking effort later, I told myself- screw it and then began the bulk deleting process. Whole albums, folders, digital albums found themselves being gobbled up by my digital recycle bin as I went on a virtual spring cleaning session. Months later after all was said and done and the court finally snapped all residual ties, I still kept finding images in places I least expected. In my office laptop, in my computer at my home, synchronized Picasa albums in phones. I kept deleting them, without a second thought as I feared the consequences of ripping through the scabs of an ugly but healing wound.

Then in the month of December, during a visit home, I came across a photo album in my cupboard.Blue with an oval cut-out in front, to show a smiling happy and thinner me, the album lay in the shelf. I opened the album to realize that this was the album of my 18th birthday. Beside me was the woman who I adored and lovingly called my sister and in front of me was the woman, who I didn't adore yet and I had no idea would become my wife. Surrounding me, were friends - new ones and old who joined in the celebration and force fed me buttery cake.
In each photo were friends and loved ones, most of whom are not in touch with me any more. And in the midst of it all was me enjoying what was a delightful birthday. I sat gazing at the smiling visages, reliving that heavenly day aptly spent in a restaurant named Ambrosia. It was a beautiful birthday and the 10 birthdays that have spanned the decade in between had not yielded one with such beautiful memories. However when I was done reminiscing over them, I couldn't make myself tear and throw it all away.

Because It is really easy to destroy and rip things apart and run away from things that hurt and it’s really hard to find something you really care about to hold on to. Through my overzealous action of erasing her from my life, I had wiped out the better parts of a decade of my life. Gone with all the evidence of her, was unfortunately the existence of me. Pictures of friends, loved ones and pets, all now just reference points in the unreliable and ever fading repositories of my brain.


I looked back at the last image of me in that album. It had me posing, with a ridiculous cone shaped hat outside the restaurant surrounded by friends and smiling with not a single care in the world. By my side, she stood wiping her eye unaware that the photograph was being clicked by the woman who few years later was forced to sever all ties with me. I didn't know then that the woman by my side would marry me years later. I didn't know then that that beautiful wedding would end as horribly as it did. All I know now is that the smiling chap in the photo was happy and blissfully unaware of all the machinations that were sent in motion. It was his innocence that I wanted to hold on to, not having any left in my life. So I dusted that blue album and returned it to its rightful place in my shelf.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Life Assurance

The lady across the table, refused to meet my eye and that surprised me. This was the same woman who talked to me incessantly for an hour and nearly held my hand to ensure that I signed the papers. However this time, she seemed to shift in her seat and the conversation moved along slowly. She seemed aloof and the fact that I was abroad,making more money didn't seem to interest her the way I thought it should. Sensing the lull in the conversation, she makes an abrupt gesture and pulls out a wad of papers that she slams on the table.

Finally, I think the lady's back to business and I waited for the pitch that I had priming myself for the minute she called for a meeting. But that pitch never came and the awkwardness continued. Did she need help from me ? Was her new marketing style desperation and self loathing?? I was trying to focus my eyes so that I could read those papers in front when she finally drops it on me.

"You need to change your nominee !"

The statement takes some time to register and I look blankly at her face. Then it hits me and everything about the meeting makes instant sense.

"Your life insurance policies still have her as nominee"

She looks me in the eye for the first time and  I knew exactly what that look meant. It's been a year and I still get that look. Friends and family walk on eggshells around me, trying their best not to say something insensitive to me. When the conversation tends to meander itself to the previous year, the look happens. Its that intense search for a change in expression, stance or tone in me, to see if I stiffen, get flustered or lose my cool. Its a look I've learnt to counter and quite masterfully may I add. 

I look her back in the eye and keeping an even tone I coolly ask her 

"Are those the forms to update the nominee? "

"Yes, but since your premium was split over 21 policies, it will need you to sign that many forms" she apologetically replies.

"Lets get to it", I respond as I grab my pen and begin what was the most number of times I signed my name in an hour.Years back on the day of her birthday, I decided that there should be something that is immediately available to her if something did happen to me. That and terrible financial planning made me listen to this lady sitting in front of me who for a better commission sold me 21 insurance policies. 

Each change of nomination form required 3 signatures and as I went through them silently, she tried her best to strike a conversation. Something about her understanding my situation,asking me to stay strong, reassuring me that there are more fish in the sea and the usual spiel on moving on with life. She then brought up the story of own personal life and then I realized that she was divorced as well. Just when I felt that her eyes were turning misty,I questioned her regarding the signatures and I managed to divert the conversation from that path completely.

I know I should have shown more empathy at that point of time and listened to her story and taken her advice. However listening to people telling me to move on and live has started to sicken me a little. I do not have to prove that I have moved on and they have no right to assume that I haven't either. So I resort to my standard smile and thank routine that gets me through such conversation.

 I hand over the signed papers to her and thank her for coming over to fix this personally.

As she leaves she turns and gives me a crafty smile.

"Call me the next time you want to change the nominee"