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Walking the walk.

November 11, 2020
Daddy was a phenomenon. He breathed knowledge and lived like a gentleman. Soft spoken Daddy was a phenomenon. He breathed knowledge and lived like a perfect gentleman. Soft spoken and a man of few words, all of wisdom and most mature in his transactions, my father's counsel was actively sought by many young officers and junior commissioner officers. From a respectable distance, I couldn't understand why they were coming home and what he was telling them, as he hardly ever spoke. 
I also remember being taken to the homes of his grateful orderlies whose wives would be singing hymns of praise for him all through the sojourn. These are soldiers who were delegated to keep our house premises spic and span, iron his uniform, polish his shoes daily and also keep his ceremonial brass regalia shining prior to an army parade. Daddy devoured books and had a huge collection of books, that actually triggered off my insatiable and precocious journey into the world of words and imagination. 
He loved teaching. I was arduously taught mathematics personally by him, a losing battle that he endured several years, often late into night when I would have long given up, but he wouldn't! Now, I guess he had more faith in me than myself.
I have seen him laugh, particularly  when he was around my younger brother  Mohan whom he used to proudly show around. He would come home to feed him and come intermittently to check his temperature if Mohan was ill. When we (I and Mohan) secretly plotted and conducted our misadventures together i.e. enacting Tom Sawyer's  raft in the canal (and were fished out by the witnessing jawaans), or when we innocently set fire to our home fence together (and our own home was also almost razed to ground), or we schemingly stole money from his wallet to benevolently purchase candies for all our class mates, I was the one who was reprimanded for teaching my little innocent brother all mischief! 
I loved to annoy him to get his attention that I continued to do even as a young adult. I ran away from home several times, and when not one soul came looking for me I would leave it for another day, and promptly return home within the next one hour or when my tummy rumbled. I ascended the highest mango tree that was banned from climbing. I was the forgetful child who within minutes would not be found sitting facing the wall where I had been assigned to a few minutes ago for some 'crime' committed earlier! I was the glib liar who would state things to escape from a situation that I was shameful about, running from fear of being caught out.  Not to say that invariably I was caught out! 
But on the other hand I also sang the best,  bagged all main roles in school drama productions, danced the best, one of the toppers in the class (but for mathematics) and shone outside home, a place full of stellar academic heroes. I worked hard to develope skills and virtues to impress and get validated by the world. 
I got appreciation for all that decades later, when I got a chance to  look after his personal care when he fell ill after a heart attack and was kept in a hospital bed for several weeks. By then, he was showing clear signs of serious dementia. I came from the UK and took care of him day and night - fed him, bathed him, took him to the toilet, cleaned him and helped him to fall asleep. This is when one night out of the darkness  I heard a feeble voice cry out 'Sethu... excuse me for having been harsh with you. I did care for you'...and then it sank into oblivion. I wondered if it was a dream, and I never heard his voice again. He passed away a few months later, after I returned to the UK. 
Those words ring in my ears even now. I still wonder if it was all my crazy imaginative mind's creation? He was a very proud man and always showed compassion and gratitude only through benevolent actions, not words. 
I feel grateful for the values he (and Amma too) instilled in me and my kin- the resolute resistance to corruption and bribery, compassion to put others before self, the courage to speak the truth to support others, and the honesty to admit one's mistakes and move on. 
I think I might have tried to emulate him at a subconscious level in my life journey. Although I might have not perhaps lived up to everyone's expectations, I do feel proud that I have lived up to his.

My DAD My HERO

November 9, 2020
My DAD My HERO 

Its only with Awe and Admiration that I can think of my Dad.   I  respected him so much that he is held in high esteem,  and assumed  to be almost  infallible for me. There are many instances in my life, where I have put myself in his shoes  and took decisions based on what he would have done,  under those circumstances  

As a man of very high principles he instilled a sense of honesty in us from the time we were toddlers .   We were rewarded, if we owned up  to the naughty pranks we committed. If we broke something, or  was the one to pick up a fight,  or lost  something valuable, admitting the same  would be forgiven  and not punished. He had an uncanny knack of finding out when we lied and mind you, we would not be spared for lying. So it was indeed very difficult, to even speak a white lie. I still remember,  how I lost Rs 100 (Roughly  more than  Rs 2500 today),given to me  during the study tour of South India while  doing my Engineering. I was upset and in tears. However when I reported the same to  him after reaching back,  he consoled me and asked me to forget it, though I knew that it was quite invaluable during those times.   

 He instilled a  sense of responsibility in me from a very young age which stayed with me forever. Once when Dad and Mom had gone for an official party leaving  us in the care  of the Orderly,  when we were very young, The orderly informed us that a movie “ Tere ghar ke saamne “ was being screened on the big screen,  in the Cantonment. They used to screen   movies on a 5 Ton truck, on some  weekends to entertain the family of the Officers and Jawaans.  All of us were game , and left along with him to view the same.     On return from the Movie, I was taken to task, with the others being let off.  I was told that me being the eldest, should have been more responsible for the safety and well being of my siblings and  better sense should have prevailed.  Though I felt miserable then, I realized later,  that  it was the stepping stone for me to shoulder responsibilities

We were introduced to reading  from a very young age. Dad  had a good collection  of books, stocked  in a  wooden shelf,  as he himself  was a voracious reader.  He was particular about spending money on buying books rather than on buying jewelry or other accessories for beautifying oneself. He was up-to-date,  on all current affairs  reading newspapers beginning to end, and  listening to the NEWS  on the Radio. (and later Transistor)

I am not too sure,  if it is due to the Training in the Army or not, he led a very disciplined life. We never found him idling in the house. Either he would be reading,  or  busy  doing  repairs to  things  found broken, fixing pipes,  drilling screws, fixing insulation tapes, hammering  nails  or painting the doors / windows of the house, even mixing cement to  lay the bricks in the garden.   Not only would he tend to the vegetable garden, but also water the plantain and coconut trees,   which he fondly  planted   in the yard.  After getting his posting to Calicut,   he even bought few cows and reared them  in our  backyard. Being a vegetarian, he was particular that we get quality milk , butter, ghee,  curd and other milk products.  May be some of these  qualities unknowingly rubbed on me  too. 

Doing a professional course meant,  appearing for exams every six months and studying for the same meant burning midnight oil. Dad would  sit up along with us, and check with us if we were ready  to go to sleep. We would be put  at ease,  knowing fully well, that  he would  wake us up at  the  time specified by us  in the wee hours,  to  enable  us to, complete  balance portion if any. As I was the one, who was  never ever able to complete sufficiently enough,  I would shamelessly  ask him to  wake me up   at 3 or 4 Am as the case may be,  and there he would be up,   with a warm cup of tea to energize  me to complete my revision.

We were very few girl students doing engineering in those days and almost all of them were hostelites, barring me and my sister.  At times, due to special classes or extended Labs /Workshops , or some unforeseen strikes, we used to be  late to reach home.  We could sense his anxiety and care, as we would find him  waiting in the Verandah looking  towards  the gate waiting  to see us get down from the Bus. It   is relevant to note that those days ,  it was quite risky for the girls to be travelling late in the evenings. Despite that, when I got a call from BPCL  to attend the Interview in Mumbai, I asked him if he could accompany  me, to which  he  declined.   As an add-on he added,  “  If I accompany you now,  do you think  you  will be able to  manage, when you have to  go on an out station Tour  or when you are transferred?  Education should help you in taking the right path and right decision”    In simple ways,  he  instilled a sense of self-confidence and fearlessness in me ,  which I  followed  to the T,  for my daughter too. Since he displayed complete Trust  in me, I was careful in not breaking his trust

 10 years of my school education was spent in 5 schools, in 3 different states

I may have been about  6 years or so , when the  Indo Chinese war broke out  in the 1962. Dad was posted in Jorhat Assam, and  we were packed off to Kerala to stay  with our grandparents,  as he had to be at the Warfront and families were expected to leave. My memories are very faint  during this stage , except that  we walked to a govt  school in our village to learn the first letters in Malayalam.

Once the war got over,  he was   transferred to Benares,  and he   took us to Benares where we started our schooling in a Private school.  But no sooner,  India was again waging a war with Pakistan in 1965,   and he was asked to  report at the Border (Presumably Kashmir). There was no time to even tell us. Today I tend to  think of such  families, where their near one left like this, never to return again. The memory which stays with me, is of my mother taking lots of Vrathas  and  fasting for his wellbeing.  When back,  on a short leave, we asked him to talk about the war,  and he explained about  the Trenches  and bunkers (where they took shelter from falling bombs or other attacks),  and about the Tanks and soldiers captured by the Indian Army, his march into the enemy territory and so on. He soft played  the glamorous part by explaining that,    when we were playing Diwali with crackers, they were also hearing the crackers of  gun shots and  bomb explosions every  where.

These were the real stories of real heroes for  a young girl at an impressionable age of 8  or 9,  when  one starts hero worshipping the real hero, her Dad. After watching the Hindi  movie ‘Haqueeqat’ released in 1964  set in the backdrop of the Sino Indian War of 1962,  I had the  desire  to join Indian Army which never materialized though, as they were  not  recruiting  ladies other  than doctors in the Indian  Army, when I  graduated  , a reality to which I reconciled later .

After the 1965 war,  he was transferred  to Jammu,  and we left Benares to be with him . We stayed in Mud houses with thatched roofs which enabled them to be camouflaged during wars or red alerts . We got admission in the Presentation Convent Sr Secondary School at Jammu.  Faintly remember  how on certain  few red alerts, we  were asked to go under the beds and switch off all lights and so on.  Even that stay was short lived,  as he got transferred to Abohar Punjab,   another Posting on the Indo Pak border which had no facility for education .

This was a conflicting period for dad, where the dream of educating his children  got pitted against his  love of serving the Nation. Each transfer implied a drop to a lower class  for us, due to the change in the curriculum / medium of instruction or standard of education. Fortunately a double promotion helped me to gain one lost year.  After discussing with us, and convincing us,  he decided to  admit us  in Boarding school ( Sacred Hearts Convent )  at Trichur  (his native place) and keep the  2 youngest of us with him at Abohar, as they were still  in their lower primary classes.  I  think the  youngest 2 were at their naughtiest  best , after we left for Kerala.  Naturally we were upset with this arrangement,  as there was no means of communicating, other than with letters, which took its own  sweet time,  and commuting by train which also  meant 2 to 3 days of travel in those days  (1967 to 69).  It was the longest period of separation and bitterness for us .

We begged Daddy  to try  for a Kerala Posting,   and though it meant  some compromise and setback  in his career,  Dad could manage a Transfer  to  the NCC Wing,  at Barracks Calicut ,  when I  was in studying  in  the 8th standard.  To continue with the State board of Kerala ,we( me and my sister ) got admission in Providence GHS , which also meant studying Malayalam as a first language  afresh  from 8th standard ( after Half the year was over ) which was less painful than staying apart in the Boarding School.    Dad  was also the commanding officer  at Providence School/ College, REC and many other educational Institutions in Calicut.  It was at this juncture , that he took a decision, that we children  would continue our education at Calicut ,  and he would proceed alone on further transfers. As expected he was soon to  leave  for the  next  Indo Pak War  called for liberating Bangladesh  in  1971.  Unconsciously,  I  started  taking  (or may be I was entrusted  with) more responsibility for my younger siblings. 

After Engineering, I got  a job with Bharat Petroleum at Mumbai,  and was soon  married.  Dad and Mom joined us in Mumbai  in the late 90s after he survived  2 cardiac arrests. Physically he was sick, but  relentlessly he  continued his disciplined life  which were  an example  to be emulated by our children in their lives.  I don't want to speak more on this as my  children have shared their memories 

While at Mumbai to engage him, we took him for the movie “Border” released in 1997,  based on  the 1971 Indo Pak war,  which he had participated  in,  and  could relate  to the incidents and  locations (Longewal)  shown in the same.  We could also take him for an Outdoor Show at MMRDA grounds which replicated the War scenes,  and locations affected during  the Kargil War,  as he could relate to them  more than any one of us, even though he had not participated in ‘The Kargil’ War.   All though we are children of a Patriot,  of a very  high order,  we still   don’t  want wars to be fought between  nations (if it can be avoided), which  leaves indelible marks on the near and dear ones  of both  who had survived,  as well as of those who were Martyred  .

I salute My Dad,  My Hero , for inculcating a sense of responsibility, Honesty, Integrity, Hard work, Tenacity, Sense of Fairness, Respect for the Seniors ( Be it in age or Rank )  and the Never Say Die Attitude,  which stood  me in good stead throughout my Academic/ Corporate/Personal and Domestic  Life , as well as helped me  in bringing  up my children who have imbibed  these  values though unconsciously
Forever missing you Daddy  ..  Gita Ramachandran 

ഒരു ഓർമ്മ കുറിപ്പ് കൂടി...

November 9, 2020
By NV Balagopalan 
 ഒരു ഓർമ്മ കുറിപ്പ് കൂടി...
ഞങ്ങൾ കുവൈററിൽ നിന്ന് മടങ്ങി വന്നതിനു ശേഷം ഞങ്ങളുടെ വീട്ടിൽ സ്ഥിര താമസമാക്കിയതിനു ശേഷം സുധയുടെ അച്ഛനും അമ്മയും കുറച്ച് ദിവസങ്ങളിൽ വന്ന് ഞങ്ങളുടെ കൂടെ താമസിക്കാറുണ്ട്. ചില സമയങ്ങളിൽ അച്ഛൻ മാത്രമായും വരാറുണ്ട്.അങ്ങനെ ഒരിക്കൽ വന്നപ്പോൾ അച്ഛൻ മാത്രമെ ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നുള്ളു.
രാവിലെ പ്രഭാത ഭക്ഷണം കഴിച്ചതിന് ശേഷം ഞാൻ എന്റെ പാത്രം കഴുകി കൊണ്ട് നിന്നപ്പോൾ പിന്നിൽ അദ്ദേഹം പാത്രവുമായി നിൽക്കുന്നു. ഞാൻ പറഞ്ഞു പാത്രം അവിടെ വച്ചോളു. കഴുകാനായി ഒരു സ്ത്രി വരും അവർ കഴുകി കൊള്ളും. അപ്പോൾ അദ്ദേഹം പറഞ്ഞത് “ നാം കഴിച്ച പാത്രങ്ങൾ കഴുകാൻ വേറൊരാളെ ആശ്രയിക്കണ്ട ഞാൻ തന്നെ കഴുകിക്കൊള്ളാം”. എന്നിക്ക് വലിയ ബ ഹുമാനം തോന്നി. ഞാൻ എന്നും ചെയ്യുന്നത് സ്വയമാണെങ്കില്ലും മിലിട്ടറിയിൽ വലിയ ഉദ്ദൃോഗം വഹിച്ച ഒരാളിൽ നിന്ന് അത് കേട്ട പ്പോൾ വളരെ സന്തോഷം തോന്നി. ഒരോരുത്തരുടെയും വൃക്തിത്വം അവരുടെ വാക്കുകളിൽ നിന്നും മനസിലാക്കാൻ കഴിയും.
by BALAGOPALAN NV

My Muthachan

November 9, 2020


A self made and independent man as I knew him..a very disciplined person, who was pretty set in his ways.  His independence was something he could never shake off and the thought of being dependent on another was something he could not think of.  His grit and perseverance are qualities, that I believe, I have inherited from him. 
As a toddler, I spent a considerable amount of time with my grandparents.  My parents who were unable to sustain the demands on their career in fast paced Mumbai and two little ones who needed a lot of time, took the hard decision to leave me and my brother in the loving care of my grandparents settled in Kerala for a short period of time.  Of course, all my memories are from photographs taken at that time. But yet those memories have been reinforced by the narratives around me.  Our home in Kerala, which no longer sadly exists, faced a beautiful garden, which he tended to personally.  The front porch where he would be parked reading his newspapers, would be his vantage point to keep an eye on all passer bys of the front gate.  We would sit next to him on the floor and playing or fighting with each other under his watchful eyes. I know my memories of living with my grandparents and uncles and going to nursery from there to be filled with happy times.
Eventually we started going back to visit them only during school vacations. He would be there at the station to greet us after the long three-day train journey.  He made sure all our favorite snacks were made by ammamma , be it the delicious unniappams or arriundas, they were waiting for us as soon as we got back home. I remember skipping along with him on his walks, with my hand in his, clutching hard at the shiny pennies he gave me to buy my favorite naranga muttais from shops outside. A very helpful person, he never turned anyone away who needed his help. He was very particular about our studies and would keep asking us how we did at school. His love for reading was widely known.He would spend his day on that porch reading newspapers in English and Malayalam. When he went in to take his afternoon siesta or retire for bed, he would turn on his transistor and tune in to the All India radio.These resonances still crash into my memories of him.

One summer we got a call that he had suffered a severe heart attack. We packed and left immediately for Kerala. When we reached the hospital, he was back in the room his usual jovial self, chiding us for our worry and also asking my dad to get him some cigarettes.Of course, we didn’t give in to his demands.

After a few years and a couple of heart attacks, he and ammamma moved in with us. His health needed special attention. For us it was a big change to come home to piping hot meals on the table, and our grandparents for company, to talk to and tell them of our day in school. We enjoyed that a whole lot. As the teen years set in though, there were a few contentions between us, but nothing that wouldn’t get resolved the next day. He would be our go-to person when we were in trouble and  gave us the lessons to face up to our mistakes and that was the most honorable thing to do. It was a lesson, that required repeated learning. He was most happy in the routine he had set for himself, which to everyone’s chagrin he would not let go even in Mumbai. He would head out every day to the nearest vegetable market and get fresh vegetables, which my ammamma cooked for us. His walk, newspaper and radio were things he could never give up on. He knew my love for shopping and would give me some money always when I took ammamma shopping to buy something small for us. His love for cigarettes was also something I knew off and once caught him red handed with the smoke of the cigarette coming out from behind his kneee, where he had stuck it when he saw me. That was our secret for a long time. He had a weak spot for sweets and would often engage our services to convince ammamma to make something sweet for us (ahem him) . Of course she know what we were upto. 

His final months with us, his mental faculties started slipping away and we were given a very hard diagnosis to swallow.Alzheimer’s disease, a disease none of us had heard about.Nothing we read was enough to reconcile to the fact that there was no reversing what was happening to him. He was unable to hold the newspapers while reading them. He resorted to listening to the news on the radio more and more. Even though the news in Mumbai was not something he enjoyed listening to, he would not give up on it. There were periods of lucidity which we looked forward to, because that’s when he would return back to us. But those were few and far and gradually started disappearing. The disease took such a toll on him, that he started struggling with his day to days. It was hard for us to watch him and equally if not more for him to understand that he could not rely on himself.My brother and I took turns holding his hands and walking him.We tried to draw him into conversations about his army life, because that was what he remembered the most. We would read from newspapers to him. We would join him as he hunted for this very valuable item which he had hid safely... At some point, he stopped recognizing us too.

In his final days at the hospital, when I went to visit him, he had a moment of clarity and recognized me. That moment is forever etched in my memory and is as sharp as it can be. He reached out to me and asked me when I would fulfill my dream. I may not fulfill the dream he wanted me to , but I will continue to pick it up as and when time permits and see if I can even take a stab at it. I missed his presence at my wedding and then for every big occasion in my life but I am grateful that I got to know him even if it’s for a few years, my muthachan not just as a presence, but as part of my childhood just as it should have been.

A funny incident

November 11, 2020
All have been discussing daddy's diligent keeping up with the latest news habit. Or may I dare to say addiction!

He would listen to the the All India Radio news at crack of dawn, be at the gate to pick the newspaper to not miss a second of the freshness of information it provided, then listen to news all through the day.We heard Akashwani signature music streaming in daily everyday at dawn and dusk, Lothika Ratnam's husky contralto voice spilling the beans 3-4 times a day.

It was my medical school admission days - lots of tears, stress and anticipation. Everyday I was awaiting the newspaper's arrival to check if the results were declared. It was a strange experience- with excitement mixed with a dreaded fear of possibly also discovering that I hadn't been selected for the course!  As always, I expected dad to look it up and tell me if it had been proclaimed- as we would never get to the newspaper unless he was thoroughly finished with it, including the obituary columns. 

On a certain day, I asked my dad if there was any news and seemingly enraptured by some sensational news, he didn't even bother to respond. I went about with my normal business and left to the college, on the way out of home enquiring again to my still engrossed dad if the result was published anywhere in the newspaper- to a negative answer.  

As I got to my University building, I received a message that my mum had been attempting to reach out to me by phone. I immediately called home- and was told by my laughing mum who had just picked up the newspaper at around 9 am THAT THE RESULTS WERE OUT RIGHT ON THE FRONT PAGE!! He hadn't even noticed it! 

Totally confused and ALSO in panic, I gave her my candidate number..and  got to know that I had actually got into the course I had desperately wanted...MBBS!!  


My Dear Muttachhan

November 1, 2020
This was a movie starring Thilakan in the lead role of a grandfather who had retired from Military. As a kid growing up I related a lot to this movie. It had elements of the kind hearted nature of my grandfather and the sternness and uprightness of a Military man. I have not seen anyone as disciplined as him. He would wake up early morning 4:00 AM daily, read his news paper , make tea and then go about his daily activities. He had a transistor that he would regularly listen to news on. After his second heart attack he came and stayed with us.  
His story is that of rags to riches ,of a man who made his own opportunities ,of a patriot who loved his country ,of a family man, a stern father and a loving grand father...if anyone wanted to get inspired by a life this is a life story worth reading, emulating and learning from.

When I went for my engineering admission I was almost certain that my parents will figure out a way to enable my continued education. Not everyone gets opportunities handed down to them as easily though. I am from a middle class family living our daily lives in the hurry and scurry of a metropolis. My grand father in contrast was not from a well to do family. He had several sisters and brothers and the priorities of his family out weighed the priorities of him as an individual. So when he had the opportunity to learn engineering he was asked to make way for an older brother as the family would not be able to sustain the fees.. Now he was not one to take No for an answer. He made his mind up that he would do engineering and came to Mumbai. He taught maths in a college and earned for his education. He then went back to study at Anna University and completed his engineering. He was a student par excellence. He would often stay late nights and learn under a street light. His house did not have electricity . 

I hear he was a very stern disciplinarian to his 5 kids but even more, I hear from them respect for a man whose self belief and conviction gave them the confidence to excel in whatever field they chose. My mother is the oldest amongst his 5 kids. In the late 70s even though Indira Gandhi was the PM of India the culture and society was very patriarchal and male dominated. My mother excelled at academics and was among the top students. She had a penchant for Mathematics and Science just like her father. While not all father's have the courage my grandfather resisted all societal pressures and ensured my mother finished her engineering education. In today's world of #me too and #women empowerment my grandfather was the living epitome of how to encourage your child girl or boy to realize his or her dream.

All his 5 children have done really well in their respective fields and reflect in essence an aspect of his life. My mother was DGM in Bharat Petroleum the first women engineer in BPCL a fortune 500 company. She inherited his organizational skills and disciplined approach to solving problems.My Aunt Sudha  is the principal of a reputed Engineering College in Kerala and to me she reflects his traits for nurturing talent. There are several stories of my grandfather sponsoring some one's education. My oldest uncle Gopan is a Charted Accountant. He cleared it in his first attempt and to me he embodies my grandfather's structured thinking way of life. My Second uncle Sethu is a doctor and is a senior consultant for paediatric neurodisability and to me he shares the same yearning to learn with my Grandfather. My youngest uncle Mohan is an Engineer from REC Calicut and a Gold medalist from Indian Institute of Science Bangalore and has inherited the good looking genes from my grandfather. (Many people tell me I look like him ..just saying)..

As a grandchild my favorite pass time would be to engage him in a conversation to listen to war time stories. He has been part of all wars fought by India. He once told me the story of how during the 71 war he went deep into enemy territory when the enemy was on retreat.. My grandfather and his driver were driving deeper into enemy territory to recapture arms and ammunition left behind by the army. His driver requested that he be absolved of the duties to drive as it was against his religion to be burnt alive in enemy territory. My grandfather told him to surrender his arms and took charge of the drive himself. He then went on to recount how deep he had driven into enemy territory that year.

This was an astonishing story for me  as we always wonder what do the army members go through. Eventually they are all people and they also want to live and die with the same respect as each one of us.

I spent a lot of my formative years under his care and would often rush to him to avoid punishment from my parents. My grandfather would shield me so many times.
I am very grateful to these memories and still feel that he is out there watching out for all of us and guiding me through the difficult times .. 

Lots of love to My Dear Muttachan...



November 4, 2020
ഒരു മരുമകന്റെഓര്മ കുറിപ്പുകൾ


ഡാഡിയെ കുറിച്ച് എഴുതുമ്പോൾ എവിടെ നിന്ന് തുടങ്ങണമെന്ന് അറിയില്ല. കല്യാണംകഴിഞ്ഞു, ആദ്യമായി ഗീതയുടെ ഒപ്പം പല്ലവിയിലേക്കു ചെന്ന് കയറിയപ്പോൾ മനസ്സിൽ കുറച്ചു പേടി. അവിടെ എത്തിയിട്ട് രണ്ടുമൂന്ന് ദിവസത്തിനുശേഷമാണ് ഡാഡിയുടെ അടുത്ത് സംസാരിക്കുവാനുള്ള മനസ്സാന്നിധ്യം ഉണ്ടായത്‌


ആ കാലത്തു ഡാഡി കോട്ടക്കലിൽ, ജോലി ചൈതിരുന്ന കാലമാണ്. തിങ്കളാഴ്ച പോയാൽ പിന്നെ മടങ്ങി വരുന്നത് വെള്ളിയാഴ്ചയാണ്. അവിടെ ഒരു മുറി വാടകക്ക് എടുത്തു താമസിക്കുകയായിരുന്നു. വെള്ളിയാഴ്ച വന്നാൽ പിന്നെ ചെടികളെ ശുശ്രൂഷിക്കുകയും നനക്കുകയും മറ്റുമായി തിരക്കിലായിരിക്കും.പല്ലവിയിൽ ഉള്ള സമയങ്ങളിൽ സൂര്യൻ ഉദിക്കുന്നതിനു മുൻപും സൂര്യൻ അസ്തമിക്കുന്നതിന്ന് മുൻപും വിളക്ക് കൊളുത്തുന്നത് ഡാഡിയുടെ പതിവായിരുന്നു. കുട്ടികൾ മൂന്ന് പേരുടെയും വികൃതിക്കാലം ആയിരുന്നതിനാൽ എല്ലാ സാധനങ്ങളും ശരിയായ സ്ഥലങ്ങളിൽ എടുത്തു വക്കുന്നതും ഡാഡിയുടെ പതിവായിരുന്നു. ഒരാഴ്ചക്കുള്ള പച്ചക്കറികളുംപലചരക്കും അടുത്ത സ്ഥലമായ മലാപ്പറമ്പിൽ നിന്നുമേടിച്ചു കൊണ്ടുവന്നിരുന്നത് ഡാഡി തന്നെ യായിരുന്നു.


ചിട്ടകളുടെ കാര്ര്യം പറയുംബ്ബോൾ ഡാഡിയുടെ പേപ്പർ വായനയെ കുറിച്ച് പറയാതെ വയ്യ. മാതൃഭൂമിയും ഇന്ത്യൻ എസ്സ്പ്രസ്സും പതിവായി ഒരു വരിപോലും വിടാതെ അരച്ച് കലക്കി കുടിക്കും. വെറുതെ തലക്കെട്ട് നോക്കി പോവുകയല്ല. എല്ലാ ശ്രദ്ധിച്ചു വായിക്കും.ഒരുദിവസം ഏതോ ഒരു അറിയിപ്പിനെ കുറിച്ച് ഒരു ചർച്ച ഉണ്ടായി. പേപ്പറിൽ നാലോ അഞ്ചോ ദിവസം മുൻപ് വന്നതായിരുന്നു. ആ വാർത്ത എന്നാണ് വന്നത് എന്ന് ആർക്കും നിശ്ചയം ഇല്ലായിരുന്നു. അത് ഏതു പേപ്പറിൽ ആണ് വന്നതെന്ന് ഡാഡിക്ക്, യാതൊരു സംശയവും ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നില്ല. ഇന്ന ദിവസത്തെ പേപ്പറിൽ 
ഇത്രാമത്തെ പേജിൽ ഇന്ന പാരഗ്രാഫിൽ ഈ വാർത്ത ഉണ്ട്, എന്ന് പറഞ്ഞു തന്നു. ഓർമ്മ ശക്തിയുടെ കാര്യം പറയുംബ്ബോൾ ഡാഡിയുടെ ഏട്ടൻ ശങ്കരൻകുട്ടി അമ്മാമനെ പറ്റി പറയാതിരിക്കാൻപറ്റില്ല

ശങ്കരൻ കുട്ടി അമ്മാമൻ ബാംഗ്ലൂരിൽ ആണ് താമസിച്ചിരുന്നത്. അമ്മായിയെ കണ്ട ഓർമയില്ല. പറഞ്ഞു കേട്ടിട്ടേ ഉള്ളു. കവിതയും കിരണും ചെറിയ കുട്ടികളായിരുന്ന സമയത്താണ് ഞങ്ങൾ നാലുപേരും കൂടി ബാംഗ്ലൂരിലേക്ക് പോയത്. അന്ന് രണ്ടു ദിവസം ശങ്കരൻകുട്ടി അമ്മമ്മനൊപ്പം താമസിക്കുവാനുള്ള ഭാഗ്യം ഉണ്ടായി. ഇത്രയും ഓര്മ ശക്തി ഉള്ള ഒരു വ്യക്തിയെ അത് വരെ കണ്ടിട്ടില്ല. കണക്കിൽ വലിയ പ്രാവീണ്യമായിരുന്നു. എത്ര വലിയ പെരുക്കപ്പട്ടികകളാണെങ്കിലും അനായാസേനപറയുമായിരുന്നു. എത്ര വലിയ സംഘ്യയുടെയും ഗുണനവും ഹരണവുംവളരെ എളുപ്പത്തിൽ ചെയ്തിരുന്നു. സ്ക്യുയറും സ്ക്യുയർ റൂട്ടും കണ്ടു പിടിക്കുന്നതിനു ഒരു പ്രതേക വിദ്യ സ്വയം കണ്ടുപിടിച്ചിരുന്നു.

ഡാഡി കുട്ടികളുടെ പഠനത്തിനു വലിയ പ്രാധാന്ന്യം കല്പിച്ചിരുന്നു. അതുകൊണ്ടു തന്നെ ആയിരിക്കണം എല്ലാവരും നല്ലനിലയിൽ തന്നെ പഠിച്ചു മുന്നോട്ടു വന്നത്. ജോലിയിൽ നിന്ന് വിരമിച്ചതിനു ശേഷം, കോഴിക്കോട് ടൗണിൽ നിന്ന് കുറച്ചകലെ ആയി പാറോപ്പടിയിൽ ഒരു സ്ഥലം മേടിച്ചു സ്ഥിര താമസമാക്കി, കുട്ടികളുടെ ഉന്നത വിദ്യാഭ്യാസത്തിനുവേണ്ട കലാലയങ്ങളെല്ലാം അവിടെ നിന്ന് വേഗത്തിൽ എത്തി പെടുവാൻ പറ്റിയ ദൂരത്തിലായിരുന്നു. കുട്ടികളുടെപഠനത്തിന് ശേഷം എല്ലാവരും നല്ല നിലയിലുള്ള ജോലികളിൽ പ്രവേശിച്ചതും വിവാഹ ജീവിതത്തിലേക്ക് തിരിച്ചു വിട്ടതും അവിടെ വെച്ചായിരുന്നു.

അതിന്നു ശേഷ മുള്ള ജീവിതം പേരകുട്ടികൾക്കുവേണ്ടിയായിരുന്നു. കോഴിക്കോടും മുംബയിലുമായിട്ടാണ് പിന്നീടുള്ള ജീവിതം നയിച്ചത്. എവിടെ ആയിരുന്നാലും ജീവിതത്തിനു ഒരു ടൈം ടേബിൾ ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നു. പലപ്പോഴും അച്ഛനമ്മമാരേക്കാൾ പേരക്കുട്ടികളെ സ്നേഹിച്ചതും, അവരുടെ കാര്ര്യങ്ങൾ നോക്കിയതും ഡാഡി ആണ്. അതുകൊണ്ടു തന്നെ ആയിരിക്കണം, മുത്തച്ഛൻ എന്ന് പറയുമ്പോൾ ആ കുട്ടികൾക്കെല്ലാം ഒരു പ്രത്യേക വികാരമാണ്. ഈ ഒരു സംസർഗം കൊണ്ടുതന്നെ ആയിരിക്കണം പേരക്കുട്ടികളും നല്ലദിശയിൽ തന്നെ ആണ് പോയിക്കൊണ്ടിരിക്കുന്നത്.

ചുരുക്കി പറഞ്ഞാൽ ബാല്യ കാലത്തു അറിവ് സമ്പാതിക്കുന്നതിൽ വലിയ താല്പര്യം പ്രകടിപ്പിച്ചു. യൗവന കാലങ്ങളിൽ ഒരു വലിയ പരാക്രമിയായി, നമ്മുടെ ഭാരതത്തെ കാത്തു രക്ഷിച്ചു. ഇത് വരെ ഉണ്ടായ യുദ്ധങ്ങളിലെല്ലാം പങ്കെടുത്തു. ശത്രു രാജ്യങ്ങളിൽ ധീരനായി ആക്രമിച്ചു കയറി, എല്ലായ്‌പോഴും വിജയം വരിച്ചു മടങ്ങി വന്നു. കുട്ടികളെയും പേരകുട്ടികളെയും നല്ലവിധത്തിൽ വളർത്തി. ഒരുപാടു ആള്ക്കാര്ക്ക് അന്നും ഇന്നും ഒരു മാതൃകയായി നിന്നു. ഇന്നും സമൂഹം അദ്ദേഹത്തെ ഓർമ്മിക്കുന്നു. ഞാനും ആ സ്നേഹ മനസ്സിനെ സ്മരിച്ചുകൊണ്ട് വണങ്ങുന്നു.

രാമചന്ദ്രൻ

A Tribute to My Daddy

November 3, 2020
Daddy has instilled many values in me that I am grateful for. Some that I can think of, and I often mention to my children, are about not wasting food, valuing money and valuing education.

In addition to these lessons, Daddy influenced me in areas that might surprise some. He taught me the first song that I sang in front of a large audience in the Calicut Maananchira Maidan, back when I was just 6 years old. I still remember him singing “Re Mama Re Mama Re” for me. I think my musical journey started at this instance!

I used to be known in school for “Mono Acting", a talent that I first learnt from Daddy. He was a great storyteller, and he used this skill to train me to perform my first mono act in front of my school for our Annual Day celebration. Even though the story was a bit silly (about eating ladoos meant for somebody else and falling on the ground with pain), the act was well received by the school audience and I became known for this talent. This led me to further develop this art and win several prizes both inside and outside school competitions.

The other vivid memory that I have about him is how I would wait for him to feed me milk-soaked bread when I was a toddler. Another one is about the trip to Thrissur to take us for the Pooram, an event that I think he was very proud of since it was hosted in his hometown.

I used to feel proud internally when I used to hear aunts and uncles say how I looked and walked like him. “Chandran or Chandretan ne pole aanu Mohan.”

Today, I am filled with emotions when I look back and see how he nurtured me into becoming a capable and responsible person, a reflection of the man my father was.

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