I had heard a
lot about her from the family grapevine before I actually met her . All good
things – that she was the ideal bahu ,
an excellent cook , educated to
just the right degree- enough to read and write but not enough to
give her businessman husband a complex etc. etc
We finally met at a family wedding
spread over three days . From the
very first day she slipped effortlessly , and cheerfully , into the role of the chief organizer/ worker / co host . What struck
me the most about her was not her indefatigable energy but the fact that here was a girl from some one horse town in
the hinterlands of Uttar Pradesh who was holding her own at a relative’s very
cosmopolitan wedding. Spunky was my verdict of her and the image I carried with me was of a smiling
face with a determined tilt to it. Many
years went by and, living in different cities as we were , we didn’t meet .
From the faithful family grapevine I heard
about the birth of her son , the marriage of her husband’s younger brother and
other tit bits .
.
Why did it happen ? Do things like this happen to people like us? It is now clear that they do. What makes an educated woman , married for more than 23 years take her life ? Well, many factors are at play but the main is the TINA factor. Yes, simply put ,it is that she feels there is no alternative. She has been the favourite punching bag of the family for too long. Family ? A father-in-law who spends his time acting out his celluloid ambitions of the archtype of the autocratic patriarch in real life ; a mother in law who is only a mother in law- not a woman ; a husband who spends his time between work and friends ; husbands brother whose importance lies in the fact that he marries a girl whose family is rich enough to send a regular supply of laddoos and kaju ki katlis. She suffers silently all those long years because her father is not alive and mother not rich enough to send the goodies. She lives the life of a second class citizen.
Why didn’t Dolly turn to anyone for help ? I don’t know if she did . But let us presume that she did . O.K . Let me take that further and hypothetically suppose that she had turned to me . What would my advice have been ? And , more importantly, would I have given her any advice or sympathetically looked in her eyes , maybe squeezed her hands ( and a few tears from my eyes ) come back home , looked at the familiar walls and faces , vowed to count my blessings and got back ,energized, to the business of living . Yes, the same thing we feel when we go to pay our condolences – the feeling of ‘ thank God it’s not happening / happened to me’
Here I stop. I have no more answers. What actually transpires in the heart and mind in those last few minutes , when the person is teetering between sanity and an insane desire to be free ? What tilts the scales either ways? No easy answers . But what is certain is that what we call suicide is actually murder. Murder of a person's dreams and hopes; of love and life; of laughter and emotions. Trial by Jury, anyone?
An image of a smiling face with a determined tilt to it floats before my eyes .