In lazy slow
motion, like a sloppily shot scene of a bollywood potboiler, the exact moment
when it, the virus, actually entered
our life plays itself over and anon. We have just started dinner and are half
tuned into Mr Modi’s address to the nation when he announces that from midnight
of that night, the country is going under lockdown. For a second no one speaks:
none of us are sure that we heard it right. But then he repeats it and in a
nano second we get into survival mode. I still remember the adrenaline rush,
the exact order of the vegetables and fruits I picked up that night, the panic
buyers clamoring for milk and other essentials, the empty shelves and bread
cartons in the neighborhood shops, the realization that terror now had a new name and it was COVID-19.
For about a week
life was all about reading up on the virus. We would exchange real news, fake
news, forwards- anything and everything, at mealtimes, on family whatsapp
groups, over phone calls. Everything was inside out, or should that read
outside in? Where earlier one stepped outside the serenity of the house to be
immediately enveloped in sound and people and watchful eyes, now the outside
was quiet and calm and the unhingement was all inside. We tried to wrap our heads around what was happening. And everything seemed to be happening at the same time, in an uncoordinated
avalanche of ruthlessness. Salary cut for the first born, an indefinite
postponement of law school Day Zero for
the younger one, no house help, an office bereft of staff for the husband. But
then slowly we emerged out of the shapelessness and elasticity to find our
Mojo.
Laughter was now in seeing the son making the beds and the husband setting the table for lunch and dinner. Love was in the sheer indebtedness of being together and alive. Work from home and online classes helped maintain order and rhythm. The husband discovered the joy of working in an empty office- the luxury of putting his feet on the table! And I discovered that Sooraj Barjatya had got it right some twenty-five years back: as long as Hum Saath-Saath Hain, even cleaning, cooking and washing up had an endearing appeal.
Laughter was now in seeing the son making the beds and the husband setting the table for lunch and dinner. Love was in the sheer indebtedness of being together and alive. Work from home and online classes helped maintain order and rhythm. The husband discovered the joy of working in an empty office- the luxury of putting his feet on the table! And I discovered that Sooraj Barjatya had got it right some twenty-five years back: as long as Hum Saath-Saath Hain, even cleaning, cooking and washing up had an endearing appeal.
What has also been proven right is the
ability of humans to adapt. The pandemic may have forced us to break with the
past and build a new world of social distancing but this world is no different
from what we were living in. As a matter of fact, it’s an even closer, more
contracted world where the friend in Singapore, the niece in London and the
cousin in the US are as close as the sister in the city. It is a world where
distinctions have blurred. No one will be traveling for a long time, posting
touched up pictures, wearing Prada or attending book launches. It’s also a more
convenient world. Bored of the conversation thread? No need for prolonged a
good bye. Bad network connectivity is a fault proof alibi.
In all this unpredictability what has
also been comforting is the tedium of human nature. We are wired to
communicate, to attitudinize, commiserate, brag. I truly want to hug that person who is
still able to talk about her friend
who is so well connected that at her son’s wedding a thousand Very Important
Persons were in attendance ; the one who will
have a drool worthy dish placed strategically during a zoom meeting; the
right winger who will take any
opportunity to turn the conversation to a strident defence of Modi ji, the
enthusiast who will share every joke
on the whatsapp group. I feel grateful to them for being that bowl of Maggi ,
providing comfort in continuity.
And on many moments in this period, I have
felt pride in the stoicism and fortitude of my people; gratitude for those
battling for solutions, shed tears for strangers and understood that what we,
the world, are going through is unique and shared. This period of retreat has also
helped me to come to terms with fear, understand that the cocoon one is wrapped
in at the moment is extremely fragile and can rupture at any time. Understood
too that the very seductiveness of its name, Corona, threatens to engulf us all
at some point in time. It truly begs the iconic question from the The Jacket: "How much time do we have?"
A Lifetime. The solemness of the words,
connoting the duration of a person’s life, of eternity, are almost never spoken
lightly. Lifetime. But, as life as we knew it, ground to a
screeching silence, we are, without any doubt, living a lifetime within another
one. We will all remember this time we
are collectively living in different ways: the fear, loss, pain, bonding and
love. Maybe, just maybe, some of us may indulge in the luxury of denial and not
remember these days. But in all this uncertainty what is certain is that we
have earned ourselves a place in history. Maybe, a Salman Rushdie will write
another Midnight’s Children and call it The Virus Generation?
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