Everyone has a story. This is my story. Not that it is
something exceptional, I just enjoy playing around with words and the process of
airing my inner contemplations through writing. I come from a family of
writers. Like most musicians or painters or dancers come from families that have
these respective art forms inborn into their beings.
As with other art forms, writing is a flow, its natural,
there is an esthetics to good writing, an originality, it’s a gift from the
Universe, and it has a soul. One doesn’t write for an audience, one writes
because one wants to express oneself though a medium. I do tend to digress
during my ramblings, a little like the abstract art forms where the expressions
get a little mixed up.
So back to my story.
It’s the problem I have with handling intimate relations
that somehow confuses me. I mean there’s nothing confusing about it, it’s just
that I’m incapable of handling such relations, that’s pretty clear; the
confusion lies in the why. Why am I incapable, whereas other normal human
beings aren’t.
Let me start with the story of my birth. I did come into
existence approximately nine months before my birth, but that part of the story
will be shared later.
I was born in Mahendra Mohan Choudhury hospital, Guwahati. My
mum’s labour pains lasted the whole night through, you all know how intensely
painful labour pains are. The clocked time for my delivery in the gynaecologist's
delivery note is 10.07 am. That’s a really long period of bearing the labour
pains. As a doctor, I know that the time taken for a primipara (a first time
pregnant woman) is the longest. In subsequent pregnancies, the time gets
shorter as the uterus and birth canal openings have been prepped by the first
delivery.
That was in 1970, in a rural Assamese family. Everyone
wanted the first born child (and perhaps all subsequent ones) to be males.
Perplexes me trying to figure out that if all kids were male, who would give
birth to them if there were no females around. You know, the chicken and egg
story basically.
To make things worse, some Goddess had appeared in my mother’s
dream when she was pregnant assuring her that her first born would be male. But
look what happened, I am the first born and I was born unambiguously female. Obviously, there
was disappointment all around, everyone feeling sorry for my mum. My
grandfather had come to see me in the hospital. When he went back home, his 7
children and wife surrounded him eagerly, waiting to hear about their new
niece.
How does she look, they asked.
Sotal Mohajanor natini, sotal e hoise.
Sotal Mohajan was my paternal grandfather. He was extremely fair,
pink and fair, but he had a flat nose. Therefore the nickname Sotal (his actual
name was Rajat). A courtyard is called Sotal in Assamese. His nose was as flat
as a courtyard.
Sotal Mohajanor natini sotal e hoise. The granddaughter of
Sotal Mohajan is also Sotal. That was a reference to my nose.
24 comments:
Loved the first part����waiting for more
Very interesting
So interesting Juri.. simply enjoyed reading it.. want its continuation ❣️
Very interesting, waiting for more 😍
Likhi ja... "one wants to express oneself" that's why one writes. Loved it. Keep it flowing.
🙏😁
Thank you ☺️
😘😘😍
☺️
😘😘😘😍
Lucid writing Juri ba. Waiting for next ...
So glad about your 'home-coming' (punned on purpose)!
Thank you, hopefully next will be soon 😁
Haha Huma, hopefully this time will be consistent 😅
Great Juri! Keep writing! Love it.
Great juri baa👍, waiting for next part to continue....
Thank you❤️
😍, hopefully soon
Lovely pieces of writing ma’am. Keep writing ☺️
Thanks Munmi!
Thank-you 😁
A very light-hearted touch to your he story. Interesting read.
A very light-hearted treatment of the narrative. Interesting read.
Thank you☺️. Appreciate your comment!
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