Not every seed becomes a tree. Some fail to find nurture and germinate. Some remain dormant, patiently waiting for favourable times while some never break out their shells to meet the sun. “Failure to germinate”; the inability to belong, is sadly a predicament we often find ourselves in, when existing in spaces that don’t allow us grow into the full breadth of our beings. This is when we go searching for any loose fragments of belonging that offer comfort, even momentarily.
In Junagarh, Gujarat, I overheard a video conversation between a Tamilzh-speaking storekeeper and his grandson who was going to visit him from Coimbatore.
“Thatha, You are sure you don’t want anything else?”, the grandson asked.
“News papers…just the local news papers. As many as you can get.”
“Any particular piece of news you are looking for? Any particular publication?”
“Get whatever you can, how many ever you can. Topic or date doesn’t matter… Son, I just want to read Tamil.”
While some find strands of home in the reaching arms of language, others may find it in a plain old recipe:
A potato salad that the world couldn’t care less about. But to you, every notion of home and belonging came to rest in the simple act of washing mud off the potatoes in preparation. Everytime it was made, as ingredients came together, it felt like a time, a person, a place, a feeling, a universe you longed for began to piece itself back around you, atom by atom.
Few things say “I belong here” in the way that trees do. Some people want to be like trees while some want to be tumbleweed.
Tumbleweed, by design, have a layer of cells called the abscission layer. The purpose of this layer is to facilitate complete severance of the plant from the root system. A clean break allows the tumbleweed to roll off on a journey that can span hundreds of miles, anywhere the wind blows.
Like one Mr. O, the young man on a fruit-diet, who I met in the Palani hills – everything that made up his life back in Europe had the same presence as one of those cardboard boxes filled with miscellaneous objects that you pack but choose to leave behind when you move out of a house. He had left behind a life of excess, addiction and abuse and wanted nothing to do with it. He had shed it down to the last leaf and stepped out to meet the world.
Sometimes , consciously and successfully “Forgetting” , “Overcoming”, “Cauterizing”, is only half the job done. The bitter drink of grief and pain, even when emptied from our cups, leaves behind dregs.