| Eternal
Moments - 2 |
 |
By Ma
Gurupriya
It
was after lunch. I was sitting on a chair in the lower
verandah of the Ashram, talking to Jaya and Skandaswamy.
Others were busy with their respective work. We were waiting
for Poojya Swamiji to return from Vyasa Tapovanam. He had
gone there in the morning for a meeting on the Bhaagavataa
Tattva Sameeksha Satram and was getting delayed.
As
we talked, I could see an old man coming through the gate.
He was walking very slowly with the help of two walking
sticks held in his hands. "Must be one of the regulars
whom Swamiji gives some help," I thought. I also
wondered how much money Swamiji would give him usually. As
Swamiji was not in the Ashram, it was my responsibility to
give him help.
I
went inside, came out with a ten rupee note and stretched it
our to him. Instead of receiving the money, he spoke in a
very shaky voice. Most of his words were not even audible.
"Amme!"
he said, addressing me, "I need thirty rupees, Amme. I
have to go to Kozhikode for treatment. Medicine and food are
free there. I need only the fare to reach there –
only thirty rupees! It would be a great help to me if you
give me that amount".
As
he spoke, I observed him closely. He was very old – too
old even to stand erect. The two sticks supporting him were
made crudely out of bamboo stems, may be by someone who took
pity on him. His face was swollen. His eyes also were
swollen and watery. I wondered whether he could even see
properly. His dry rough skin gave him a shabby appearance.
He wore a ragged dirty dhoti and a shirt equally
dirty. With a blank expression on his countenance, he evoked
a lot of sympathy in my mind.
I
asked him wherefrom he had come. He came from a distance, he
said. Somebody had directed him to this Ashram, assuring him
that the Swamiji here would certainly help him.
When
I handed over the thirty rupees to him, his face lit up. He
looked at me with grateful eyes and tied the notes carefully
in one corner of his dhoti. I asked him whether he
would need more. He nodded negatively and murmured, "Amme,
normally I would not have come this way. Only because
somebody suggested, I came. And see, I got the thirty rupees
I needed!"
"Amme!"
he said, "you have done me a great help." He kept
on repeating this over and over again with a lot of emotion.
I
asked about his family, only to hear that he had none to
call his own. I was visualizing this forlorn figure in a
hospital far away in Kozhikode – lying all alone in a bed.
In this condition of health, how will he go there and with
whom? Will he be able to reach the hospital? Will thirty
rupees really be enough? But he refuses to take more... what
else can we give him, which may be useful to him... all
these thoughts rushed past my mind, while I listened to his
murmur.
I
remembered that some poor villagers come to the Ashram
asking for old bed sheets whenever someone in their house is
ill or has to be hospitalized. They express their relief and
gratefulness on receiving bed sheets especially during the
rainy season.
"Do
you need a bed sheet?" I asked him, thinking he might
need one in the hospital. His face lit up with happiness:
"It will be nice to have a bed sheet. Then I can cover
myself when it rains." Jaya went in to fetch a bed
sheet from our stock of old clothes. On second thoughts I
asked Jaya to get a new dhoti too. I was sure Swamiji
would have given him all these and even more had he been
present.
When
Jaya gave me the packet, I went up to the Neem tree under
which the man was standing. With lot of love and sympathy, I
hung the polythene bag in his stretched out hand telling him
about the contents. The old man's eyes were gleaming. Were
these tears in his eyes? Did he feel touched by the love and
concern we expressed?
Looking
up, fixing his clouded gaze on my face, he whispered:
"I had asked for only thirty rupees, but you have given
me so much! I was destined to get all these things, perhaps.
I never come this way, but today someone guided me here. It
is all God's wish! Oh! What a day! How much of love and
compassion I got today!"
"If
our Swamiji were here, he would have given you even more.
You would have experienced divine love and compassion. He
would have talked to you a lot," I said.
Looking
at me with his watery eyes, he said, "I will go to
Kozhikode now and get admitted in the hospital. Somebody
will definitely help me get into the train. I will cover
myself with this bed sheet; I will cover my head with this mundu
(Dhoti)... it is cold in these rainy days..." He
went on murmuring in a happy and delighted note.
But
he stopped abruptly as if something painful had struck him
and he was not able to contain the pain. He gazed at me
intently and said, "Amme, you have shown such
compassion and given me so many things without my asking.
But old and sick as I am, after going to Kozhikode I do not
know whether I will be able to come back and see you again.
Will I ever come back? Will I ever see this Amma
again?" His voice was soaked in sorrow now.
He
turned to go. His each step was painful. It was then that I
noticed that he was wearing torn slippers of two different
sizes and colours! His feet were bruised and heels cracked,
swollen. There were dirty big nails too, protruding out of
the toes.
I
looked at Skandaswami. He understood my mind and said,
"Amma, we have chappals to give." I went to
the man who had moved only a few steps by now. "Wait,
wait! Your chappal is very torn. We are bringing another
pair for you." He stopped, turned slowly and looked at
me. With a beautiful loving but sad smile, he said: "Madi
Amme (enough, Mother), these chappals are enought for
me. I can walk."
"Wait
a little," I pleaded, "we will give you some
bananas (nendra pazham). You must be quite hungry by
now!"
But
he did not agree. "Amme," he said
hesitatingly, "I don't want anything more. What you
have given me is more than enough."
I
stood under the Neem tree in front of the old guest house
and watched the frail figure totter towards the gate.
Apparently a forlorn figure, cared by none, owned by none,
except by the Creator perhaps! But how contented was his
face now – as if the whole world meant nothing to him
after he received the thirty rupees he sought for!
I
got back to my daily chores, but the scene remained in my
mind – the old man's wrinkled face, his gleaming eyes, the
contentment he enjoyed, his refusal to accept more than 'his
minimum needs'! How many of us can take such a stand? How
many can accept their unfavourable fate without grumbling
and brooding? Apparently very poor, is he to be called poor?
Was not his mind rich with contentment and acceptance?
The
last two lines of the verse Poojya Swamiji often recites
from Bhartrihari's Vairaagya Satakam (Verse 53) kept ringing
in my ears:
Sa
tu bhavati daridro yasya trisnaa vishaalaa
Manasi ca parituste ko'rthavaan ko daridrah
When
I had first heard Swamiji recite the verser, I was struck by
its rich content: "They alone are poor, who foster
raving desire. When the mind is contented by itself, how
does it matter if one has wealth or no wealth?"
I
also remembered what Baba used to say: There are people who
live happily with contentment even if they are living under
a tree eating pounded rice. But there are others who grumble
and are unhappy even though staying in palatial mansions,
eating lavishly.
Throughout
the day so many things happen. But there are some moments
which remain etched in the mind. One more pearl gets added
to the garland of eternal moments.
Harih
Om Tat Sat. Jai Guru.
* * *