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Age cannot wither…

What do you see when you look at all the old people around you? While most of us only see their fragility and helplessness, I see a whole lot more, says Seema Goswami.

Updated on: Nov 08, 2014 09:27 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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So, you are very into pottery,” she said, as I walked her to the front door, pointing to the many terracotta pots and figurines that lined the hallway. “Not really,” I demurred. “These were all made by my mother-in-law.” I could see her do a double take as I said this, though she was polite enough to disguise it. And sadly, I could understand why.

These days, my mother-in-law is confined to her bed – bar the occasional whirl on the wheelchair – with round-the-clock nursing care. So, all that who visit her now, see an old, frail woman who needs to be cared for as you would a small child.

And that is true, as far as bare facts go. But what is also true is that there is so much more to the woman lying in bed than her fragility and helplessness. But most people can’t really look beyond appearances to see this essential truth. They find it easier to deal with her reality by infantilising her.

And in seeing her as an infant (“it’s like a second childhood, isn’t it?” they smile indulgently) they wipe out her entire history, reducing her to a cipher instead of the three-dimensional woman she is.

But even though her visitors can’t seem to look beyond the obvious – an aged, helpless woman lying in bed, with nurses hovering solicitously around her – what I see is something very different indeed. When I sit by her bedside, I see a whole lot more. I see the bright young student, the first woman of her family to go to university in America to study industrial psychology (a subject that most people in India didn’t even know existed).



Seema-Goswami
Seema-Goswami
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I see the defiant woman who eloped with the man of her choice in the face of parental opposition. I see the radiant bride in Paris, in her Patola sari and her bouquet of flowers, basking in the glow of her happy-ever-after love story. I see the working mother, juggling office and a baby.



I see the dreamer who gave it all up to become India’s leading pottery artist. I see the untimely widow, left to rebuild her life, coping with adversity as best she could. I see the doting mother, the loving mother-in-law and the indulgent grandmother.



I see a person. A person with a history, a person who led a fun, full and fulfilling life, who loved, lost and then found peace and contentment in whatever circumstances life thrust upon her. I see stories in her wrinkles, laughter in her eyes, joy in her smiles.



What do you see when you look at the all around you? Do you regard them as objects of pity?

Do you see them as a waste of time?

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From HT Brunch, November 9
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