Repeatedly crossing, while on my morning walk ̶ a sticky, vine-coloured patch on the walkway, painted
by jamuns that have fallen from the jamun tree, crushed by the
impact of their fall, and perhaps, inadvertently trampled upon by walkers, awakens
memories of the mulberry tree that stood in my parents' house when I was growing up. Right
at the entrance of the house, the tree caused a similar red and violet chaos on the floor,
which greeted us each time we entered the gate.
Today, as I walked by this red patch, I was reminded of an incident that my mother had narrated to me several times. It had taken place shortly after her marriage and her arrival in this house from her hometown. One day, she climbed up the mulberry tree, the शहतूत का पेड़ as we used to call it, to pluck mulberries, and was merrily at it when she suddenly spotted a neighbour passing by on his scooter. She immediately jumped off the tree ̶ embarrassed, reprimanding herself silently and making herself the promise of a more appropriate demeanour in the future ̶ one befitting a married woman.
For a girl born and brought up
in Dehradun, growing up amidst nature, in a house surrounded by trees bearing
mangoes, litchis and peaches, climbing a tree came effortlessly to her, and so did some inconceivable feats, like grabbing a rat by its tail and hurling it out of the house and in
the open. She lived in a large joint family. Climbing
those trees with cousins of all ages, plucking fruits and then eating them
together ̶ my finite imagination renders me incapable of measuring the joy she
must have experienced doing that. Why then, could she not do the same, in her new home? Why did she jump off the tree? For years, I lived
under the notion that she did so, on seeing the stunned look on the neighbour's
face. I was convinced about her being called on the carpet later to be told that
such an act was not expected of the daughter-in-law of a highly respectable
man that my grandfather was.
Today, I asked her what the
neighbour had said to her and her response left me dismayed. "Nobody said anything!" she explained. "I jumped off
due to my own doubts and fears. वो Uncle सोच रहे होंगे ̶ देखो, दुआ जी की नई बहू पेड़ पर चढ़ी हुई
है!!”
For that girl who grew up
climbing trees, this was probably the last time she ever climbed one. That moment
of assumption was the silent death of the spontaneity of her spirit. That moment of
assumption that arrived because gender roles and expectations are defined, as is the code of conduct for a married woman ̶ no, not in a manual, but in our
minds. Gender stereotypes, though a by-product
of the patriarchal society that we have always lived in, are now so intricately
woven into our conditioning that despite our progressive thinking, we are
unable to break free from them. The
solace in this 45-year-old story is that although she never climbed a tree again,
the years that followed were some of the best years of her life, again in a
joint family where fun never ended, albeit in other ways.
This was 1972. Four and a half decades later, I wonder if anything
has changed. I can climb a tree on a holiday, or on a picnic, but can I do it otherwise, without
glancing around to see who is watching? The fact is that we, as a society, are still
bound by an intrinsic need to adhere to norms. We live our lives the way others want us
to, conduct ourselves the way others expect us to and try to fit into roles
that others want us to fit into. And so, we don’t do the things we want to
because of the self-inflicted burden of conforming to societal norms that
leaves us so dissatisfied!
This Independence Day, besides
the many other ills that we seek freedom from ̶ as a nation, and as humanity, may we also, on a personal level, break the
shackles of our own mind, and learn to liberate ourselves from expectations,
assumptions, boundaries, forced codes of conduct and anything that does not
make us happy!