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Daddy Dearest
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| Text by Anita Nair and Illustration by Abhijeet Kini | |||||||||
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Published: Volume 16, Issue 7, July, 2008
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Anita Nair equates her dad to Old Father William who stood on his head every now and then; and wonders how he became the perfect husband and the exemplary father that he is
These days, by about half past nine, my father excuses himself and goes to bed. Later in a reversal of roles, I would enter my parents’ room to wish him goodnight and he would be in bed with a transistor radio at his side and his sheet pulled to his chin. My father, however, likes to keep his feet uncovered. “I feel suffocated,” he explained once. And my mother had laughed, “He has his nostrils on his soles.” I think of how my father liked to take me for long scooter rides. Most Sundays, we would ride a long way and return in time for breakfast. We seldom spoke; the breeze would have snatched our words away anyway. My father seemed to need those little excursions more than I did. Stifled by the routine of the everyday, he seemed to need to breathe. My father seldom goes out now. He contains himself to spending the day pouring over the newspaper. It is the obituary page he spends a great deal of time on. Friends, family, acquaintances, one by one, they seem to drop off his horizon. I pause to touch his sole. His nails have grown horny and thick with age. The skin around the heel has hardened and I see age there in every crack and line. I feel a huge lump grow in my throat and expand into my chest. This is my father, I think. The man I loved first. In his arms I thought I was safe. Now all I want to do is keep him with me safe and forever. Many years ago, I chanced upon a book: And, When Did You Last See Your Father? I skimmed and scanned the opening paragraphs…I paused at the line: ‘My father does not like waiting in queues. He is used to patients waiting in queues to see him but he is not used to waiting in queues himself’. I smiled to myself. It was enough to make me want to read the rest of the book, though at that time I didn’t know who Blake Morrison was or why I ought to read his memoir about his father. What drew me to Morrison’s book was the openness with which he talked about his relationship with his father. There was no effort to judge or even justify his views. Truly significant in our times for where would we be without parents as scapegoats to explain why we turned out to be the way we turned out to be. There are countless quotes about parents and children. My favourite one is from the otherwise mild-mannered Philip Larkin: ‘They f*** you up, your mum and dad’. In contrast, the devilishly witty Oscar Wilde offers a sympathetic and deep understanding when he says: ‘Children begin by loving their parents; after a time they judge them; rarely, if ever, do they forgive them….’ When it comes to our parents, especially fathers, I think even the most free-spirited amongst us turn into arch conservatives. We view them with uncompromising eyes that would make even the most perfect of gods flinch. We expect them to never descend from that inviolable place we set them up first. Fragility, vulnerability, mortal flaws are what other fathers may be guilty of. Not one’s own! Fathers emanate a fragrance that is their own. My husband refers to a cherished memory of his father peeling him oranges. The combination of citrus and tobacco that clung to his father’s fingers combined to make it a singular memory, so poignant with ‘as long as I am around, I will make the sun shine on your world and the birds sing for you….’ Morrison is a writer whose work I continue to love. But amongst all his books, it was this first one I read that was to exert a tremendous influence on me. For one, it went on to make me want to explore a father-son relationship when I began my first novel. More importantly, it made me want to know my father better. Not as Zeus, ‘wise in counsel, father of gods and men, under whose thunder the broad earth quivers’ or as a vengeful Old Testament father figure but as the boy he was and the young man he became and now in his mid-seventies, the man he is.
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