
I am celebrating silver jubilee of my
life on this Valentine, though the mode of celebration is different. I
celebrate it by pondering over the moments I once had in my life. Life would
have been more sweet and pleasant if I have the fruit of love still in my lap. But
where is the time? Where is the time for girls to have a look on an average guy
while so many hunks are already chasing them?
Sometimes I wonder why each boy wants his girlfriend to be a katerina
kaif and every girl her boyfriend a Salman Khan? Can’t we love one for what
he/she is? We fight over corruption in politics, impurity in vegetable oil and
uncertainty in our life. But do we respect and care for honesty in behaviour,
originality in one’s feelings and certainty in love? For me, unfortunately, the
answer is ‘No’. What does it suggest? Perhaps we have a corrupt heart, an
impure soul and an uncertain attitude. And the worse thing is we are not aware
of it. But I am fortunate enough in this matter because SHE came in my life,
what if for a short duration, and rubbed off my conscience.

If you have been in relationship with
six or seven girls/boys (pay your attention to the repetition of ‘S’ sound
here), it’s not any achievement. Rather it shows how much you lack consistency
and loyalty. Love is not a game like Cricket where your century would be appreciated,
mind it. It’s a deep passage to get refined just like falling into a pit to
grow like a lotus. That’s why we fall in love to rise later. Many of you would
not agree, I know. If there are varieties to be tasted and options to be opted,
why we shouldn’t try them, they say. To answer this query, let me tell you a
story. In fact, it’s not a story but an incident occurred recently to one of my
friends, Mohit.
This incident happens at a pilgrimage
to Goverdhan, a sacred place related to the most romantic and loving couple, Radha-Krishna,
near Mathura, Utterpradesh. It is believed that fulfilment of our diehard
wishes can be achieved by taking a round (Parikarma, as it is said in Hindi) of
Goverdhan Parvat, with complete faith and integrity, marching with naked feet.
It is almost 22 Kilometres long round to cover. I have visited this place
several times in this short span of my life. But on my latest visit, there happens
a unique episode that stimulates my faith in true love and its loyalty.

I have just started the revered
‘Parikarma’ of Goverdhan Parvat when a family – consisting of an old lady, her
son and daughter – joins me. The lady is of almost 55 years old and she is in a
yellow sari. Her son is in his 20’s and daughter should be 16. Soon we become
familiar as it is obvious there. The lady tells me that they are on their first
visit to this place. Out of curiosity I ask her if there is any strong reason
for their visit. Her face immediately becomes pale. With her sad face she
exchanges a glance with her son and relieves a sigh. She informs that their
life is terrible due to her son’s miserable condition. I instantly look at the
guy; he is six feet tall and seems to be quite healthy. What’s wrong with him?
He is absolutely normal, I wonder. She looks at me and reveals that he sees a
girl in his dreams but cannot identify her. And then he remains disturbed for
the entire day. Due to this, he is at the verge of losing his job. They are
very scared if she is a spirit or something. That’s why they are here in Lord
Krishna’s holy land. His mother has heard that the soil of this place has
something magical about it if it can cure her son’s problem.
I feel fascinated and become eager to
know more and more about her son’s life. When I ask her to tell the details of
his dream so that I may help them, she passes a sign to her son. And then he
unfolds his past life before me.
His name is Mohit. He works as a
technical officer in a call centre at DLF Phase IV in Gurgaon.
‘How many friends you have there,’ I
ask. He counts in his mind and replies, ‘three or four.’
‘So few? Don’t you feel compatible
there?’ I inquire and look at his face. He starts fumbling for words. I think
he is feeling hesitate in his mother and sister’s presence. So I ask him to walk
fast so that we can maintain a distance from them.
Now we are almost 30 feet ahead of
his family. I look back at his mother and she smiles as if she is saying ‘carry
on.’ Then we come back to the topic.
‘You are a well built guy, you must
have been in some relationship,’ I comment.
‘No, not up to now,’ he replies
reluctantly.
‘Don’t feel shy, you can tell me.
This is common now.’
‘Truly, I never have a girl in my
life in that sense.’
‘It sounds strange. What about your
other male colleagues? Don’t they have girlfriends?’
‘No . . . I mean almost everyone has,
even two or three at a time.’
‘So what’s wrong with you?’
‘Nothing, I just don’t feel like
that.’
‘Okay, who is your best friend
there?’
‘Kapil, his name is Kapil.’
‘How many GFs he has?’
‘He has three: Dipti, Reema and Neha.’
Mohit pronounces ‘Neha’ with an added emphasis.
‘How is Neha?’
‘She is receptionist there, very
beautiful and charming. I personally like her smile.’ I notice that this is the
first time when Mohit himself furnishes details about someone, that too
willingly, without waiting for my next question. There can be something more
about Neha, I think, and ask him to describe her.
‘Neha? She is gorgeous. Just like an
angel.’
‘So, if you like her so much, haven’t
you tried to be her friend?’
‘No . . . I mean she doesn’t like
reserved persons like me.’
‘Okay, how is her relationship with
kapil?’
‘She is damn serious about him. But
he is a big flirt. Actually, he likes Aditi. But Reema spends money on him so
he is intimate with her too. For him, Neha is just a time pass.’
‘Haven’t you attempted to make him
understand?’
‘I try sometimes but he thinks I am
jealous of him.’
‘And what about Neha? Have you ever
talked to her regarding this?’
‘Once, but she took me wrong and said
that I abuse my friend because I want to claim his place in her life.’
‘Oh, so you are slapped from both
sides,’ I comment. ‘What do you exactly see in your dream?’ I think a diversion
is needed then.
‘I see a girl who has turned her face
and is crying. It’s a crowded place full of noises. All passersby stare at me in
a strange manner but my eyes are just fixed on her. There is something in her
hands, I cannot identify, and that she is holding near her bosom. But as I approach
her, she throws that object at me and walks away. When she throws that item at
me, a loud shriek comes out from my mouth and with it I wake up. That’s why,
now a days, my mother sleeps near me.’
‘Do you see only this version each
time or there happens to be some variation?’
‘There is a shadowy figure too at a
distance towards which she walks away after turning her back at me. But only
sometimes I can feel him there, not always.’
First I convince him that it’s
neither a big problem nor a disease to fear for. This dream is just a manifestation
of your unfulfilled wishes. It’s quite possible that what she throws at you is
your heart, and the guy to whom she goes is you friend and that crowd and
noises are of you call enter.
Now he seems more panicky than
before. Then I feel it’s the right time to reveal another possible dimension of
his dream.
‘You may likely see your friend in
your own image and the thing can be his heart that she throws back. She cries
because she is probably filled with regret for loving a disloyal person. And
the shadowy image towards which she moves may be you, since you are a mere
shadow, an unacknowledged presence, up to now.’
As he listens to my words, his
expressions change radically. Perhaps he is blushing from within. He meditates
a little and then asks, ‘Can this be the meaning of my dream?’
‘Of course, it can be and the
authentic one in my view,’ I say firmly. He is looking somewhat relieved after
listening this. The ‘Parikarma’ is finished at 2:20 am. After that we return
back to ‘dharmshala’ both sleepy and fatigued. He does not ask or reveal anything
else in the way back.
I wake up at 9:50 in the morning.
Mohit is lying beside me, hands folded on the chest. There is a light smile on
his face. I shake him and he opens his eyes. ‘Have you seen that dream during
last night too?’ I ask him, looking curiously into his eyes. There is calmness
and peace on his face when he says ‘no’.
Later when I join his mother and
sister for breakfast, his mother says that there is certainly a magic in this
soil that has cured her son. Mohit too is looking refreshed and relieved as if
a heavy stone has been removed from his chest.
I receive a call from him on 6 jan.
2012. He is very excited. He tells me that now he is no longer in that
depressed situation. Kapil’s reality has been exposed to Neha. She has caught
him red handed in a discotheque with Aditi on the eve of New Year. She is very
depressed after that. But yesterday she asks Mohit personally why he doesn’t
have a girlfriend. He simply replies that he loves her and that’s why he can’t
accept anyone else till now. She looks at him aggressively and then leaves.
‘Today, first time in my life, I
receive a call from a girl and it is Neha. She feels sorry for her yesterday’s
rude behaviour and reveals that she too likes me. But Kapil used to paint a
negative picture of mine before her. So she has never taken any interest in me.
But now she says she likes me.’ Mohit tells me and seems very happy and
excited.
Author’s note:
For me, this valentine is very
special. What if I don’t have someone to love me, to love in its harmonized
sense, at least I could become a medium of streaming love in the life of
someone like me. I love the concept of
love and the people who firmly believe in it, so that there would not remain a
single lovelorn self. In fact to make somebody deserving in his own eyes is the
true function of love. I did it unselfishly. Now it’s your turn. Have you made
this valentine special for you?