They
say that losing a child is the worst thing that can happen to a person. And I
believe them. As a mother, the thought is unfathomable. How do you live with a
part of you missing? There are no words to console a grieving parent and there
shouldn’t be. Nothing you can say will ever make them feel better, or help deal with
the pain. But, that’s not what this piece is about. It’s about losing a parent.
When I was 11, a dear friend lost his father and I could not conceive of a life without mine. I cried my eyes out and all Papa could say was, “But, I’m still here. You still have me”. That made me cry harder. What would I do if he ever left me? As an 11-year-old, I didn’t think I’d survive a day without him. That sentiment remained with me till I was 32. Then he died. He just left. This strong, wise, funny, oak-tree of a man was gone. His wit was legendary. His compassion even more. From 600 kms away, my mother called to tell me he was on the ventilator. But I knew. I knew I’d never hear his baritone and the endearing names he’d make up for me. I knew I’d never walk into my parents’ house again and see him reading a book, dressed impeccably, his glasses perched on the edge of his nose, his silver hair gleaming. I held my 3-year-old the entire flight back home, crying. She slept soundly while I wept. I was holding a piece of me in my arms, but I had lost a larger part of me.
When I was 11, a dear friend lost his father and I could not conceive of a life without mine. I cried my eyes out and all Papa could say was, “But, I’m still here. You still have me”. That made me cry harder. What would I do if he ever left me? As an 11-year-old, I didn’t think I’d survive a day without him. That sentiment remained with me till I was 32. Then he died. He just left. This strong, wise, funny, oak-tree of a man was gone. His wit was legendary. His compassion even more. From 600 kms away, my mother called to tell me he was on the ventilator. But I knew. I knew I’d never hear his baritone and the endearing names he’d make up for me. I knew I’d never walk into my parents’ house again and see him reading a book, dressed impeccably, his glasses perched on the edge of his nose, his silver hair gleaming. I held my 3-year-old the entire flight back home, crying. She slept soundly while I wept. I was holding a piece of me in my arms, but I had lost a larger part of me.
The
11-year-old me resurfaced. All my fears about not being able to go on without
him were not irrational. The pain of losing him hurt physically. I remember
every minute of his funeral. The sheer amount of people in attendance was mind-boggling. It was as if no
one could believe he had gone, and they had all turned up to see for themselves. I wasn’t alone in my disbelief. Yet, I was the
only one in my consuming grief. My little girl kept asking for her Nanu and
I had to make my peace with the fact that she’d have to grow up without his
wisdom in her ears. Without his advice. Without him.
Staring
at life without Papa and a long-drawn divorce and custody battle, I felt ambushed.
It was just round one of the biggest fight of my life and without my greatest
supporter. But somehow I found the strength to push back. Years of litigation
followed, but I never thought of giving up or backing out. My prayers were
punctuated with sobs, and my Bible pages stuck together with the tears that
fell on them. I pushed on. He would have wanted me to.
After
6 long years of standing my ground, stubborn like my father, I won. I got my
divorce and my child was old enough to understand what it entailed. It was
Win-Win. Papa wasn’t physically present to see me win. He wasn’t waiting for me
outside the grimy court. He wasn’t there to shake my spectacular lawyer’s hand
and thank her. He wasn’t at home expecting me to walk in the door with the best
news he’d heard since the birth of my child. But he was there. 1708 days after
I lost him, I walked out of that court, victorious. The strength it took to not
falter, not waiver, not give in, not yield, could have come only from his
testimony. His faith, his trust, his immovable belief that what we ask for we
receive, was in me. When we ask of a Living God. He answers.
My oak tree had gone, but he’d left his strength behind for his acorn…
My oak tree had gone, but he’d left his strength behind for his acorn…