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Acceptance

I went to my park after a long time.  It was brightly lit, except that the trees stood as dark soldiers, silent and erect as if they had figured out their lives. Rain, shine, breeze, noise, silence – they stood there, weathering the elements and letting go of their withering parts. The gold and amber foliage beneath their feet, ready to be blown away at a strong whiff, indicated that as seasons change they let go.

Sitting on the swing, I saw the living and dead together, I wondered how to live a life like that, letting go of parts that were so integrated with oneself. Is this the difference between love and life? Love is a streak that comes and then goes away in a journey called life. The relationship between the leaf and a tree, beyond its physical connection, is that of a parent and child.

The life of a leaf is significantly shorter than a tree and nobody ever remembers a leaf – they do their little things, turn brown from little green, and all the glorious colors in between and wither in the autumn breeze. New leaves are born, and the cycle of myriad births continues. But there is one tree.

If the tree were a person and it had so many little relationships in its long life – the lifetime of a leaf is a blip considering its longevity — I would consider that its life is complicated and almost philosophical. The art of having short-term love – whether you consider the leaf as an offspring or a lover, and then letting go and moving on, and doing it all over again is as complex as it gets.

The leaf has only one to love – the tree. The tree has many leaves and its love is divided (or so it seems.)  This seems imbalanced at first thought, but it is a perfect symbiosis of a lifetime full of love by the leaf and a short stinted love by the tree. A tree needs the leaf to grow and keep its life on, and a leaf needs the tree to support its life’s journey.

I reflected on my life and the happenings over the past decades. Some people have come and gone, filling my life with joy and sorrow, love and hate. The stinted relationships have come and gone, but if there was lasting damage, my mind blocks them out. There is a conscious effort in me to forget the hurt, the stint, or even the person – as if I am blessed with selective memory.  Call it dissociative amnesia, but it has served me well. So, I am the tree in such a relationship.

But it is not universal. I remember and love people who are special, beyond the family, and I have loved them for a lifetime. In such a relationship, I am a leaf, for I have poured all my life into it –most of it was just waiting.

I’ve learned that waiting is the most difficult bit, and I want to get used to the feeling, of knowing that you’re with me, even when you’re not by my side.

― Paulo Coelho,Eleven Minutes

The waiting part was almost constant – for it was almost sure that things wouldn’t happen. The satisfaction lay in the fact that the person was somewhere else, not by my side, but the wait – the only act of love I perform. Such were the many years that went past – I got married, had a kid, and the family grew, and I grew older. Yet the waiting remained the same. Somewhere, in the corner of my heart, the love remained – like a little lamp glowing in the dark. Little, almost microscopic, but it was undeniably lit all the time. I ventured into that corner once in a while, just to check in – and like the leaf, I thought that the waiting could outlast my lifetime.

But unlike the leaf, my waiting wasn’t silent. It was demonstratively loud. I rained verses and published books. If love was ever stoic, it was here, but not silent. Why would I ever be silent?  I am not the quiet type.

I have never found anybody who could stand to accept the daily demonstrative love I feel in me, and give back as good as I give.

― Sylvia Plath, Journals of Sylvia Plath

So when my waiting ended, the only question was that of what remained. That was the hard part. There was something to live for, like how Nandi, the bull, waits eternally for Lord Shiva. But what if the Lord, the beloved appears in front of Nandi? I don’t know, to be honest.

I realized that when the waiting ended I would be in the gates of heaven. But what would the heaven be made of? It took some time to out, the person’s presence was the fruit of waiting. Right there, just in front of me. But as it turned out, it is like afterlife.

Ashok Subramanian
Ashok Subramanian
Ashok Subramanian is a Poet and Fiction Author based in Chennai, India. Ashok has been writing blogs and content since 2011. From technology and management articles, and to website content, Ashok has written articles on businesses, finance, funding, capital markets, management, strategy, and sustainability over the years. His poems and articles, which were published in blogs got a publishing turn when he had time in hand to put together his poetry and short story collections. He publishes short stories and poetry reviews regularly in his medium.com blog. His published works so far: a) Maritime Heritage of India - Contributing Writer - b) Poetarrati Volume 1 &2: Self-published on Amazon in Kindle and Paperback; Ranked #8 in Amazon Hot Releases in May 2020. c) A City Full of Stories: A Short fiction Collection based on people and events of Mumbai: Self-published in Amazon in Kindle and Paperback. d) Poetarrati Ponder 2020 - A collection of Poem Reviews He is currently working with his creative advisor and publisher on his next poetry collection. His second short story collection about Kolkata, India, and his first novel are in the manuscript stage. He is a graduate in Engineering from Madurai Kamaraj University, India, and a post-graduate in Management from IIM Calcutta, India. He currently runs Strategic Advisory and Investment Banking companies headquartered in Bengaluru. He lives with his wife Gayathri and son Anirudh in Chennai, India.

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