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MY
TEMPORARY SON -AN ORPHAN'S STORY
NON-FICTION
“The book is about love and loss, and how destiny
– from being discarded at birth- brought an orphaned
baby first to my wife’s notice, then into our
home to be loved, and then taken away to Europe with
his adoptive parents. It’s also about my deep
personal relationship with Bhima and how he changed
me, and we him.”
REMEMBERING GOLDEN BELLS (Po Chu-I 772-846 AD)
Trans. Arthur Waley
Ruined and ill, - a man of two score;
Pretty and guileless, - a girl of three
Not a boy, - but still better than nothing:
To soothe one's feeling, - from time to time a kiss!
There came a day, - they suddenly took her from me;
Her soul's shadow wandered I know not where.
And when I remember how just at the time she died
She lisped strange sounds, beginning to learn to talk,
Then I know that the ties of flesh and blood
Only bind us to a load of grief and sorrow.
At last, by thinking of the time before she was born,
By thought and reason I drove the pain away.
Since my heart forgot her, many days have passed
And three times winter has changed to spring.
This morning, for a little while, the old grief came
back,
Because, in the road, I met her foster nurse.
(Pub
date: Penguin India, September 2005. All other rights
available)
An Extract from the non-fiction book.
The
opening chapters of the book tell the story of the baby's
immediate rejection by its rural natural parents, and
its long pain-filled journey, through orphanages and
hospitals, to our home.
JUNE
Bhima came
to our house in mid-June, the nineteenth to be precise.
When I returned home from playing tennis there was no
baby in the downstairs guest room that had been lovingly
prepared for him. It had a bunk bed and Maureen had
pushed another single bed against that, stacked it with
pillows, to prevent him from rolling off. The guest
room was also partly an office with my filing cabinets
and a work table.
I
went up to our bedroom. It is a very large room with
a high ceiling furnished with a four-poster double bed,
cupboards along the walls and a television set. Along
with my sisters, brother and three aunts, I was born
in this house and now sleep in the very room I was born
in. This is
a strange feeling, having lived away so long in apartments
in New York, London and elsewhere, to return to one's
exact birthplace. It's comforting in one way, there's some permanence
in my life after years of wandering, yet unsettling
as I feel at times I've never ever been away and all
those years in exile are only an illusion.
Maureen
was lying on the bed, proud as any new mother, with
a sad-faced baby, thin and fragile as a mosquito, beside
her. Bhima watched me warily, teetering on the brink
of tears. His eyes were round, large and mesmeric. He
looked more like a girl with his thick curly hair and
delicate round face, and I could see why there had originally
been doubt about his gender. No doubt he was worried, afraid and bewildered by this further change
in his environment. Where were the iron-barred cots,
the rows of babies crying in their pens, the orphanage
women, familiar sounds? And here was yet another stranger
staring at him.
'He'll
be here a few days. That's if it's okay by you.'
I
was surprised that my permission was needed as, like
other husbands, I didn't have such an authority of refusal
in my home. Bhima was watching me strip off my sweaty
tennis outfit.
'Sure,'
I said, and headed for the shower, his eyes following
me around the room.
'When
he's well, he'll go back to the orphanage,' she added.
Then
he began to weep, not with any anger or pain, just sadly
for himself. A 'Where am I? Who are you? What's happening
to me?' weeping, I thought. Who could blame him for
those tears? He was barely fourteen months old and in
his brief, tragic life, had had five major moves.
I
let Maureen comfort him while I went into shower. I returned in shorts to lie on the bed, and watch the football world
cup on television.
Bhima sat between us, sniffling, watching me,
and then slowly, tentatively he stretched out his thin
hand to touch my arm, and began to stroke it. I have hairy arms and we realised he had never
ever touched a man before, that this feel of hair was
a new sensation for him. I was a man, the same sex as
him, within touching distance. Up to now, the only men in his life had been
doctors who had held him at a clinical distance, never
giving him an intimate moment. Women - the orphanage
women, nurses, Maureen - had been his sole human contact.
He looked to see if I would reject him as so
many had before but, when I smiled, he grew a bit bolder.
He shifted his hand to caress my hairy chest and tugged
the hairs gently. Still, his face remained solemn and those large
eyes were watchful and wary. When I put my hand out
to him, he withdrew and sitting between us on our large
bed, began to weep again. I wanted to hold him and tell
him he need never be afraid again but I let Maureen
do that as he was more used to her arms. Yet, strangely
I felt he already trusted me, and that it had happened
in the instant he had touched and stroked my arm.
From
that first touch, I had become his father. But how does
one behave as a father with no experience of it and
so late in life? What was I supposed to do? How should
I communicate? My friends, when their children were
babies, used baby talk -
'pinky-winky wants her milky-wilky', 'lovesy
bunsy wants to plays-waysey'. I couldn't wrap my tongue
around such a vocabulary for this watchful baby. He
was expecting more intelligent communication.
Uncertain, I kept an emotional distance from
him, though he had no such inhibitions about me. After
all, I thought, he would return to his orphanage very
soon.
Maureen
lifted up his cheap cotton blouse to show me the livid
scar of Bhima's 9-hour operation for vesicale exstrophy.
His whole abdominal area was an angry red but between
his legs was a distinctive, tiny penis. The next few
weeks were vital for his life as the bladder could still
be infected by reflux - urine flowing back and not being
released. He
was on medication, both for strengthening the bladder
and against infection. His medicine shelf also held
baby-strength painkillers, baby-strength analgesic and
the baby sedative pedicloryl.
He needed to take his medications thrice daily
and he always resisted at first before swallowing them.
We would have to monitor him very closely as, even to
my amateur eye, he looked a very sickly child. We knew
he would have continence problems all his life and prayed
that the bladder would strengthen over time for him
to be able control his passing urine.
I
was not used to babies or children, felt awkward around
them as we had not had children. We had tried many years
ago when we were living in New York. Maureen had become pregnant but unfortunately
miscarried. We
decided to consult a doctor about artificial methods
and saw a doctor in London, Terry Solomon who was a
specialist. He
tested me and found I had a low sperm count but this
could be overcome and suggested all the ways we could
have a child. Maureen
and I went into another huddle. Did we really want to
subject ourselves to all these clinical ways and means? Admittedly, we were not desperate to become parents. If it happened it happened, if not not. Selfishly, we thought it would restrict our
travelling and my work as a writer and film maker. I
would have to get a job, do real work for a living as
a reporter or an editor, to support a child. That did not appeal to me. I did not think of myself as old - one never
does- even when looking into the mirror each morning,
yet the scars of time lay on my face and my hair had
receded. I was
60 years older than this baby watching me, Maureen only
a few years younger than me.
We were an elderly couple.
Young men and pretty women called me sir and
her ma'am.
Our
'babies' were our dogs, Griffin and Apu, a mother and
daughter. Do animals also have destinies? A watchman
had found Griffin and brought her home, if only to keep
him awake at nights. So her life was altered by this
chance encounter, one dog out of the many who roamed
our streets. It was her luck, her good luck, friends
said, that she ended up in our house to sleep on soft
chairs, eat two square meals a day, with Marie biscuits
for a late night snack, to wear a collar, to be brushed
and bathed and to sleep in an air-conditioned room.
Griffin was a small tawny-haired Indian prairie
dog, a contrast to her daughter, Apu's, blackness and
size, and a very affectionate dog. Apu, like me, had been born in this ancestral
home and we had lavished our love on her. She was to play a very important part in Bhima's life.
I'm
not macho but as a writer I have always been a self-contained
man. I am exasperatingly laconic in conversation. I
am shy too. My emotions are channelled into my writings, as are my thoughts.
As I am childless, people remark 'his books are his
children'. They are in a way; writers are puppeteers,
creating figures on paper, breathing their emotions
- anger, lust, love, hate, fear- into them. I've certainly
experienced many of those emotions: broken love affairs
are the most agonising for everyone is helpless in the
maelstrom and it takes months, even years, to emerge
cleansed finally on the other side of the darkness. Because of my peripatetic life style, wandering for thirty years
between Canada, Britain, the States, India and, as a
writer, not making the kind of money to support a child,
I had closed my mind to it. I tolerated friends' children
but never became emotionally involved, even with my
nieces and nephews.
I visited, I chatted with them but I couldn't
quite figure out children and how to behave with them. I was stiff and uneasy around them, and always
relieved when they went away to play. I was nervous
about picking up Bhima.
I had never held a baby before.
Partly, I was afraid I would drop it. Partly,
I did not want him to shit, pee or vomit, which babies
do, over my delicate sensibilities.
His arms and legs were so skinny; I thought they
would break if I handled him too roughly.
NIGHT
TERRORS
After
his evening milk bottle, I picked Bhima up finally.
He was light and so fragile. He came to me naturally,
with not a moment's resistance or doubt, that he would
be safe. He wrapped his legs as best he could around
my waist, put one hand on my shoulder and with the other
took a tight grip on my tee-shirt. I didn't know then
that babies do this only when they feel secure with
someone. I carried him around gingerly, afraid to drop
him, but he held on securely.
Our
house is not exactly baby-friendly.
There are two steps to enter the house and different
levels of flooring that even trip us up at times. And
the stairs go up half a flight to a landing, before
continuing up to the second floor. 'Devasolai' is a
large, very old house with sixteen-foot ceilings and
two-foot-thick walls. It had been begun in 1911 by my
great grandfather and completed by my grandfather. I'm
not sure whether they employed an architect or whether
they just winged it, as it rambled all over the place.
We
had nothing, apart from the bed, milk and medicines
to offer our tiny house- guest. As Maureen was worried
about his bed not being safe, we borrowed a wooden play-
pen from Irene, whose children had out grown it. It
had bars also in the base so I was sent to buy plywood
to place over the bars and Maureen found a Dunlopillo
mattress that fitted. She made up his bed carefully. But Bhima screamed his head off the moment
he was lifted into it and drew up his legs so as not
to touch the sheets. The pen was too much a reminder of the iron
pen in which he had spent his entire life.
He craved to escape bars, no doubt as desperately
as a convict. It was to take many months before he entered
it voluntarily through a gap, but only to snatch at
whatever toy lay inside for him. It became a repository
for his toys of which he accumulated many in no time
at all.
Our
evening routine, as an elderly couple set in our ways,
if we are not going out, is to have drinks in the living
room when we chat about the day or read or I make notes,
more inspired after my second drink, about whatever
I am working on. And there is always music on my stereo.
We both like western classical music but we also have
jazz and Indian music, classical as well pop, like A.R.
Rehman CDs. 'Dil Se' is a favourite as I used a couple
of short tracks from it for my play, 'The Square Circle',
that I directed at the Leicester Haymarket Theatre.
Quite consciously, while Bhima was with us before he
went to bed, he listened to the music. When we saw his
interest in music we bought him musical toys. His favourites
were one shaped like an old-fashioned juke box, a large
tortoise with buttons which, when pressed, played different
tunes, a learning computer and an electronic key board.
They all played different tunes and he wore out the
batteries regularly with constant music. However, when
I played 'Dil Se' once too often, Bhima quickly learned
to crawl over to the system and hit the 'off' button.
When I played Bach or Ravi Shanker, he would sit and
listen for a minute or two, savouring the music, before
continuing with what he was doing. But 'Dil Se' drove
him nuts whenever I tried to play it.
We
learnt that first night, and for the next six months
of nights, why Bhima slept badly.
His room was quiet, as we were some distance
from the road, a fan cooled him, he had stacks of pillows
to roll on and Uma lay beside him.
We were asleep when our intercom rang at around
one in the morning. We both ran down, hearing Bhima screaming.
Uma had tried to put him back to sleep and called us
in desperation. It was frightening watching this thin, undernourished
baby reveal such lung power.
More terrifying was trying to hold onto him. It was like trying to cling onto a frightened, squirming, struggling
baby seal. He
arched his back like a bow until I thought his spine
would snap with the force and fought against us.
Maureen tried to calm him, and then I did. We
walked back and forward together, trying to soothe him,
singing, whispering, embracing him. Nothing worked.
He screamed and arched, and we could not pacify him.
No doubt he had done this in the orphanages too- it
must have somehow relieved the pain of his condition-
but no one had held him and tried to comfort him. Now,
after the surgery, there was new pain. The doctor had
warned us he would remain in pain for a few weeks as
his wound healed and the nerves slowly joined. The pain
killers, baby strength, didn't work. He had slept for maybe an hour, when he awoke
and began screaming.
The pain would wear off as his body healed itself.
But pain, we discovered, was only part of the
reason.
The
other part was his night terrors.
What dreams haunted this poor baby, I wondered.
What did he see in those dreams that terrified
and woke him screaming in fright?
There was more than enough; his past was littered
with rejections, loneliness, pain. Possibly, more than any other orphan. We realised too that he wasn't really awake,
that even as we walked and held onto him, he remained
locked in his nightmares. It must have been an hour before he finally
calmed down, exhausting his meagre energy.
He took his milk bottle, drank his fill, and
then dozed off. He never ever slept well or fully. Every midnight or around three or four when
the soul is at its lowest ebb and vulnerable (to quote
F. Scott Fitzgerald), Bhima would awake screaming.
Over those first six months, we became as haggard
as any young parents nursing a new baby and wondered
how much longer we would have the resilience. We even woke at his first whimpering cry, attuned
to his pain.
Because
he needed twenty-four-hour hour monitoring, we had two
girls working shifts. Maureen had brought Uma from the
orphanage as she knew his bottle habits and, as she
had been with him around the clock, he was comfortable
with her. Maureen had found an agency that provided home-care
support in the form of young girls who had been given
three months training in the hospital and were then
sent out for hospice care. She had had to wait a few days as the agency
said there was one good girl able to look after babies
but she was busy with another job.
Once released, she had gone bounding into the
hospital to relieve to Uma. That same evening that Maureen brought Bhima
home and agreed that Sarala would come to look after
Bhima during the day, and Uma would do the night duty.
Sarala was a pretty, somewhat buxom girl of twenty,
poised at the age for an arranged marriage. She lived
in Red Hills, a two-hour bus ride away from our house.
Maureen
went about her normal life, at first.
The ayahs were there to care for Bhima.
She had Cheshire Homes to look after, attended
meetings for Dakshnachitra (of which more later) and,
as treasurer for the OWC, spent days accounting for
every rupee spent on Bhima.
It was on the second or third day, when Sarala
didn't show up, that Maureen realised that she had committed
herself to Bhima, and had to look after him.
She knew nothing about babies and borrowed books
on baby care from Irene and Aruna, and swotted up desperately.
I only knew of Dr. Spock, but he had fallen out
of favour with mothers around the world.
In those first few days, I saw little of Bhima.
He drank his milk, took his medicines and slept.
I watched these ministrations with an emotional
detachment. He
went about his life of healing, while I went about mine
of working. I
had a non-fiction book contract about a murder in Mumbai
and postponed the trip for a few weeks while Bhima was
with us. There
were also a film project and a novel doing the rounds.
I was selfishly absorbed while he was constantly
watching for me should I enter his line of sight.
And then his calm would be broken and he would
wail and hold out his arms to me. Already, he had a
fierce grip and if his sitter was carrying him, he would
catch my shirt as I passed near him, and hold on with
all his strength. I would un-grip his hand, placating him with
a 'Later, Bhima, later' but of course for a baby only
the immediate moment is important. There is no meaning
to 'later'. He
would give heart breaking cries until one of the girls
carried him out of earshot.
He had not yet begun to crawl and had to be carried
everywhere. When
we put him down on the carpet, he would roll over or
sit and play with his soft toys.
He drank three bottles of milk during the day
and another three during the night when he woke in fright
and we had to calm him.
Was milk enough for a baby? We knew nothing of
baby nutrition and Maureen rang all her friends to get
their advice. Soft
foods we were told, chicken broth, biscuits, rusks. We do not have instant baby food in India, so we had to make do
with what Ethiraj, our cook, could conjure up for him
in the kitchen, rice and mashed vegetables to start
with, then later pieces of chicken or other meat.
During
these early weeks, I flippantly referred to Bhima as
'my house guest'. He was the subject of my dinner party conversation.
His life, like his body, was opened up like a book for
friends and acquaintances to observe. They admired us
for our act of charity and compassion for a discarded
baby. I was
always quick to point out that it was Maureen's compassion
that had brought Bhima into our home.
I was, at that time, merely the host for this
small house guest. My continual use of the word 'guest' emotionally, and mentally,
kept him at a distance.
But
to him, I wasn't his host.
I was his father, the father he had never had,
the man with whom he had first had tactile connection.
I was blind to his heart and mind through this
pretended detachment.
Yet, subconsciously, and I didn't explore it
further then, I was acutely attuned to him.
I heard him if he cried in his distant room or
in the garden, anywhere in the house, and immediately
responded, stopping mid-sentence, cutting off a call
so that I could be by his side to comfort him.
Next door there was a baby, around his age, who
had a similar 'whaaaaa'. But I knew the difference, without knowing
how. I thought
then, when I did give it thought, that I was just caring
for this orphan. After all he would leave fairly soon.
All
love affairs begin, and end, differently.
Sometimes, it's a slow, sublime emotion that
gradually builds between two people. Rarely, is love
instant and those lovers are fortunate in that doubt
never enters their minds or hearts. For me, it was instant,
at that moment of touch, though I was not truly aware
of it then. He was just a baby, I thought,
just passing through my house for a few days
before going back to his familiar iron railed cot and
the casual affection of his minders.
Bhima
was more in touch with his emotions than I was. For him love was instant. Being
ignorant of children, especially of babies, I had no
idea of this instant love.
Of course, a baby has a shorter distance to travel
to its heart; the journey is swift and instinctive. Our friend, Subbu, a grandfather now, told
me later that babies and children were far superior
to adults, intellectually and emotionally.
Though Bhima's journey to my side had been torturous,
his little heart wasn't cluttered with too many experiences.
He knew more about his heart than I did of mine.
I,
as an adult of sixty, had little true knowledge of how
I felt at that moment. The road into my heart was confused
with broken love affairs in the past, and by being the
youngest in a dysfunctional family. I had married late; my meeting Maureen was also a quirk of destiny.
I had been living
in New York when I had to return to London to adapt
my non-fiction book, The New
Savages, into
a script for the English film director, Hugh Hudson.
I had arranged to stay with a friend.
Maureen, (coincidentally also a Hudson!) flying
in from Australia, had also arranged to stay with the
same confused friend, and I had ended up on the couch.
Now I was safely content in my marriage, expecting
no further emotional upheavals nor wanting them.
So
I was protected. I
was strong and Bhima was weak and tiny.
Enough harm and befallen him already, and I wanted
him to feel safe. Compassion and protectiveness were what I thought
I felt for him; I had no idea how badly I had mistaken
my own emotions.
JULY-The Decision
After
four days and four sleep-broken nights, Maureen and
I found we could not just return Bhima to the orphanage
to languish in his iron cot. He was healing, physically and emotionally, and a return would only
harm him, we felt.
He was still sickly, catching colds and wheezing.
Orphanages are rife with diseases and, in his
still-weakened state, he could die from an infection.
He
was classified as a 'special needs' child because of
his condition. This meant he could be offered for adoption
abroad, and that the Indian government would pass his
adoption papers quickly, and without a problem.
We expected this to happen in a few weeks.
Bhima
fell in love again, this time with Apu.
Not
only did he adore this wary black dog, but the very
first word he spoke was 'Apu'.
It was an easy word for him, and gradually it
took on various meanings in his baby language. Apu did not reciprocate his love, she shied
away, and he would crawl after her in pursuit. Sometimes
I held her so that he could embrace her, though she
was too big for his small arms, and he would smile beatifically,
this embrace fulfilling his whole purpose to be alive. As he had been shut away in the orphanages
all his short life, Apu was the first animal he had
ever touched, or even seen.
We had worried about Apu, and consulted dog-
loving friends. While
her mother was alive, she remained independent, preferring
to sleep downstairs on her sofa most of the time.
But with Griffin's death, she had become totally
dependent, following us from room to room, sleeping
in my study all day or else in our bedroom. I've always
believed that every living creature has emotions, and
that Apu was revealing her mourning to us during those
months. Now,
having been our baby for so long, she was displaced
by this other, human, baby.
In
fact, before Bhima came to us, we had asked friends
whether we should acquire a pup to give Apu company.
They had advised against it as she would feel
displaced and, besides, she wouldn't have the energy
to deal with a playful companion.
At her age we should give her as much love and
attention as we could.
Now, she found herself dealing with an adoring
baby as well as our emotional distraction. If I gave her too much of my attention, Bhima
would crawl over as best he could to place himself between
us. And if Bhima should get our attention, Apu
would thrust herself between us.
As
I had never known or observed a baby, I wasn't aware
of their sense of awe.
For a baby, everything is new, brand new, never
witnessed before, never existing before. As adults, we have lost this sense of wonder
at the ordinary. Even
the extra-ordinary- space shuttles disintegrating, volcanoes
exploding, bombs falling- might fill us with surprise,
but not awe. Bhima's first delight in his expanding world was flowers; the colours,
reds, purples, yellows, against the green, drew his
eye and we had to pluck them for him daily. He would
carry around a fistful. Sarala and the other girls would either tuck
flowers behind their ears or pin them in their hair. Bhima, already observant, stuffed the flowers into his ears. We would laugh and pluck them
out, then tuck them behind his ear.
Our
house is fifty yards down a lane.
One morning, I carried him up to the road, for
a morning constitutional. This was the first time he
had 'set foot' outside our compound. At that moment, five buffaloes ambled past
us on the road. Bhima's
eyes grew large and his jaw dropped.
If, as a writer, I had written those words -
'Bhima's jaw dropped'- I would have deleted them with
embarrassment. But
his jaw did drop. I
could not imagine an Indian child of sixteen months
never having seen a buffalo or a cow. It was as if an American or European child
of the same age had never seen a car or television. If he had remained in his village, buffaloes and cows would have
been a daily sight.
These common beasts, scarcely-noticed pedestrians
on our Chennai roads, had inspired awe in this baby's
life.
Another
child his age would have experienced many things when
his parents proudly carried him out into the world.
But Bhima, imprisoned in his orphanage dormitories,
had never seen the outside world at all.
When he was transported from one orphanage to
another and on his visits to hospitals and labs, he
would have lain on someone's lap, and stared up at the
interior roof of the vehicle.
Bhima's awe made me look again at these slow,
lumbering black beasts as Bhima commanded me - pointing
and crying out excitedly 'Apu.Apu.'-
to follow them down the road.
Maureen told the Social Worker, Shaila, to
put him up for adoption and, as she was the only one
who knew Bhima intimately - the details of his affliction,
the many tests, the operation, and the problems he would
face all his life- wrote up her report on behalf of
Shaila. In her
'Child Study Report'
[1]
Maureen detailed his background, his physical
problem, the successful operation and his physical and
emotional recuperation.
She did not mention he was living with us. The
report would be circulated eventually, along with his
photograph, to adoption agencies in Europe. Maureen then 'transferred' Bhima, on paper,
from the Orphanage 1 to another orphanage over which
she had some control.
At
that time, our only thought was to find a good, secure
home for this lost waif. Some where he could come to
rest and enjoy childhood, puberty, become an adult and
grow old surrounded and cosseted with love.
The report was signed by Shaila and sent Parallel
Universe I, the Indian one, into motion.
Another
social worker, a young woman, visited us from the Voluntary
Co-ordinating Agency for Tamilnadu.
She had Bhima's file and had come to inspect
him before they moved the paperwork further. Maureen removed his nappy to show her the scars
of the operation. It
tallied with her medical reports. Then she checked her
file photograph that Bhima was one and the same baby.
On
the form she had filled in- 'Indian Placement Not Possible'-
words which condemned him to a possible life of exile.
The reasons were not obvious but were entangled
with Indian culture. Indian couples, who are increasingly turning
to adopting orphaned babies, have the choice of perfectly
healthy ones. They would not want 'a special needs child'
who would require medical attention and be a burden
to them. Apart
from that, Bhima might not be able to father a child.
Indian parents want grandchildren, even if their
child has been adopted.
Indian history and society is littered with adoptions.
Childless maharajahs and nawabs have adopted nephews,
distant cousins and, in one case in Jodhpur, even a
village boy who, according to legend, was one of several
children to be invited to a meal hosted by the maharani.
He observed how she ate and copied her.
He became the next maharajah.
Childless couples, from many economic and caste
backgrounds, also adopt the children of relations who
may have a child or two to spare.
'Special
Needs Child'!! The magic words were Bhima's passport
to leave India, the ambition of most Indians, admittedly.
I had left India when I was eighteen like many others
who leave for higher studies, and surprised everyone,
including myself, when I decided to return.
Every friend and relative of mine has a son or
daughter, often more than one, living in the States,
Australia, UK, Europe.
It's as if a Pied Piper had piped us all away.
At
this early stage of our relationship with Bhima, we
saw only this rosy future for a baby, rejected by its
parents and dumped in an orphanage, to soar away and
be given this golden opportunity.
'Once
we got this clearance certificate', Shaila told us about
the procedures, 'we have to wait 60 days, in case the birth
parent should change their minds about the surrender. We couldn't even know whether the parent would have given his real
name. How can
we verify such a thing? I remember once searching in
a small village for the parents of a child adopted abroad
who wanted to meet them.
No one knew anything but I am certain the mother
was listening because when I returned to make further
enquiries, I saw the same woman listening again. They
will never admit to giving away a baby.'
(Which
was why when I later visited his probable village I
didn't expect to meet his parents or for them to acknowledge
that they had given away their baby)
Shaila
is a wonderful, earth-mother kind of woman, both physically
and emotionally, who did her Masters in Social Work
in the States. She radiates warmth and humour.
She has to have the patience of a Buddha too
as she spends her days in pursuit of the countless documents
from bureaucracies and the courts necessary for a child
to be adopted. She
has a fund of anecdotes about the fifteen years she
has been doing her work, and has somehow retained not
only a sense of humour but of compassion for these orphaned
babies.
'Then after sixty days, we circulate the child's
details within the state adoption agencies to see if
anyone within the state will adopt it.
We wait thirty days for a response, then, if
there isn't one, we send the certificate and the details
of the baby to the Central Adoption Resources Agency
(CARA) in Delhi for clearance for the child to be adopted
by a foreign couple.
So
Bhima's file was sent to CARA in Delhi. Every piece
of paper that had accumulated on him within the fifteen
months of his life was in that file - three copies of
every medical certificate, details of his operation,
of his recuperation, Maureen's report, the Certificate
for adoption, the clearance.
Each piece had to be notarized, every piece had
his baby photograph attached to it with the notaries'
seal. No child
can be sent abroad for adoption without the CARA clearance. This is theoretical, as illegal adoptions do take place. We were also told it would take a couple of
weeks for CARA to give its clearance.
By
chance, we had a friend in Madras who came from An European
Country. He suggested that we put Bhima up for adoption
in his country. Though admiring the country, we just
felt that Bhima would grow into a too-precocious teenager.
I had met quite a few teenage children from the
States visiting relatives here, and though bright, there
was grating American edge to them.
We thought of Spain, as we both liked the country
and the people. Denmark was also in the running.
I
went into the web to find out more about my friend's
suggestion. His country was wealthy, stable, democratic
and, I thought, safe from the new plague of terrorism.
It seemed to be an island of tranquillity in an increasingly
dangerous world.
And
so we made the decision for Bhima about his whole life
and believed this European country would be his safest
haven. Of course that depended on whether there was
a couple who would want to adopt him.
AUGUST
Up
to now, he had smiled seldom.
There was a gravity in his persona, a quiet watchfulness,
as if aware that his life could change any moment.
It had taken us nearly two months to bring out
the gift of a small chuckle, and now he was learning
to laugh. Sometimes he would crane his head down and
around to look at us and give us a stunning smile, knowingly
captivating us and, more frequently as the weeks passed,
bursting into laughter.
However,
at night, our routine had not changed.
He would awake screaming. Sarala would try to
pacify him, and then hit the intercom button in desperation.
And we would stumble down, haggard from so many
nights of broken sleep. In desperation I suggested we
should occasionally, not too often, give him Pedicloryl,
the baby valium. Shaila,
the mother of a bright ten-year-old boy, advised against
it, especially for such a young baby, as sometimes it
could cause fits. I could now understand the frustration and exhaustion of a sleep-deprived
mother, coping alone, who could so easily lose her temper
with a screaming baby.
At
first Maureen thought it could be his teething trouble. She took him to Dr Thomas who examined Bhima's
mouth. His teeth looked well formed and there was no
infection. Dr Thomas told her that because Bhima had been
incarcerated in his cot all the time, he had not picked
up any infections through crawling on the floor and
then putting his fingers in his mouth. This was what caused infection, and teething
problems, in other babies, he said.
Having
ruled that one out, I went onto the web, the lifeline
of the desperate and the ignorant, to search for wise
counsel from expert strangers. I came across scant advice. One site briefly explained the causes. 'Night terrors are mysterious sleep disturbances
that preschoolers and older children are occasionally
subject to, always during the deepest part of non-dreaming
sleep, usually within one to two hours of falling asleep.
During a night terror - which can last anywhere from
ten to forty minutes - your child may bolt out of bed,
thrash around and scream, or run wildly through the
house. While his eyes may be wide open, he is not awake
and will not be aware of your presence. Unlike with
a nightmare, he will fall right back to sleep after
the episode and have no memory of the incident the next
morning. About 5 percent of all children will have an
episode of night terrors.'
This wasn't our Bhima.
He thrashed around in our arms and screamed but
he had not yet learnt to run wildly. The site went on to suggest - 'Don't try to intervene in the middle
of a night terror. Let your child scream it out, and
unless he is in danger of hurting himself, don't try
to physically restrain him. If you attempt to hold your
terrified child it could lead to wilder behaviour. Instead,
speak calmly and place yourself between him and anything
dangerous.'
These remote advisors
had no idea of Bhima's past. If we hadn't restrained
him he would certainly have hurt himself badly.
Being such belated and inexperienced 'parents',
we discussed his problem with each other, and with other
parents too. Irene
reassured us that night terrors were quite common and
that her son had had them when he was eight.
THE ACCIDENTAL MANTRA
His problem was not neurological but emotional. It was going to take
time for him to come to terms with it.
Americans spend a fortune on their shrinks but
there is no absolute cure for our emotional ills, only
a brief interlude from them. They are too deep seated,
though quick to surface in a crisis.
One night, by chance, I did find the secret to lulling
him back to sleep while he was screaming, twisting and
arching his back. It was instant but needed to be repeated over
and over again until the terror was vanquished. We knew he was still asleep, though his eyes were open, and somehow
I had to break through to his terrors and reassure him
that he was in a real, safe world.
There were no demons or devils in pursuit of
him, he wasn't falling into an endless dark abyss, he
wasn't alone and abandoned, he wasn't. What was his
great fear, I wondered, what did he see in his terror.
Bhima had night
terrors, according to the baby experts. I didn't know
there was a difference in what frightens us, as children
or as adults, when we sleep. Whatever, it awaits us all.
On
this night, Maureen and Sarala were sitting slumped
and exhausted. I was taking my turn with our screaming baby.
As I walked Bhima up and down, struggling to keep a
hold, I thought I'd try some imaginative psychology.
He was not reassured by the human touch, which
had been cursory, careless, indifferent, given and taken
away impatiently while he was awake in his iron cot.
Adults were his betrayers, not his saviours or
safe havens. What was real to him, truly real, more
real than a human touch or voice, that would penetrate
his night terror? What would reassure him that it was solid and
strong enough to draw him out of his terrors?
I
spoke softly by his ear: 'Apu's here. Apu will look
after you. Apu will guard you. Apu loves you, Bhima.
See Apu's standing here, Apu.Apu.Apu.Apu'
To
our total surprise, 'Apu' was the mantra that penetrated
his dreaming mind and drew him out of his terrors.
Bhima's screams lessened, they became sobs; he
straightened, relaxed and took deep breaths.
He fell asleep. The sleeping dog never knew what magic she
had wrought on this baby.
Big Apu was his secure present; she was the first
animal he had ever touched and held and what he had
felt was reassuring. Animals are a natural force, more
earthbound than we humans, and Apu gave him her strength.
'Apu' worked every time we used her name to calm
him down.
I
had led a selfish writer's life and now had to turn
outwards - I am known as a recluse by most people- and
embrace this house guest who demanded so much attention.
Like all babies, he drank, slept, defecated,
pee'd, woke, cried, needed comforting. I began to pay much more attention to him since
he had bonded with me with that initial touch. And I still was not sure how I should respond. He would be leaving us soon but I could not
reject his constant overtures without harming him. As he lived downstairs, with frequent visits upstairs to our bedroom
throughout the day when we carried him up, I remained
upstairs. He could not yet make that long flight of stairs
by himself, so if I went down on an errand and he saw
me, he would immediately reach out for me.
Maureen was a natural mother. I wouldn't say
it's instinctive in all women as I have seen friends'
wives awkward and uncomfortable with their own children
but she had infinite patience with Bhima's physical
and emotional problems. He desperately needed nurturing and love and
she gave it, unstintingly.
It took me longer but not much.
I enjoyed the fruits of Maureen's and Uma's work
of cleaning and feeding him. Uma stayed for a month but she had to return
to the orphanage. Sarala
became his most constant baby sitter, alternating between
days and nights with other young women who came and
vanished back into the city. Some stayed a month, others a day or two, mostly defeated by this
baby whose sleeping pattern kept them awake at night
when they had thought it would be an easy job.
Our
baby did have a temper, and showed it.
If he didn't want to scream, he would pull Sarala's,
or another girl's, hair.
His tiny hand had a surprisingly strong grip,
and she or I would have to gently prise open one finger
at a time to release her hair.
But as one finger opened, the others would close.
He would look at us with those beautiful innocent
eyes as if saying 'Am I doing something wrong?', knowing
he was. We soon discovered that he was also an angry
baby. He was
angry with the world, and we could not blame him.
He had every right.
But my surprise was how a baby could already
feel such a rage at his unjust treatment. It hadn't been nurtured by us, in fact the
opposite. So
it had to be something in his nature woken by his experiences.
We're born with every emotion - hate, love, anger,
envy, greed, sloth - an instant broth in our genetic
make up. Which
one rises to the surface and commands his life's pattern
depends on the nurturing of the baby.
Pain and neglect were the fuel for Bhima's rage.
He could suddenly throw a tantrum, quite uncontrollable,
as if he remembered how bad his life had been and felt
that we were to blame. We believed his anger was internalised against
the wound in his body that had caused his pain. The
battleground was his mind. He was divided between his
past and what was occurring in his present with us.
It took us months to leach this anger out of him.
MY TEMPORARY SON, BHIMA
I
began to e-mail friends outside India about our little
house guest. Briony, a good friend in London we'd known
for many, many years, replied and called him 'your temporary
son', correcting my casual reference to him.
I had not thought of the word 'son' until then.
Was he the son we had not had?
So
Bhima became my son.
And I became his father, though not temporary
for how can a baby not believe in permanence? It has no idea of time, apart from feeding
needs, and time is infinite.
In his eyes and feelings, being permanent meant
I could not begrudge fulfilment of any of his emotional
needs when he turned to me.
A few days after Briony's letter, I was downstairs
when he woke from his morning nap and came out of his
room crying, wearing only a drooping nappy.
A small, fragile human, vulnerable and alone.
We were the room's length apart and when I knelt
and put out my arms, he ran into them, stopped crying
and sighed. No
baby/child in its right mind had ever voluntarily come
to my arms. They usually turned tail and bolted, screaming
'mamaaa'. His
nappy was wet and I took him to his room and laid him
down and he allowed me to change him.
I was getting pretty good at this by now, especially
as they had Velcro fasteners. I kissed him. He would placidly
allow us this proof of our love for him. He returned my kisses only much later in our relationship.
Over
the next few days, I probed my emotional defences as
delicately as a dentist picking at an infected tooth.
A large gap had opened up, and Bhima had slipped
through. My defence against adopting Maria had been
that being handicapped, she would lead a better life
in the States. The
question of emotion did not enter the equation then.
She had spent only intermittent times with us.
And now the adoption question rose again.
But I was sixty years older than Bhima.
This gap yawned wide as a gorge.
I just didn't know how I could bridge such a
chasm and remained stranded one side, Bhima on the other.
When he was ten, I argued with myself, I would be seventy,
and I saw him orphaned again when he was a teenager. My father and his sister had lived well into
their eighties but I led the more sinful life style
of smoking and drinking admittedly, countered by a daily
regime of tennis and jogging. So when Bhima was twenty, I could be eighty.
Maureen would no doubt outlive me.
But for how many years? Bhima could be orphaned
again by his early twenties. Or even earlier, at ten
or twelve or fifteen.
I
have had an intermittent interest in astrology, inherited
from my father and from my culture.
At my birth, the astrologer who cast my horoscope,
predicted I would either die at the age of twelve or,
if I did not, I would live a very healthy life. Sadly, he had not predicted my mother's early
death, so it was left for my father to worry about this
prediction. The astrologer had been fairly accurate.
I had been a sickly child and at twelve came
down with a complication of jaundice and influenza.
I nearly did die; I remember the family gathered
around my sick bed to bid me goodbye. I survived the dire prediction and since then
have had a mild interest in astrology.
At this time, I had not seen an astrologer for
years but two of them had predicted I would die in my
mid to late seventies. Seventy five, seventy six, seventy eight? This cut-off date played in my mind with Bhima's
future.
What
would be Bhima's future with us?
I tried to place myself in Bhima's mind. How
would he feel having such aged step-parents?
I imagined us at the local PTA meetings, Bhima's
friends' parents would be in their mid to late twenties
or early thirties.
Maureen and I were ancient measured against such
youth and life styles. Parents I knew bonded, made friends, and socialised
through their children.
We would be out of place among them, they would
be another generation. Not 'another' but two
generations younger.
Bhima would be embarrassed, maybe even ashamed
of us. I know
from my own childhood that I was embarrassed and ashamed
that my stepmother was white, while all my friends had
brown mothers. I
wanted to have one too, instead of this stranger who
would appear, out of place, among all the brown faces
at sports days and PTA meetings. I disliked her and wrote two novels about our
family experience.
The first one, Field of Honour, was set in Bangalore and
although Graham Greene, a writer I admired tremendously,
wrote to me that he was 'very much impressed with Field
of Honour' (he rarely quoted and gave me permission
to use his comment). The English reviewers were not. They attacked my depiction of this horrid Englishwoman,
as if I had slandered all Englishwomen. The second novel, Steps From
Paradise, was more autobiographical, and set in
Madras. The novel didn't fare any better with the English
reviewers for the same reason.
The lesson I learned from those two novels was
that an Indian writer had better depict Englishmen and
Englishwomen in India as heroic, upstanding, self-sacrificing
and pure.
The
memory of my stepmother was reinforced, thought not
as extremely, by Elizabeth who was also adopted.
'I loved my step-parents dearly,' she told us,
'but they were older than my school friends' parents.
I remember being very embarrassed at seeing them
drive up in this old car to attend our school functions.'
Would Bhima cringe at the sight of his, not even
elderly but old,
'parents' attending his school sports days and prize
giving days?
These
thoughts ran in my head continuously like a rat in a
maze, unable to work out an escape route, unable to
find the way to free myself from old age. I knew also that no court would allow a couple
over sixty to adopt an eighteen month old baby. Forty was the upper age limit for adoption.
The law was the same in the UK, and other countries.
The age barrier then seemed insurmountable for us, not
only legally but more importantly intellectually. Logic was locked into both our minds as if in a bank safe with an
impossible combination which could never be opened.
To some friends, age did not matter.
'So what?' was my good friend, the Madras historian
Muthu's comment, while Nicki Mackie e-mailed from London
to tell me she had been adopted too, and her husband
was sixty years older than their ten-year-old son.
But then she was much younger than her husband.
There wasn't that comforting cushion in the age
gap between Maureen and me.
Bhima
then had been with us three months and we were all still
unaware we were in love with him.
Looking back, I believe he had no doubt about
his love for us. I
remember thinking and telling friends, almost boastfully:
'Just look how destiny has changed for this baby. He
was born was a dreadful affliction, dumped in an orphanage,
found, operated on and is now living in a large rambling
house with us. And then his destiny will take him away
to Europe and he'll grow up into a fine young man.'
I spoke so lightly, just cocktail and dinner party conversation,
passing time. Who
had set this destiny in motion?
How does it work, what forces shape our lives? It seemed so arbitrary - a chance visit by a few foreign women and
his whole life changed. Was that meant to happen? Was
it fore-ordained that the time and place should bring
his small hopeless life into collision with total strangers?
I'm not a practising Hindu, but at times the
feeling and sense of karma controlling our lives overwhelms
me. We invent
words - karma, destiny, ill-luck, bad luck, good luck,
fate, inshallah- to try and rationalise the forces that
distort our lives and cannot explain them either to
ourselves or to others.
The words are meaningless balms with no curative
powers but just band-aids to cover the suppurating wounds.
If we believe in the continual cycle of re-birth
then we are getting the rewards and punishment for our
deeds in a previous life.
I have always believed it unfair that I should
suffer for things done by someone or something before
I was born. People
think such belief is Indian fatalism; I don't think
of it that way. Some things are fated over which we have no
control. Also
our lives are entangled with so many others. It was
my karma and my mother's karma that she should die and
my life became dislocated.
Despite the shortcomings of the astrologer' art,
I wanted Bhima's horoscope to be cast.
I wanted a vague glimpse into his destiny.
Unfortunately, not having his star or his precise
moment of birth (the day was not enough), no astrologer
would draw up the chart.
Later on I tried a palm reader but she refused
to read a baby's palm and I thought it wise of her.
She said his life lines had yet to form.
I would have to wait to see how and where his
destiny took him.
OCTOBER-A COMMITMENT
On
October nineteenth Maureen returned home depressed.
She had been to the office and seen Shaila.
'A
couple have committed to adopting Bhima' she told me.
'They've started the processing of their documents.'
'How
long?' I managed finally, trying to absorb the news,
now depressed too. I had no idea what documentation was required
for the adoption.
'By
Christmas he'll be gone.'
'We
can adopt.'
'You're
over sixty,' she reminded me gently. 'No court..'
I was angry now about my age, something I had
previously accepted gracefully. If only I could lose
ten, twenty years, we could adopt Bhima.
It seemed cruel to have a cut-off age at sixty
when we both still had plenty of energy and, most importantly,
a great of love for this baby.
How
could we measure the quantity of energy required to
raise Bhima to manhood, to see him off to Oxford/Cambridge/Yale/Princeton/Harvard
university? In my family, like any other Indian family,
education was paramount.
From the richest to the poorest, we all wanted
our children educated. In the slums, mothers scrubbed their children
clean daily, washed their faded uniforms, and sent them
to the free corporation schools.
Drive into rural India, along the highways and
byways, at an early hour and you will see streams of
children, even there in uniforms, trudging off to schools
in the nearest town.
The
practicalities were a different drain on energy. I knew parents having to beg, bribe, grovel to get their children
admitted to schools and colleges, because of the huge
number of applicants for limited places. They ran with
their children from one school to another, then another,
until they got their child admitted.
India's education system creaks and groans and
buckles under the demands of an exploding population
of children. Nearly 20 million children are born annually
and, statistically, India needed to build a school a
day to absorb them.
Of course, India has not done that.
I
saw myself spending the next dozen years chasing schools,
then colleges to get Bhima admitted, driving him back
and forth, and then because of the fierce competition
for good grades, driving him to special tutors. My friends with school-age children spent their
days shuttling around the city with them to tutors and
waiting outside to take them home again.
It sounded exhausting.
'Can
you do all that?' Maureen asked, reading my mind.
'Why
not?' But I
was not sure I could. 'Who are this couple wanting Bhima? Do they
know he is a Special Needs child with problems?'
'They
must know. It's
all written down along with medical reports.' She was
concerned too and asked Shaila to check and double check
that they understood Bhima's medical needs.
I
remember Bhima interrupted our discussion as he came
wobbling in to be scooped up, unaware that his future
was being shifted around again like a chess piece on
an inter-planetary board.
Stars were being shunted around to accommodate
a destiny that had been decided by us in one way, yet
also by his unfortunate start in life.
'Why
have they chosen Bhima?' I asked over his head.
'Shaila
said they fell in love with his photograph.'
I
knew the photograph she meant - a thin solemn baby with
large and an unruly curly mop of hair staring sadly
into the camera, wearing an American football jersey
with the number One on it.
I looked down at Bhima.
He had changed since then - his cheeks were plumper
and he had grown taller by almost a head.
He was no longer that solemn, sad baby of the
photograph; he was a cheerful one most of the time.
However, he did have mercurial moods, one moment laughing
and playing, the next screaming his head off. 'Whaaaaaaaaaaaaa'.
But now he was not screaming in pain but because
we had denied him something.
WHAT
HAPPENED
Bhima
lived with us a year and we were hopelessly in love
with each other. His adoptive parents came and spent
two weeks in our house to bond with him. Of course he
didn't bond and we were in confusion and hurting. When
we took them to the airport he kept calling for Maureen
and me to 'come' with him. Of course, we couldn't and
for weeks we were numbed with pain and in mourning.
Bhima had 'died'. We later heard from his parents that for a month
he had cried out, calling for us. He stopped eventually
and went on with his life.
One
year later, Maureen was invited to be his godmother
and for us to stay in their house.
When Bhima first saw us, he frowned, trying to
remember why he knew us. We spent four days with his
family and the consolation was that he's loved deeply
by his parents and is surrounded by grandparents, uncles,
aunts and friends who adore him. He began to spend more
time with us too and remembered bits and pieces of his
past with us. But the time was all too short. We had
thought this visit would have been a closure. But there never is a total closure, not until
love dies or we die.
©Timeri
N. Murari.
(The
book runs to 75,000 words and includes an appendix on
the adoption procedures for Indian babies). |