Monday, October 1, 2018

Just the morning when you wished the world stood still!



It is not any different “a morning” to other mornings, in fact it is like every other morning here, this First Day of October 2018.

Time does not wait for no man, but years have passed, decades and perhaps centuries, but in this pursuit of glory, we all seem to forget glory is there every day, every moment, and we simply fail to see it. Are blind?

I type this in my home this Monday morning at 6 am, soon after the morning sun commenced its climb over the horizon, but then again, this feeling is not all pervasive. Why? People have completely changed their habits! While I seem to have regressed into the past, or so it seems to others, but not to me, they go about their daily chores of 2018, getting their kids ready for the school bus that comes at 6.30am to take kids to schools, in Minneriya or Hingurakgoda from this village Ratmale, often with money for nutrition-less GRUB! Too lazy to cook it seems.

I am where the old village was a hundred years ago, and subsequently abandoned, once the roads were built, and electricity supplied. People left their freehold land in the village and just squatted on state lands by the side of the roads, building their houses and fencing their lands as theirs, that’s what happened.

So here I am by the side of the Ratmale Tank on a damp morning after last night’s rain, feeling cool, hearing the birds sing their morning anthems of praise for the return of the rainy season after months of drought, and suddenly the whole place seems to be a sea of green, and even my pond in front of my home, which was completely dry, is now half full, with the loud kingfisher call as it flies.

A serpent eagle flew into the top most perch of the tree to the right of me, while the wail of the peacock from some tree signals they are ready to roll.

So, regressing with no power in my home, or pipe borne water, just a well, that mercifully did not run dry this year, and sleeping out in the veranda, where it’s open on three sides to the elements, and light and to everything else, I feel satiated!

None of the village folk are able to enjoy their village as much as I do, as everyone lives in a home that just looks like any home in the country. They sleep in bedrooms, in houses that are fully enclosed, even their windows are locked shut, and perhaps fans humming inside, blissfully unaware of their forefather’s lives sleeping in verandas, in days without power as the coolest place in Rajarata!

As I write this on a desk, in my open veranda, which doubles or quadruples, depending on which way you may look at. It is my bedroom, my study, my dining room and drawing room! After all it is my LIVING ROOM! What is a living room for, crying out loud? It is the room that one lives in after all, and this is my living room, where everything takes place as it did in days of yore, now forever changed in the interests of progress.

To all the local people, who come through my land in the evening to bathe in the lake/tank and wash their clothes as they did when their fore- fathers lived, where I now call home, they think the lay-out of my home is so UNHOMELIKE that they call it the HOTEL! What an unnatural thought, when it is more what has been forsaken for modern living that no man wishes to re-enter. It smacks of no security to them, in days when lock and key is the only game in town!

In the past no one closed their homes, there was community living and sharing that took place, as women worked together in walking into the fields to collect the raw material of the reeds to clean and dry before they made their mats and other household items with cane and reed for them, and then some for barter or sale for them to purchase that which they could not supply.

One of the ladies in the village gave me the last of the mats she personally made, before she died, GAVE ME MIND YOU! That even her family did not value, and she realized I appreciated. There is no one left in this village, to carry out that tradition, in this race for progress and modern living steeped in CKDU.

I am the last home here that clings on to wooden furniture that needs to be woven with cane, when it crumbles, but now with the cane industry rapidly disappearing, it is plastic alternative to cane that is used to weave, completely removing the feeling of air flow when seated. To have one’s body ventilated on all sides in days with no fans is forgotten. Damro heavy furniture is the preferred choice to display wealth, frowning on my old fashioned yearnings for days gone by.

I am now confined to be a fossil in this rapidly noise induced form of living, where music blaring, and loud temple berating, from the adjoining temple, replacing its simplistic charm of natural sounds of prayer and chanting.

By the time I have finished this essay @ 6.30am, the KEMANA, an old form of fishing had yielded 2kg of Lake Fish "Korelli" for breakfast and then some. It was put into the canal last night, and the fish going upstream from Kaudulla Tank get entangled in it and are today’s protein fix. 

No wonder life is GOOD!  

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

World Children's Day and World Elders Day - Isn't it ironic that they both fall on the same day?

In your essay on what might have been and what eventually was:

Today, when we celebrate/commemorate/ eulogize OLD PEOPLE AND YOUNG PEOPLE

It is best to remember that both elders and children were better prepared for their part in the past than either is today.

Children were both better educated in values in historic times (not necessary in Victorian Industrial Revolution which Sri Lanka is still wallowing in)
and Elders were better taken care of in extended family groups than they are now, who are effectively left to fend for themselves.

Therefore we did not need those namesake days to remind us unlike today. Now both these categories are neglected in the pursuit of greed that leads us no where. Progress at all costs has been the bane of our value system that keeps large parts of society stuggling to survive.

Ratmale,Minneriya,Sri Lanka said...

I have been asked how at 6am I could write such a detailed piece!

Well this was written in the short span 6am to 6.30am perhaps 15 minutes longer because of two interruptions, first of the serpent eagle up on tree about 50 meters away and secondly while I was writing the breakfast of the fish in the cage was brought to me while typing and so I wrote about that too, while taking a few photos to upload at the same time on my FBpage.

So before I posted here, I posted the whole article on FB with the photos and then posted the article here a few minutes later.

There was no read and re read and edit in this case. the word flow just came and I simply uploaded without spending time, editing and adding etc, which is done when one is preparing a dissertation, as this was not, it was just a call of the wild from the heart!

Thank you for reading, and hope you are inspired one way or another