It is seriously starting to embarrass me. Just this week alone, it has happened about
half a dozen times. I weep for the
weirdest reasons these days.
I am afraid to go to concerts anymore. Poor musicians! After enduring hours of practice, there they
are on the stage pouring their hearts out expecting to enthrall their audience and what do I do? Clap in appreciation like everyone else
around me? Oh no, I don’t. I sob hard into my ‘dry-clean only’
saree! At the last concert, the lady
next to me took one look at my bawling face and gingerly scooted her chair as
far away from me as possible. Really, who can
blame her?
3 days ago, I had an urge to read ‘Thiruvasagam’ at 5 am in
the morning and with an iPad next to my bed table and Lord Googleswara at my
fingertips, what is to stop me? There I
was leaning back comfortably on a couple of pillows fluffed up for my morning
reading and into the first 10 verses of Sivapuranam, sure enough my eyes
started to leak. My husband woke up in
confused concern when I greeted him not with a ‘Good morning Sankar’ like any
normal wife but with a weepy ‘Thiruchitrambalam Sankar’. Poor guy!
His life with me seems to be one endless soap opera.
All this crying is exhausting. I had to recently switch handbags just to
accommodate a bigger Kleenex box. I run
through tissues like there is no tomorrow.
It is bad enough that I bawl in public but to do so without the
assistance of a tissue box? The idea
does not bear thinking. If it weren’t
for Costco and its value-priced tissue boxes, I might have been forced to take
a second job to dry clean my clothes each week.
I guess it is true what they say about God opening one door when another
closes. Yes, it is true that He gave me
a faulty eye faucet but He also gave me tissues to deal with it. His compassion chokes me right up.
The saga continued yesterday in my music class. Two teenage boys were in my classroom doing an exceptional job singing
a composition in Hamsanandi ragam. I
closed my eyes in appreciation and seconds later, the tell-tale signs of a
brewing Tsunami made themselves known – my lips were trembling, nostrils were
flaring and from behind the closed eyelids, tears started to peep out. All in front of two boys with budding
mustaches! Talk about embarrassment! It took all my willpower to suck it in and blink
it away. Poor, poor kids! It is
such a tender age to be traumatized this way. A boy should have the right to sing in front of his teacher and not have her wail and whimper all over him. And which parent will want to pay for trauma therapy in addition to music lessons?
Either I am getting old or it is payback time for all these years
of teasing my Dad for crying alongside the poor women of Tamil TV drama, not to
mention, crying in patriotism at the achievements of Indians in the world of
Science, Philosophy, Sports and Technology.
My gut feeling says it is the latter.
The only difference is my Dad sobs in to his somewhat-white-looking cotton towel and I sob into my 20th century pristine white disposable
tissues. Life does come full
circle.
And so, it begins again!
And so, it begins again!
Till next time, Thiruchitrambalam, my friends! :)