IT DID NOT HAPPEN TO ME...
This morning, I had left home at 7.45. As usual, like everyone else, I too was in a hurry. I got into the first waiting auto and off I was towards my workplace. Just some distance had gone by, there was a sudden commotion a few yards ahead… a motorcycle had fallen right in the middle of the busy street, its wheel still running in full speed, a few steps away lay, on the street, one of its occupants, maybe the one who was riding it, and next to him, in great pain, lay another young man, probably the one who was sitting behind. Their bags were tossed to the sides, the lunch boxes had spilled out their contents… There were a few currency notes scattered here and there... and their ID cards, as well.
My auto was just some
distance behind…
What was miraculous
was: a BEST bus had come to a standstill just an inch away from the motorbike!
The bus driver seemed to be in a daze… and, even from that distance, I could
read what was going on in his mind… “What if the two young-men had come right
under my tires?”
A crowd gathered… Some
men immediately helped the youngmen-in-pain to the sides, some lifted the motor
bike and cleared the road… and, the action, now, moved to the sides of the
street… The traffic had come to a standstill… Everyone was in a hurry,
including myself… So, the moment the road was cleared, everything became
normal… everybody went about his way… including myself.
In my office, I described
that incident to one of the visitors. “In this big city, such things are very common,”
this man reacted casually, “As we speak here, someone somewhere has come under
a speeding train or truck or bus… It is just common. We cannot live in this
city being so sentimental about it.”
Well, he was right,
probably. We can not live in this man-eat-man city wearing a thin skin. We had
to be a little thick-skinned, bit tough, to survive here.
I kept quiet!
Last morning, my wife had heard what Deepak Chopra had to
say. “Every morning, when you wake up, remember five things to thank for,” he
had said in that video. We had exchanged randomly five things… five things my
wife had to thank for… and five things I had to thank for…
That was last
morning!
This morning, when I
saw that freak accident - in which not only the two young-men had survived, but
also that elderly numbed-bus-driver – I had only one thing to thank for: “Thank
God, it did not happen to me!”
But, it happened to
someone, and it happened right in front of my eyes!
That visitor was
telling me, “Learn to shut your eyes! You are safe, that’s enough for you to be
happy!”
No, I wasn’t ready to
accept this logic.
My happiness hadn’t
come
from ‘shutting my eyes’…
but, from ‘opening my eyes’…
This morning,
there
was only one thing to thank for…
and, only one reason to be happy…
Even though all the
‘bad things’ had happened to someone else… and, somewhere else… In this big-bad
world!
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pics.: Monica Valdar
Comments
Love,
GERRY
Love,
GERRY
One man’s empathy is thousand people’s sympathy which is million people’s apathy
Regards,
Mahesh
Love,
GERRY
Please let me know the other blogs you wanted me to read. Missed them in the past.
All by old posts are there just see the right-hand side Old Posts slot.
Hope, u will love them.
Love,
GGERRY