THE PACKED LUNCH-BOXES OF OUR TOMORROWS
Pic.: Fr. Reginald Pinto
“What you give, will be for you; what you hoard, will be for others’;
Do not remember or regret what you give…
For, that will be the packed lunch-box for your tomorrows.”
Sarvajna
was a great Kannada poet and philosopher. He was famous for his Tripadis – simple three-lined poems.
They were easy to remember and recite… and, they were loaded with meaning. And,
the best thing about all his Tripadis
was: they ended with ‘Sarvajna’!
So, though we kids in school were
bad in memorizing Sarvajna’s Tripadis,
we were brilliant in creating our own Tripadis
– with colloquial fun. Oh, we would come out with a fresh one every second
morning… yes, just like our young-kids do, today, in their FB factories!
Frankly, I had completely forgotten,
both, Sarvajna and his famous Tripadis.
And, this morning, when I was talking to Mr. Rao, a senior citizen – who, like
me, had done his schooling in Mangalore (and much before me) – he recited one
of Sarvajna’s Tripadis…
Let me tell you, he did it better
than my school teachers had done. Or, was it that, today, the teacher appeared
because the student was ready?
I am sure, it is the latter. In
school, our only concern was to pass… So, we mugged-up all those (amazing)
poems without understanding their relevance or meaning… and, we disliked – and
dreaded - the subject, the teachers who taught… and, yes, those poets and
writers, all.
This morning, the subject of our
discussion was – ‘Giving’. Mr. Rao, who is a very unassuming soul, had something
priceless to contribute…
We
give in different ways. Financial help is just one of them. But, all our givings,
as Sarvajna says, will eventually benefit us, the givers… more than they do to
the receiver of the benefit. As the poet says, what we hoard - hold tightly
back – eventually only benefit others… And, as he gently reminds us, we should
neither regret nor try to remember what we give, because, they will be right
there for us, along our tomorrows, as our packed lunch-boxes.
Sarvajna!
GERALD D’CUNHA
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-- Uma