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THE QUIET ART OF CHOOSING WHOM TO LOVE


 

My dear friends!

 

In these curious and restless times, I have found it valuable of note — and somewhat disheartening — to distinguish how swiftly and thoughtlessly the civilisation rushes to weave the same tired narrative whenever it finds an individual, especially one past a certain age, spouseless and at harmony with their solitary station. The human brain, particularly the one that has not yet ripened into the fullness of self-knowledge, seems ever eager to reduce every unmapped life to one simple and shallow explanation: that it must be the effect of some entanglement of sexual perplexity or a timid dread of companionship. It is, I must say, the fixation of stunted and immature intellects, who — in their own struggle to understand contentment — cannot help but gauge all lives against the yardstick of their own fidgety preoccupations.

 

On Solitude and Self-Possession

 

But for those of us whose romanticisms have long since outgrown such infantile narcissism, there exists a rather different state — a habitation of hushed happiness, and of security rooted not in another’s approval, but in the unshakable ground of being unworried with oneself. I daresay the truly self-possessed man has little need to make haste in the matter of mortal attachments. He is neither starved for endearment nor alarmed by privacy, but rather lives as one who is whole, and alleviated.

 

The Modern Dilemma of Commitment

 

Now, the present-time has set before the male species — if I may call it that — a new dilemma, though it is scarcely a novel instinct. Even in the days of our forebears, the reluctance of men to pledge themselves to the bond of marriage was no oddity. The difference now, perhaps, is that we live in a more molten and unmoored life span, in which the reasons for such reluctance are not only more varied but more openly spoken of. Loneliness, or ambiguity about one’s own pining, is seldom the true culprit. No, the real guardians at the gate are caution and careful discernment — those two old sentinels, continually standing watch over the kernel of discerning men.

 

The Shifting Roles of Man and Woman

 

When one surveys the progress as pragmatically as one can — and I reckon there are few better ways to approach it — the roles assigned to man and woman were, from the dawn of earthly existence, carved out by both nature and necessity. The man, provider and protector; the woman, nurturer and keeper of hearth and home. An elementary and enduring blueprint. But alas, this pattern has not escaped the edgy hand of recent revision.

 

The Legacy of Liberation

 

One cannot speak of such things without acknowledging the great rupture brought about by the women’s liberation movement and the financial independence it has since afforded. This shift — understandable, even necessary — has, however, torn through the delicate fabric of centuries-old order. To say it plainly: women, having long endured the heavy hand of repression, sought dignity, and rightly understood that dignity, in this current culture, would require both education and economic self-sufficiency. And so they armed themselves with qualifications, with keenness, and with ambition. But somewhere along this steep ascent, many seem to have lost their footing — caught, as it were, between two spheres: unclear whether their latitude lies in the corridors of enterprise or the placid chambers of the home. This bewilderment, born of divided loyalties, has sown not only dissatisfaction but a fracture in the once harmonious, if imperfect, union between the sexes.

 

The Mirage of Self-Help

 

I often encounter the well-meaning theories of self-help sages and writers, promising the reader that should they do this, or refrain from that, their spirits will be rewarded, their lives transformed. But the veracity, as any seasoned soul can tell you, is rather less mechanical: nothing happens until it is meant to happen, and no amount of anxious striving can accelerate the arrival of what is not yet appointed. Much of what parades itself under the banner of self-improvement is little more than the bright packaging of contemporary commerce — a clever masquerade for the oldest game of all: selling hope to the impatient.

 

A Word on My Own Case

 

Permit me, if you will, to speak without adornment of my own case, as I am, an open book—unsealed and unguarded. By the standards of the coterie into which I was born, I am considered rather too old to be unwed, and yet my direction has not been hindered by confusion over my cravings. I am as settled in my preference as I have ever been, and my temperament leans firmly and unambiguously toward women. The reason for my retreat sprawls elsewhere, and it is neither shrouded in mystery nor deserving of gossip. 

 

Inheritance and Ambition

 

While my father, a barrister by profession, elected to live his life much as he pleased — according to no standard but his own — I must confess, with no lesser measure of gratitude, that both he and my mother bestowed upon me all that a child could be reasonably given: not merely the security of several roofs, scattered generously across continents, nor merely the untroubled ease that comes from unending reservoir of wealth, but more significantly, a heritage — a lineage — which I carry not with vanity but with immense honour.

 

And yet, the crux of the circumstance is this: I could not reconcile myself to the idea of merely existing as a beneficiary of such a pedigree. There stirred within me a desire, as deep as it was unwavering, to fashion for myself a legacy that would not be borrowed but built — not an inheritance to be spent, but a life’s labour to be earned. And as one must, at some juncture, confront the unavoidable possibility between living as a full-time paramour or a full-time creator, I chose the latter — not from coldness of compassion, but from a conviction that to create was, for me, the more honest and enduring trail.

 

My Early Influences and Reflections

 

The conditions of my infancy moulded my cognitive abilities, as they must for every man. My father, though from an aristocratic line and an heir to considerable wealth, saw no urgency in applying himself to effort. He drifted through life absorbed by his own interests, with little thought for the example a father might set for his son. My mother, herself the daughter of an illustrious family, found herself forced into an unfamiliar role — setting aside her own pursuits in order to anchor the family amidst my father’s disinterest. And thus, the child who descried this drama unfold within the walls of his own home came to associate temporal relationships with dissonance and discord. As a result, I retreated into the safe and solitary stronghold of my own mind — a spot I came to know as my ‘mind palace’ — where conflict could not reach me. And this, I believe, is at the mettle of many a man’s temperament: they do not shun love, but they do loathe dissension.

 

Brotherhood Beyond Blood

 

With no fortune passed down, and no father to blaze the wake before me, I began from the barest foundations. And what I lacked in bequest I was most fortuitous to find in social fellowship. I joined hands, with my childhood friend, as my business partner — a man whose loyalty, character, and devotedness have proven graver and truer than the bonds of mere blood. What I feel for him is not born of sentimentality, but of mirrored hardship and tested trust — the kind of brotherhood that does not require ceremony to be known as sacred.

 

On Slander and the Judgment of Others

 

He has stood by me with a steadfastness few souls could ever match — more, indeed, than any other family I have known. And as for those who, in the smallness of their natures and the idleness of their tongues, imagine they might assassinate my character by slight and sluggish insinuation, I can only suggest they are grievously mistaken. For I have long since ceased to concern myself with the fickle approval of the world. The judgment of strangers, or of those who exhibit themselves as convivial connections but possess neither gravity nor fidelity, matters not at all upon me. My compass is set by the recognition of who truly matters in my life — and the constancy of those few roots is all the assurance I have ever needed.

 

On Society’s Expectations and the Matter of “Settling Down”

 

Of course, it would be naïve to imagine that such a life could remain untouched by the sharp little stones of slander. There are always those who, lacking sufficient work for their own mentalities, make the affairs of others their primary occupation. 

 

It was put to me, rather presumptuously I might add, by certain members of my extended family — those whose association with wisdom is perhaps more casual than their acquaintance with social expectation — that now, having tasted the fruits of success in a measure beyond what many might dare to imagine, the time has arrived for me to “settle down.”

 

How does one even respond to such dull-witted counsel? There exists no universal schedule for human fulfilment, no clock by which all must live their lives in identical sequences. Every man is shaped by different priorities, and every soul is drawn by different longings. My own, I imagine, have never been dictated by the baser appetites which seem to hold so many others captive. Physical needs — if they have ever held sway at all — have long since retreated to the placid recesses of life’s concerns. In reality, and at the risk of sounding snobbish (though I would call it nothing but normal and measured observation), I have always been possessed of an awareness rather more mature than the absurd trivialities which swirl about me.

 

Regarding My Father

 

And there are others, in the same breath, who ask — with the same feeble curiosity — whether I harbour any lingering misgiving toward my father. To that, I must answer firmly and without a flicker of doubt: no. Life, as I have learned, is a long and winding road where each of us must choose the path upon which we walk. He chose his; I, mine. And for that, there is neither resentment nor regret — only the laconic acceptance that each man lives by his own purpose.

 

Idle Whispers and the Price of Aloofness

 

I have grown accustomed to the idle whispers that question the attributes of my aloofness, or suggest, in that knowing tone peculiar to the envious and the ignorant, that my life must be shaped by some hidden secret, some supposed divergence from the ‘straight path.’ These rumours, I regard as I would the buzzing of a fly: an irritant, but no real concern. My world is wider, and my company, more evolved than such pettiness can comprehend.

 

A Disinterest in the Common Circle

 

I must confess, too, that I have never belonged to those chattering circles — the cliques of common and uninspired souls — nor would I ever stoop to find a place amongst them. Their approval is of no consequence to me, for their world is one I neither envy nor seek to enter.

 

The Weight of True Veneration

 

The statistic is plain sailing: to venerate a woman — truly, wholly, and without reserve — is no light task. It asks for one’s time, one’s presence, and above all, one’s concord of cognisance. I once gave such tenderness, and for no small stretch of years. Eight long, to be exact. But when the juncture came to choose between the gentle succours of an itch that had grown wearied and the invitation to forge the life I had envisioned, I selected the second. The woman, once bright and light of gusto, grew disconcerted, and the closeness which had once felt like home began to weigh like an anchor on the psyche. Affection is no remedy for the absence of understanding, and it was with no bitterness, but a contented canon, that I set her free, and myself along with her. And thus I have remained — not unready for a swain, but unwilling to settle for its pale imitation.

 

The Unapologetic Truth of Experience

 

I have conveyed these thoughts before, and on occasion have been met with disapproval, particularly when I have spoken candidly of my father. But fact, if it is to possess any real worth, must be spoken comprehensibly, even when it grates against the sensibilities of polite society. If the telling of it causes discomfort, so be it. Better an uncomfortable factuality than a pleasant lie.

 

A Life Aimed to Outlast

 

I have walked a road not barren of ardour, but deliberately designed by the endowment to set up enough that would outlast me. That is, in the end, the breadth of my story.

 

The Perils of Premature Partnership

 

I have observed the fates of many who, in the heady fervour of youth, leapt headfirst into matrimony, only to find themselves ensnared by a silent suffocation — trapped in the lovely, but loveless, golden cage of mistaken partnership. And I have perceived others — slower to bind themselves, or perhaps simply more fortunate — find, later in life, an intimacy founded not on passion alone, but on features acceptably exceptional: mutual mentality, levelled laughter, and that abiding equanimity which even time cannot undo.

 

Lessons from Friends and Fellow Wanderers

 

I have had the privilege of knowing dear friends whose lives bear out this exactitude. Some married late, some embraced solitude, but all have taught me this: amorousness, if it is to mean anything, must be favoured freely, not out of fear or duty, but out of the sheer, unforced joy of finding a kindred quintessence.

 

The Currency of Time

 

For myself, I have learned to value time as the rarest of currencies. To spend it upon one unready, or unworthy, would be the greatest waste — for her, and for me. And so I wait, with the calm and patient trust that the Author of all things will write this chapter as beautifully as He has written the rest.

 

The Quiet Conviction of Awaiting Love

 

When the hour is ripe, I am convinced, she will appear — an embodiment whose warmth is as open and unblemished as the one I offer in return. Until then, I am at peace.

 

The Balanced Soul

 

Nor have I let the imbalances of my childhood embitter me. I have questioned myself, as every sincere man must: Was it the foreboding of fidelity that kept me footloose and fancy free? Was I, perhaps, adrift between an ancient belief in man as provider and woman as homemaker — a belief fast becoming an anomaly in this modern generation? But no. My resolve, when tested, gave no such answer. I knew then, and I know now: when the heart and head both say ‘yes,’ and the same music stirs in another, then — and only then — will the bond be made.

 

A Friend’s Remark and the Nature of Waiting

 

A friend once espied that I must be missing out on life for want of a wife. I wonder, do I truly believe that life, had it been shared, would have offered more than it already has? Perhaps. But until the one who means something appears, I can see no cause to trouble myself over what has not yet come to pass. She further asked, with no little exasperation, whether I was always so pedantic. I had no answer for her, save this: we possess no real control over the present moment, much less over the unseen future. The wisest way, it seems to me, is to outline one’s life with intention but never to let oneself drift aimlessly — for it is only dead fish that are carried along by the current. The living make their own way.

 

On Commitment and the Wise Man’s Caution

 

I do not think men display a phobia for commitment. The sagacious ones — the ones sharpened by life’s more exacting lessons — have simply learned to avoid foolish hurriedness. They know the weight of expectations, the toll of misplaced propensity, and so they tread vigilantly. And while the morale must never be shielded beyond all feeling, neither must it be handed over at the first flutter of fancy. One must be open, but not obliging; cautious, but not cold.

 

The Trouble with Intelligence in Modern Courtship

 

I came across an article recently, declaring that intelligent men are more strenuous suitors — that the more inquisitive the self, the more troublesome it becomes for others. Perhaps there is some accuracy in it, but I suspect the subject is more nuanced than the writers allow. Intelligence, after all, does tend to distance one from the multitudes — not out of pride, but out of a merciful mismatch in wavelength. Yet the truly enlightened man is not difficult by disposition, only particular about where he places his trust. His foresight is his strength, not his flaw. When applied with reverence and attention, this foresight becomes the very safeguard that preserves the sanctity of allegiance.

 

The Cost of the Wrong Bond

 

And so I leave you with this: it is neither bafflement nor qualm that keeps some men solitary. It is, quite simply, the clarity of knowing that the wrong bond costs more than loneliness ever will. Those who wait do so not out of helplessness, but by choice — the still, deliberate choice of a man who prefers to build his house upon rock rather than upon sand.

 

Yours, 

always in thought and in truth,

F

 

P.S. For the dimwits at the back — I am straight. And no, I don’t let the clod between my legs do the contemplating for me. 

 

And even if I were not made in the manner the world deems ‘straight,’ I should harbour no shame nor disquiet on the laws of nature; for at the end, we are all — each and every one — human souls. Love, in its staunchest system, is neither a contrivance of humanity nor a staple subject to the governance of men. It is a faculty bestowed, not commanded; an adherence of the leaning that flows where it will, and suitably so, for it is no more within our jurisdiction to domineer its passage than it is to regulate the rising of the sun.

 

I THINK




In today’s times, one observes the male species a bit troubled to commit, specifically to marriage. Not that in the past they felt any different, it is just that today we live in rather fluid times, and there are abundant reasons that gravitate towards men not committing. Loneliness, or confusion about one’s sexual preference is certainly not one of them. What else then, you might ask? Cautious and careful are the two watchwords that withhold men from commitment with the opposite sex, and nearly most of their life sciences seem somehow to revolve around those two factors.

Examined most pragmatically, the roles of men and women have been etched rather befittingly from the inception of mankind: men have been the bread earners, and women, the homemakers. One leading factor to have drilled a hole in the happiness was the woman’s liberation movement, followed by the financial independence that women have obtained in the last couple of decades. This has ruined the pattern that had been followed since centuries. Then again, it is not the fault of women alone. They have been repressed from eons, and it was but natural that they sought respect, and respect, they knew, could be earned if they stood on their own feet, and that would happen if they qualified and educated themselves, and that is what they went about doing. However, somewhere, in the pursuit of practising such unparalleled power, most women have found themselves confused – they have no clue whether they belong to an office, or to their homes, and this has lead to dissatisfaction, conflict, and a crack in something that would have been wonderful had this whole ‘I want equality’ not interfered with the equilibrium chartered out from time immemorial.

I read articles every now and then of people theorising about why something is this or that. I also hear discourses on self-help that say if you do this, this will happen, and if you do that, that will happen. Truth is nothing will happen unless you want it to happen, and you cannot make anything happen until it is the time for it to happen. The rest is nothing but a marketing and money laundering drama.

If I were to cite my own example, I would say that I am now a bit old to get married by conventional Indian standards, and it has nothing to do with my sexual preference – I am perfectly and clearly heterosexual, but what had kept me from letting a woman into my comfort zone for a long time could be attributed perhaps to two possible reasons. My father, besides being born into great wealth, inherited a great fortune as well, and did not consider keeping himself occupied with a day job as it was below the dignity of aristocrats to be caught up in the nitty-gritty of life. If that was not enough of a mental adjustment, my mother, from an equally illustrious ancestry, was unable to handle my father’s indifferent nature, and had to give up her medical profession, which she loved, and dress herself up in the role of the proxy man in order to keep the semblance of the family intact, whilst he sailed, rode horses, barbequed at the exotic farmlands he bought in affluent cities and regularly burnt rubber of his luxurious four wheels. This image had established such asymmetry in me as a child that I found it incredibly tough to cope with changed gender roles, and as a consequence I escaped into a world of my own – my mind palace, as I would term it. In my palace I was free of conflict, and this is the crux of male mentality – they loathe conflict. I did not permit the domestic imbalance distress me and with time the fact was firmly established that it was not my father and mother who were responsible for me in not plunging into matrimonial bliss, (as it was presumed more so by anyone else but them) but it was the grasp of the reality, the truth, the scruples, and art that prevented me from being coerced into anything that my soul did not find relief in. Parents being parents, it was indeed difficult for them to comprehend that as their children we saw life far more clearly than them. 

Next, I asked myself whether I was threatened by commitment? Or whether I was caught between the devil and the deep sea, that to find a woman who would appreciate that I believed in the traditional role play of man the earner, and woman the homemaker, was something that was a bit too far fetched in the twenty first century? My inner voice provided me a negative for both, and I came to realise that when I found the right fit, and my heart and mind said yes, and the similar bells tolled in her heart and mind too, then it were to be a connection built to last.

A friend said that by not having a wife in my life I was missing out on life. Do I ‘really’ think that life would have been any different had there been a woman in my life? Possibly, but, until the one who mattered had put in an appearance, there was no reason to stress myself with what had not happened. “Are you always this pedantic?” she further asked. I didn’t know what to tell her, I mean we have no control over what we are doing this very instant, so how can we know what fate we would meet with in the future. As shrewd as we think we are, and plan for posterity, at least until we live, we should not fool ourselves into believing that the future can hold something glorious because it simply cannot. One must organise one’s life, but one must not go blindly with the flow, since it is only the dead fish that go with the flow. The ones that are alive make their own path.

I don’t think that men in general are frightened of commitment. The smartest of the lot have schooled themselves sufficient enough to safeguard themselves from rushing into things. They have become cautious for they do not have the tolerance to deal with the strain of expectations that loving a woman, in particular a wrong one, would demand of them, and thus, they prefer to be safe than sorry. Also, one must be warned that this notion of negotiating with caution merely because one has been hurt once seems nonsensical. Each situation is different, just as each person is different, so we ought to get rid of comparisons by attempting to emboss one experience over the other. Who knows, in the fuss of letting hurt overpower us, we might just about fail to recognise the one who is meant to be the one for us. Core of the matter is that one must be mindful, but not rigid. One must be sensitive, but not over sensitive. One must be cautious, but certainly not excessively cautious.

I was reading an article that states that the more intelligent the man, the more investigative he is, and the more investigative he is, the more complex he is to get along with. While the people who have arrived at such conclusions would have their points to prove, I find such blanket statements a bit juvenile to digest. I do concur that intelligence confines us from intermingling freely with the multitudes for lack of wavelength, but it is not entirely true that clever people are problematic. Possibly, they are difficult in case they find themselves adjoined in the arms of those who do not stem from their own sensibilities, but otherwise I think it is just their own farsightedness that comes to their rescue. Prudence allows a certain luxury of seeing beyond the obvious, and when those principles are employed with respect to our partners, then the true nature of each other’s interest in one another is revealed most plainly, which indirectly helps in navigating through a relationship with caution. As a result what wisdom does is trigger the conscience to retain an upper hand than mere superficiality, and that is where the notion of ‘intelligent men’ are not prone to being fooled in a relationship has taken birth, when it is nothing but experience and arithmetic at work.

Before I go, I would like to reiterate that it is not sexual confusion as I abovementioned, or the fear of commitment that keeps men from committing. It is just the methodical reasoning that they are gifted with which allows them to remain single until they find somebody of their own liking. They know that a wrong turn could cost them their peace, and this wrong turn seldom happens considering the points discussed above. So the smart ones are single by well-thought-out choice, and certainly not the victims of circumstance.



THIS IS THE FIRST STEP ~ Sushant Singh Rajput



The media is rife with the news of Sushant Singh Rajput wanting to provide free education to needy children who will be chosen wisely against a set of tests of merit. If the children clear the test, they would be granted a year of free education, and as an incentive not to render the spirits of such chosen children lackadaisical, the children would have to appear for another test at the beginning of the next academic year if they are to be eligible for their education being supported for the consecutive year. Says Sushant, “This is the first step, and we will work on other models. I think this process will give kids a new excitement and encouragement to study and make themselves more competitive.”

A studious lad who had cleared multiple engineering exams, Sushant was born and brought up in Patna. Right from an early age he was rather eager to study abroad, but the circumstances were not conducive for him to pursue his dreams any further. “My mother always taught me that we educate our children not to become doctors or engineers, but that the impact of basic education reflects on their thought processes and decision making,” he says. As you can infer, he is doing whatever he is doing in honour of his mother, who is no more. As admirable as it is, the dichotomy is that in this age; where nearly everything is short-lived, do we receive such deeds of benevolence with a sense of gratitude, move onto what’s the next sensational story to make waves, or, do we build on it with a goal of permanence, just so that we may create a little bit of Sushant Singh Rajput in each of us? That I leave to each of you to introspect and arrive at your own answers.

Education is one of the vital tools that favour humanity for the betterment of it. Education provides you the ability to discern between the good and the bad, the right and the wrong. Education grooms men to be gentlemen, and women, ladies. A good head and good heart are always a formidable combination. But when you add to that a literate tongue or pen, then you have something very special said Nelson Mandela, and even though a formal education has all the properties of helping you make a living, it is self-education that is a sure means to make you a fortune. For that reason, a fire to learn must be kindled in kids. They ought to be made to desire what they are learning, considering the mind is constructed in such a way that it retains nothing that it takes in, if it is not something it finds appealing, and that is something that people can expect from Sushant and his endeavours: the propagation of encouragement at the very grassroots.

I have believed in a simple philosophy that at the end of your life you will know that nothing you have done will ever matter – only who you have been while you have done it. And in keeping with my own philosophy, I have only one thing to say – don’t merely like what Sushant Singh Rajput is doing; strive to be like what Sushant Singh Rajput is. Be the fire that lights a million lamps, for the mind once enlightened, as Thomas Paine said, cannot again become dark. And in giving to the world would be the best honour you can be giving Sushant Singh Rajput.   

On this day, don't just post a status. ~ ALI ZAFAR



Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Sibling’s Day etcetera are nothing but methods invented by clever people to make people spend money. There is no ounce of love in them, only exhibitionism. As always, this fad gained momentum over the digital world, where to display your love publicly has become quite the vogue, when, in actuality, you should be doing the opposite: be with those who matter.

Thoroughly amused at the steady flow of photographs popping up all day, I shared on Twitter – Today we have to bear with all the morons who decided to wish their mothers online because some moron decided it was Mother’s Day. People I tell you!!!

A rather popular journalist and renowned food blogger friend of mine, Sunory Dutt, responded to my tweet with: Lemme guess - you wished aunty Taj a happy Mother’s Day and she said there was nothing happy about being a mother to you.


What a hearty laugh I had.

Just while I was calling it a day my brother Ali declared something on his Facebook wall. Leaving you with his words, which, for me, were nothing short of the simplest, and yet the wisest grand finale to a rather over-popularised day.

On this day, don’t just post a status. Go and tell your mother how much you love her, and how thankful you are to her for giving you not just this life but so much in it. And while you’re at it...a big tight hug. #mothersday

~ Ali Zafar ~

And then he followed it up with: 

She dedicated her life to acquiring and then transferring knowledge to her children and children of many. My mother.


And then you all ask me why I love my younger brother as much as I do.


People I tell you!!!