The Water Animal
If I have to believe in past lives of our souls, I am damn
sure that Rayyan was a water animal in his past life. He could have been a
fish, octopus, squid, crocodile, whale, tortoise or a toad; but he sure was in
water. Since he was a baby, Rayyan would get terribly excited as we prepared his
bath.
He would laugh and enjoy the bath, as his loving Naani would start
scolding us for making her life a hell in our own childhood. She would say that
we all cried and threw tantrums whenever we were bathed. I would accuse her of
pouring hot water on us which must have made us cry.
As days went by, I made Rayyan sit in the water tub for some
time. It was too late for me to realize that it was a wrong move, because he
would plead to be left there and did not want to come out at all.
When he came
out, he hands and feet would be like raisins. He would help us as we washed
clothes (manually off course) or bike since it allowed him to get wet. He would
love any work that involved water. Farheena turned out to be the same. Even as
small children, they would be drenched in rain. Rayyan would be running around or
playing in water, while Farheena would just love to sit on a chair and get wet.
Fortunately, it did not lead to cold or fever or else they would be banished
from enjoying the rain. I have so often been reprimanded by different people
and strangers for leaving children out in rain. They cursed the irresponsible
mom who did not care for her children.
When we shifted to Byndoor, I decided to teach Rayyan to
swim. For all the love of the water, he would not jump in the water for his
swimming lessons. He was afraid to go deep and would just hold the ledges and
pretend to swim.
Once when we were on the beach, my brother and I together
decided that we will remove the fear of deep waters from Rayyan’s mind. We found
a nice spot where the water looked calm and decided to send him in there. Rayyan
already knew a bit of swimming but was not an expert. We two stupid people who
were trying this out did not know swimming back then. Rayyan was brave to
venture into waist high water but would get scared when the water mark reached his
chest. We just wanted him to get over this fear.
We threw one of his favourite ball in that calm water and
asked him to fetch it if he wanted it, or else we would abandon the ball and go
back home. The poor child was in a dilemma here. “Maa, what if the water is not
safe”. “If you get in there you will know that it is safe” we said. Rayyan went
a little further in water, but then rushed back to the shore. “Maa that water
is different. It looks like it is pulling at me”. We ignored him and stuck to
what we said earlier. The poor child, who usually doesn’t abandon his toy,
especially the ones which are old, again slowly started venturing into the water.
By then, someone started shouting at us, “Take the child out of water, take the
child out of water, it is not safe waters”. By then Rayyan had reached to the
ball. He grabbed at it and rushed back. By then, the person shouting had neared
us. He was quite angry and grew wilder as he watched Rayyan staring at him
innocently. “Are you people crazy to send that child into such dangerous
waters? This is the place where the river meets the sea. There are strong
undercurrents that can drown expert fishermen like us and we avoid it. How
could you send such small child to fetch that toy?” He looked agitated enough
to push us both into the water. We said sorry to both the man and Rayyan.
Rayyan still accuses me of trying to drown him in water, but
that did not stop him from loving water.
After, little bit of pushing from me
(one which literally was push into the pond) he started venturing into waters.
Like with the water filled tub, I realized too late that this was not a right
move. Not only Rayyan would get into any water body without checking out for
its safety (though he disagrees with this), he would stay there and we would be
stuck on the beach, river bank or amusement park for hours. What scared me was
his adventures in sea on Someshwara beach.
Sometimes I would try to look for
him and his tiny head would be invisible. I was torn between my fears and his
love to enjoy water. Rayyan would come up with different theories about the
safety of what he was doing. He would somehow convince me about it as well. Though
I wanted Rayyan to be safe, I did not have heart to steal the love of
adventures, exploration or fun from him. In return for his freedom, Rayyan
promised me never to take risks and would check with locals or watch out for
dangerous signs whenever he would be in water or anywhere else during his
adventures.
To this day, Rayyan is still the same child who loves the
feel of natural water on his body and comes with hands and feet looking like
raisins. I am quite sure he has some connection with the water animals. You should
tell me which animal ……
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