
UNLOCK
THE LOCKDOWN
When my office introduced us to WFH
(Work from Home) by rotation, I was undeniably happy. I have no qualms in admitting that the thought
of oversleeping, not having to get ready for work, not having to commute and
all the add-on’s of WFH enthused me. I
had already thought of all that I could do with the extra time before 9 and
after 5. My first thought was
assignments, essays and pending readings of an ongoing post-grad course that I
have undertaken.
Our HR Manager explained the finer
points of WFH to us amidst the chuckles and mental replay of all the social
media forwards about WFH. However, being
the first time, in addition to the excitement, I was trying to figure out how
and when I would need to fit into the larger picture of our departmental scenario. So Monday 23rd March was my first
day of WFH. Despite all the plans as
above, I found myself waking at the usual hour; but of course, I rolled back
into a cosy curl. "Silly woman, you won’t
have to doll up to take a phone call or send mails".
Late tea, late breakfast but the
cell phone on a full charge and with me all the time. That was the most important instruction. A decently disciplined me which I ought to be
at my age followed it dutifully. I had
only heard about the concept; often with an aura of “puffed-up” air. So the child
in me wanted to experience the same feeling, of course in a smaller dose. Having announced at home what my WFH would
look like, I reiterated with my friends too about no chats, less personal calls,
and no browsing. My cell phone had to be
free. Surprisingly, all of these were
acceptable breaks I took in the office.
Into the second day, I realised it
was not for nothing that I stayed on in an organisation for 27 years. My workstation had plenty for me to do and I
missed the ambience, no matter how many times I have felt like hanging my
boots. There was no buzzing of
intercoms, laughter’s, sniggers, a harsh word or a frustrating phone call. A bit of leg-pulling, some counselling,
someone being mentored and of course spotting that “harmless gossip” in a
corner only to look away like you knew nothing at all. I missed our harried office boy who was
always beckoned in unison. He perpetually
managed to upset at least one of us with his so-called “negligence”, but never failed to make it up with “bhalo[1]
coffee.”
Continuing
in a state of mental readiness, I respected the office hours and set myself
aside from home chores or hobbies that would interfere or cause any delays if I
was needed. That evening the PM was to
make an important announcement; he did and the nation went into a LOCKDOWN from
the midnight of the next day. Social distancing
was imperative to delay the community stage of the virus attack. This would flatten the curve by breaking the
chain, lowering cases of infection and prevent loss of life. Earlier on we were trying to get home a
precious friend from Mumbai. He just had
to get back. Reasonably occupied by
gimmicks of the popular airlines, it took up some time till we realised what
had struck us.
The next day comprised of crucial decisions,
arranging grocery, provisions, and medicines.
There was too much to be set in place.
Too much would be disrupted; just too many issues to sort out. Recuperating from PTSD[2],
stress gets to me first but wasn’t I contradicting myself when I said I will
put faith over fear? There are many
beautiful quotes, on fear and faith; though my personal favourite is a line I coined myself, “fear is not an absence of courage but lack of knowledge”. So for my quick dose of knowledge, I usually
turn to some Bible verses. As I
meditated the verse from “The Lord’s Prayer” came to my mind – “Give us today our
daily bread”[3]. Daily bread does not mean food alone, but all
our needs. And so if I stay fearless,
armed with the information of all the steps and decisions by the authorities
add to it my personal faith in God; I am good to go.
A reality check wasn’t as simple
as the plan above with constant bombardment of Whatsapp forwards, news
channels, research from Facebook University, tips on YouTube and positivity on
Instagram. Prayer calls, phone calls and
video calls clarified nothing for that moment.
How will we get this done?
Despite all attempts a tinge of impatience was rising slowly like the cake
does in my oven; with a cherry on the top, three children of the family away
from home at Bangalore, Dubai and Paris.
With portfolios and conditions that say, lab research, evacuation
flights, and one of the highest hit countries; worry is the least of all ill
feelings from the list of thoughts if one is to be truthful.
One set of aged parents at another
part of the country, fortunately with family and another set close by. It was of some assurance, but all four in the vulnerable category with multiple health issues. Whoa!
Can that get better? The only
words that came to mind at that moment were inconveniences, disruption,
slowdown, price rise, fear of the illness and uncertainty. Yes, I began to feel insecure, even inside
the four walls of my home and complex.
Newspapers had stopped, water vendor, maid, milkman nobody could come
up. The bell would not ring for
anything!! Isolation seemed painful,
even though they were just mundane everyday stuff.
The first afternoon of the lockdown,
I connected with my present classmates on a conference call. In a refreshing conversation; we shared individual
concerns and prayed for the various needs of the Pandemic. I missed Amit’s[4]
tea; though it was just an ordinary black tea, there was a bond in that cup. I missed my colleagues and friends. I missed the whole routine of life that we
had. Wait, what was it? Routine did I say? Ah!!
Aren’t we humans finicky? When we
have it, we want a break. When we get a
break we want it. This was my point of
realisation when I took stock of the situation and mentally rehearsed the next
day.
I drew up a comfortable schedule
working around the WFH aspect and merged my timetable with the rest of the
family. Through an assortment of feelings, one word reverberated over and over again, T-i-m-e. It took me to a line of Gandalf “…all we have to decide is what to do with
the time that is given to us”[5]
which perfectly matched the verse, “Look carefully then how you walk, not as
unwise but as wise, making the best use of the time…”[6]

Twenty-one
days meant a lot of time, even with WFH and all household chores, there would be enough spare moments. I stood before the multiple shelves and
corners of the house where I safely tucked in all the “unfinished projects” due to lack of time. There was course-work, crafting, painting, mending,
filing papers, abandoned knitting, incomplete embroidered pillowcases, saved
up junk and many more. The list was
incredibly long. Not forgetting the many
books in my cupboard, movies and reading links I had saved in my device’s to
watch and read later. My eyes fell on my
Bible, honestly, quite neglected. So, if
eternity was to be spent with God, I need to learn to spend time with God!
The voice within prompted me to act, “get
moving girl, do you still need time or discipline? Is it really time or priority? You have two options; fuss and mope, feeling
miserable, or chin up and choose to evolve and grow a little more.
I smiled as I pulled out my first project, “definitely the second option as long as it doesn’t tilt the weighing scales, I choose to
grow".
To be continued :
"Unexpected Crisis - Incredible Opportunity”
"Unexpected Crisis - Incredible Opportunity”
Images: Courtesy
Google Images
[2] Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
[3] Verse 11 of The Lord’s Prayer, Matthew
Chapter 6:9-13(The Bible,NIV)
[4] The Office Boy.
[5] The Lord of the Rings, Part 1- The
Fellowship of the Ring, J R R Tolkien





15 comments:
Very nice Smita..
Wonderful writing
Great Smita, where can I get someone who can write so beautifully.
Superb smita.. Keep on writing ..
Superb Smita... KEEP ON WRITING Regards Madhu
Superb.. Keep up the good work
Superb
Nicely written Smita!
Thank you Sheela...love you. I write my heart out :)
Thank you for the appreciation.
Thank you for the encouragement Madhu
Thank you for the appreciation.
Thanks Ariff
Excellent Smita, so beautifully you have penned it down. Why don't you send this article
to Dejani, CCD, to feature this in our Express News
Hi I have already sent them.
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