I’ve always taken my
uncling responsibilities seriously. Even before my little nephew was born, this
much was clear to me: growing up, I didn’t have an elder male figure I could
depend on to bail me out of trouble, or even to show me the ropes to basic
adult stuff like shaving in a hurry or sleeping with women without falling in
love with them, and this sort of deprival lasts a lifetime. I would not
let my nephew grow up a fuzzy-chinned romantic fool.
My approach to uncling my little niece however, is a little different. Having played
Having said that, I’m quite fond of this gig I have going as the niblings’ only maternal uncle, and the unofficial “fun uncle” by a mile. As my sis never tires of pointing out, mine is a kingdom founded entirely on the great institution of the uncle-in-transit. I’ve never lived in the same city, or even the same state as the niblings till I moved recently to Cochin, so I’ve never had to unplug the X-box just as the nephew was approaching his top score or take a U-turn and head right back into the city after a long day at work because I forgot to pick up glitter pens for the niece’s ‘art’ project. I come bearing gifts, and when I’m visiting no household item can not be converted into a plaything.
So when my sister announced recently that she and her husband would be out of town for a night, I jumped at the chance to re-write a little history. When Fun Uncle was on the throne, the niblings would look back and remember, bliss was it in that dawn to be alive. Not only would the fun never set on his empire, but the subjects would also eat their five greens with relish, shower without complaint and scoot off to bed in orderly fashion at quarter to ten. It was only a matter of a few hours before I would be inducted into the pantheon of all time greats- Uncles Bun, Charlie and …err.. Kracker.
The first evening, a Sunday, passed uneventfully enough. I reached their place around five with a party-planner’s diary worth of things-to-do only to find that the agenda had not just been set, but that it was cast in stone: a trip to Donut Factory, followed by a visit to Crossword bookstore, both conveniently located almost across the road from each other in Panampilly Nagar where they stay. Fair enough, I thought, especially since my own game plan would have taken us on a criss-cross road trip across the heart and whatever soul is left of commerce-heavy Cochin.
The outdoor seating arrangement at Donut Factory did however tear a significant hole in my comfort zone. My nephew, who takes great pleasure in reading out- and consequently inquiring as to the meaning of- just about any road/shop/other sign he can find, pointed a questioning finger at the poster behind us: “A hole looks better on a donut than on your lungs”. The words were accompanied by a picture of the universal circle around a cigarette with a line running across it. “It means you shouldn’t smoke,” I said, “because smoking pokes holes in your chest.” “But shouldn’t that be your choice?” he asked immediately, with all the privileged disdain for authority of his particular breed of Cochin’s private school populace.
If they can sell
cigarettes, and tax cigarettes, then of course it should be your choice, I
wanted to tell him. Screw choice, smoking is just awesome, I wanted to say. But
one look at his comically revolutionary face, and a quick flashback of him
running circles around me in his Messi jersey as I lunged about gasping for
breath during our impromptu football game a few minutes earlier, and I turned
into my dad. “You’re seven,” I barked, “you have no choice.”
My niece plays games of a subtler kind. At Crossword bookstore a little later, after explaining to me the literary merits of the many numerous diaries maintained by a kid whodescribes himself as “wimpy” with a sense of irony I suspected was lost on her, she asked me: “So how much can I spend?” I quickly scanned the price tags on the shelf in front of me, and said: “you can both pick up a book each.” “No” she declared, “tell me how much we can spend, that’s what we always do.” As I tried to remember if I even understood the concept of spending power at her age, she added, “our other uncle always lets us spend five hundred each.” I nodded in the affirmative, and prayed to all the Gods I’d heard of that she didn’t grow up to be a politician or a banker.
Of course the real test came the morning after. My niece woke me up at six to make her a poster for her campaign; she was running for Class Monitor and her pitch was “I will increase lunch hour by one hour”. “More glitter, dude,” she sighed exasperatedly every time she walked past in various stages of undress until the maid finally scooped her up and stationed her under the shower. I think she actually flicked my ear one time, but that may also have been my brain exploding. Only when the early morning wind did a little jig around my face as she waved goodbye from her bus did I fully realize the absurdity of the Goldingesque nightmare I had woken up to.
My nephew had courteously decided to exit his royal chambers when I returned, at least physically if not in spirit. I walked in on the sight of the maid flying spoon-aeroplanes of sliced idlis into his open mouth as he stood in front of the television, his hand operating the video game console out of sheer muscular memory even as his head drooped to one side, his eyes tighter shut than Kerala’s shops on a hartal. The kid was half-naked and asleep on his feet as a middle-aged woman spoon-fed him breakfast, as the streets of some ghetto or the other rose up in flames on the TV screen to electronic punk rock! The world hadn’t witnessed such decadence since the Romans.
His
eyes remained shut as I helped the maid plant one of his legs after the other
into freshly ironed shorts, tucked in his shirt, converted the signature quiff
of his hair into a side parting just to spite him a little and deposited him on
the bus next to a cute girl who looked around his age. I made my way back to
the flat in a daze. I must have dozed off on the couch because the next thing I
knew, the phone was ringing in the vague vicinity of my ear. It was my sister.
“You okay?” she asked. “Oh I really hope I can’t have kids,” I told her. “We’ll
be back before noon,” she laughed. “You should,” I said, “they grow up so
fast.”
Icy Highs's Music Recco: Four Times and Once After - The Superfuzz/ Indigo Children
This piece was originally published in Helter Skelter magazine on 03-03-14
7 comments:
aww... that was cute.
they aren't really that bad, are they?
Heh "that bad" is subjective but I love the little scamps to death.
Increasing lunch by one hour should be universal. Why haven't politicians running for office picked up on that one.
Also, naps. When I run for office, most my promises are going to be nap-related.
Haha. I don't know if I'm just getting old, but I'd vote for more nap time.
Nice post. There are certain advantages in being the Aunt or Uncle rather than the parent. The thing is, I was so used to all the Hubub, that when I moved away, I started to want my own kids.
Cheers,
Kat
I feel ya, Kat. A week away and I can't wait to get back to the sound and the fury.
I feel ya, Kat. A week away and I can't wait to get back to the sound and the fury.
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