I picked the bookmark,
placed it between the pages and closed my book. It has been almost an hour that
I was reading; I needed a break. Then I logged online - surfed my friends’
pictures on Instagram and checked messages on WeChat, Viber and Facebook.
Almost quite immediately, the
Facebook chat bar popped out on my screen. As I touched on it, my friend Gyembo
Namgyel from Pemagatshel was greeting me,
“Hello Riku. What you doing
there?”
“I’m reading a book. But now
taking a short break online here he-he,” I wrote back.
As usual, we jumped into
talking about books we read and our writings and blogging. I congratulated him
for having created his own blog recently. Gyembo is a former reporter with Bhutan
Observer and he writes from his farmland in Pemagatshel.
“Yeah, I love working in my
farm. Now feeling good to see my avocados bearing fruits,” he answered me
proudly when I asked him about his farming life.
Generously though, he said,
“I enjoy going through your blog and I can see you have improved a lot. Your
writing, your reads, your circle of friends; and your outlook of life is what I
like most.”
That was too big praise
about me and I was greatly astounded. I was sure that I really don’t deserve it.
However, that’s what friends are for, aren’t they? So I’m lucky to have one.
For a little while, we
chatted how it feels to live a humble life. We’ve agreed, together, it’s simply
“beautiful and wonderful”. And then I wrote to him that I always wanted to live
a humble life and now emphasizing on it even I stay in a City like Thimphu.
Gyembo responded, “I’m glad
that you have found this important direction in life. Riku, always be like
that. If we live like this, every moment of our life is just beautiful.”
I thought to myself that this
is the key to a happy life on our short stay on earth; and most importantly, I
hoped this is the right way to life.
“Everything is just
ephemeral, you know? Nothing tangible. Nothing actually belongs to us. We are
just chowkidars (caretakers) of what little we have and have to pass on
including this body,” he wrote to me.
I read the message, and
reread it more carefully. Oh it penetrated me so deeply that it stirred every
part of my body. For a moment I couldn’t digest the fact, this brutal
truth.
Then I turned away from my
phone. I pulled up my window curtains, opened the glass and myriad of golden rays
of the setting sun flooded into my room. As I craned my head out window, I felt
delighted to see the sun shining stunningly through clouds and prayer flags.
I asked the mighty sun in
wonder, Are we just caretakers of what
little we have including this body?
I waited for answer. But the
sun sank beyond the mountain and horizon and beyond my grasp. I was again left with
that vast question still echoing in my head.
However, wondrously, after
a brief moment I started feeling deep sense of comfort dwelling in this
question. Sometimes the depth of our thoughts is like the presence of sun that
exists over the horizon, in the sky, which meant the light of life to us yet
its existence is way beyond our grasp, logic.
Meanwhile I turned back in
my room and picked up the phone. Instantaneously, I wrote back to Gyembo, “I’m
glad I dropped at the right place to take this break from reading. This
realization is beautiful. Thank you.”
And I continued reading.