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I never really got to know didima - as I call my maternal grandmother - as a person. There were no hugs, no story times, no pampering. When I was growing up, all I encountered was an embittered old woman who lived alone and did what she liked. And since my paternal grandmother also maintained her distance, I grew up without any of the grand-parental love (the granddads had passed away early) everyone talks about. So when conversations head to such memories, I remain silent.
It leaves me feeling - strangely perhaps - robbed. I didn’t know my grandparents at all, I have nothing to remember them by, I say when prodded. They left me nothing, I would say in my head.
And so it was till well into adulthood and years after didima passed away that I stumbled upon an unexpected inheritance.
Bits of her in me.
I may not have known her as a person but I grew up on stories of didima. My mother shared innumerable anecdotes - good, bad and downright ugly - about her over the years.
But I saw none of these things. When my turn came, didima was but a shadow of herself. And the couple of photographs that are left behind told me nothing about the grim-faced woman who stared right back at me.
We stared at each other. I had never tasted didima’s version of the dish.
It didn’t end with tossing in this or that ingredient into a bubbling curry pot. As I grew older and began fighting my own battles, I realised there is more. I certainly don’t have her stupendous artistic talent, but a love for the arts and the finer things of life has been passed down to both her daughter and me. And we have had far more opportunities than her to hone that love.
There are other little big things that make me stop and reflect too. I think I owe my itch for the road to her - we are the proverbial rolling stones. That and the love for animals and solitude, an undefinable restlessness, a strong disregard for the opinions of that beast - “society”. These are not traits I have inherited from my parents.
My mother says I have didima’s stubbornness and what she calls the “courage of a fool”. Ha ha! But then, I am glad I have it! Here I was all these years thinking I had nothing, that they left me nothing. I only hope I can live it up a little better than didima could.
I like to imagine didima is living another life - hopefully a more fulfilling one - through me.
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