Thursday, June 28, 2018

RED


As a child, I loved Red Cherries, Red Balloons, Red ketchup with hot samosa’s, Red Toys. Red was the colour of my mother’s bindi. Red – the cross on doctor’s car. Red Mehendi, Red Frocks, Red Roses, Red Candy Bars, Red Crayons. Red was beauty, was love, was passion, was energy, was dreams...  

And then I grew up... And something changed. Goodness of Red escaped from a crack and it became the colour of shame and the colour of pain. I was around 12 years old when I saw a red river flowing between my thighs. I was frightened, I was confused. I thought I had blood cancer.

I never imagined that this blood would become my life-long adversary. That Red would become my vengeance.   My life would be full of ‘DON’Ts’.  Don’t walk like that. Don’t talk to boys. Don’t dress like that. Don’t think like that. Ssshhhh... Don’t speak about those things. Don’t go out late. Don’t go to the kitchen. STOP..!! Don’t Pray.

Five long days – the days of impurity. Living life like an untouchable. [PS: We got independence in 1947 but we still make the female in our society untouchable every 5 days a month]. Living life like I didn’t exist. Five long days that I had to bear of my own. Uncertain, Uncomfortable, Painful, Ignored. Five long days that even God wiped me off his list. Can you imagine the horror of a 12 year old child? 

She suddenly discovers that she has become a woman? It’s nothing beautiful? Isn’t she beautiful anymore? She feels tainted, she feels ashamed. And I was not the only one. There were and there are many like me who step into puberty not knowing that their bodies are the most beautiful vessels. Vessels with the power to bring forth human-beings.  

Surrounded by myth and burdened by a taboo, they consider themselves a curse. They learn no hygiene. Rags, Ashes, Leaves - they use any means to remove all traces of shame. The drop out of schools. They withdraw into themselves. They wonder why their body limits them? Who clipped their wings? For humanity to live, they bleed.  

They have thousands of questions but yet they are scared to raise a voice. Too ashamed to think. But they need to be told that they are children like any other. Womanhood is not witch. Puberty means life. Menstruation is not a disease. With care, understanding and knowledge, give her the strength to untangle the chains to break the societal taboo. Talk to her, discuss it. Tell her that she has a magic within her. Tell her that the RED blood which comes from her will one day help another heart, beat.