A bureaucrat is like a bottle of medicine: he comes with an expiry date. He knows, right from his first day in office, the exact day and year on which he has to hang up his boots, and yet most of them are caught unprepared on the appointed day, scrambling to adjust to the changed realities. On one occasion, when I moved into a house being vacated by a senior who had just retired, I found him in his pyjamas, furiously packing mounds of "raddi"- three years' worth of old newspapers (he was entitled to five every day), a pile as imposing as any in the National Archives. Seeing the perplexed look on my face he sheepishly explained: "Just to tide me over till the pension starts coming, you see...."
Bureaucrats don't retire, they are filed away and become a PPO (Pension Payment Order) number in the Accountant General's office. The smarter ones among them refuse to accept the expiry date and consider it the "best by" date at most, and adopt various yoga postures in an attempt to get another five years, one reason why Yoga has proved to be so popular with civil servants. The most practiced asana (position) is the "Sirnamaskar", a variation of the "Suryanamaskar"- the posture is the same, only the God has changed. It's nothing but old whine in new bottles, but it usually works.
Retirement is, of course, the great equaliser and leveller, as I'm now finding out in my village of Puranikoti. I may have retired in the Apex scale, but I have to bow and scrape before the IPH (Irrigation and Public Health) key man or the Electricity Board lineman every time I have a water or power supply problem. They are the new VVIPs for me, along with the Patwari, the driver of the single HRTC bus that serves my village, and the postman who comes once a week if you are still in his good books. Our "Acche Din" depends on them and not a distant Prime Minister expounding on Atmanirbharta. This was very well explained to me one day by my good friend and I.P.S. batchmate, Heimant Sarin: "A retired babu is like a fused bulb, Shuks , it doesn't matter whether the bulb was of 120 watts or 10 watts- once fused, all bulbs are similar." Had he studied English literature in Delhi University instead of guzzling "chhang" at Tib Dhabs , Heimant would perhaps have couched this wisdom in more poetic language:
" Scepter and crown shall tumble down
And in the dust be equal made
With the poor crooked scythe and spade...."
But the gist of what Heimant says is certainly an improvement on a First Information Report, which would have been his favourite bedside reading when he was yoked to the plough.
It is said that a criminal always returns to the scene of his crime, which is why retired bureaucrats just can't tear themselves away from their former offices. They haunt the corridors of power like Banquo's ghost, but unlike this Shakespearean spectre, they insist on dishing out unwanted advice, recounting hoary tales from their undistinguished pasts, and drinking endless cups of sarkari tea while the files on his reluctant host's desk keep piling up. But their effect on the serving babus is the same as Banquo's ghost on Macbeth- making them feel guilty that they are still in service while the old geezer has retired, that they have taken his place unjustly. I would strongly recommend that all bureaucrats read Macbeth, so that they can exorcise all such ghosts when the bell tolls for them.
Retired bureaucrats just can't forget their heady days in power, when they were fawned upon hand and foot, and confuse this with genuine popularity. This misconception sometimes goes to their head. An I.C.S. (Indian Civil Service) colleague of my father-in-law, who had been Chief Commissioner of a Union Territory (UT), convinced himself that the populace loved him to distraction, and after retiring stood for election to the post of M.P from that UT. He received, I am told, 17 votes, mostly from people who mistook his name for that of another candidate. His wife later confessed to my mother-in-law that she didn't vote for him- he was already too full of his self-importance, even without being an MP !
However, there is one positive trait that we carry into our twilight years- the habit of meticulously keeping all papers in files. I have carefully marked files for every subject under the sun, including the names of blighters who have asked me for copies of my books but have not paid for them. It's a different matter that I can never find the right file when I most need it. My doctor tells me that this is a sign of AAADD- Age Activated Attention Deficit Disorder. But I won't blame you if you thought the acronym was another one of Mr. Modi's pet schemes, announced on Republic Day and forgotten by Independence Day, or a type of cell for your electronic thingummy.
But this habit can occasionally work miracles. When the Chief Commissioner referred to earlier handed in his pail in the fulness of time, his widow could not find his Will, which posed a problem in probating his considerable estate. When she had just about given up, the old gentleman appeared in her dream one night and told her to look in the pages of John Grisham's book THE TESTAMENT in his library. She did, and sure enough the Will was there! Who says civil servants don't have a whacky sense of humour ? (This is a true story, I swear, though I may have got the title of the book wrong. It could have been WHERE THERE'S A WILL THERE'S A LAWYER by Confucius, or WILL HE, WON'T HE ? by Rahul Gandhi).
And finally, there's this thing about bureaucrats writing books after they retire, something which has assumed the dimensions of a plague or pandemic. These books fall into two broad categories: toolkits for fixing the civil services, and memoirs of a life generally mis-spent. I have yet to figure out which is more lethal, but it's a close call. In this respect one can't but agree with Christopher Hitchins when he says that "Everybody does have a book in them, but in most cases that is where it should stay." Which is why I also support the government's latest diktat that bars retired govt. servants from writing about their experiences in service. Retirement is a time for blessed forgetting, not recollecting. For the latter we have the blood curdling Partition Horrors Remembrance Day now, don't we ?
Which reminds me that my birth certificate is nearing its expiry date and it's time for me to write my own Will. But is it worth the effort, I ask myself ? By the time I get that one way ticket (with a 50% discount for senior citizens, thank you) , Mrs Sitharaman will in all likelihood have ensured that there's nothing left in my bank accounts, my car would have been scrapped by Mr. Gadkari, my Mutual Fund investments would have been squirrelled away in the Dominican Republic by some fat cat, and my Mashobra home would have been demolished to make another six lane highway for tourists from Karol Bagh and Kotkapura. Maybe I'll just spend my remaining years in that Kedarnath cave when Mr. Modi vacates it to move into his new mansion on the Central Vista. Must remember to ask Heimant whether I'll need any bulbs there.
Wonderfully told and hilarious. My jaw is aching laughing non stop.
ReplyDeleteI read most of your weekly blogs (link sent by our mutual friends Pulok; by the way it's his birthday today) but this one has made my weekend ; na week.
Stay well.
You retain your sense of humour in spite of Our Dearly Beloved Supreme Leader. That's good...
ReplyDeleteLove the old whine in new bottles and the old Sir namaskar posture ...
ReplyDeleteYou have hit the nail on the head as always. Love your wacky sense of humour.
ReplyDeleteOh god my jaws are still aching with laughter at the creatively recreated pen pictures of our 'halcyon'days! I did a quick recap to double check if I unwittingly adopted any of all of these amusing practices and pronounce myself GUILTY of some as charged so humorously... Terrific reality check... Will file this one away for regular retrieval...
ReplyDelete"Bureaucrats don't retire, they are filed away and become a PPO"! What a delightful read, Shuks!!!
ReplyDeleteSirnamaskar is unbeatable. Worthy of an unforgettable piece on prostration which appeared in the Tribune one morning.
ReplyDeleteHilarious and totally enjoyable. Great piece.
ReplyDeleteNot all bulbs fuse. Some sprout as well, in the bracing weather of Mashobra.
ReplyDeleteI agree ... but very few
DeleteOur mostly solemn and somnolent post-retirement days have been lit up by your fused bulb, Avay.P.G.Wodehouse would have been proud of you.
ReplyDeleteAwesome read.Sirnamaskar takes the cake!
ReplyDeleteHilarious to the hilt!!
ReplyDeleteLoved it. Visit any whats app group of veterans and you will find Modern Chanakyas, Pattons and Rommels holding forth their court. Some of them take offense for being compared to Fused bulbs. Some are trying to join political bandwagon just to stay and feel IMPORTANT.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant piece, as usual. Sense of humour comes naturally to him.
ReplyDeleteAn absolute delight! Retirement unsettles. But can be lots of fun with half a sense of humour as yours, Sir.
ReplyDeleteGreat writing. I t is very much applicable to the veterans too, with the difference that fused bulb is replaced by 'khali kartoos'!!
ReplyDeleteHow very well said General Sir..!! Your sense of humour is intact too!
DeleteAAADD is a gem..
ReplyDeleteJust hilarious. He has the light touch and wit of a Shaw.
ReplyDeleteLoved it. Written with a humorous edge, that stays. Fused bulb ,any wattage, is still a fused bulb
ReplyDeleteTotally enjoyable and hilarious.
ReplyDeleteAnother great piece of a brilliant write up by Mr. Avay Shukla.His humour, his laconic reference to current idioms and their intertwining with age old wisdom is simply a delight to read and share it with others. His absolute truthfulness about the civil services and the kind of specimen they are, which these specimens think about their legacy is indeed very engaging. He illuminates our mentalscape with lot of freshness while demolishing ghosts of this supposedly a venerable sect of people but with feet of clay. His blogs always leave a sense craving, skint o the erslier tagline of Pepsi advertisement - Dil Mange More.Davinder Sodhi. ( P.S. Meticulous as he is, there is devil's print in the word old "whine".)
ReplyDeleteNo, Mr Sodhi. The use of the word " whine" is a deliberate pun. If we don't whine and plead we don't get re-employed. It's an accepted tactic in the civil services!
DeleteAvay Shukla is our very own P.G.Wodehouse....! His characters are himself (who he loves to go through the most hilarious sufferings!), and then anymody and everybody who can accentuate his sufferings with more hilarity!
ReplyDeletePlease continue Sir...your articles are the one exercise of the lungs that I look forward to in the midst of the slow tattering of the social fabric of the country...
Love your writings.
ReplyDeleteA delightful read as always. Explicit, factual and many a lesson for the Fakhta Khans!
ReplyDeleteGood piece
ReplyDeleteCan't entirely agree
Some smart competent bureaucrats re_tyre
Themselves
& Become useful to society
Shukla is either oblivious of them
Envious of them or ignorant about them
Cheers
What an entertaining piece....loved the one about old "whine"....."sirnamaskar"...and in the comments that followed..."Khali Kartoos". I do confess that for some time I too was a khali kartoos....but realised the futility of comments and writings...when there are so many "experts" around. Keep them coming Mr Shukla.
ReplyDeleteAnother absolutely brilliant piece. I suspect that by now your tongue is firmly embedded in cheek. Bring them on.
ReplyDeleteAvanian vocab "Sirnamaskar" and "Whine" will have a longtime impact on bloggers. Brilliant piece!👌
ReplyDeleteWitty, as usual. Would like to add that in India, a desire to cling to harness is not confined to Civil Servants. Has been judges, lawyers, journalists,corporate heads, sportsmen all continue to fork out unsolicited and outdated advice. The problem is their identity is so interlinked with their jobs that many crumble when retirement dents their fragile egos. There's not much else, you see.
ReplyDeleteShukla ji pranam. Superb.l will start reading your books.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely brilliant! But let me tell you something from a common man’s point of view. A few good retired bureaucrats like you are showing a mirror to this Govt just as others have to the previous governments. It’s invaluable what you do. So please carry on. Don’t discredit poor retired bureaucrats so much😂
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written. I kept laughing all through reading it, as I could completely relate to it.
ReplyDeleteSir Namaskar and old whine are the standout ones , love the way you narrate incidents and the devilry that leaves a reader rolling. Thank you
ReplyDelete