Add this

Friday 10 May 2024

WHERE THERE'S A WILL THERE ARE MANY WAYS

   April is the cruelest month, and not only for the reasons given by T.S.Eliot: it is also that dreaded month when we have to turn our minds to filing our income tax returns for the benefit of the lady-who-doesn't- have-money- to- fight-elections but, like Oliver Twist, is always asking for more. But this year April has been harsher than usual because of the introduction of two surprise imponderables: Inheritance tax and Covishield. The two, my CA tells me, should induce all of us to do a bit of "estate planning" and think of life after death.

  It is now undeniable that AstraZeneca's Covishield vaccine had very serious side effects, and that they were actually bedside effects, i.e. they laid you out flat on your bed, never to rise again, not even in Jerusalem or Golgotha. After the emergence of damning evidence in a London court, it has been reported on the 7th of March that the vaccine has been withdrawn globally. That is cold comfort to the millions who might now be living under a death sentence. The possibility of an Inheritance tax has now been mooted by an emigre but influential Congressman, and Mr. Modi himself has explained it in his usual simple, crass language-namely, that if you have two buffaloes the Congress will take one away. He has not, however, explained what will happen if you have two wives. My well- informed CA tells me that that will depend on whether wives are regarded as assets or liabilities.

  Be that as it may, these developments have led me to seriously consider executing my will, since the afore mentioned bedside effect can come into play at any time and fell me in one fell swoop (I had taken two of the ruddy shots). Mr. Modi, I'm told, has already disappeared from the digital vaccination certificates and may soon disappear also from 7, Lok Kalyan Marg; as the poet said: If Modi goes, can Shukla be far behind? Which is why I'm now seriously considering the redistribution of my poverty (in the absence of any wealth), among my progeny and Neerja.

 The first obstacle you run up against when registering a Will is to prove that you are of "sound mind". The magistrate, having read some of my blogs, had serious reservations about that in my case. I patiently explained to him that soundness of my mind is a relative thing, has its ups and downs (as the Duke told the Duchess one unsuccessful night), and has to be seen in its context. I referred him to Mr. Modi's speeches about buffaloes and mangalsutras, Mr. Amit Shah's statement about a five trillion tonne economy, Surjit Bhalla's claim that the Modi govt. has ushered in true secularism, Jaishankar's boast that India was the leader of the global south-and then slipped in the knife: if these jokers could be considered sane enough to decide the fate of the nation, was I not sane enough to decide what to do with the accumulated fruits of my labours? His Honour, being of sound mind himself, immediately agreed and signed off with an RO+AC.

  For the record, I don't really have much to bequeath to my next-of-kin. The bank deposits and FDs will disappear soon at the current rate of inflation and taxation; whatever little is left will probably go to cyber fraudsters. The cottage in Purani Koti will probably have to be sold to pay off the inheritance tax. The car belongs to Mr. Gadkari anyway, what with fuel prices, the highway robbery legalised as toll fees, and the rule that requires it to be scrapped after ten years. But to be honest, I don't give a shit, as the honey badger confided to his mate: my family will probably live a better life without me lurking in the shadows. And, in any case, I would like to believe that these baubles do not constitute my real wealth and legacy.

  For, of all my possessions the ones I am most proud of, and which give me most happiness, are the trees I've planted on my land in Purani Koti, near Mashobra. I, along with my sister-in-law Anjali, had bought about 6 bighas (little more than an acre) of land there in the early 2000's and I decided to convert it into a little green oasis before the village was taken over by hotels and guest houses. The latter has happened but so has the oasis! I had the full backing of Anjali, who was keen to compensate for her otherwise Delhi based (carbon) footprint, which is slightly bigger than Godzilla's footprint.

                                            
                                                            [ A grove of robinia trees]


                                                                  [ Weeping willows]

  I did an enumeration of the trees on our lands yesterday and counted a total of 209 trees, of both the forest and fruit varieties. An examination of old photographs reveals that there were only about 15 fruit trees when we acquired the land, so we have added almost 200 trees, and they are all doing well, the fruit trees are all organic. The forest varieties comprise deodar, blue pine, robinia, horse chestnut, oak, weeping willows and chinar; the fruit variety are apple, pear (nashpati), cherry, plum. I have no sense of guilt in admitting that I have begged, bought, borrowed and stolen to get these plants from all corners of the state !- from the Jalori pass, Tirthan valley, Manali. The greenery is now a haven for birds of more species than I can recognize, and we even have visiting species like parakeets, swallows, Himalayan magpies, pheasants and barbets at different times of the year. The bulbuls are permanent residents and have bed-tea with Neerja and I on our terrace every morning (see photo).


                                                                   [ Horse chestnut ]


                                                   [ Our regular morning tea companion]

                                                               [ Cheer pheasant chicks]

                                                               [All photos by the author]

  This then is the possession I really value, my own creation without any embedded advantage of birth, education or inherited wealth, something I can be proud of. I would like to consider this my real legacy, not only for my family but for mother earth. It feels good to leave one tiny part of this planet a better place than one found it. And it needs no Will- just a dream!

26 comments:

  1. Wonderful sir! You should invite some of unlucky city dwellers to this oasis for inspiration!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Toll tax is really too much and I don't know how common man bears it. Cars also should be scrapped as per condition not age. A 6 yrs car not maintained is worse than a 12 years old that's well maintained.
    I have to see your land some day to try something similar

    ReplyDelete
  3. A slice of paradise sir! Will have to steal the horse chestnut as i love is canopy and the flowers!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Purani Koti near Mashobra is a paradise. Waiting for your invitation.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The sight of the splendid foliage cultivated by Mr. Shukla with unending affection is admirable. He has truly erased his carbon footprint and freed himself of his debt to the planet.

    The preemptive declaration though, dismissing his financial assets as eroding and unworthy of legacy, is clearly intended to obfuscate any inquisitive IT hound reading his blogs. We, however, are not examining his fiscal robustness here, anymore than scanning him for soundness of mind. His handsome sons are testimony to his having led a life of more ups than downs, so he can rest as a man less anxious than the unfortunate Duke.

    With the toil and tears invested in restoring nature to her resplendent best, Mr. Shukla is assured of his place in the heavens from where he can gaze at his afforestation, that will doubtlessly go to the right hands for proliferation and furtherance.
    Thank you Sir for letting us peep into your paradise.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Dear Mr. Shukla....with your efforts of re-greening, you have not just erased your carbon footprints, but also those of many others' including the specimen's called Rana. If you will erase him entirely, the blogspace might be free of wet garbage - a term I learnt here and find expressly accurate to apply now.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Entirely agree with you, Mr Patankar. The likes of Mr Rana, always self combusting, belong in a landfill where they can vent their noxious gases. Unfortunately, such odious organisms are a fact of life and we have to suffer them like a plague.
    His education always appears to be incomplete: he has obviously never heard of the carbon sequestration properties of trees, and how trees perform an important function as carbon sinks. But let him stew in his ignorance.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Trees acting as carbon sinks? LOL. Trees don't deal with free carbon but with compounded carbon as carbon dioxide. Trees serve as a channel of recycling carbon dioxide either by assimilation during photosynthesis to prepare starch that's converted to soluble glucose to do work or during respiration when CO2 is given out by trees to atmosphere. Water vapour is expelled during transpiration via stomata.

      You must learn basic science before shooting your ignorant mouth.

      Delete
    2. Mr Avay is an English graduate speaking on carbon chemistry when he won't know the difference between oxidation and combustion in the carbon cycle.

      Patankar and Shukla ki sahi jodi hai.

      Bye, dear.

      Delete
    3. Mr Rana: When you know Mr Avay Shukla is of average intelligence, an illiterate in science, old and weak and he could kick the bucket anytime due to the poisonous vaccines he has taken, why do you target him? Shukla is most likely corrupt with pots of black money earned when he was a civil servant but that is not your concern. You don't go down to his low level. You be ethical. Character and morals boil down to upbringing. Take some pity on him. Please, stop making fun of him. Do this much at least.

      Delete
  8. Absorption of infrared light at the vibrational frequencies of atmospheric CO2 traps energy near the surface, warming the surface of Earth. Carbon dioxide is a green house has which absorbs and emits radiation.
    And it has been established that there's been a 50% increase Co2 concentration in the atmosphere, since the industrial revolution. All these are known and basic facts. But Mr. Rana ' s para dropping as a crabby old school science teacher amongst us kills a thoroughly enjoyable read.

    ReplyDelete
  9. A perfectly well baked cake is being stepped upon needlessly by those seeking gutter thrills. This despite them sharing knowledge on a range of topics from Astrophysics to Organic Chemistry, from Carbon dioxide to Photosynthesis. These pestilential lifeforms who have swarmed the blog, have wrapped insightful information within their malodorous offerings if one examines, though that task is made unbearable by their stenchful droppings.
    What are they...?

    ReplyDelete
  10. Veer Mehta, tumbling out all those names like sweets from a jar doesn't make you a rattling good intellectual. But it does show yours is a serious case of humour by pass and needs treatment.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Why is it then that you are squatting here? Leave Avay Shukla and us to our simple pleasures that are so meaningless to you.
      I am in a quandary though. If these world renowned individuals accept you as a commenter on their blogs, is their premium not severely eroded? Or do you crash land on their sites similarly, leaving them with no choice than to claim depreciation?

      Delete
  11. Der Veer Mehta
    Now I see humour by pass is overwhelmed by delusion of grandeur in your case. I plead inability to deal with this. My deepest sympathies.

    ReplyDelete
  12. @ Veer Mehta:

    I read a couple of your incisive comments on synergy made a year or so ago beginning from the many fundamental stages of systems thinking on the Dawkins Foundation blog.

    I am aware that the cutting edge blogs operated by leading intellectuals like the litany of famous names in the list you furnished are highly selective in allowing comments on their blogs and as some of your comments are published there it shows they pass scrutiny. I once posted a lengthy comment on Prof Richard Dawkins blog and in minutes he/admin deleted it because it did not stand up to the exacting intellectual/cultural standards.

    You must post on high quality blogs not here.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Dear Mr. Sen....this unexplained onslaught is not dissimilar to an attack by a swarm of egregious locusts on a verdant green patch of painstakingly cultivated land. Mr. Shukla must be relieved that his green paradise is not under a real siege from such unpleasant strike. In any case, the pillories cast by delusory minds are best disregarded. One was taken unawares admittedly, to be spat on by she who was thought to be a fly on the wall!

    ReplyDelete
  14. Excellent post Avay. Purani Koti sounds like a slice of paradise and your devotion to the environment around you means that you will leave the world better than your found it, a truly lasting legacy.
    I really enjoy your posts and am more than a little amused by some of the commenters who use this forum to get into a petty one upmanship game with...no one! The likes of me come here for the light humor, the word play and the musings of someone who has seen a world that I haven't. Keep writing!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Dear Mr. Patankar
    I do share your concerns about unsolicited intrusions on Avay's blog. His blogs provide me with just enough laughter medicine to keep me keeping on in my old age and in these not so happy times.
    I have also reached this ripe old age when I have learnt to suffer fools and upstarts gladly and would hate to engage with any of these verbal sniping intended to vitiate this weekly,' little green acre' - I do so enjoy!
    Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  16. My sincere advice to the likes of Jessica, Veer and Rana is to not vitiate the ambience of this blog site or to inflict their acidic opinions and abuse on the readers. This is not a site for "intellectuals" or "international" opinion makers: it is a simple platform for the average, dare I say, well read and well informed Indian citizen for the expression and exchange of views in a civilized manner on topical subjects. Something we have been doing for more than ten years.
    The three worthies mentioned above belong, by their own admission, to an elevated intellectual firmament, and they should stay there and not descend to our mundane level. They should start (if not already started) their own column or blogsite and not piggyback on this blogsite. There is no place here for their pedantic, irrelevant or condescending views, or for the regurgitation of useless information which we can obtain from Wikipedia, if we so desire. This blogsite is not a platform for them to dump their malice, abuse and sensational (and probably false) "inside information". If they persist in their trolling they shall be blocked and each and every "comment" of theirs shall be deleted without any hesitation or delay.
    Go your way, sirs, and let us go ours.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Why so much fighting on this blog space? Live and let live. Let the handful of intellectuals have their say in the comments section. Let the common readers have fun with their comments made up of sweet nothings. Let the blogger be humble to accept his/her shortcomings and upgrade his/her writings to a decent level of knowledge, refinement and logic without his/her low self-esteem and envy getting the better of him/her which makes him/her press the delete button that he)she controls.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Part one : The Jacinda Ardern home-philosophy tied in neatly with the FBI's as a phenomenon of identification. The more publicity accorded the more the desire for it. In Ardern's case unwelcome but in Hoover history, the way to go. Either way it stems from an intense need to be recognised.
    Part two: The true test of a thespian is when an Iago was virtually mobbed at curtain call. The actor hugged the projectiles and the abuse hurled to himself, choked by the response to his delivery.
    While you are not, Avay, a thespian of any note ( thank goodness, though Cervantes may have exulted had he seen you for a Cyrano, though that was a long time ago now), you must surely exult (a) for your personal efforts at re-wilding and our warmest congratulations thereof; and (b) for evoking such wide and disparate responses unified by passion, simply by means of wielding an irreverent pen.
    Great going my friend. And more muscle to your readership, not only burnished by the Patankar, Sen, Ninan, Chauhan, Thakur conglomeration & many more including myself; but now joined by others vociferous as well! Excellent. Way to go dear friend.

    ReplyDelete
  19. PS: There is a difference between dissent and descent as we have learnt in our recent past. One is dignified, unblemished by vulgarity; the other stripped of everything but their vulgarity.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Had this pushback been more timely from the one who is easily the Wordsmith, perhaps this space would not have been so beleaguered by the Unworthys.
    "Huzoor aate aate bohot daer kardi..."

    ReplyDelete
  21. Mr. Shukla, a few years your junior, but definitely possessing more merit than you to enter the Sanyasa stage (or would that be lack of merit, I forget), would like to highly appreciate all your regular spiels that unfortunately fall on deaf ears (or saffron infected EVMs).

    Having left the shores of janambhoomi several decades ago, I am quite impressed by your zeal to rewild flora in your parts. This is a concept that has gained increasing popularity in north america too (and my backyard).

    Another very enthusiastic proponent of rewilding (that of the young impressionable minds) so ably pursued by the great leader and his ilk, is also now a global trend.

    Hence it's a sheer joy to know there are fewer years ahead of me.

    ReplyDelete