The question that is being asked of me by
many of my well wishers, friends and admirers is how do I feel, now that I have
retired. Well, to be honest serving for close to four decades in one of the
most coveted services of the country has many disadvantages. You tend to forget
the use of your limbs. There is someone connecting and picking up the phone for
you, you are driven around, your engagements, your tour, and your other quotidian
worries- from filing tax return to paying your utility bills- are someone
else’s concern. In higher echelons of the government someone even thinks your
thought for you. You just have to be!
After
you retire all that elaborate support system, all those rites of pride and
protocol disappear. It is like someone who does not how to swim is thrown in a
pool without a lifebelt. Or you are left to navigate in a totally unfamiliar
city. Many of us tend to show unmistakable withdrawal symptoms. Jostling for
paying electricity bills, or booking a railway ticket (if you are not into net
transaction) doing things as others not so spoilt do, can make you maladjusted
for a while. I was warned – not that I could not see it for myself –but I had
some more worries.
To add to the standard quota of
uncertainties of a retiring officer, I have been trying to renovate my house to
make it livable. It was empty for quite some time. It is no point trying to
explain the hazards and the frustration of such an activity to someone who has
not undertaken such an expedition himself. There are so many liars, thugs and
swindlers in this line of business that it can easily turn you into a misanthrope.
All in all, my prospect in the near future looked like a perfectly scripted
plot for a black, neurotic drama! Anticlimactically, it is my date of retirement
that kept me buoyed up, gave me hope and sustenance. And when it actually came
it was such a relief! All the uncertainties did stare me in the face as it does
any one of us. The prospect of my house becoming livable had receded a few more
weeks into the future. But hell is a relative habitation. The comfort zone that
I seem to have left behind was no comfort for me given that so many knives were
out for me and danger seemed to be lurking at every corner.
So
much has happened in the dying years of my service, so many distressing things-vilification,
show cause, disciplinary proceeding, supersession, a complaint case and much
more- that they remind me of
Lenin’s famous remark about politics, “There are decades when nothing happens;
and there are weeks when decades happen." It was only God’s infinite grace
that I survived several attempts to frame me up in order to harm me in my
career and ruin my reputation. I have never considered the denial of
opportunities, postings, medals, etc as acts of disfavour because the
government giveth and the government taketh away. (For the record, I was overlooked
for the post of DGP on four occasions and I have retired in a lower grade of
pay than officers four years my junior. I never even made a grievance of it.) But
my reputation is not a matter of an executive fiat, or a government
notification; it has been hard earned and paid for in hard currency of an
unwavering faith in the values of probity in public life. The worst thing is
that on every occasion personal malice was dressed up as considered government
decision. Since an officer cannot challenge every order
in a court of law, the government can play havoc with his life and career. I
felt like the French philosopher who spoke during disturbingly
unsettled times in France,
“If today I
were to be accused of having stolen the Church of Notre Dame I would have no
option but to run away from France.”
Now that I am past the hump all these precious years of my life which vaguely
leaked away in worries and anxieties seem but like a transient twitch. I am in
a celebratory mood reveling in my migration from the ranks of Helots – Helots
were a class of people halfway between slaves and citizens in ancient Sparta-to
that of an independent citizen. This freedom is worth years of the lives of any
number of tongue tied, terrorized and fear stricken civil servants. Like any
liberated serf I am going to exploit to the utmost my freedom to speak my mind.
Earlier on my conversations with the government were subject to conduct rules,
elaborate courtesy, and the unbreakable code of never mentioning facts that
could bring disrepute to the government however disreputable its conduct. Never
to speak truth to power except in such a term that the unpalatable truth became
an error of your own judgment. (I violated that rule on several occasions and
paid the price for it. So we are quits!) In fact, when I was addressing the
Home guards who had lined up for inspection on the eve of my farewell parade on the 30th of
June at Bihta I kept concentrating hard so that I did not shout from the podium
itself : azadi , azadi azadi. Decades of conditioning,
however, was a surer guarantee and my uniformed self behaved exactly as it was
supposed to.
18 comments:
Sir, I find it very interesting to read whole writing in a single breath
ajitabh
Respected Sir,
You have written very true facts of your experience . No one can challenge about your honesty , You are one of the luckiest person who has got a very Excellent reputation with hard working man in our society . I don’t want to write more about this post but I can say Great Man, Great thought !!!!!
With kind regards
very well written, sir. it was excellent reading
एक नौकरी करने के अलावा सामाजिक रूप से प्रत्यक्ष रूप से आपका क्या योगदान रहा है ? सोसल मीडिया में आपके जाती के लोगों द्वारा आपको 'शहीद' घोषित करने के प्रायोजित कार्यक्रम के अलावा आपका क्या योगदान रहा है ?? :))
Dear Uncle,
Lovely and inspiring piece as always!
And, this gives us hope... lots of it! Exactly when it is required.
Charan Sparsh
Neerja
Abolutely brilliant and inspiring.
I shared this article with the IFS officers at Vladivostok
Sir,
Feelings Captured superbly.I wish you to be columnist for all time to come. Pen is mightier than sword.you are now free to express yourself to the fullest.Meantime once you are settled please visit the NE. I shall be there to take care of your travel requirements.We are part of your family. With profound regards.
Well written, Nath sahib. Retirement is indeed a 'liberation', moksha. You are not accountable to anybody but yourself. Enjoy.
- J.K.Khanna
Retd DG, Bihar
Manoje, Though I was luckier than you not to face, enquiries and vilification campaign, I can well appreciate your anguish at what the Service has meted out to you. You have expressed your feelings and 'musings' very well in deed! May be, my several tenures in the Central Government, that too in departments where there was hardly any 'support system' prepared me to face the retirement better. Having several hobbies which I pursued passionately also helped.
I am now doing all those things, which lack of time and being in the strait jacket of the Indian Police Service prevented me from doing in the 36 years I was in service. I can well understand your reference to Helots. I am reminded of Matthew Arnold's poem Summer Night, where he asks
"Is there no life, but these alone?
Madman or slave, must man be one?".
Enjoy your freedom!
Koshy
thank you koshy koshy .oh iam enjoying my freedom, even thought i had arrogated to myself a large slice of it while still in service - too large a slice in fact for the comfort of many a people. shall catch up with you.
n
Well written sir, it is a reality which all of us have to face. Before comming to services we had led life of a common person (majority of us)and after retirement again that life. It is during this interim period (our service tenure)we get used to these luxuries(so called) of life.
@ajitabh, Amotabh Thakur
& Anonymous from Vladivostok
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
@Neerja
Thank you, I'm glad you think so.
But it is young people like yourself that give us hope, and whom we hope to inspire.
@Soumitro
Thank you, Soumitro. And rest assured, now that I am out of the strait-jacket, to borrow Koshy's phrase, I do not plan to stop expressing myself anytime soon.
if one is not prepared for retirement during his service tenure, then either s/he has compromised on principles or has been lucky..!
freedom is something that needs to be enjoyed during active service....!!
if this was a warning about the future Katrinas that would hit the Bihar Secretariat, then am eagerly awaiting their arrival...
if this was a promise of greater Freedom of Expression... then i am excited...
but if this is final forgiveness, then i am disappointed...!
wisdom dawns on most Government Servants after retirement... but we have so many who trade post retirement expose' to perky post-retirement engagements..
it is about time to drop a few Nukes sir...
Well who knows it better than you and who has faced more sustained persecution than you but your spirit is indomitable . In the long run all of us retire, how well do you conduct yourself while in service is all that matters, which again I need not tell you.Thanks for visiting my blog.
i completely agree with what u wrote. i always feel that people like u shd hv been treated in much much better way but as u said, u are now above of all these things...i personally liked when u qouted Lenin and the french philosopher:- “There are decades when nothing happens; and there are weeks when decades happen."....and...“If today I were to be accused of having stolen the Church of Notre Dame I would have no option but to run away from France.”....i liked other sentences also which directly come from heart.." Earlier on my conversations with the government were subject to conduct rules, elaborate courtesy, and the unbreakable code of never mentioning facts that could bring disrepute to the government however disreputable its conduct."...certainly this kind of wit cant come without bringing your heart out. Again i wd like to say sir...awesome
Sir ,i am speechless,do not know what to write,i used to think that i am only in govt sector pushed to corner.but i salute you sir you are made for bigger things in life.Thanks and with deep regards " P sahay"
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