Yesterday was Wednesday. One of the days of the week, I still look forward to. For an obvious reason, Toastmasters. Yesterday's was a special meeting in association with an internal club of the organization, Sparsh- Healing Touch. The theme being- 'Educate, Empower, Heal'.
The Master Of Ceremony, reached out to me a couple of days ago asking me to deliver a speech related to the theme. Here's what I spoke:
"I may not have visited a lot of old age homes. Or orphanages. Or all the good places that give us an opportunity to educate, maybe empower or heal.
The Master Of Ceremony, reached out to me a couple of days ago asking me to deliver a speech related to the theme. Here's what I spoke:
"I may not have visited a lot of old age homes. Or orphanages. Or all the good places that give us an opportunity to educate, maybe empower or heal.
But each one of us goes through experiences that transform
you into a more humble self of yours.
Toastmasters and guests, let me pick a memory of an evening
that did it to me.
This was in Hyderabad. A couple of years ago. It was my
first time in the city and I wanted to explore everything that the city had to
offer. A couple of google searches later, I found myself in a mall, exhibiting
the usual exuberance, glitz and glamour. I immediately headed to the 4th
floor. Ah, I was there. Unaware of what lied ahead, I excitedly bought the
ticket. The guy at the counter handed me my ticket, a cane and said, “Take this
along. You’ll need it.” I smirked and gave him a look that I’d give my mother
when she’d give me an umbrella before stepping out of the house during rains.
You get that look, right?
So, I stepped ahead and the massive orange colored door
behind opened. I walked in and all I could see was nothing. It was dark. Pitch
dark.
My instant reaction was to search
for somebody or something. What do I do? Where do I go? What if I fall? Where
is light? I felt helpless. I started to panic.
Suddenly, the initial confusion
and panic was put to rest by a sweet baritone. “Hello, I’m Nasir and I’m going
to be your guide for this tour through the darkness. I request you to stand in
a queue, one behind the other. Put your right hand on the shoulder of the
person standing in front of you and take 3 steps forward.” Oh, there are other
people as mad as me to come here as well?
It was kind of funny. I could
hear the voice, but had no idea where the voice was coming from. And forward?
How do I see forward? What direction is it in? I had no option but to give in
to the voice, the dialogue in the dark.
After struggling just a bit, I
could feel assured that there were other human beings around me. Phew. A sigh
of relief.
And thus began the experience
that I was SO excited about. Finally, giving in to using the cane. The counter
guy was after all, right.
Apprehensive, I played along.
Nasir took us to a wall and made us sense the engravings on it. We had to feel
the wall, examine the texture and guess what was engraved on it. “A man”, “A
flower”, “A scenery”, people started shouting. “Which man?”, “Which flower?”,
“Which scenery?”, Nasir pushed our imagination. We started touching the wall
and feeling the nitty gritty of the engraving this time. Slowing down, touching
and feeling the texture, one crest, one trough at a time, the image started
getting clearer in our minds. “Lotus”, “Bhagat Singh”, “Mountains”. The room
suddenly got filled with luminous joy as Nasir said we were correct.
After a while, I was really
surprised at how calm I became. And Nasir’s, step by step instructions
exhibited how planned and safe this was. I started having fun solving those
puzzles. It was an absolute delight on having other senses come to rescue in
the absence of sight. And how that awakened other senses, deepened
self-awareness.
Next we were asked to take a few
steps forward wherein we would find a rocking, shaky bridge and the idea was to
cross it. The simple task of taking 10 steps and crossing a bridge seemed
impossible. What if I fall? We are used to seeing “where” before taking a step,
right? No matter how hard I tried to pop my big eyes out, I still couldn’t see
anything.
“Walk slowly, count your steps.
Take help of objects lying by the side” reassured Nasir.
And bravo! I crossed it. Having
the sense of space without even looking at it made me feel like a hero.
The 45 minutes experience ended
on a snacky note. Nasir led us to a café setup in the same room. Entering the
café, taking our seats, Nasir recited the menu and took our order. As I handed
him out the money, he prompted “That’s a 100. I need to give you 20 back.”
Confused, mesmerized, before I could’ve said, “Yes.” ,he said “Here’s your 20”.
I was flabbergasted. How did he know that was a 100?
After sipping the amazing coffee
served by Nasir, I started walking out with a heavy heart, NOW not really
wanting this to end. The doors opened and welcomed us with the gush of bright
light; Blinked, cringed and then smiled. It was a relieving feeling similar to
getting your first love back. Happy and excited that you have it again but
difficult to let it fit in your life for you are a changed person who has
adapted to new surroundings now.
I turned around to thank Nasir
that is when I saw him tip-topping his cane, making his way and adjusting his
blind glasses. Shocked and stunned, I looked at him with a blank face. While I
had tears in my eyes, Nasir beamed. “In there, you were blind and the blind
were sighted.”
As I heard those words, I
questioned myself- did I just put myself in the care of a blind person for
almost an hour? Did I ever imagine that?
And we think of ‘them’ as less-abled?
What gives us this power? Their
ability or our inability?"
This was something I had written earlier. Tweaked it to fit the bill. :)