An Ode To A Union That Was - Blog Post #291 by Asrar Qureshi
Dear Colleagues! This is Pharma Veterans Blog Post #291. Pharma Veterans shares the wealth of knowledge and wisdom of Veterans for the benefit of Community at large. Pharma Veterans Blog is published by Asrar Qureshi on WordPress, the top blog site. If you wish to share your stories, ideas and thoughts, please email to asrar@asrarqureshi.com for publishing your contributions here.
Today, I
wish to use this space for a personal note.
February
17, 2020 marks the First Death Anniversary of my wife, Rukhsana Bajwa. Exactly a
year has gone by since this loss.
This post
is not a customary note on loss and mourning. It is actually a celebration of a
life beautifully spent. I am sharing it to inspire others. It is a long story
and I shall complete it in three installments.
I shall
start by saying a few things by way of introduction.
Rukhsana was
a PhD in Botany from Sheffield University UK and was teaching at Punjab University.
She became Professor in Botany and later established a new department which was
then upgraded as Institute. She retired as Director of the Institute. During her
career, she supervised 23 students for PhD and numerous students for Masters. I
worked in Pharmaceuticals and am still working.
Rukhsana
and I met in 1985 through common friends. We found each other to be highly
compatible and decided to marry, which we did in February 1986. We had 33
wonderful years together and celebrated our 33rd Wedding Anniversary
on 13 Feb 2019. On 14 Feb, she was hospitalized for respiratory distress from
which she never recovered. She passed away on the evening of 17 Feb 2020 surrounded
by all children, their families, and her best friends who came from other
cities to be with her in her last moments.
Rather
than telling about how she died and how did we, the family, cope with the loss,
I would rather talk about how we lived.
We were
considered to be an ideal couple by all who knew us. Here are some things that
we did differently.
Respect
– we always
respected one another; from the way we addressed one another to all matters
small and big. The respect was not just verbal; it was always the running theme
of our life together. We believed that a relationship could not sustain without
mutual respect. We did it visibly in front of children so that they also learnt
the same. During the initial years, we had our moments of discussions and disagreements,
but these had no effect on the level of respect. Our respect was genuine,
heartfelt and deep, and it arose from our sincere appreciation for other’s individual
decency, capacity to love, talent, capability and achievements. Rukhsana had
much higher education than me, but she never even mentioned it to me. She always
said to me and everyone else that Asrar knew everything. It was not just
talking; she actually asked for my input in everything she did. Ours were joint
decisions, though I see in retrospect that those were mostly what I suggested.
Ours is a
patriarchal society where men are supreme. In that feeling of being supreme, it
is common to see men treating their women shabbily. Like love begets love, respect
begets respect in the same manner. Love cannot sustain without respect. I quoted
a study earlier also about finding clues in a relation about its sustainability.
The most common and earliest clue for breaking-apart marriages was CONTEMPT. Contempt
develops out of complete disappointment, distrust, disillusionment, and disenchantment.
Contempt erodes respect completely and kills the relationship ultimately. Respect
therefore must be guarded as jealously as love.
Support
– We supported
one another and stood together in all situations and at all times. We covered
one another’s back so the other could do what she or he wanted to do. In late
1992, my job portfolio changed, and I started traveling extensively, within the
country though. Our children were young, but Rukhsana supported me through and
through. She took hold of all home matters and let me work freely. I would come
back late night from some other town, but she waited so that we could have
dinner together, which we did. During the last eight years of her job, Rukhsana
became extremely busy due to new department affairs. She worked till the late evenings
and even on holidays. I supported her fully to facilitate her so that she could
work with full concentration. SUPPORT creates GRATITUDE. Grateful people carry respect
and will always be good to each other.
Our
support was also a running theme of our lives. We had twins within a year of
marriage. We were working parents and lived independently. A third child was
born a year and a half later. We raised the children together. We did their
things together including but not limited to their cleaning, bathing, dressing,
feeding, weaning, and washing. Our mutual support was always our greatest source
of energy. We also had couple of occasions of financial difficulty, but we came
out winning due to unconditional and unending support to one another.
Love
and Romance – we married
for love, and we nurtured our love all our life. We did not let that light become
dim ever. We found ways to celebrate our birthdays, our anniversaries. We also actively
celebrated family events, children birthdays so that the circle of love keeps
getting bigger. Love is a feeling inside and shall only be seen when expressed
as a tangible, visible action. Gifts are a good expression, and we always gave gifts
on all occasions and sometimes without occasion. During 2003-2009, I was traveling
a lot internationally. It was a given that I would choose something special
from that country and bring for her. Rukhsana loved decoration pieces, crockery
and selected perfumes. She always got plenty of these. Her face would light up
when I brought her these things.
Romance
is the expression of love in soft, delicate, emotionally laden manner. We had
plenty of romance in our life and we kept creating it. Once on our wedding anniversary,
we went for a long drive and ended up at Bathikka, a small, riverside, town in
Neelum Valley, some 30 km ahead of Muzaffarabad. It was a picture-perfect beautiful
place. We spent the evening on the riverbank and the night in rest house on the
hill. Next day we came back; it was a lovely treat. Romance brings energy to
love. Love without romance is dry and frivolous and may not be sustainable. We created
romantic occasions to keep our love growing.
Continued……
V nice&lovely
ReplyDeleteIts a good advice for many married couples.
ReplyDelete