कुछ घर ईंटों और सीमेंट से नहीं बनते। कुछ घर लोगों से बनते हैं।
और जब वो लोग चले जाते हैं, तो घर बचा रहता है, लेकिन घर नहीं बचता।
I am writing something this
long after a very long time. Maybe longer than I should have waited. I do not
think I am writing this particularly well. Some experiences refuse to fit
neatly into words, and this is one of them. But memory has a strange habit of
fading at the edges, and I wanted to leave something behind for myself. A place
where I can return years from now and find them again. Not exactly as they
were, because that is impossible, but as honestly as I remember them today.
There are some losses that
do not feel real even after they have happened. The mind understands the facts,
the dates, the rituals, the phone calls, the silence, but the heart keeps
standing at the same old door, waiting for everything to become normal again.
My family died in a road accident on 25th April 2026. My father, my mother, and
my younger brother along with our pet dog left this world together, and with
them, a whole world that we had built together also disappeared. It has not
even been two months, and I still do not know how to speak about it without
feeling that I am speaking about someone else’s life.
We were not four people
living under one roof. We were more like a single song sung in different
voices. My father had his quiet steadiness, my mother
had her strength, my brother had his laughter, and I had my place somewhere
between all of them. Later, when Rudra came into
our life in November 2024, even he found his note in that song, and somehow we
became five. We did not have much money, but our home had a kind of wealth that
is difficult to explain to people who have not lived it. It had safety. It had
noise. It had trust. It had the freedom to be weak without being judged. It had
people who did not just love each other, but remained involved in each other’s
smallest details.
Our home was built on this
involvement. Nothing was really individual. Every decision, whether big or
small, passed through all of us like light passing through different windows of
the same house. We called each other several times a day. Video calls stretched
to forty or forty-five minutes without any urgency. Sometimes we discussed
serious things, sometimes we discussed nothing at all. That was the beauty of
it. Love did not always arrive as advice or sacrifice. Sometimes it arrived as
a random call in the middle of the day, someone asking what you ate, someone
telling you about a scene from a series, someone reminding you of something you
had forgotten.
The reason our home felt
like a home I know was not because each person had a separate role, but because
everyone flowed into everyone else. Their presence were not separate things
placed in different corners of the house. They mixed together and became the
atmosphere of the home. It was in the way my father trusted my mother with
every decision, the way my mother carried the world and still made space for
tenderness, the way my brother turned ordinary hours into something lighter,
and the way Rudra entered the house and somehow changed all of us.
I grew up seeing patriarchy
around me, but inside our home, my father did not let it become the language of
the family. My mother handled banks, paperwork, finances, and decisions, and my
father trusted her completely. That trust did not feel like a big announcement.
It felt normal because he made it normal. My mother, with all the pain her body
had carried, with dextrocardia, situs inversus, injuries, and years of
struggle, still created a world where the rest of us could breathe. My brother,
two years younger than me, brought the noise, the jokes, the carelessness, the
sudden laughter, the feeling that life did not always have to be taken so
seriously.
Then Rudra came and
completed something we did not even know was incomplete. I named him Rudra
because I was reading the Shiva Trilogy then, but slowly the name became larger
than a name. He became another heartbeat in the house. My mother, who had not
touched non-vegetarian food since taking diksha in 2002, began boiling eggs for
him and mashing them with her hands. She knitted sweaters for him, bathed him,
cooked for him, and spoiled him more than anyone else. This is what love did in
our home. It quietly changed people. It softened fixed ideas. It made room. It
made everyone a little more than what they were before.
So when I say we were a
unit, I do not mean that we were always peaceful or perfect. We fought, argued,
laughed, disagreed, watched series, discussed the smallest things, and still
moved together. We were like a song where every voice had its own sound, but
the beauty was in how those voices stayed together. Even Rudra had his rhythm
in it. His paws near the door, my father in the lobby, my mother managing ten
things at once, my brother making tea or cracking a joke, the TV running
somewhere in the background. That was home. Not one person. Not one room. Not
one memory. All of it together.
If I close my eyes and
think of home, I do not first see walls. I hear the TV. Our TV was almost never
off. Someone was always watching something, mostly a series, and everyone
somehow became involved. A scene would become a discussion. A dialogue would
become a joke. A plot twist would become a family event. The house had this
constant hum of life, as if something was always happening, as if we were
always in the middle of a small celebration. The TV would finally go silent
only when we slept. That sound was not noise. It was the heartbeat of the
house.
On 5th June, 2026, I
travelled back home. Alone. The train was moving exactly the way trains always
move. People were talking. Vendors were walking through the aisle selling tea,
snacks, water bottles, and things I wasn’t really paying attention to. Phones
were ringing. Children were crying. The world was continuing exactly as it
always does. But my mind was somewhere else.
I knew the facts. I knew my
parents would not be standing outside the gate, looking at every passing auto
to see whether I had arrived. I knew my brother would not be the one picking me
up from the railway station. I knew Rudra would not come running towards me
before I had even stepped properly inside the house. I knew all of that. And
yet, somewhere inside me, I kept imagining it.
My parents had always done
that. Even at sixty and sixty-six years of age, they would come to receive me
or drop me. They waited outside with the kind of excitement people usually
reserve for special occasions. They would look at every auto that entered the
street, wondering if I was inside it. Rudra would hear a familiar sound and
suddenly the entire house would know I was home. My brother would pretend to
act normal and then spend the next few hours talking about everything and
nothing.
I knew none of it would
happen, but grief does not listen to facts. Love keeps rehearsing old memories
until they begin to feel possible again. As the train moved closer to home, I
kept thinking about them. I kept imagining the same familiar scene that had
played out so many times before. For a few moments, I allowed myself to believe
that maybe something would feel normal again.
When I finally reached home
and opened the door, there was silence. Not an empty silence. A silence that
carried the shape of every voice that used to live there. Their things were
still there. Small objects in cupboards. Things lying in corners. Everyday
items that nobody would notice under normal circumstances. Each one carried a story.
The house looked the same, but it felt different because the people who gave
meaning to everything inside it were gone. I could feel them everywhere and
still not reach them. I did not even have the courage to turn on the TV. That
large screen, which had once filled the house with sound and movement, suddenly
looked like a closed window to a world that had ended.
And yet, even in that pain,
the house gave me peace. Maybe because love does not leave a place all at once.
Maybe it settles into walls, bedsheets, chairs, utensils, cupboards, and the
smell of rooms. That house had seen my father cook for us, my brother make tea,
my mother run the world from inside it, and Rudra sleep beside my parents. I
had been the sole earning member of my family for the last five to seven years,
and that thought still makes me feel proud, humbled, and deeply emotional. I
know my parents were proud of me. I know my brother was proud of me too. But
the beauty of my home was that even while I was carrying that responsibility outside,
inside that house I was still allowed to be cared for. The world looked at me
and saw someone carrying a family. My family looked at me and saw someone they
wanted to take care of.
The difficult part is that
grief does not stay only in the big moments. It hides inside the smallest
habits. It comes when I pick up my phone and realise there is no one to call
five times a day. It comes when something good happens and I do not know where
to send the excitement. It comes when a small decision has to be made and the
voices that would have discussed it with me are missing. It comes when night
falls and the world becomes quiet enough for memory to become loud.
Even songs have changed.
Earlier, a longing song could sound romantic. A sad song could belong to some
imagined heartbreak. Now every line about waiting, distance, separation, or
return feels like it has been written for them. Music has become a room where
grief sits before I enter. A railway station, an auto, a TV remote, a cup, a
sweater, a phone call, a dog’s bowl, all of them have become doors that open
into memory.
People often talk about
grief as if it is only the absence of people. But grief is also the collapse of
a routine. It is the loss of the people who knew what your day sounded like. It
is the disappearance of your audience, your advisors, your witnesses. It is not
just that I lost my father, my mother, my brother, and Rudra. I lost the unit
we were. I lost the small country we had made for ourselves, with its own
language, habits, jokes, rules, sounds, and warmth.
I am surrounded by people
who love me, and I am grateful for them. But some voids are not about the
number of people around you. They are about the exact shape of the people who
are gone. No one else can stand in that space because that space was made by
them. Their absence has its own shape now, and I meet it every day in different
rooms of my life.
I do not know what healing
means yet. Maybe healing is learning how to carry a home inside you when the
home outside has changed forever. Maybe it is learning to live with love that
no longer has a person to receive it in the old way. Maybe it is learning how
to keep walking while a part of you still waits at the gate.
We were not rich in the way
the world measures richness. But we were rich in the way a family should be
rich. We had a home where respect was natural, where love was daily, where
emotions were safe, where laughter lived freely, and where a dog could enter
and change everyone. That kind of life cannot be erased by death. It changes
form. It becomes memory, ache, habit, longing, strength, and sometimes, if you
are lucky, a quiet kind of peace.
My house is empty now, but
it is not empty of them. It carries my father in the kitchen, in the lobby
where he sat, in the quiet confidence he gave all of us. It carries my mother
in the order of things, in the strength of walls that somehow still feel
protected, in every corner that was once touched by her hands. It carries my
brother in the laughter that is missing, in the tea he used to make, in the dal
tadka whose taste I will keep searching for all my life. It carries Rudra in
the silence near the door, in the absence of paws, in the way every homecoming
now feels incomplete.
And I carry them too. Some
days I carry them like strength. Some days I carry them like weight. Some days
I carry them in food that does not taste the same, in songs I can no longer
hear the old way, in work, in silence, and in the old habit of wanting to tell
them everything. Maybe this is how love survives after loss. It does not remain
where it was. It spreads. It enters memory, language, habits, grief, prayer,
and the way we continue to live.
I went back to an empty
home, but maybe empty is not the right word. The house had lost its voices, but
not its soul. They are not there to open the gate for me anymore, not there to
call me five times a day, not there to ask what I ate, not there to laugh at a
series playing on TV. But they are there in the only way love knows how to
remain after death, quietly, stubbornly, everywhere.
And maybe that is why I will
keep returning. Because the house still knows.
~Mimansa

















Mimansa, my child, you have put the voice of my soul into words on paper; it is a deeply moving and heart-touching presentation. You are the reflection of my brother and sister-in-law—seeing you brings me peace. May you live long, my child, and always keep smiling.
ReplyDelete🙌🙌❤️
May God bless their souls and clean your grief stained heart while making you strong enough to live in a world without what seemed like a part of you. Your words got me teary eyed and the helplessness was visible. But so was the strength that you possess through and through. ॐ शांति!
ReplyDelete❤️
ReplyDeleteThere are no words that can truly ease the pain of such an unimaginable loss. Sending you strength, courage and heartfelt condolences dear Mimi. 🙏❤️
ReplyDeleteI honestly don’t think this was just a blog — it felt like a piece of your heart on paper. The way you expressed your emotions was so real, raw, and beautiful that I could feel every word while reading it. It takes incredible strength and courage to put such deeply personal feelings into writing, and you did it so gracefully. Your love, memories, and emotions came through in such a powerful way. Thank you for sharing something so meaningful and personal.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written 👌🏻
ReplyDeleteMore and more strength to you didi 🫂🫂🫂❤️❤️❤️
They are always with you to receive all the love you have for them but they aren't able to reciprocate the same in the way it used to be. They are your guiding angels and will accompany you throughout your life.