Fruits of Labour
Fruits of Labour
`Vairagya’ is a Sanskrit word with a deep sense and connotation, whose shallow
English equivalent is `to renunciate’. The lore of Indian culture stresses on
some occasion-driven `vairagya’ - surges of diffidence, futility and
self-questioning which most people encounter, but soon get over.
The momentous event of childbirth impacts so many peoples at once – its parents,
grandparents, the larger family. While the expectant mother undergoes her
agonies and ecstasies within the sanctity of the labour room, a circus of
emotions ranging from joy to disappointment and on to elation or anguish are on
a grand visual display outside. Presiding over the proceedings in these rather
hallowed corners of every large hospital are people like Godavaribai, affectionately
called Godabai, the Matron Nurse at Pune’s General Hospital.
There is considerable officialdom at General Hospitals – doctors of various
positional denominations, nurses likewise, ward boys, conservancy and other
support staff. They have their inter-personal relations and adjustments
problems. It is people like Godabai around who the entire functioning of a
department revolve and to who even the senior -most doctor is deferential. Besides providing continuity, she was a
storehouse of knowledge and experience on complications and procedures not covered
in any textbook. Godabai had an all-pervading presence, She minutely oversaw
the various requirements – cleanliness, supplies and stores, patient comfort,
ensured that other staff was on their toes. She seemed to be there all the
time, at every bedside where need arose and her patient reassurance to anxious
relatives calmed so many minds. No picture of that labour room at that time could
be visualised without Godabai in the centre of it.
A general hospital labour room is quite akin to a railway station. Action never
ceases and the large old-time bench in the foyer outside provided a vantage
point to observe the circus of activity and emotion. There may be no chai
or pakodawalla, but the permeating sense of expectation is just as on a
platform, with the moment of arrival setting off a sequence of interesting
responses.
Not many knew the reasons for her extraordinary commitment and concern. It was
a casual visit by an old maid which revealed that just as Godabai was being
brought in for her own delivery, in the dark of a night on a tonga, the
jerky ride triggered convulsions. She gave birth to her daughter by the
roadside, with no assistance at all, overseen by husband and the tongawalla,
both of who knew nothing at all of what was to be done.
Work for Godabai was worship and scores of happy couples had the benefit of her
unsolicited yet worthy advice. Generations of budding doctors were wiser by the
wealth of practical experience and narration of uncommon cases she freely
related to them. As her own child grew,
she began to see her daughter in her lady students and her students in her
daughter. The twain did meet when her daughter, groomed on the focussed care
and upbringing her mother besides blessings of so many grateful people, qualified
to be a Medical Student herself.
In the flow of life, time and distance, memories of earlier togetherness come
to wither. Godabai did not come to mind for a long while until news reached
that she had passed away - at the ripe age of eighty-two. Her demise brought
back memories of her unsung service to humanity to all who knew her.
For one who had stood over so many deliveries, the fruits of her own labour
were indeed sweet.
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