Monday, November 4, 2013

frog tales

Frog stories
I have always hated frogs, they are slimy and look disgusting. They have enormous eyes which rotate in all directions. Above all, they have no fear of the human race, they tend to run straight at you instead of away. (What if God forbid one jumped up my clothes)? If they get into the house they hop into cupboards and sit there waiting to jump out and give you a fright!
I had a distant relative, a very bad tempered old man, who lived by himself in an enormous house in Kerala. His wife had died many years ago, and his children lived abroad. One or the other sporadically went to visit him. His sister lived fairly close by and she dropped in about once a month to make sure he was not dead. He lived a lonely life for which he blamed everyone else.
My mother insisted on visiting him when we went to Kerala, so I was deputed to escort her there.
The garden was gloomy and dark, the sunlight completely excluded by tall trees. Even though it was midday, there were frogs everywhere. I developed a paranoid fear that they were going to climb up my leg. Just near the door of the  house was a grinding stone. A snake slithered out of that,  grabbed a frog and proceeded to swallow it whole. This was too much for me. “Lets go” I said to my mother, “this place is creepy.”
The door opened abruptly and an enormous shapeless blob of flesh with warts all over appeared with an iron rod. He beat the snake mercilessly till it died. “bloody monster” he said, “eating my frogs.”
He caught sight of us and said ,”come in, chechi, I didn’t see you.”
The last thing I wanted to so was go inside. He filled the dark damp hallway and eventually led us to a musty drawing room. The chairs looked mouldy so I sat gingerly at the edge of a bench. My mother  had astigmatism and cataract in both eyes. The lighting was ideal for her. The place looked dim and clean to her.
“Would you like some tea?” He asked and then added “I have to make tea, but there is brandy in the cupboard.”
We politely declined. My mother softly, me vehemently. “I only came to see you” said my mother “we don’t want anything”.
“Then you won’t mind if I have a brandy.”
It was only 6 pm but I made a polite grunting noise. I was trying to keep the frogs at bay. I was holding both my legs about a foot off the ground. My hips were beginning to pain and my thighs were going into spasm. I just wanted to leave before the next snake made its appearance.
He brought out a brandy glass and poured an inch of brandy in it. Then he placed a saucer on the ground and poured a little brandy into that.
“Who is that for?’’ I enquired.
“David.”
There seemed to be no one else there, but after a few minutes of hoarsely saying “David,” an enormous toad came out from the crevice behind the cupboard. It went to the saucer and flicked out its tongue. “He loves brandy,” said the old man. “After that I give him raw chopped chicken liver.”
They looked eerily alike, size, skin, eyes, demeanor, posture, warty skin  and pitch of voice. “Lets go, “ I said to my mother. By then she also wanted to leave.  It  was along walk to the gate and the car. God only knew what creatures we would encounter along the way!
“Do you think it is cruelty to animals?” She asked.
“What is cruelty?” I said.
“Feeding those frogs brandy, encouraging then to take over his house, giving them chicken, aren’t they supposed to eat live flies and mosquitoes?”
We never went back there. I was not really surprised that his children didn’t go either. Finally a few years ago I heard that he had been admitted in an old age home. He had developed dementia, probably worsened by the fact that the home did not allow consumption of alcohol in any form! He was heartbroken because they would not allow David to come with him. Apparently he wandered around searching for David saying “he never leaves me , where has he gone?” 
Dr. Gita Mathai
The writer is a paediatrician with a family practice at Vellore.
If you have any questions on health issues please write to








No comments:

Post a Comment