The son of an IITian father and doctor-mother succumbed to expectations last year. The grieving parents find it hard to come to terms with their loss and rue inadvertently pushing him to the brink
Noida, July, 2023. It’s 10.30 on a murky Monday night. The roads are marooned, traffic snarls have become deafening, dark clouds look menacing, and an anxious mother is unnerved by continuous rumbling. “I don’t know if the help has closed the windows of his room,” wonders the doctor who takes me to a room on the second floor of a building. She opens the door which has a partially-torn poster that reads ‘enter at your own risk’, reaches out for a switch on the left, and screams in anger. “I told you so many times to replace the bulb,” she shouts at her husband who has just returned from work. “But you are so stubborn.”
The rumbling continues outside, and it starts to pour heavily. “Get a bulb and fix it now,” she continues with her rant, takes a smartphone out of her pocket, and turns on the flashlight. “This is my son’s room,” she says. The small space is filled with a musty smell. “He used to call it a ‘den’,” she adds. “Here’s his study table,” the mother affectionately points towards the extreme corner. The room is in a mess. Two soiled T-shirts, a blue denim, a hand towel, and a few notebooks are scattered across the bed.
The study table is plastered with sticky notes. Some are reminders about maths’ coaching timing, some have a few motivational words scribbled like ‘hustle’, and then there are a cluster of equations and formulae jotted down on bright fluorescent sheets. “The room is always in a mess, but this is how he loved it,” she continues. “Please don’t touch anything on his table,” comes a stern warning. “We don’t do it, and we don’t want anybody to do it.”