The End?
I
watched this movie ’The Lunch Box’. Although it is an endearing story, I was
momentarily upset when the lights came on indicating the end of the movie. The
reason was that there was no closure. The director of the story left the end of
the movie to the interpretation of the audience or to its destiny if I may say
so.
Right from childhood, we are taught
to look for closures. A cartoon ends with a ‘That’s all Folks’. Television shows
for the day used to end with a vibgyor screen. School functions used to end
with the National Anthem. As and when we grew up, there were further closures. If
the endpoint of education is a job, the destination of a relationship is
marriage.
When a dear friend leaves our town
to a new place, we have to meet for one last time. We do not want to leave the
Goodbye unsaid for it means not knowing when one will get to meet again and we
do not give much credibility to the chance of meeting yet again.
Closure can also sound the death knell
of imagination and ambition. We are choosing the easiest route when we look for
a closure. When we watch a film or read a book, if it has a definitive ending,
we do not exercise our imagination. We are just agreeing to the imagination of
the creator of that art. Likewise, Life will throw up many instances where the
closure will not be assured. One needs to take that chance. It might end stupendously
well or tragically bad. But if one goes with only those opportunities with
assured closures, one might risk losing the stupendous ending and land instead at
the mediocre success.
Studies in Human Resources state
that we as a cultural group are averse to uncertainty. We prefer definite
states to vague continuity. May be this is the origin of the saying that goes a
Known devil is better than an unknown angel.
I think the reason that we look for
closures has got a lot to do with choices. Not having a closure means having
multiple choices. For all the hue and cry about Life being difficult, when
presented with multiple choices, we are more at sea than ever. Most of us prefer
a single choice of existence even if Life is miserable in that state of being.
We spend a large part of our lives
looking for closures. Why is it so difficult for us to understand that Life is
akin to a continuum? More so when we do not know when is it going to end. It is
like searching for the end of a wave swelling on a beach. We should realize the
wave is to behold and to be admired. The best that we can attempt to do is to
surf along and enjoy the ride that is Life through its crests and troughs.
Arun
Babu