RETIREMENT

 

Dr. R. R. Menon

 

I’ve seen many people fretfully approach

retirement with sheer fear, if not reproach,

never the relief I felt Not a topic I broach

with others lest I should look an odd egg

hatching some special chick to brag.

I felt so comfortable with myself having

nothing to do, and doing only what I like,

time hardly mattered; watch, a bracelet.

A heaven had been won, my life was set

in the peace I dreamt of. With wet blanket-

­predictions I had been slightly upset.

 

Methodologies on managing time

are many. Prescriptions in their prime

meet sickness that change. Oh, man,

thinks he manages; man just ages. If he can

see the light within, each sense tuned

to his talent and adjusted to taste, a fine­-honed

life reveals itself. Luck was your solace

earning your victories in the damned race

Mornings now unhurried. The slow breakfast

builds no acids. Needn’t cut short the walk past

your favourite garden Days. Have a new cast.

Sundays were my favourite days: no more.

Such partiality is part truth, part folk-lore

Of the workaday world that I now ignore.

Each hour I savour at my pensioner’s pace,

its joys and juices. To win lasting peace

I wage small battles and stand at ease.

The candle of life now burns a golden flame,

no winds disturb, the hands holding the frame

are steady, the light merely exists and adorns

a heart whence faith has removed all thorns

with which devil and darkness play their game.

 

 

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