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She Is Now Just A Caged Bird

I had a pet parrot, it was always kept in a cage. Once I thought of opening the door and allowing it to fly away. I did what I wanted to do, but to my surprise, my petty didn't want to even walk out of her cage. It sat there as if not interested in what will happen to her or as if she was exhausted to even try and save herself. I felt she has learned to live happily in her captivity like most of us.


I still remember the day I bought her, she was so angry. She won't be silent for a single second. She made it sure that none of us sleeps and went on to make annoying sounds the whole night. The next day she had a new strategy i.e. hunger strike. Kids were at the edge of crying and were ready to do anything for the sake of our new friend.


I used to call her mirchi. She was an intelligent creature. She knew the correct way to irritate people. She used to test my patience level regularly. The worst time was when she started to hurt herself in pursuit of freedom. She would fly in the congested cage and hit the pillars of the cage. Some time with so much strength that she used to bleed but she never stopped trying. Every morning she used a new technique to come out of her cage. But as days passed her strength and her body was not to bear any more pain. She used to lie at a corner of the cage.

I couldn't bear the pain, but I was helpless. Even though I wanted to set her free I didn't want to hurt my kids' feelings so I planned something new, in my courtyard I had a small garden where I had few trees. in between those trees I requested my carpenter to make a cage big enough for three of four parrots to fly around. I think my mirchi also appreciated my effort and started to enjoy its new abode. Now she had a place to sit, walk, drink, eat and rest. I thought like all married couples my mirchi understood the magic word ADJUSTMENT and without any noise, it started to live a life of silence.


I used to miss her annoying sounds, I used to talk to her regularly but felt sad that I never saw the same fire in her when I bought her. Then I decided to leave her. Even if it becomes the food of any predator I just wanted to live a life of freedom. But my Mirchi was exhausted by her struggles that she was not even ready to try. She had compromised to the life inside the cage so perfectly that a thought of a single flight was life-threatening to her. She stopped flying altogether. She used to walk in her new cage from one corner to the other.


I lost my mirchi , she was now just like any other caged bird who just wanted to finish their few last days peacefully.

 

About the Author


Gayatri P is a postgraduate in English. She takes tuition and write for websites.

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