They say attachment is never one-sided. If one end remains tied, the more you try to break free, the more entangled you become. And while you may walk away from something, it never truly leaves you. Life, in its quiet wisdom, teaches us this again and again—sometimes through longing, sometimes through loss, and sometimes through the unexpected grace of reunion.
I had the rare privilege of being trained by a master of the Rigveda, a man whose wisdom flowed like an ancient river—steady, deep, and timeless. His second son became my closest friend, and for over fifty years, our lives remained intertwined, bound not just by shared memories but by the unshakable lessons his father passed down.
Then, life shifted in an instant. A sudden fever took away our master’s wife—his companion of seventy years. Perhaps it was grief, or perhaps it was vairagya, the call of detachment, that stirred within him. One Sunday morning, he was gone.
All he left behind was a note blessing his children and, for me, a notebook filled with his learnings—his final gift. We searched desperately, even filing a police report, but he had vanished. Time moved forward, yet his absence remained, an unspoken void in our hearts.
My friend, unable to bear this emptiness, left his medical practice and joined an ashram in Haridwar. He tended to wandering seekers, treating their wounds and illnesses. “Perhaps I’ll find my father someday,” he once told me. “But I feel him blessing me every day.”
Five years passed. On a trek to the Valley of Flowers, I felt an inexplicable pull to take a small detour to a hillock, intending to stay for a couple of days. Seeking shelter, I was directed to a Veda school run by an elderly master. Something about the description stirred a deep familiarity.
And there he was.
Sitting among young students, teaching with the same quiet intensity as before, was my master—now in his nineties. We stood in silence, time folding in on itself. He looked up, and in that instant, disbelief turned into quiet joy.
For two days, we spoke as if no time had passed. He had left behind his home, his name, his past—but teaching had never left him. It was not just what he did; it was who he was.
And then, something even more remarkable unfolded. My friend, who had spent years just miles away in his ashram, had never once found his father. Yet, by pure chance—or the grace of time—I had. I called him, and when he heard my voice, he did not hesitate. He left everything and came.
For ten days and nights, we sat together, talking, laughing, reflecting on life’s mysteries. It felt as though time had given us a rare and precious second chance. My friend left that evening to pack his things, ready to return for good.
That night, as I sat beside my master, he looked at me with a knowing gaze.
“The call has come,” he said, his voice calm, his eyes steady. He asked me to complete his last rites, even if his children arrived. I hesitated. He only smiled.
The next morning, I sent word to my friend and his siblings, though my master had wished otherwise. My friend arrived at 11:45 AM—just in time to witness his father leave this world, peaceful, unburdened, free.
As we performed his final rites, something shifted within us. The hollow we had carried for years—the ache of separation, the longing for closure—was gone. In its place was something indescribable, a quiet fullness, a sense of completion.
Perhaps this was true fulfillment—the final, unspoken lesson from our master.
And so, he departed, not with sorrow, but with the serenity of one who had already let go.
Some ties are beyond time. Some lessons are beyond words. And some journeys, no matter how far they take us, always lead us back home.