My grandmother May died last year in January.
Success or the sum of a person is usually measured in how much that person has accumulated, how many awards have been received and what the rest of the world thinks of the same. I would rather look at my grandmother’s life not as a list of achievements, but more as a work of art. A painting maybe, smudges included.
Everyone who knows "Mama May" well knows how she raised her children alone in Bangalore for many years while her husband worked in the gulf, in days when there was no email or cell phones. How she handled bankruptcy and the loss of her home to a tenant who decided to force the sale of her home to him. How she looked after anyone ill in the family with devotion and perseverance. How she made life hell for some people also. Moving, repeated loss and slow resurrection.
moving out of the brigade road house, for the last time
I'm trying to cut a very long 90-year-old story very short here, and it’s difficult to squeeze a lifetime of memories and conversations with her into a few paragraphs. To express memories that also involved smells, feelings and other intangibles. I would like to speak of her as I recall her truly and maybe this can illustrate her humanity and at times, lack of it, all of which played such an important part in my early life.
My earliest memory of my grandmother was of Yardley powder and the smell of dog. The smell of Yardley powder filled my nostrils as she carried me, held me in her arms and walked about her home on residency road. Walking fast, in the earlier years. May Cordeiro was not the sweet doting grandmother you read about in children's books. She was much better and worse than that.
I remember horrific cocktails of ragi porridge, egg and Waterbury's compound which I was forced to eat with threats of "ill tie it to your stomach if you don't eat it". I recall her fights with my quieter grandfather who enjoyed his drinks a bit too much, according to my grandmother. They were numerous arguments and she could be mean and relentless, and she aged so fast when he died.
I remember my grandmothers numerous dogs, being bitten by them and never learning and still playing with them thinking i would not get bitten and getting mauled again. Like so many Daisy Buchannans. Brandy with milk for the dogs and a yelling for the grandfather, every night. She would attend to my dog bite wounds with liberal amounts of undiluted dettol and bits of cactus which she heated on a flame and tied to the weeping teeth holes.
Pogo
Marchello A.K.A. Macho
She loved her dogs, maybe more than people sometimes. Neil wrote me and told of a time when he stepped on a dog turd. My grandmother said "Shit happens, deal with it". It doesn't sound like her as she did not have that American experience of the line, was incredibly proper and never said the word shit. She was so careful with her words, but it's a story I like, even though it's probably not true.

Macho, the miniature doberman was 23 years old here
I remember sitting with her at housie at Catholic club, surrounded by what she referred to as "her gang" and she being overly thrilled when I won 50 rupees and asking me to get her a whiskey " a large one please" which she whispered so no one could hear. I recall her playing the piano, while I stood by getting poked in the ribs if I messed with the keys. She was an accomplished piano player with all kinds of degrees but later on in life she refused to play because she was afraid her arthritic fingers would miss notes and that she would make a mistake.
May and her children
I remember her whacking with a broom a cart driver for setting the tail of an exhausted bullock on With 90 year old Mrs. Kamath from down the road she called the police on the man and brought the cow into the house to prevent it being led away. Later I was instructed to help Narayani the maid clean up a large pile of cow dung which I did before we went inside for a lunch of beef curry and rice. I had felt sorry for the cart driver as he looked tired and small and sickly.
Recently in December 2008 she has asked me many times to come over as she wanted to give me old photographs as I was interested in archiving them and finding out about the people in them. She called me several times but I postponed the visit and even when I visited I left them behind because I felt she was preparing herself for death. I told my parents a few days before she died what i felt but they felt I was being overly concerned.
On Ulsoor lake in Bangalore in the 50's
May Cordeiro was not a physical touchy feely kind of person. She was only affectionate with her dogs. I recall her sitting with a relative who had a troubled marriage and holding her hand once though. I hugged her at Leisha and Chris's wedding a couple of weeks before she died and it was a proper hug. This time she hugged back and held me very close for a long time. I told her I loved her and my heart broke when I said so, for the first time in so long, and she said so as well. So important this, to tell people you love them, when they're live. I recall how tiny and fragile she felt in my arms. We were surrounded by the legacy of so many of the family from all over the world, 13 grandchildren and one great grandchild.
"I'am tired of this noise Ryan, take me home"
Great grand child
After her eye operation a few years ago
I stood by her hospital bed as she lay there in a coma and as she died and talked long and earnestly to her about things I cannot repeat. Her heart monitor faltered as i spoke . I held her arm as she died and was profoundly present, with all my senses. Outside things went on as usual and cars honked and nurses walked by and when I walked to the window a flock of parakeets shot by like green comets, just like the flock I had seen the day before from the same window.
I do know of her failures with people she loved and I do know of a few of her successes. I know to some extent a little of her childhood and the traumas of relocating from war and violence in Iran. My mothers story of looking out of her window and seeing a British man being dragged alive behind a jeep and my grandmother slapping her to stop her screaming.
She, May, was abandoned by her parents at a relatives house in Goa for 2 years as a small child, and they did not tell her and left for Africa with her brother. This was something she spoke of with a trembling lower lip, 85 years after the fact. What makes us be who we are and how important our present moments are. And what power we have to sow whatever it is we sow.
Most of all I remember holding her and she holding me back.
I know that her mother, my great grand mother (Avo) had carried May in her womb, on a ship that suffered a cholera epidemic from Africa, to India, to undergo a kidney removal or die. The dead were buried at sea, dropped into a warm shark filled ocean from a stinking ship and I can only imagine those endless windless terrifying days. Avo survived and underwent the operation after trekking halfway across the country when there were no tarred roads, while pregnant with my grandmother.
Many years later my mother randomly met the son of the american doctor who had conducted the operation and saved the life of both my grandmother and her mother. What courage, what resilience and faith would have propelled this woman to survive that. And what of the child in her womb? Would May Cordeiro, suspended in the womb have felt her trepidation and terror, resillience and courage? And how much a part of her would they have become.
And how much of me?
90th birthday party
With angali at the big banyan tree
Christina and Veronica amd Angali and May
Pogo
May and Gavin her son
her makeup mirror while she was moving out
Her plants
Alphone, maid and companion at home for many many years
Tomas and Pam, her grandchild with her at her 90th birthday
"We are not amused" (as Sandeep her grand child in law fools around with a wig)
ok maybe a little


























32 comments:
Another amazing photo essay. Haunting.
Thank you for sharing such a beautiful story so beautifully.
Wow .. what a great photos. Love your work. It tells a story ...
Your work for the dutch TV program "Laura verslaat" draw my attention to your work ...
Keep up the great work ...
Warm regards,
André Niquet from The Netherlands
You are a treat. Great story.
Dear Ryan,
I have been following your blog for quite some time. Although not a pro, I have an inclination towards the art of photography. Further more, I have always observed that majority of the pictures in your collection are monochrome, which virtually and practically hooks up my mind towards the composition.
Some day would want to know more about the approach that you have towards the frames that you create.
Till then,
Cheers.
beautifully expressed... Its a true tribute to a beautiful and an elegant woman. Its a pictorial tribute with the human touch.
Come to think of it the women in our lives are the once who shape up the person we grow up to be, they may be our mothers or our grandmothers. I feel; more than anything this is a tribute to femininity and how much men ... See Moredepend on them, not only for love and affection but also for inspiration and learning that stay with us for a life time. You made me revisit my childhood days. How i use to trouble my grandma and how she use to be patient and shower me with her love. completely unconditional.
Thank you for sharing this Ryan!
Prabhjeet Singh
Beautiful !
Kavita Sripada
a touching tribute to a woman of substance
Asha Pinto
Wonderful woman. Wonderfully written.
Siddharth Mangharam
Ry, it's a beautiful tribute to a beautiful woman. Thank you for sharing her life with us. I'm so sorry for your loss.
Aparna Subramanyam
Love the photos with her and her piano. I think they had a connection. Remember that time you and me went there to take her photo for that MTV Job? She told so many mad stories!
Robby Banner
what amazing pictures... it's like a story book.. done in such a awesome way
Neena Raina
Such a beautiful tribute to your grandmother... it made me miss my grandma! I am sorry for your loss....
Pallavi Naidu
Sonya Chittiappa Reuther
Sonya Chittiappa Reuther
As always, I loved it...so evocative and memorable...xoxo
love the pictures. Very nice tribute to your grandmother.
Pallavi Gopinath
Ryan, these are brilliant and capture A. May beautifully. It brings back so many amazing memories of times spent with her. Miss her and Macho dearly
-Karl De Nazareth
Affection and honesty. That's quite an inheritance she's left you. An awesome piece of writing Ryan - Ashok Krishnan
What a beautiful compilation of your memories Ryan.
preeti noronha
Thanks son..for bringing my mother back to me.
Aloma Lobo
So touching. And beautiful.
- Radha Sarma
How little, how insignificant everything we have "achieved" becomes when we visit the truth behind what, and who, brought us here. Yet those realizations are nothing if not translated into everlasting gratitude for the luck and fortune our elders have created for us.
Ryan, I'm very sorry for your loss, but happy that in her final months and days, you had the wisdom to be with your granny once more. All we have is time, and you did great by just sharing it. God bless.
Anuj Sharma
Ryan, I'm sad to hear about the passing away of your precious Grandma. May her soul rest in peace. Thanks for sharing her life story.-Biju Joseph
Ryan you are gifted. This is wow!
Paula Sengupta
How lovely Ryan...
Deepa M Jacob
Love this story....
Lobo!! "Focus on the dignified, the beautiful and the courageous, and it will grow." This essay about your beautiful grandmother and family grew my soul up a good bit. Thanks. WWW.TheIBC.US
What a lovely panegyric.
Your words and photos are beautiful; brief glimpses that are impossibly intimate.
thank you for allowing us to share these tiny vignettes of an amazing life.
much love.
A.
A.May will always be a very dear person I knew and fondly remember. I was once part of "the gang" who used to sit with her to play housie at the Catholic Club ...... even though it feels like just yesterday it was almost a life time ago.
Thanks Ryan, these photos are amazing.
Brandon Northwood, Ottawa
A.May will always be a very dear person I knew and fondly remember. I was once part of "the gang" who used to sit with her to play housie at the Catholic Club ...... even though it feels like just yesterday it was almost a life time ago.
Thanks Ryan, these photos are amazing.
Brandon Northwood, Ottawa
Very evocative. As someone who was known to your Grandmother from birth - it made so tangible my memories from a long time ago. Aunty May (as we knew her) bequeathed all the baby clothes to me, only for Gavin to be born just on nine months later. We grew up with a long line of dogs whose anscestry goes back to Aunty May's dogs - so I remember so vividly her devotion to them.
Beautiful Photographs, Beautiful Writing and Portrayal and most Beautiful of all - the subject of this Memory.
What a wonderful tribute. I think what I liked most about it was the lack of mawkishness :)
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