Wednesday, July 9, 2025

The cost of a free consultation (1164 words)

 

You can call me a counsellor, a shrink, a psychiatrist or even an agony aunt. It is up to you, and it will not affect me. I am not one of those who have big consulting rooms with flashy boards and upholstered furniture. I don’t flaunt my degrees to impress my clients and attract them. Instead, I seek them where they are and who are mostly abandoned by family and society. They live their own lives in a cocooned corner of drugs, alcohol or red-light areas. It is easy to spot them and you don’t need any special skill.

I leave my home at 9 am to go on my daily rounds to the park, mall, bars, drug hideouts, red light areas and isolated places, even funeral homes. In what I consider social work. I don’t need well-cut suits and expensive leather bags. I am content with my rather old blue serge jacket and slightly faded jeans. I don't pay much attention to my appearance, and I'm aware that my long hair needs a cut. My work is more important to me than my appearance. I cast my look across the places I visit. I can invariably find the individual(s) who need my professional help.

I was in a supermarket where I found this middle-aged man with bloodshot eyes filling the basket with half a dozen bottles each of whiskey and beer, vodka besides, I think rum and tequila. There was also a lone bottle of wine. You don’t need any further proof of this man’s addiction to liquor; one buys so much unless he is an alcoholic. I gently approached him and smiled at him. He returned the smile but continued to look for some other variety. I coughed slightly, and when he turned, I said, “Liquor is harmful, and it is difficult to break the habit. Not so much at one go.”

He ignored me. I considered it my societal responsibility to wean him away from this weakness.

“If you can spend 30 minutes with me, I can cure you of this dependence without any obligation, for I consider this as my duty to society”, I said softly.

He looked at me contemptuously and bawled out “What shit are you taking? Get lost before I lose my temper”

Even as I was saying, “Do not get upset. I am aware it takes a long time to break the habit”, he punched my nose hard, with blood oozing out. In a short while, the security led me out with a warning not to harass customers. I do not get disheartened by such violent rages or failures in my attempts. I keep looking for the next client.

With a band-aid on my bloody nose, I happened to see a zombie sitting on a bench and smoking what I was certain was hash. I went closer and as I feared, his eyes had a vacant look and his cheeks were shrunk. He was oblivious of my presence close by his side or my salutation. It was evident he was hooked on drugs. I could sense a sweaty smell of one who had no shower for a week or more. He moved away from me. I do not give up easily and followed him.

“Leave me alone. Why are you stalking me? I have no money with me,” he said with some irritability

“Cool down, I have gone through this hell, but could shake it off though with difficulty,” I said gently.

“What do you want? What are you talking about?”

“Let us sit down for a while. But tell me what are you into, Ice, LSD, cannabis, opium or ecstasy or any such stuff? I have done all these. I know you get high, into a world of heaven if you have a female partner to boot. I have come to save you from the hell you are sliding into.”

“You wish to save me, yes, by all means. I have been jobless for four months and need one immediately. Can you fix it? My wife and child are starving,” he said

“I have heard this refrain countless times. Come on, let us go and sit on the bench over there,” I said persuasively.

The man pushed me down and started hitting me with such ferocity for a weakling like him. Soon, a crowd gathered to save me, with a policeman also joining. After hearing him and despite my protestations that I was trying to help him, the police took me to the station and, look at the irony, searched me to see whether I carried any drugs. After confining me for the whole day, they sent me away with a warning not to harass people with my help.

I was disillusioned and remained at my place for two days. Then on the evening of the third day, I went round the bazaar area around 8 pm. It is not far from the red-light area and was busy with people. I saw a good-looking well well-built young woman standing under a lamp post. She wore jasmine on her head, and the large bindi suited her round face. She looked decent. I wondered why she was standing there like ‘other’ women. I wished to check whether she needed my help despite the warning from the police.

“Why are you standing here alone at this hour? “I asked

She did not answer. When I repeated the question, she said, “I am waiting for my man”

I assumed she stuck to one person, unlike others and said, “Glad that you are sticking to one man, unlike others of your type. Even then, it is a vice. Better get married to him instead of standing here daily.

She let out a shriek, saying ‘ayyo’ when a two-wheeler with a man and a girl of 6 years with a bottle of Coke screeched to a halt before us.

“What happened?” he asked

“This idiot thinks I am a woman of shady character waiting for some customer.”

Soon, there was a crowd and some manhandling, and I was taken to the police station. They did not let me go home this time.

Someone came the next day and talked to me about the incidents. When I told him in detail that I am a counsellor doing social work voluntarily in saving people caught in vices, he laughed aloud. He asked me lots of questions and had my blood sample taken.

I overheard that man telling the inspector, “That smelly guy needs a shrink as he is slightly deranged and suffers from hallucinations that he is a doctor. Maybe he also requires de-addiction and some medication for an acquired ailment.”

Now I am in a mental hospital, and the fun of it is that doctors are treating me. I laugh at them but revel at the opportunity to help the large number of inmates here. The moral I learnt is never do anything for free, as you are mistaken for a fake.

 

21 comments:

  1. True that! Free advice is never valued! Anu

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good one! Free advices do not get any respect....Sandhya

    ReplyDelete
  3. This has a different story narration style Very interesting to read till the end. The story subtly makes fun of the judgmental , self righteous advisors in many families. Ha ha ha ha

    Chitra

    ReplyDelete
  4. Counsellor or Consultant borrows your watch ,tells you the time and charges a fees. Nothing come free!
    Jagadeesan

    ReplyDelete
  5. Nice story. If you provide free advice it is not appreciated.

    ReplyDelete
  6. From childhood to old age, life here is a never-ending parade of advice, disguised as concern, obligation, or love. And here’s the thing—some of it is valuable and has been our way of keeping each other afloat. Story with a different style and narrative.

    ReplyDelete
  7. To put it the other way round: "Nothing of value comes for free!"
    There is that good old saying: "There are no free lunches."
    -- Pradeep / Time and Tide

    ReplyDelete
  8. Doctor- cure thyself! V funny.

    Arvind Rajan

    ReplyDelete
  9. Help needs to be received, not just given. (JJ)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Even well-meaning service can stem from unresolved personal issues. The protagonist may be projecting his own need for relevance or redemption through compulsive outreach—a savior complex ….

    ReplyDelete
  11. It appears to me that the man is really hallucinating and is need of the medical help he has finally got. At least now, the world at large would be spared from his misplaced concern for those he thinks need de-addiction, But pity the doctors and patients in the asylum! --Thangam

    ReplyDelete
  12. C’mon, seriously! Your hero a doctor?!! Partha Sir, in the beginning we gullible readers almost swallowed the “ doctor “ being the benevolent guy but soon we too caught on . All the telltale signs were there:)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Good one. 👍 Shantha

    ReplyDelete
  14. Crazy guy thinks he’s saving the world but he’s the one who needs help. Loved the twist, it was messed up but kind of funny too.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Crazy guy thinks he’s saving the world but he’s the one who needs help. What a wild ride! Loved the twist, it was messed up evidently to steer us from realizing the twist. Funny story that I really enjoyed!

    ReplyDelete
  16. He had it coming, being judgmental and being a self-appointed savior. Different from your usual stories!

    ReplyDelete
  17. Hmmm. Interesting!! Nice twist in the end!

    ReplyDelete
  18. From Counselling to mental hospital? In this weird world such things also can happen. Free advice is not easily accepted. Deaddiction centre charges heavily then only advise is taken seriously. Hats off to your horizon of imagination. Regards PKR

    ReplyDelete
  19. A beautiful narration that leaves many morals for the readers to pick. And that done in a deceptively simple style! The dividing line between good and evil is so thin, as it almost always is!

    ReplyDelete
  20. Very very true words that anything offered without a request doesn't get recognised!!

    ReplyDelete