Thursday, 30 April 2026

Floored: A Story of Pain and Perspective

 

Do you take your bed for granted? I know most people do, like your bed automatically comes with the bedroom. Well, it’s baked into the name of the room, right? Maybe I should frame my question better. Do you take your bed-frame for granted? I know I did. My small bedroom comes with a bed frame fit for a king size bed. It has a sufficiently large mattress on it.

Nowadays, people in their late 20s are no longer considered young, and why should we be? After spending hours hunched over my laptop, I get up from my desk like someone twice my age.  Holding my neck with one hand and my back with another, rubbing and massaging them, as if that will alone remove the last spec of ageing from my body, I walk over to the kitchen for a quick snack. Sitting in the same position makes it harder to stand up and often when we do, a sound escapes our larynx, somewhere between a sigh and a groan, almost as involuntary as a sneeze when we have a cold, except the cold is cured after a few days, but there’s as of yet, no cure for anticipated ageing, or let’s call it ‘Aetas Vigniti’- Latin for the uniquely dramatic condition of ageing in your twenties. When we sit somewhere, we hold our knees before lowering ourselves down to the chair, just to curb the pain. Showering in cold water even in summers can make our backache go berserk.

The reason for my rant about our over-advanced ageing was simply to drive home the fact that a normal mattress that would’ve felt heavenly to lie on for 50 year olds even twenty years ago, feels an assault on the backs of us who are traversing, rather poorly might I add, the dangerous realm of being in our late twenties. I was subjected to this mattress and its oppression on my poor back for the last decade. On the brink of beginning my 30s, it’s safe to say I am no longer a young woman and sleeping on that mattress generated strong and painful protests from my ageing back. On most mornings, instead of taking a shower with warm water, I’d take a shower with a pain-relief spray to make my back feel less aged.  

Witnessing my pain every morning, my mother decided enough! It was time to get a new mattress. After careful planning and picking and pondering, my mother and my uncle decided the ‘memory-foam’ mattress would do justice to my poor, aged back.

Now, there’s something you need to know about my mother. One project, as simple as it is of buying a new mattress and disposing of the old one, is not enough for her. She has a pressing need to squeeze in as many projects into this one project as she can. Once the mattress had been finalised, she decided she needed, to increase the amount of storage in the divan underneath my bed-frame. “While you get a new mattress, you might as well get a new bed altogether”, she announced one morning over breakfast. I was about to pop in my paratha dripping with butter, and stopped abruptly. What did she mean by a new bed? Soon it became clear though, that she had a few bed-ly renovations planned, and my need for a new mattress was the perfect occasion for her to execute them.

I did not enjoy my breakfast that morning, for my mind went over the size of the hole this entire assignment would drill in my purse (you see, I don’t wear pants often because it’s too hot, and women’s dresses don’t have pockets, so the hole was most definitely going to be in my purse). My mother then suggested we get the bed frame ready with the extended storage and we can purchase the mattress the next month. It seemed reasonable to me and arrangements were made to dispose off the old mattress that had waged a war on my back over the last decade, and I was officially without a bed in any shape or form. I looked around my room like it belonged to someone else. Having a huge bed in my small room all my life had simply removed any concept of floor space from my brain and the first look after my bed-frame had been dismantled and carried away made me feel like this is a studio, I can dance in here! I don’t dance though. But it’s strange what the exuberance of having more floor space can make you do. It made me dance! Had my mother caught me in the act, she’d have fainted from the shock of it- has my daughter been replaced by someone else?

What followed were two weeks of pure joy and a lot of dancing (with the door closed of course!) Although my brain did not quite register the sheer blessing of having the whole floor to myself, I loved having a single mattress that my mother had rummaged out of one of the lofts to sustain me while my bed was being redesigned. I liked the single bed. A bit too much! I pleaded with my mother to let me keep the single-bed mattress but she needed her storage, and on any day of the calendar, the Indian mother’s wishes, fancies and weird arguments win against anyone by a long shot. My lawyer friends were also sure to lose, had I sought their help. So, for all intents and purposes, I knew I stood no chance of keeping my floor.

I spent many a glorious hour on that mattress, propped up the throw pillows, and brought out my soft toys and cuddled with them while watching movies on my iPad. And the best part was, I could keep my glasses of water and mugs of tea right beside me without fearing they would topple over, because the floor was right there- like a pillar of strength! Or, maybe in this case a floor of strength. I’d come home every evening and my room would be waiting for me with all that floor at my disposal, as if to say ‘sit wherever you want, we’re all yours!’ No invitation from no man has ever seemed so alluring to me, and I hope those men read this someday and really put in the work to better their skills. The floor had me floored and how!

One afternoon, I randomly set up a stack of books by my bed and stuck my bedside lamp on top of it. Now I had a reading nook doubling as a bed and tripling as a chill-out corner. With that massive bed eating up my room, my old limbs had to make the effort to climb the bed; get all the things needed for a long session of chilling in my bed with movies, and if mother called me from the next room, my old limbs would have to find the strength to climb back down again. And, there would be no book stack by my bedside either, which really added character to my room. Who needs a bedside table when you can have a bedside stack of your favourite books? Not me!!!

The floor gave me so much potential to try different things, dancing behind closed doors being the first. I could buy a bean bag, set up my easel, and have canvases stacked up against one wall on the far west side of the room; I could buy a couple of different beautiful rugs and make the room even cosier, although, as an unfortunate resident of Kolkata, cosy is not what we need. But, it never hurts to dream, right? I could buy a huge Lego set and sprawl everything out on the floor to assemble it, only to fail miserably. I could spend my money on all of this that my mother perceives as useless and be very content. This is why you earn money as an adult- to splurge on things meant for children. These are all things I could do, but never did because the villain made a comeback!

That ominous, gigantic, gargantuan bed-frame was meant to be in my life. I cannot keep a man, but something about me summons huge bed-frames to my room; and one evening when I came back from work, there it was, ogling me, mocking me, teasing me. It might also have eve-teased me, you never know. And the days of unfiltered joy of having a floor were over. It was like a crazy, whirlwind romance come to an end, like a farewell to a dear old friend, like... Oh! I am too full of emotions to be able to put words to them. However, now the new mattress would come in, and my days of suffering acutely from Aetas Vigniti would be over. Having cursed my back all my life, had it not been for its relentless pain, my mother would never have turned the project of getting a new mattress into a redesigning assignment, and me? I’d have been oblivious to a great friendship and camaraderie of my life- me, the single-bed mattress, and The Floor!

-Reva.

(A reflection on what a life without a bed could've been)