---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: p.v. narayanan
Date: Thu, May 4, 2017 at 8:06 PM
Subject: Fwd: Story if Army officer 'a wife who later joined Army.
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Subject: Story if Army officer 'a wife who later joined Army.



 At the age of 23, she lost her husband and was left with a two-year-old
son. This brave mother fought against all odds, overcame weaknesses and
became a role model for many.
Hats Off to the spirit of Motherhood! Here is her story, in her own words–

“It was year 2001. I was happily married. I had an army officer as a loving
husband. Maj Avinash was posted in Kashmir. The separation seemed
tumultuous enough. But I did not know at that time, our destiny wasn’t to
be an average fauji family.

Married at the age of Nineteen, I continued my studies after marriage too.
We were blessed with a baby boy in 1999. I was a happy fauji wife, blessed
mother and busy student. Life was great.

Mobiles were not yet common. We used to be connected through phone calls,
which were either patched up through many Army Exchanges or made after a
long waiting in the only STD booth available for thousands of soldiers.

Considering the quality of the connection and the rarity of it, each
successful conversation was like a battle won. He used to love listening to
the meaningless chatter of our son over the phone. Life was a true wonder.
And we used to desperately wait for those phone calls.

Until one morning when a phone call from Kashmir hit us like a bolt of
lightning.

Early morning on 28 Sep 2001 we got a call from his unit that he is
seriously injured with gunshot wounds.

We were shaken. The worst fear of a fauji family had come true. Our
universe went dark. Our world came to a standstill. We prayed and prayed
and prayed. But it was futile.

Second call after two hours turned our world upside down. I lost my
husband, at the age of 23. My two year old son lost his father.

(We got to know later that Maj Avinash Singh Bhadauria, Kirti Chakra
(Posthumous) had already made the supreme sacrifice when the first phone
call was made by his then unit, 8 Rashtriya Rifles, to us. He had single
handedly killed 04 terrorists. But in the fierce fight that followed he had
suffered gunshots and attained martyrdom. He was 29.)

I was 23 and my son was two. My mind went still. Body was numb. Time was
passing in a haze, like a glint of darkness in a pale, dull universe.

I did not know how to react when people gave condolences. I could see the
faces, feel the movement around me and hear the buzzing sounds, but
everything seemed unreal. Nothing made sense. Nothing had a meaning. My
life had lost meaning so early in life, all of a sudden.

I felt like finishing myself.

But there, I had my innocent baby in my lap. Playing around, giggling and
chattering with people, chuckling and laughing, and crying over small
matters at times, enjoying all the attention and drama.
Full of life, clueless to what had just happened to us, Dhruv brought life
back in me. I had to be strong, for him.

I decided to join the Army. I was not sure how I will do it. I was very
fragile and delicate physically. I was a pampered child of my family. When
I met his unit officers at my home, I told them that I had decided to join
Army.

Most were pleasantly surprised and extremely supportive. They had seen me
as a delicate Army wife, so some of them were sceptical too. They made me
aware of the challenges. The selection was tough and the training was
tougher.

Life as an officer and the work is not any less tough, they used to say.
Frequent movements, remote postings and lots of instability, they said, may
cause lots of problems as I had Dhruv, wholly dependent on me.

But I had decided that my son is my biggest strength and I will not let him
be a weakness. I was not listening. I had just one thought in my mind. I
have to be strong. I have to wear the uniform and hit back at life. For us.

I quit my Post graduation studies in between and applied. I prepared hard
and also took coaching for Service Selection Board (SSB) interview. I even
had a nose injury due to wrong long jump attempt while being coached for
SSB.

In December 2001 (03 months after my husband attained Martyrdom) I was
called for a week long interview at SSB, Allahabad.

My son had never stayed without me. I could not have left him for a week.
My parents accompanied me to Allahabad. Understandably, they were not
allowed inside the SSB centre. My son refused to eat from them. They used
to wait outside in a nearby park with him. I used to come out at every
break and feed him.

It was tough. My SSB co-candidates were moved to see my difficulties and
were all praises for my strength. It was difficult but I was determined.

For a week, I went through the rigorous procedure with determination and
focus. Tears only used to roll out at night when I was inside the centre
alone and my son was not with me.

When the results were announced, I couldn’t believe my ears. Yes, I had
made it! I cried and cried and cried… don’t know for how much time and ran
outside in full speed to inform my parents. We all cried together with
immense joy and remembered my husband.

Thereafter, I had to spend another week for the medical tests. I could not
have asked my parents to continue sitting at the park for another week. So
I thought of speaking to my little child and making him understand that he
should go with his Nana-nani.

Dhruv did not cry as I had expected. He gave a smile and a flying kiss,
then waived me good bye. I controlled my tears. I am still grateful to him
for his understanding. We connected through our soul. And he understood my
pain and the need for him to stay away from me. He became my strength.

But this one week of staying away from his mother was only a small
rehearsal for my little one. It was a precursor to the many long periods in
future when his mother would be away, not for days but for months at a
stretch.

The beginning was a six months long training in Officers Training Academy
(OTA), Chennai starting in March 2002. Life had changed 360 degrees. From
sari/suit to uniform and army boots… I never had imagined in wildest of my
dreams ever. But I was there. Such is life.

Was Academy training tough..? No, it was very very tough. To put it
bluntly, it was beyond my imagination and physical stamina. At times I used
to cry in pain, overwhelmed by sadness and silently angry at my destiny,
but I couldn’t have given up.

Hard work paid off. On 07 Sep 2002, twenty days short of my husband’s first
anniversary of Martyrdom, I was a Comissioned Officer in the Indian Army.
Everyone present for the commissioning ceremony had tears when my three
year old son pipped the epaulettes on my shoulders.

Life was getting back on track. My husband was awarded Kirti Chakra (Second
Highest Peace Time gallantry award) posthumous which I received in uniform
from President Shri APJ Abdul Kalaam.

For a young single mother working in a mostly male dominated environment,
life had many challenges too. But I faced them with positivity and a smile
on my face. I learnt to move on with more courage each passing day.

Life has been full of struggles, but I guess that is the case with
everybody. Ours may be a little more intense. There is not one but many low
moments and every time it felt the lowest.

After eight years of losing my husband, when I lost my own dad it was the
worst. My husband and my dad were two pillars of strength in my life. One
gone the other supported me with equal energy and love but both gone the
vacuum in my life became inconsolable. This time my mom, brother and son
proved to be my support helping me stand up again.

The organisation was very supportive. I received all the monetary and
pension benefits from the Army.

However, it’s been 15 years and I have yet not received Ex-gratia fund from
UP government and my fight is still on for the same.

Sometimes I wonder when it is so difficult for me – an educated lady with
an unparalleled official and administrative exposure as an Officer – to get
her dues from the Government, how difficult it must be for a Jawan’s wife
with much less education and almost no exposure.

After six years of service I decided to leave Army to give a more settled
life to my son. And today I am a mother of 16+ year old boy. We are settled
in Delhi. I am working and we are happy as a family. We are each other’s
strength.

I have taken a sabbatical this year to support my son with his studies and
career goals. He is in class XIIth.
As a single parent, if you really ask me my dreams and aspirations in life,
I only wish to see my son grow big in life and live up to his father’s
name. That’s what I tell him. That’s all that I want and wish for. If he
does well my sacrifices of this life does not matter at all. I will thank
my stars for being kind on us now.

Hi, I’m Captain Shalini Singh and now Mrs India 2017 and a mother of 16
year old son.






Sent from my iPhone



-- 
P.V.NARAYANAN

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