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Added on: 2013-12-22 00:00:00 Total Views: 11,028
Description: Video details - jWmMZvhE6ds : Gulzaar's classic. Lekin is the story of a soul of a woman, Rewa, caught in a time warp, somewhere between the realm of the living and the dead. She dies while she is trying to escape her long captivity and her ominous portending rape by the local Raja. She is caught in a storm in the desert as she is desperately trying to cross the desert to reach her paternal home. The winds blow in such a fateful way that her body and soul are left struggling under their force, till she succumbs and falls and then gets slowly submerged under the ruthless sands. The man, Sameer, to whom she appears, as a lost soul, time and again, is perplexed till he finally realises that she does not want to die, but sorrow and suffering have made her too scared to live.Rewa thus is the quintessential representation of many of us who have gone through a traumatic experience that has wrenched the life out of us. We want our life back, just as it was before the trauma, but are too scared….to live. We do not want to die but are too fearful of life itself. So like Rewa, we get caught in no man's land, flitting between the living and the dead, the real and the unreal, the concrete and the illusion, the fact and fiction, the conscious and the sub-conscious. And just like Rewa has the hope that Mehroo (the man who is supposed to be her saviour) will come and take her across the desert, we all harbour hopes that someone else will come and break this ever compulsive repetitive cycle of our pain and suffering and free us from its seemingly inescapable clutches.The moment we realise that the compulsive repetitiveness is the creation of our own mind, we free ourselves. The moment we realise that we are in a prison, the door of which is perpetually open, we free ourselves. The moment we live in the present, and stop ruminating on the past or worrying about the future, we free ourselves. The moment we realise that our soul has no constraints and no one can trap it or stunt it and that it transcends beyond all boundaries, we free ourselves. We all have to ourselves escape the deserts of our own minds, just as Rewa ultimately does, all by herself. The mind can be its own prison and its own salvation. It depends on us and what we choose it to be. So live every moment. That's all that is ours anyway.