“It is the number placed below the horizontal line of a fraction. It indicates the total number of equal parts into which the whole, the number above the line, is divided. It is sometimes used interchangeably with the term ‘divisor.’”
“Do you know what a denominator is?” was the question to which I had responded. It may not have been a textbook definition, but I had rattled it off with confidence. Math had been a favourite subject in school.
My back had started to straighten once again, coming, as it did, on the back of (no pun intended) “Do you know what a numerator is?” to which I had responded confidently with “It is the number above the line in a fraction which gets divided into as many equal parts as the number below the line. It is often used interchangeably with ‘dividend.’”
We seemed to be moving towards familiar territory. I was sure the next question would ask me to define ‘quotient.’
About time too. The sailing before these questions had been anything but smooth. “When was the last time you ordered food?” as soon as I entered the room, had set the tone for the meeting.
It was not something I was prepared for, and my immediate impulse was to call it out as an ‘out of syllabus’ question. But then, you are never prepared for a meeting with a smart government representative, are you? Especially when the official is an enumerator who calls on you for the decadal census exercise, which, this decade, was being done a decade-and-a-half-ly, to count the number of heads. I resisted the urge. If we can do ‘thali-banging’ to force the pandemic back, then ordering food could certainly be the secret key to unlocking the mysteries of the census.
“Is that a thing? Can that be done? Don’t you need to go and fetch it? What do you mean by ‘ordered food home?’” I had not said a word, but sensing the confusion and the torrent of questions her question had possibly created in my mind, she said, helpfully, “Haven’t you heard of apps like Zomato and Swiggy? Through them, you can order food from anywhere, generally at a much higher price.”
A light bulb clicked. I remembered. Of course, I was familiar with the apps. Just two years back, when we needed to order samosas for some unannounced guests, we had requested our son in far-away Hamburg, in Germany, to order them for us in Gurgaon after trying and failing ourselves.
“Nearly once in two years,” I said confidently.
If she was disappointed with the answer, she did not show it, though her next question did possess a hint of betrayal. “What about eating out? You must be folks who prefer to eat food hot and hence eat out instead of ordering. How often do you eat out?” she asked, with hope once again. She knew she had found a legitimate explanation for the meal-ordering frequency.
I knew I was on a strong wicket. Just two months back, we had gone to an eatery across the road from our house for some idlis and dosas. The enumerator would be pleased. “Two months,” I said, looking her in the eye.
She almost fell off her chair. “You don’t mean…” she had trouble completing the sentence. “You don’t mean you cook food at home?” It was more an accusation than a question.
I could only nod, no longer looking her in the eye.
If she was disappointed, she did not show it. Regaining her composure quickly, she asked, this time with a smile that seemed genuine, “and which nice restaurant do you go to once in two months?” She spoke with the authority of a person who had found a legitimate explanation for the eating-out frequency, or the lack of it.
“Nice? What do you mean by nice?” I was sure that the place I ate at was nice, but I wanted to be sure.
“You know…expensive.” With some after-thought she added, “The ones that advertise and say that you could be anywhere, New York, London, except where you are, Gurgaon or Delhi, once you step inside. Where butter chicken is written in Portuguese on the menu with an explanation in, well, maybe Japanese, with a picture alongside to help you order. That one.”
She looked at me. She knew. There was no answer. Considerate woman that she was, she did not dwell on it for long and moved on. “Then…” she pondered for a bit, “how do you fall ill?”
“Do I need to? Must I?” I protested.
It seemed she did not hear me. “Do you ever think beyond yourself? Have you noticed that shops selling groceries and bookstores are closing down and shops selling protein powders, skin treatments, and diabetes medication are thriving? Do you know how many big hospitals have opened in Gurgaon in the last three years?”
I was about to answer when she started raising her right hand. I braced for a slap. But she merely waved it to indicate that I should stay quiet. I gladly complied, having avoided the slap. I did not know anyway.
“Did you know that India runs the most efficient health-based economic stimulus programme? It may have taken time and effort but we have managed to make the modern city lifestyle a masterpiece of convenience, replacing walking with driving, cooking with ordering, and sweat and exertion-prone exercise with motivational reels about exercise and mental reconditioning. Now, even if you want to exercise or make physical exertion of any sort, like getting up for a glass of water, you need a physical trainer or yoga teacher to tell you the right way and monitor your heartbeat and steps through the entire process. Children are no longer allowed to play aimless games, building their strength, creativity, independence, and ability to negotiate the world in haphazard ways. They now play managed games under the watchful eyes of a trainer, learning valuable leadership skills that will help them comply and look for approval when they grow up.”
I was transfixed. It was all so simple. She smiled, knowing the impression she had created. “There is even a solution for aiding the sleep that you cannot get because there is no physical exertion; soothing music coming out of your mobile, that takes you further away from it, helping build fatigue. The body is a remarkable machine, isn’t it? Every ounce of effort removed from daily life is carefully converted into a future medical condition. The economy keeps moving: first, we spend money avoiding effort, then we spend even more money repairing the damage. The result? A thriving ecosystem where everyone in the economy, the food delivery apps, pharmaceutical companies, diagnostic labs, hospitals, and health insurers, all prosper together.”
“But tell me,” she seemed to have been reminded of something as she sipped water from a glass, “have you started undergoing preventive medical checkups once in three months yet?”
I had relaxed, believing that the inquisition was over and all I had to do was listen to her. But the ball was thrust back in my court. “Three months?” I repeated the question.
Ignoring my question, she added, “Since we became a free market, though we may not be able to freely express ourselves or freely convert rupees to other currencies, preventive checkups have freed up a billion people from health non-issues. While initially recommended once in three years, the nation’s development and the concurrent rise of hospitals and diagnostic facilities now require every patriotic citizen to do a checkup once every quarter. Of course, we are working on an educational campaign that will make people feel guilty each time they walk past a diagnostic centre and don’t get themselves tested. Are you there yet?”
I thought I had understood the question before the explanation. Now I was not sure I had. I could not even repeat “three months?” as I had done earlier, since I was no longer sure what the question was. “Where was I supposed to be?” I wondered.
“When was the last time you went in for a preventive medical test?” she prompted helpfully, rephrasing her original question for my benefit. “Why wait for symptoms when you can begin worrying immediately? After all, prevention is better than cure. And recurring prevention is even better than one-time prevention, is it not?”
She glanced at her watch, apparently realizing she was running short on time. “OK, what about wearables?” she said abruptly, without waiting for a response.
“Wearables?” At least I could repeat the question. It meant I understood the question.
“Yes, wearables,” she said, her words gathering pace. “What you, and everyone, not just people whose health requires them to, wear on your body at all times to find new reasons for seeking medical help. Now, if you wake up feeling rested, you can check your sleep score to discover reasons why the sleep was not restful and seek treatment. Good health is no longer the exclusive preserve of the individual. The national economy is fully involved.”
“How often do you take shots for diseases that you have never heard of? Or the ones you have heard of? Have you started taking annual flu shots at least twice a year yet?”
“I think I got the standard polio, BCG, smallpox, etc. when I was a child,” I said.
She gave me a withering glance. Regaining her composure quickly, she continued, “Ah! Maybe, you consult your doctor every week?” with the gentleness of a person who had found a legitimate explanation for the shots, and the absence of a response.
“Just before Covid,” I said, hesitatingly, “is when I last saw the doctor.”
“Are you saying you don’t visit doctors and occasionally spend a night or two in hospital? Or have aches and pains and conditions that go away on their own?” Her voice was sharp.
She leaned back in her chair, took off her glasses, and kept them on the table in front. She had apparently reached a decision in her mind and turned the conversation to the numerator and denominator. And then, exactly as I had anticipated, came “Do you know what quotient is?”
“A quotient is the numerical result obtained when you divide one number (the dividend) by another number (the divisor),” I said, a little unenthusiastically. I was not sure where this discussion was headed.
“Exactly,” she beamed. I relaxed.
“Our great leaders have been working at increasing our GDP and taking us out of poverty, ably supported by most people. The per capita GDP tracks the GDP per individual and is considered to be one of the sacred measures of material prosperity. The numerator is the GDP, the denominator is the number of people in the economy, and the quotient is the…” she trailed off.
This was in my comfort zone.
“You are one of the few who stand in the way of our great nation’s deserved development…” This was a direct attack. I closed up again. “…by not contributing to the GDP. What right do you have to be counted in the denominator without contributing to the numerator?”
The path from ordering food to unlocking the mysteries of the census was becoming clear to me. “Do you want to be cancelled?” I heard a faraway voice say, like a mythical ‘akashvani.’ “No, no, no,” I screamed out. “I promise to always take the lift instead of stairs when going up and spend at least an hour aimlessly scrolling on my mobile before sleeping. I will selectively replace water with carbonated, sugary drinks after checking that their advertisement says they are good for health, which I will order through a food delivery app. I will…”
“Relax! Wake up. Who were you talking to?” The enumerator was standing next to me, with worry on her face. “We know you are a well-meaning person. A lack of knowledge and guidance can lead anyone astray. I will be back in a few weeks for the final tally. You have time to turn things around and make a positive contribution to the GDP, or else…” she trailed off as she gathered her papers and walked out.



