With Kindness As His Mantra: A Conversation With Irrfan Khan

Reader's Digest India had interviewed actor Irrfan Khan for its April issue. The actor had then talked about his diagnosis, patience and a clean mental slate

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Reader's Digest India had interviewed actor Irrfan Khan for its April issue. The actor had then talked about his diagnosis, patience and a clean mental slate

Your childhood ambition was to play professional cricket. If your family had financially supported this dream, would you have still ended up in films?

I loved cricket. When I love something, I don’t calculate where it will take me. Perhaps it’s a funny example, but my last house was in Madh Island, far away from the city [Mumbai]—a serene, beautiful house. People often wondered why I bought this property even though I wasn’t retired. But I was happy there as I could see very little of the city. It was surreal, the view of the distant city skyline from my balcony—all the noise, pollution and chatter were miles away. Hundreds of migratory birds would come to spend the night in a 200-year-old tamarind tree across my balcony.

For me, Madh Island was a nest away from the cacophony of the urban jungle. I didn’t calculate that I would spend extra time commuting, or that my kids would travel so far for school—we were just happy. Besides, kids learn to adjust faster than we think. They could only see the sea and coconut trees from their rooms, instead of skyscrapers and hearing the deafening traffic.

The point is, one cannot calculate everything in life, but parents do, to ensure the best for their child. And they push you to do what they think is best. If I had taken that route, cricket would have been my Mecca. I can’t do things half-heartedly. It was not like, Let me give cricket a try, and if it doesn’t work I will try acting. I had not looked at acting as a second passion until I abandoned the first for many reasons. I explored acting later, after I saw Naseerbhai [Naseeruddin Shah] in Nishant and Mithun Chakraborty in Mrigayaa. That’s when I realized, this is engaging; that as much as I liked cricket, this can be the ‘bhoot’ [spirit] I am possessed with.

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