The Third and Final Continent By Jhumpa Lahiri
This story by Lahiri is about one man's journey from India to London and to America. As he travels to new places he has to transition to get used to life in a new country. This story is one about change and all of its forms. The man changes as he travels from India to London to be on his own, studying at university and living with many bachelors with very little money. He then is offered a good job in America and travels first to India to marry and then goes to Boston.
Every time that that he goes somewhere new, he tries his best to observe and learn how to survive in the foreign city. After arriving in Boston the narrator starts to feel more comfortable there. " In a week or so I adjusted, more or less." He stays first at the YMCA and then with an older widow in a quieter neighborhood. Each time he comes home, he goes through a ritual with the woman, which involves her telling him that there is a flag on the moon, and he replies with "Splenid!". The narrator respects the old woman, and when he hands in his first week's rent, he hands it to her personally. She calls him a true gentleman. Once he finds out that she is over 100 years old, he begins to worry about her, and he almost watches over her.
The narrator and his wife Mala have been married for some time, and once she has received her green card they live together permanently in an apartment. It takes time, but eventually they go out and the narrator takes her to see the old woman. Once there, the woman tells the narrator she has broken her hip, and he replies with "Splendid!", which makes Mala laugh. The narrator is caught off guard by her laugh and genuine smile, which is something he has never seen or heard before. The old woman describes Mala saying "She is a perfect lady!", which makes the narrator laugh and smile. That moment between the husband and wife was a starting point for their love. The couple come across the old woman's obituary a couple months after their visit with her, and Mala comforts the narrator as he mourns his first death in America.
I loved this story because it shows how people who come from other countries have to adjust and transition when they move somewhere different. Everything is new and strange and different, and it takes time for things to feel as they should. This story also highlights change in human character, seen in the narrator as he goes from being on his own as a bachelor, to being a caretaker of his mother and the old woman, to being a husband, and to being a father. It also showcases change in love and how little things can really create a connection between people and spark something bigger. The old woman had seen and experienced so much change in her long life, and she had helped change the lives of others for the better. This story goes to show that life is ever-changing.