Friday, 12 June 2015

The Death Of A Stranger

Mr. Herman was one of those men who led that very silent, very invisible life; always merging into their surroundings like tapestry against wallpaper.
I never knew exactly what he did or where he worked, but I did know that each morning at 8 am, without a minute's delay, he would pull out his rickety old Chevy that was as silver as his hair, and drive into the day to do whatever it is that he did. At about 6 pm everyday, when I would return from work, haggard and annoyed from my mundane goings-on, I would see his car parked outside his house and some part of my subconscious would acknowledge and register my neighbor's quiet presence.
I had never truly had a conversation with Mr. H in the three years that we lived next door to each other. Of course there were the regular hi's and hello's and polite smiles we would exchange upon the chance encounter of (accidental) eye-contact in the neighborhood, but that was it. I have always been terrible at social niceties and I do my best to avoid looking right at another human's face, lest I be forced into having one of those laborious conversations that come as naturally to me as breathing underwater. What do you say to someone you barely know when he asks you how you've been and what you've been up to? Does he know what you were up to before this moment, to begin with? But let us leave this tirade for another rainy afternoon.

The day I shall now tell you about was a lovely one when the sunshine played with my fingertips and my hair felt light like the wind. My caffeine kick was just about setting in and I was walking to the garage to pull out my car when I noticed what can only be described as organized commotion outside Mr. Herman's house.
I knew for a fact that he lived alone and I hadn't ever before noticed him getting any visitors, apart from the annual visit his son would pay him around Christmas-time. On a keener observation, I realized that the people parked outside his house and on his front door were policemen, and with that, a horrid dread consumed me. I plopped my car keys into my bag and shuffled to where they stood.
"Excuse me sir, but what's going on?" I asked, although I was convinced I already knew the answer.
"I'm sorry ma'am, who are you?" asked a blue-eyed potbellied policeman.
"His neighbor, Shireen Polanski. I live in that house," I replied, pointing at my place. "Is everything okay, officer? Is Mr. Herman okay?".
"I'm so sorry ma'am, but Mr. Herman has passed on. We got a call an hour ago from his housekeeper when he failed to answer the doorbell. When we arrived, we had to break down the door. The coroner says it looks like he left us at least ten hours ago," he said with an apologetic shrug.
I stood there, stationary as an ice-sculpture, not knowing what I was supposed to do or say. The police-officer looked worried and said, "I'm sorry for your loss Ms. Polanski. Were you two close?".
I mumbled something incoherently because my lips and tongue seemed to be in a neuromuscular shutdown, to which the officer looked at me dubiously and said, "Excuse me? I didn't quite catch you. Here, why don't you sit down miss," and offered me a chair.
"No thank you. I'm fine," I managed to say, while continuing to stare profusely at the house which up until ten hours ago was home to a meek old man with a Chevy and a son in Chicago who made his Christmases a little merrier.
I have always been convinced of the fact that my mind is the noisiest place in the universe, second to none, but at that moment, there was an eerie silence that had descended over me like a venomous mist over a swamp.
I turned around and went back to my house and shut my door with a booming finality, as if though that would calm me down or make the noises reappear in my head; as if this would bring back some normalcy into this morning that seemed so glorious not so long ago. However, the only thoughts that came to me were of how old Mr. Herman was dead, and how terribly lonely it must have felt to die without any human companionship or audience when he breathed his last.
I wondered if someone had telephoned his son yet.
Of course they must have.
Somewhere in Chicago, a man had been freshly orphaned. Would he be drowning in a pool of his own tears for his deceased father? Or would he be at a bar trying to swallow his grief with some Scotch and ice? And then, the darkest of thoughts came to me like the swooping wing of an albatross- what if this young Mr. Herman was actually unaffected by the passing of his father? What if he didn't really care much and was subconsciously (or otherwise) prepared for such an occurrence? What if he viewed this as a mere formality that would end his Christmas duties with an irreversible punctuation mark to finish this proverbial sentence?

At that moment, I wept for the neighbor I had never spoken to and the man I knew next to nothing about. I suppose you could call him a good neighbor; he never did anything to disturb or annoy me. No irritating loud 50's music, no stenches of failed culinary experiments, no trash disposed off at inappropriate spots. He looked like a kind old fellow, but then perhaps that is the consolation prize your body receives when your skin has that many wrinkles. I would never really know about his kindness-or the lack of it-now.
I wiped my tears on the sleeves of my shirt and regretted my action almost immediately as my kohl streaked the crisp white with black, and I was instantly reminded of a misplaced zebra.
As I looked outside, I saw the policemen placing a body-bag into the ambulance, and with that visual, I decided that it would be best if I just drew my curtains for the day.
Life can be so funny, and so can I. Here I was, shedding tears for someone with an unwavering honesty whom I didn't know at all.
With another cup of coffee, I shook myself out of this crying session and decided that I would never like to die alone. I would hate to not have another soul witness my final hurrah, so to speak. I also decided that Mr. Herman actually picked a very nice day to leave this world. The sun shone down on us with a happy gentleness and the breeze embraced the day like an old friend. It was a beautiful day, and death was just the beginning.

Saturday, 30 May 2015

Indian Summer

The past week turned out to be one laden with tedious drudgery and a relentless relay of mental gymnastics that has resulted in me feeling exhausted and grateful to have finally arrived on the merciful shores of the weekend. In fact, I suppose I could say so for the entire month that was.
I'm an autumn child; someone who enjoys the comfort of sunshine, cold winds, warm coffee mugs and crunchy leaves to step on. The heat and humidity brings out the worst in me- my temper flares up like a solar storm, there is verbal vomit that is almost always followed with regret and embarrassment. I've often considered the prospect of going into a solitary hibernation during the summer months; lying flat on my back in a cold vacuum chamber, with my eyes shut, seeing nothing, doing nothing, saying nothing, only to wake up and resume normal life when the ambient temperature is more hospitable to my flaky head.
However, to shift slightly away from the rather psychedelic ideas that my brain is home to, it just hit me how we begin the sixth month of the year on Monday. As I tend to do on any significant dates, I'm forced to introspect and analyze the past half year that flew by like a bullet from a blazing gun.
What have I achieved? What have I lost? Who did I hurt? How much did I love? What did I forget to do? Have I been a good person?
Ask yourself these questions, dear readers. And above all, ask yourself if this is who you wish to be for the next six months. 

I think if we train our brains well enough, we can establish an efficient heart-brain network and frankly, that's all we really need to make it through weeks such as the one that ends tonight. It's a wonderful blessing to have found true love, perfect friends, and a doting family, but if you are unsure of the person that you are, and if you depend on someone-anyone-for your primary source of peace and joy, then that's one thing that needs your urgent attention for the next half of 2015. Find your inner pool of happiness so you can share it with your loved ones and spread some light and laughter. Oh, and self-acceptance! Work on what you can improve, but before that, accept what you have and who you are.
I am weird, ditsy, supremely temperamental, possessive, insecure and underweight; but I am also honest, dedicated, loyal, optimistic, loving and well, I guess I'm a confident writer, if nothing else. So for every negative I house in this little body, there's an equally bright and shiny positive.
And this holds true for us all. I guess we just need to stop being so harsh and judgmental about our own selves to allow the positives in us to multiply in a happier, kinder environment.
I want to be a better person for the people that I love, so that's what I'm deciding to work on from the sultry month of June.
Meanwhile, let's keep our floppy hats on, any sticky make-up off, and thank the Lord for the greatest invention of our time- air-conditioning!

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Flash Of Light

You are the reason
That the universe has held
Itself together
Through so many storms and quakes,
On sturdy legs, and sometimes
On shaky ground-
But it has held on,
Like the grip of a tendril
That doesn't let go
Unless Death arrives
And turns the green into dust.
You have handed me
The confusing pieces of the jigsaw
That the world made of me
In an arranged fashion,
Organized into a little flash
Of perfection that spells to me
A sentence only I can read-
And it tells me that I'm loved
Beyond my wildest dreams,
And beyond my deepest intuitions
Of how love was supposed to be,
And what the universe would
Allow me to own.

Thursday, 7 May 2015

Brown

In your dark eyes, you have shown me
The world as you see it, in sepia,
Black and white, and in technicolor,
Changing shape like a melting ice cube
Or a pouring thunder cloud.
Your lips have taken me to countries
And fed me luscious cuisines
From the peninsulas of solitude,
The plains of companionship,
From the mountains borne of our love-
I have tasted it all from those lips.
When they kiss the air and romance
My tongue,
I have heard stories you've never even told
Through a wrinkle here, a frown there,
A nervous twitch here, a grateful touch there.
When your skin flames up red and luminescent,
I have felt the temperature of our
Rising libidos, and our growing love.
I have felt the pain of distance,
I have heard the songs of missing,
And in your dark eyes I have seen
A shade of brown that hides from you
Only to come out of hiding
When I am the audience,
As if though, it knows who I am
And how much I love you.

Saturday, 2 May 2015

Extraordinary Measures

I cannot write with the same ease and flair that has belonged to my fingers and mind since I learnt how to spell and hold a pencil two decades ago. I wonder if this is a symptom of an excessively cluttered mind with overflowing compartments or because I haven't managed to read anything inspiring in an unusually long time. They say that reading good literature increases the flow of one's creative juices; it supposedly smooths and shines up those tiny ideas that are already present in your mind into becoming something bigger and better. However, I've always believed that the kind of originality that appeals to me when I read something I end up liking cannot possibly be plagiarized through another writer's work, no matter if that's an indirect hijacking of creativity.
How does one stay true to one's self in a circumstance such as this, and how long does such a creative drought last?
I've been doing this for longer than I can remember, and I am quite aware of my temperament as a writer which is why I have been repeatedly telling myself to remain calm and let the ideas return home. I suppose they are much like migratory birds that only come back when the weather is more hospitable and kind.
So here's me hoping very sincerely for the words to return and fill me up like a fat vat of magic potion that shall lift me out of this rut that I seem to be furnishing. When they return, I can imagine it's going to feel like a warm hug from the man I love who I haven't seen for the longest time in a while.
My life always ends up telling me parallel stories that come in twos. There's always something to learn and grow with.
Until that glorious and much anticipated moment that I manage to enchant you (and myself) with a relatively respectable post, I hope you have a happy weekend, devoid of earthquakes, storms and/or being away from the one you love.

Friday, 17 April 2015

Summertime Sadness

Last week, with a loud and unattractive thump on my door, summer arrived. With a musty suitcase and an unkempt mane of sunshine and perspiration, this annual guest of mine entered my world as I cringed at the thought of those severely hot afternoons we would have to endure and those balmy nights which were bound to make each of us crave for merciful respite.
The temperature enjoyed its steady climb up the thermometer over this past week, as I found myself falling prey to those very working-girl-woes which we all undoubtedly have. I'm sure I can't possibly be the only one on cyberspace to be cribbing about having a horrible boss; there have got to be others like me who get pushed and prodded around-both metaphorically and otherwise-by their superiors at work in that very silent, snarky, camouflaged style which hits you without warning or sensation. You realize that you were mistreated well after your day is over and you're back home with a cup of green tea for company; the realization is unpleasant, like a cube of stale cheese, because this suddenly explains why you've been feeling so annoyed all day despite the lack of anything 'bad' happening to you.
I was speaking to my best friend today about how they should have taught us how to deal with the real world back in college so we could enter it with some preparation and gusto, instead of being the insipid little lab-rats we're proving to be with every passing day.
The real world hits you like a giant red truck with no brakes, square in the face, and yet if you're lucky, you'll have that one person by your side who watches it all unfold with a stoic resilience and solid support that you grow to depend on with each passing second.
It all boils down to that companion.
I'm glad I have mine, through summer, through the rains, through the winter winds, and through those spring nights that pass by quicker than you knew time could pass.

Saturday, 14 March 2015

The Feminist Post

I have always had a shaky stance on all these motley 'days' that card companies, TV channels and ad firms come up with, and have felt that they are drenched in a sickening lather of predictability and a crowd-pleasing fetish.
On principle, I despise all things cheesy, even my pizza (which I honestly do believe is God's favourite food), and am the kind of person you'll find wearing all-black on 14th February merely so I don't drown in that saccharine sweet sea of pink ribbons, red roses, cuddly teddy bears and heart-shaped balloons.
Yes, I do think that it's rather sad if you depend on any one demarcated date on the calendar to celebrate love; specially so because you had nothing to do with why Valentine's Day should be any different for you and your partner. In my opinion, that very fact makes it exceptionally plebeian and unattractive to be going gaga over it.
But enough of my hatred for 'the day of love'.

This particular diatribe is dedicated to a more recently passed date.
The 8th of March, celebrated internationally as Women's Day.

Last Sunday, my brother was driving me to the mall where I was to meet someone. We were accompanied by some of his friends, one of whom wished me a happy women's day. I wished her back, because that's the polite thing to do, I suppose.
"So wait, does that mean that the other 364 days belong to us, men?" asked my brother with the kind of cynicism in his voice that instantly reminded me of myself. I guess scepticism is one of those things you inherit through blood, because in that moment alone I could see the magic of genetics and DNA.
We all laughed his question off with some men-bashing and some feminist jokes, and the day passed by rather happily and peacefully.
Women's Day came and went, and when I hit the sack that night, I found myself spending a couple of seconds in my head to dismiss the need for the day, and all this feminism that seemed to be reserved in people's hearts and minds solely for this date.
I'm a hardcore feminist, for sure, and perhaps that's why I have always found it rather insulting to feel that we deserve a red flag on the calendar to make us feel special. Just because of our anatomy?
No, that hardly seems like a valid reason.
This should be an age of equality and a time where individuals are appreciated for the person that they are and not the sex they belong to, I thought to myself in bed that night. A dreamless sleep came, and Monday morning arrived, unceremoniously and unkindly.

Midweek, I happened to gather the conviction to make myself watch the latest BBC documentary to make waves in the world. India's Daughter.
I'm not going to waste your time by telling you what it's about, because the nearly 2 million YouTube views give me the hint that anyone who is online in this day and age has seen this horrifying film. I couldn't bring myself to watch the whole thing. I must have given up halfway, or maybe even before that, because of the extremely disturbing facts that this brave documentary dared to bring to light.
India's Daughter has, ironically enough, been banned from being shown in India, which has probably ensured added publicity for the film and an added embarrassment for our bureaucracy in the global scheme of things.
I was within and without, supremely disgusted with the unapologetic disrespect for my gender that is so very prevalent in my country even in 2015 when we are busy (and proud) sending out spaceships to Mars and telling ourselves that India is incredible.
No. India is not yet incredible. We cannot take credit for the undeniable geographic beauty of this ancient land. We cannot be as complacent as we are about the gifts that Mother Nature has given our nation in such merciful abundance. These wonderful things have nothing to do with our efforts or our behaviour as passport-holders of this country. They are merely lucky coincidences which we ought to be grateful for, and make conscious heartfelt efforts to do everything in our power to ensure that these gifts are not lost for the generations of Indian children to come.
We cannot be haughty and smug about having a rich cultural heritage either, because while we have grown up in households which worship the Goddess, the same households impose different rules on their daughters from their sons. The same households have allowed their sons and brothers to grow into demons with libidos from hell and a depleted conscience which makes them believe that even if they rape and murder a woman, it is still the female's fault for having the audacity to step out after dark or for showing too much skin.
That night, after I closed the YouTube tab on my laptop, I found that my sleep had disappeared and a dormant fear I never knew I contained in my head sat up awake. For the first time in my 25 years on this planet and in this country, I felt afraid of taking a cab the next day or walking alone on the streets after sundown.
Oh, and I'm the same girl who has traveled across the globe alone. I felt afraid of being attacked, because I am a woman, and I live in India, and there's no point denying how realistic the chances of that happening are. I glanced into my bag and took out my faithful can of pepper-spray. I wondered how useful this could even be in such a horrendous circumstance, and I prayed to God that I would never have to find out.
I thought to myself in that instance that if someone like me could ever be afraid of such vile uneducated monsters and feel threatened by them, then perhaps there is indeed some relevance of the 8th of March even in my life.
I am barely any different from the crowd then, clearly.
It was a heartbreaking realization, because I find being part of the herd grossly unappealing, but this was the truth.
I am a part of the herd.
I am a woman.
With that thought, I turned on some music and tried to calm myself back into bed, pushing this uncomfortable realization to a lonely corner of my brain.

So yes dear readers, Women's Day came and went, and as this rant of mine now draws to a close, I am still shaky about whether or not I shall ever manage to bring myself to celebrate such 'days'. I do know however, that it is definitely high time that we spoke up and acted against such injustices that prevail with much gusto in our country even today. If you are a girl and you are reading this, I pray that you lead your life with courage, and that you are blessed with safety and good sense. More power to you!
And if you are a man, then I sincerely appeal to you to contribute positively to the safety and protection of the women around you, and I appeal to you to never allow yourself to objectify a woman to that terrible degree that she feels naked, exposed and unsafe even with her clothes on when you look at her. If you have friends who do the same, make them read these words if you must, but I think the time is ripe for us to be harvesting a healthy attitude towards both genders and teaching our sons that unless they respect women, they will never grow up to be men.