Thursday, September 28, 2006

Warning, generous profanity ahead

On some afternoons, some gentlemen do not have particularly pressing issues to deal with and decide to tag people. A certain such gentleman is Kishore, and this is in response to his tag.

I am thinking about… the conversation the girl in the next cubicle is having over her cell phone, some Taiwanese people eating aborted foetus, the nice voice that cows have, cross cultural communication, and a late night phone conversation.
I said… watch the drool, moron.
I want to… ask you to finish the rest of this tag.
I wish… I finish the bloody document I am working on and get to move on with life.
I hear… the walrus sing. Why, it is all so clear (Sorry, A. I hope you are not reading this.)
I wonder… about so many things. Sometimes I also wonder if the thoughts in my head will ever shut up.
I regret… tough one. Haahhaa, I wish my mind were this silent more often.
I am… in dire need of a hug. Or a chocolate brownie. Whichever comes first. Heck, one chocolate walnut brownie please.
I dance… clad in Zebra skin on full moon nights. And GROWL. So watchout. Yes, YOU.
I sing… when I think I should mate with the frogs.
I cry… uncontrollably.
I am not always… incoherent.
I make with my hands… perfectly circular mud pies
I write… and sometimes I don’t.
I confuse… anything straight and simple. And spellings.
I need… more books, more time, more brawn, more brains, more money, more education, more deliberation, more vodka, more this, more that. More More More! Bring it on, life. Ye hear me?? {Mumbles profanity.}


To continue the tradition, I tag Squirrel, the girl FKA transience, Gulnaz, Ô¿Ô, Sunny, Inky, Sailaja, Stormy zephyr, evestigo, H, Jessy, Anumita, Shaz, Mahen, Saltwater, Swati, MotoRama. Let me know if I forgot someone lurking around.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Man without a face

This morning
From about a bumper away
I saw
Your pale white arms
In a white tee
Doing a swirl
To stretch;
Like poetry
In slow motion.

Your almond brown hair
Still nestled
The aura of dreams
At that moment
You seemed
Like
The most beautiful thing
And
At that thought
I can't help but smile.

Bookstore

For K, whose perseverance and sheer magic of being makes me swell with the pride of just knowing you.


Will it rain tomorrow
I asked you
You negated
From a city
That is far away
From where I sleep

Will it be okay
I asked you
You were affirmative
Trust me, you said
I believed you

A lot of other what ifs
I asked you
You explained
Destiny and the human mind
You showed me
It is true

In the middle
Of a bookstore
In the middle
Of a working day
You read out poetry
That’s straight from your soul

You make being
Seem so easy
In spite of the what ifs
Coming to life

Amidst the sculpture
And verse
And rum
And being
You forgot
To teach me to breathe.

Monday, September 18, 2006

Silver girl

The evening walks away
To join the dust of dreams
Night lulls its way through
Bringing with it
A silence

She walks by
The creaking wooden boards
And footprints in silver-moon cinders
Her only company

The tips of the pine
Tap against the windows
The moon wrangles
Putting on and taking off the clouds
Conflict abounds

Auburn tresses slide
Below the nape of her neck
Dry emotions form
At the base of her throat

She lets out a scream
Salty and earth shattering
The owls outside
Scram

Oblivious to her form
On the floor,
In a fit.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

When Rumi came alive- I


An auburn autumn sky begins to indulge in colours of the imbrued, colours of yore. Sitting at one of the numerous road side cafés that dot this part of the world, I await the perfection of a steaming hot latte, with half a spoon of sugar, please.
Life looks exactly the same with the sky, the overbearing cold about to break and cause red cheeks, the Scotsman at the next table whose accent reminds you of a love far away, of a love from yesterday.
So what went wrong?
Something always goes wrong, doesn’t it, or there would be a solitaire on these ink stained fingers yet. Let’s see, what went wrong the last time?
It is difficult to tell which was worse, the one cheating who was trying to have a baby with another woman, or the one who was not in love at all but was in it for who knows what?
It’s all just blah right now, anyway.
Waiting for no one at cafes like this is the most romantic thing you can bear to do for yourself right now. The banal paper napkin with squiggly stories written all over, the tip of the pen sauntering over it, careful enough not to rip pieces away.
It is the collective whole that makes sense, the entire scheme of things has a way of falling into place.
Across the street is a young man. Early twenties, you figure, standing in the trademark grey University sweatshirt. What could he be waiting for? He stands on the pavement, walks up and down slowly, looks into the shop windows mindlessly- you can tell he is not interested. You can tell so well, mainly because you were him not so long ago- one of those outsiders who spent all their time looking in. Looking into other lives, families, happiness, as time and its many winters quietly slipped by.
Maybe it is a lover he is waiting for. Or maybe drinking buddies. The waiting game is not fun to play all alone. You think of beckoning him over, so he can warm his fingers over your cup of latté.
Something from your classroom days passes over your mind silently- what was it, it is hard now to remember what once was the very fabric of your life. I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.
Life, but a mere streetcar?

As if validating the presence of a thing as telepathy, or is it the power of staring real hard from behind Kohl smeared eyes, in a skirt riding up your knee on a cold evening, the young man in the grey green eyes casts a long look your way. You do not know where to look, what to do, but instead hold his gaze for a few fleeting seconds. The both of you look away.
Other things quickly capture your attention- for instance how few people there are sitting out, the waitress’s black skirt, and the Scotsman with the nostalgia inducing accent.
You make eye contact again, with a little smile this time. He does the same. No hurry in his eyes, just an overwhelming sense of the magnitude of here and now.
I am here. So are you. With that he reaches out and gives your hand a quick squeeze. When was the last time that happened, and why is it getting increasingly difficult to remember?
By now you figure that whatever he is waiting for is running terribly behind schedule, if it exists at all.
You make eye contact one time more, and silently give a profuse bleeding of apologies. He nods his head, as if to say its ok. Or is it another way of saying you’re being silly?
Before I know it, the boy in the grey green eyes is at the table next to mine. Whatever he was waiting for never arrived, just like so many other things in life.
I was a nice beetroot red by then, taken aback at my own childlike desire to touch another passing person, feel the texture of their nose, smell their perfume, and consequently decide whether I like it or not. Or maybe even stay up one night crying for it?
The familiar voice asks him what he would like, a garbled response follows. Garbled because I was trying so hard not to listen, not to pay attention, and like a kid in a candy shop, trying so hard not to get into trouble.
Don’t talk to strangers.
My mom told me that once, when I was young and full of life, and thought that nothing on earth could do me harm. Why was her voice ringing in my years today, when I am so far away from home, on a Saturday afternoon that is pregnant with the chills, following a destiny I chose for myself? Agreed that the destiny bit began to get a little blurred around the edges and I just toss myself from getting hurt to not getting hurt to everything else that lies in between.

I continued scratching my paper napkin winter afternoon notes, with my third latté for the day. He was somewhere in the back of my mind, kind of merging with the scheme of things. There was a sound that came from the next table that made me look up in his direction. The shuffling of pages. He was bent over this book, trailing his fingers through the pages, and from where I was seated, I could see the tips of his almond brown hair almost falling over his eyes and his cherry red lips that showed complete lack of emotion, looking so seemingly engaged.
Now this is an opportunity not many from my clan will pass up. Discovering somebody who lived in the same world as you do, living between the pages of books, thus seamlessly fleeting lifetimes and emotions. Like how immortalised in tales from other lands, where women move to strange countries with a book tugged below their arms, hoping to find more of their kind, more who belong to the same state of being. Was that really a story, or is that your story? I tried hard to tell fact from fiction, to remember what I carried under my arm when I moved to this country.
I had to know what it was. I remember mumbling something, and the grey green eyes looking up at me. He smiled slightly and I lipped another apology. The book was passed on, and then his coffee moved to my table. It was a collection of poetry by Rumi, and on the first page was written this, in hand:

Listen to the reed, how it complains of separation…

Ah, could anything have been more appropriate?
The talk continued from literary, of writers and such, to ecstatic flights into the infinite. Between the discussions, I looked into his eyes and saw the bitter sweet light of things to come. Sometimes all you need is a little magic.
With a little time and the barely there sun tugging its mattress over the sky, our conversation moved to places not seen, things not told, and stories that nearly wrecked your life, and are told as if it is but little deal.



To be continued.

The continuation can be found here:
http://apurplebreeze.blogspot.com/2007/01/when-rumi-came-alive-ii.html#comments

Friday, September 01, 2006

These Minutes

Through time, there have been certain places, people, emotions that evoke the same reactions. These people and places are what the very walls and the many dormitories are to a Harvard grad: the measure of all that she has worked for and all that she has aspired to be. The emotion rises from the pit of the stomach and traces its way up to the heart, chocking every little muscle and droplet of blood with the crux of its being. Pride, some people may call it. Arrogance. Lunacy even, at times.
When at that moment, that rising in the feeling, the climax of all those years of piling little things up, it does not matter what you choose to call the experience.
She looked up from the book she had tightly clutched in her hands for over two days now. Like a compelling tour de force, these two objects held on very tight to each other. She hoped that through its pages, she would some how find the answers to all that she seeked. If the book had a voice of its own, it would also have a story to tell. Truth be told, that was what she was thinking of at that precise moment: the story of the book she held. Where it came from, all the hands it passed. The stories each of the hands that held it that went untold.
Some of life’s greatest mysteries hold the answer in the question itself. They lie within the very confines of the human head. Why we react the way we do, why in the middle of a predicament there remains a fine hardy thread of hope clearly running through. Why the balance between hope and despair can tip either way.
That day, looking up at the sepia toned sky, she knew that it will not go on forever.
She knew that between the blinking cursor of her laptop and the crumbling brownish, severely underlined pages of her books, she held close to her two of her best friends life was willing to give her.
The rain decides to come down. Slow trickles of colourless liquid seamlessly taking the hand of all those immaculately written alphabets, to merge into something more singular, something more whimsical.
Those hands, as always, snatched the two of them away, wiped the droplets off so that the fabric that added meaning to unkempt dreams and lonely promises may somehow be personified again.
Not very far from where she sat, there is a lake that is enveloped by a marsh. Not very long ago, this lake was famous for reasons of it own. For having drowned in its ebb to go on, some voices that were never to be heard again.
It is a story that has crossed the minds of the people who live there at least once. The moment can be one of many: a walk uphill, rain, bad grades, bad teeth, good grades, good teeth.
It is the story of a hand that liked to tell stories. She was messed in the head, they said. Been in and out of the cuckoo house. But when the weight of being fell on her shoulders, she did not have the strength to have to endure this tumult any more. Her hands- pretty ones at that, that wrote in the loveliest of ways, that were long and slender and had stains from certain other habits- those very hands one day picked up some rocks to put in her pocket, so that if she were to walk into a lake, the weight of the stones would ensure a smooth, swift path to hitting rock bottom. Later when she did drown herself, the now blue and bloated hands were the first part of her to surface above the lake waters. What a way to bid one final goodbye.
If you look closely, every hand has a story to tell. While some of them may not make it through tunnels of time, some others appear and reappear. Moving fingers thus write them down, at times making it complete with a Virginia Woolf style suicide.