Sunday, February 7, 2021
At Tajpur Beach
Saturday, January 9, 2021
City Girl
City
Girl
Coming home late
at night,
Down the highway
at nine-forty five,
Wishing there
were more days to the weekend than two.
Uber driver says,
“Put on your seat belt, ma’am.”
Peers down to
check for traffics lights,
Wish there was a
man in his place that was mine.
Seeing the beach
in everyone’s eyes,
Brown sand and
seashells, lovers and lies,
Dreaming of the day I’ll be a mother and wife.
Sunshine,
moonlight, rivers and rain,
Black eyes still
guarded, don’t want to feel more pain,
Wishing for
meaning and love worth the name.
Sunday, January 3, 2021
Live Again
Live
Again
Lydia
took the early morning train to the beach on the third anniversary of
Lawrence’s death. She wanted to meet the ocean.
She
dropped off an excuse at work which was met with grim, reluctant acceptance. Several vital projects were running, and the boss had wanted all hands on
deck. So Lydia had to beg him to gain the leave.
She
sat in an empty compartment clutching her handbag and looked out onto the
platform as the train pulled out of the station. Was there anybody running up
to stop her?
Lydia
had vowed never to love again. Only today she realised the weight of the
sentence she had passed on herself. Miserable, and utterly alone, she wished
somebody would enter her compartment just so she could feel reassured by the
presence of another person. Her need for human companionship was paramount.
At
Bally, another gentleman did board the compartment. He sat opposite to Lydia
but busied himself with a newspaper. Lydia looked at him for a few seconds, was
almost about to make a confession, but decided not to engage him in
conversation.
“I
have to see mother,” muttered Lydia, “Only she will understand what I have
done.”
Even
when she was growing up at the Lila Rai Memorial Institute for Girls in Goa,
Lydia had felt a bond akin to kinship with the ocean, and for that matter with
any water body. Whenever any of her friends at the Institute found themselves a
new home, with a new mother and a new father, she consoled herself that the
ocean was her mother, the rivers her sisters, and the lakes and ponds her
brothers. They were the family she would always have.
Lydia
never resented not being adopted. She told herself stories to explain her
fatherless and motherless existence. She was like Sita, born from the womb of
the Earth, or like Karna born when the Sun God Surya handed a child to Princess
Kunti. Her explanations satisfied her in childhood and she ceased to look for any
other.
Her
youth had been pleasant. She had an urgent need to please her elders in the
orphanage, and so, took on responsibilities without being asked. She ferried
the younger children at the orphanage to school and back, helped them with
their homework and took them to the toilet in the dead of the night. The women
in charge of the institute thanked her and complimented her for her care and
Lydia was pleased to have been of service to them.
While
still at the institute, a certain teacher gave Lydia some kindly advice. The
teacher told her that once she turned eighteen she would have to make her way
in the world, so it would be wise for her to start preparation for a career.
Lydia chose to become a teacher.
But
life after the Institute had not been easy on Lydia.
When
she left the institute at eighteen and entered a teacher’s training college,
she had felt for the first time a case of the “angsty reds.” She had gotten the
term from Truman Capote’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s. It was Holly Golightly’s word
for the unexplainable moments in life that cause pain like a stab in the heart.
When the “angsty reds” came on, she would burst into tears and wonder why she
had been born without a family to call her own.
But
it had all changed when she met Lawrence. They met while working at a school in
Mumbai. Lawrence was an orphan like her, and when Lydia had found that out she
was excited to get to know him. Here was another person like her, the child of
the wind and the offspring of the Earth, a child with no beginning and end. Surely
they were given life to love each other.
Lydia
made the first move. One day she told Lawrence her story, and she could make
out in his eyes that some spark of love or protectiveness towards her was emerging
in his cold black eyes.
“You’re
like me,” he said softly, “the daughter of the Earth.” Then he blushed. “I’m
sorry,” he hastily apologised, but his mistake helped Lydia to understand that
he, too, played the family game. They were children of the Sun. The Earth was
their native place. The Sky was their protector.
From
then on, they became inseparable. They spent their breaks together watching the
children play in the yard, and on the weekends they travelled together, every moment
spent in amazement at the mystery that somehow from the Earth had sprung up two
pearls of the same kind and in the vast expanse of the Universe they had
chanced to find each other.
*
Lawrence
took Lydia to see the Jog Falls in summer, and the Mansarovar Lake in autumn.
They went to Sri Lanka and played with the elephants and took long walks at night on Marina Beach.
They
always walked hand-in-hand wherever they went. She would play with the strap of
her purse. He would feel for her fingers. And, somehow, just as the ocean meets
the sky at the horizon, their hands would meet, interlock, and stay encased in
the security.
They
never tired of each other. For them, there was no pulling away. There was always
a gentle curiosity to grow closer, to grow fonder, to know more about what the
other person had to say.
Like
lovers they did quarrel. They fought to the rhythm of the rain. There was
thunder, lightning, dark clouds, strong winds, but every war ended always with a
new dawn, a fresh beginning. The Sun never left off appearing in the Sky even
though she had raised black clouds from the depths of the Sea.
They
moved in perfect harmony, the way the wind dances across a plain of paddy
fields, swaying and bending the frail leaves. He danced with her softly on the
terrace, under a black sky full of pinpricks of lights. “Marry me,” he asked
one day, “And then we’ll travel the world. Just you and me. And we’ll be in
each other’s arms till the day we die.”
Lydia
was content to be asked, “All right,” she said, “but you have to promise that
we’ll always be together.”
Lawrence
nodded and swore with the half-moon as witness. “I will love you forever,” he
said.
*
To
fulfil his promise to her he took a job with a travel company. It was his
responsibility to take groups of people on vacation. Lydia accompanied him
whenever Lawrence found a place that felt to him like home. Like this, they had
seen all the delights their mother, the Earth, had laid out for them.
Lydia’s
angst abated during this period. Lawrence was the Sun of her Sky. She rose with
him and worked in the light of his glow. His smile was to her the precious gift
of the universe. There was no more solitary existence, no more lonely thoughts.
Every idea she ever had, she told Lawrence about it and he bared to her the visions
of his soul. They fulfilled the longing in each other for a person to call home.
Then
one night Lawrence took ill.
And
at once they both knew that the Darkness that comes for everybody had come for
Lawrence. The spirits in the sky had taken note of their happiness, and growing
wildly jealous had sent Death on their heels. Lydia screamed.
At
his funeral she swore with all her might. “I will never love again. I will never
live, again.”
Darkness
enclosed her. For her, the Sun had stopped giving out light.
*
The
long brown swathe of sand on the beach glimmered under a lukewarm Sun. It was
afternoon. Lydia walked along the beach alone. She was the only one there. For
miles before her the ocean stretched out like a tent.
“Mother,
I’m home,” she whispered.
Waves
crashed against the rocks in response.
She
could feel the sand under her feet. The crunch-crunch sound of gritty dirt was
music to her ears. Cool white froth from the ocean bathed her ankles.
“I
can’t live without him, mother,” she screamed to the ocean, “I don’t want to.”
Then
she began to cry. “I’m going to drown in your arms tonight, so you can reunite
the two of us in the Darkness.”
The
ocean made no answer.
Night
came, and Lydia sat on the rocks and thought over what she would do.
“I
can’t go on like this forever. I love him and I can’t live without him.”
But
it was hardly true. She uttered the words as if they were an oath though her
heart knew that the wound of Lawrence’s death had healed. Now, it was up to her
to put away the gloom and take up living again.
Lydia
never lied. She had never wanted to. Lawrence was gone, and she was miserable,
but her soul, which beat to the music of Nature refused to let her follow him.
“I
have to give him up,” she whispered, and loosened his ring from her finger. “But
I promised to love only him always! Mother, what should I do?”
“I’ve
lived like the half-dead. I’ve given up on life, and I know that it’s wrong! I want
to feel the Sun again!”
“Why
did I make a vow to love only him for the rest of my life? Was I so wise to see
the end of my days? I want to be free from the vow I made, Mother.”
*
The
next morning, like a child of the Dawn, Lydia raced to the beach. Fishermen were
coming in with their boats. She was smiling and laughing.
Last
night, she had thrown Lawrence’s ring into the ocean. For her, today was a new
beginning. She had freed herself from the oath of loving him even after his
death.
She
could feel the warmth of the sun on her face, arms, and legs. The lusty ocean
crashed against the rocks of the beach.
Some
fishermen were excitedly talking to each other and calling all the others to
come and see. They had found a ring caught in a fish’s mouth. They were
congratulating the fisherman who found it. It’s a new beginning for him, they
cried, he could sell it and buy a new boat!
Lydia
heard and joyfully plunged into the ocean.
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Vignette #003: Thank Yous
Vignette #003:
Thank Yous
I am a villain when it comes to acknowledging that others have helped me get to where I am now in my life. I don’t like to say ‘thank you’.
This is probably because I hate to admit that I’ve
taken the help of others. I like to think I am self-sufficient. I’d rather, not
take help and suffer than ask for help and live. Yep, that’s me. Proud and
distant.
As the last post to mark the end of the
year, I want to thank all the people who helped me through life in 2020. I am grateful, though I might not tell you that to your face.
I want to begin with a ‘Thank You’ to
my sister. I could have never made it out of that hell-hole without your patience.
I want to thank you for helping me to apply for jobs and start my blog. You got
your PhD this year, so that’s quite an achievement, which isn’t new for you.
But I thank God He put you as my sister instead of anyone else.
The second and third person I want to
thank is my mom and grandmother. God used both of them to communicate with me, so I
know that God speaks to them. However, when I found that out, I wondered whose
voice I was listening to all these years. And that thought makes me cry.
Then I’d like to say thank you to
Mrs Joyce Devadas, Mrs Christine Gnanaseelan and her husband, Mrs Salome
Singh and her two daughters. The reason I am grateful to them, though, I won’t share.
That’s for another day. Also, a big thank you to my readers.
Apart from these persons, I want to
thank everyone at my workplace. I never thought working would be so much fun
and exciting until I stepped into Das Writing Services. Every month the
office has something exciting planned, so I look forward to working all
the time. I have my lazy days, but they are just a few and far between thanks to
the amazing ambience at work.
And finally, I am grateful to God.
Why?
Some people love the life they live on Earth. They love their family,
friends, work, and generally, life. But there was a time when I didn’t want to
live. Now that I’ve understood that life can be fun, I sometimes wonder
why I went through a phase where I did not want to live. Well, I want to thank
God for not taking that phase of my life seriously and giving me a second
chance.
Thank You and Happy New Year!
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Vignette #002: Quality Consciousness
Quality Consciousness
I have a small
confession to make. I am usually not a very quality oriented person at the
workplace or at home.
When I write at
work, I do so very haphazardly. I neither take the interest nor the time to do
my work well. My chief aim is to reach the day’s target rather than deliver
quality work. Now that I think about it I don’t patiently craft each sentence.
I don’t ponder over what words to write. For professional and timely writing
there is another set of rules I adhere to. I focus more on speed, clarity and
functionality. This brings me to talk about the quality of the work we turn in
at work.
There is this
proverb in the book of Proverbs that pricks my mind. It goes like this in the
Good News Translation: “Show me someone
who does a good job, and I will show you someone who is better than most and
worthy of the company of kings.”
I’ll share a
story about a friend of mine. For two weeks, my friend’s cook didn’t turn up,
and she was forced to do the cooking. She took so much trouble over making the
dishes that I was surprised at the amount of attention to detail she put in.
When I cook, I again focus on completing the job on time, rather than serving
up a lip-smacking dish. Not my friend. She diced when the recipe said to dice,
chopped finely when it said to chop finely, poured hot water when it said to
pour hot water. She followed every recipe to the T. If the recipe called for
four bay leaves she used exactly four bay leaves, nothing more, nothing less!
What a perfectionist!
I always
approximate or take shortcuts when following a recipe.
Some months
later, this same friend attended Breakthrough 2019 which is a program at the
Assemblies of God Church Park Street. The Tamil Pastor’s wife prophesied over
her saying that she was a person who did her work with all her heart and that
was a sweet fragrance to God.
I was very, very
surprised to know that God notices such small aspects of our life. From then on
I began to wonder why I never took the same interest in my work. Whenever I do
anything I never aim for excellence. I’m satisfied with the bare minimal. Then I
read this verse and it got me thinking.
I think the best
way to test the quality of your work, is to let your heart be the judge. Or
your conscience.
But in the
workplace and at home, no matter what task we are assigned, quality matters,
and so does diligence.
Let me know what
you think in the comments below.
Saturday, December 5, 2020
Vignette #001: The Galilean Drunkard
The Galilean Drunkard
I write a wine blog for work. Usually, it goes something like this: “The Sauvignon Cabernet is a classy, carmine libation, destined to tantalize your taste buds and stay in your memory long after you’ve finished a glass.” I use a ton of sensory words like ‘boozy’, ‘revelation’, ‘silky’, and ‘mellow’, and frankly, I am sort of sick of it. So I thought for the month of December, given Christmas is around the corner, I’d write something different.
A while back, I had
wanted to write about wine and literature. I wanted to talk about the Rubaiyat
of Omar Khayyam and somehow marry the themes from the book to selling wine (since
that’s what the blogs are written to do), or merge wine with music, wine and
poems, anything but a direct sale.
Then for
Christmas I decided I wanted to write about Jesus. I thought I would talk about
how Jesus called himself the “true vine”.
But I knew I could
not mention his name outright since that isn’t permitted, so I came up with a
moniker for him: The Galilean Drunkard. The name comes from the Pharisees
calling Jesus a glutton and drunkard.
Suffice it to
say, I didn’t have the courage to float the idea, and knowing that it isn’t fair
to sneakily promote my beliefs on somebody else’s blog, I thought why not write
what I wanted, on my own blog?
This isn’t a
story or a poem, it’s about Jesus calling himself the “True Vine” and why I feel let down by the Galilean Drunkard.
Welcome…
My text is from
the Gospel of John, Chapter 15. and in particular the verse 16. The verse goes
something like this: “You did not choose me, I chose you, and appointed you to
go and bear much fruit, the kind of fruit that endures.”
There was a time
when I believed God meant that verse for me. But now, I am not too sure.
I remember Reverend
Nigel Pope preach this sermon one Christmas morning about the Vine into which all believers are grafted. The Vine is Jesus, God is the Gardener who does the
grafting, and the fruit that we produce are the good deeds we do that show off
our new faith.
Then comes the painful yet necessary part of pruning…
There were
strange things going on in my life at that time, and I sort of believed God was
pruning me to bear more fruit.
There was another episode where this verse came to help me.
I was at my wit's end once and
I turned to scripture to find solace, and I read these words from John’s
gospel. “You did not choose me, I chose you, and appointed you to go and bear
much fruit, the kind of fruit that endures.”
That Sunday I
went with a friend to AG Church to seek help from a Pastor there. They were
giving out awards to kids who had finished this course on the Bible or
something, and the Pastor quoted John 15:16. I thought he was speaking to me.
My heart leapt.
If there ever is one
thing I said, that I meant with all my heart, it was this: this time I’m going to follow Jesus.
I sometimes
wonder why that wasn’t enough for the Galilean Drunkard…
Saturday, November 28, 2020
Poem #11: Winter Heart
Winter Heart
Grey clouds
herald dawn,
Branches of
the coconut tree sway,
I sit by my
window and brood,
Summer is
still far away.
I’ve pushed
everyone out of my life,
I’m afraid
to be hurt again.
My heart is
stone cold, and it chokes my breath,
But I won’t
have it any other way.
In the last
days it was predicted,
That warm
hearts would grow cold,
Winter comes
but twice a year,
And my
indifference won’t break its hold.
I am waiting
for someone to change my mind,
And make me
believe in the force of true love,
Until then,
let my life be frozen in time,
Like the
grey ashes of a burned-out flame.
Friday, November 20, 2020
Short Story #011: Sol 2.0
Sol
That summer I drove down to Villa Rosa
in Tuscany with the determined attitude of a Roman general on his way to war. I
was going to meet Lizzie.
She had moved to that grand house in
Italy to live with her new vineyard-owner boyfriend, and it was imperative that
I see her before she married him.
There was another reason to make the
trip. I needed to get her signature on a couple of documents which would
release the house in New York to me. The work ought to have been done by my
lawyer, but I accosted the tiny man and told him I needed some legitimate
excuse to see my ex-wife again, and reluctantly, he agreed.
I arrived in Florence on a Friday.
Going to a car hire place, I picked
out a convertible because I wanted to arrive at the precious Villa Rosa in
style. I bundled the one bag I had brought from New York into the backseat of
the convertible and settled in for the long drive to the country. I had given
Lizzie warning of my coming, but I failed to mention to her the exact date. I
wanted to catch her and the new man in her life unawares.
The house is New York ought to have
been mine. It had belonged to my late father. When Lizzie and I married, my
father, sick and bed-ridden, took a great liking to her. “You’re just the woman
to tame him, and make a man out of Sol,” he said while I grinned sheepishly in
a corner. Lizzie, wild and free, shot me a look of murder. She did not believe
in taming anybody, any more than I did, but my father saw something in my wild
wife, and deciding that we would be married forever, left the house in his will
to her.
When three years into the marriage, we
divorced, the old man, both shocked and deeply wounded, passed away without
correcting the will. My first instinct was to let Lizzie have the house—an
offer which she declined. So the place remained unoccupied.
After the divorce, Lizzie moved to
Tuscany to teach music at a school there and I roamed the world with the gusto
of a stallion that has been released into the wild. She had wanted us to be
friends but I was indignant and rebuffed her.
The magazine sent me to cover a
reclusive tribe in the Amazon, I went. They sent me to the Pyrennes, I went.
They sent me to Cape Cod, Andalusia, and Venice, I went. I put all thoughts of
Lizzie out of my mind. I was angry at her, and I knew she was angry at me. We
had failed at the fundamental task of marriage—the task of taming each other.
In those three years of wandering, I
began to pine for Lizzie. I missed her wide smile, her lovely long legs, and
the sound of her laughter. Many times I had to stop myself from jumping on a plane
to go to her. Now I regret that I didn’t give in to my impulse. She was on the
verge of marrying another man.
When I returned to New York after
another long stay abroad, a couple of mutual friends at a Thanksgiving party
mentioned that Lizzie was living with a new man. They said she was engaged and
planning to get married next year.
I felt a panic rise in my stomach the
likes of which I had never felt before. I couldn’t rush off immediately because
I had another assignment set for the winter. Once that was over and the time
seemed right, I booked a flight to Florence.
I wanted Lizzie back, and I was going
to go to any lengths to get her.
*
The drive to Villa Rosa was lovely.
The weather was warm, sunny. I was in my element. Determined to shock and impress
I’d chosen my best attire of blue jeans and white t-shirt. I admired myself in
the rear-view mirror and was satisfied that I appeared like an old Hollywood
star of great renown—Montgomery Clift. Lizzie was mad about him.
Cypress trees lined the curving road I
was driving on and the fine dust raised from the wheels of my convertible
danced in the sunlight. The murmuring within me grew strong. Lizzie was mine. I
loved her. She would see that she belonged to me once I presented myself to
her. I knew her romantic spirit would consider the notion at least once.
We had first met when Lizzie was
eighteen and I was twenty four. She was working as a model in Milan and I was
apprenticing under a renowned master photographer. She was all legs and bosom.
That’s what had attracted me to her at first. Years later, Lizzie said she had loathed me at first and thought I was a pervert because I was wouldn’t
stop staring at her chest!
After the shoot, a bunch of us went
out to eat, and Lizzie took a seat next to mine. Later, she told me that she
had planned to teach me a lesson for ogling her the whole day. But we got
talking and I discovered that she was impetuous, wilder than me, spontaneous
and bright, she had some rules she lived by and she wasn’t going to compromise
on them. In the tidal wave of her personality I was washed away.
I was going to remind her of those
times. The times when my fire caught her fire and the whole forest came burning
down.
I was driving up the gentle slope of a
hill when I caught sight of the valley down below. The scene was arrestingly
beautiful and I stopped the car and got out. The sun blazed down on us. The
valley responded in joyous chorus at the roaring attention. I could feel the
spirit of the land dance in one accord with my soul.
There was a great house on the crest
of the next hill and I wondered if it was not the Villa Rosa. A few farm men
were resting in the shade of a tall cypress tree and I asked them, “Is that the
Villa Rosa?” “Yes,” they said. I took out my camera and took a few shots.
I wanted to capture the house in that
golden light. The place was bathed in soothing shades of buttery yellow.
Rolling hills surrounded the vineyard and the grape vine grew with mighty
vigour over its support. I clicked a few more shots then I pulled out a
cigarette and began to smoke.
All of a sudden I felt a little faint
from the heat of the day. I went to the farm men who were sitting under the
shade of a cypress and asked them if they had some something to drink. One of
them had a bottle of limoncello, which he offered me and I took a deep swig.
“Rest,” they said, “it will take you
only a few minutes to reach the Villa, you look like you desperately need to
sleep.”
It hadn’t been a good idea to drive
with the top of the convertible open, I thought as I lay back to rest against
the knapsack of one of the men. In my attempt to appear as the dazzling jewel
of the past to Lizzie I had almost suffered a sun stroke.
In a matter of minutes I was asleep. I
slept fitfully. Was it because of the heat of the day or my own heightened
sensations, I do not know, but I had a strange dream. I would prefer to call it
a vision, for I was as alive in it as the light of day.
I dreamt of a beautiful palace on top
of a hill, something like the Villa Rosa, in construction, only grander and
statelier. The room I entered wasn’t heavily decorated. White linen curtains
hung from the arched doorways and were swaying in a gentle breeze. At the end
of the room, was a throne, a magnificent golden one, full of intricate and
exquisite work. On the throne sat a king. He was handsome, dark-haired, tall,
and broad-shouldered. I knew his name even before the vision could introduce me
to him.
His name was Solomon—the wisest king
in the world, the offspring of a torrid affair, the man who had saved a
suckling babe from death and restored him to its rightful mother.
We shared the same name, but more
importantly, we shared the same outlook.
In Solomon, I found a kindred spirit,
and as I saw him now, he appeared in tense and deep thought. His head was in
his hands, and a heavy golden crown lay balanced on his forehead. He rubbed his
forehead and looked straight at me. Together, we whispered—‘Meaningless!
Meaningless! All is meaningless!’
Then Solomon got up from his throne
and walked along the long avenue which led from the throne room to the
pool. At the end of the colonnade there
were steps.
His feet went in first. Legs, torso,
shoulders, chin, and eyes followed, until the very crown of his head was
submerged. When he came up for air I heard him whisper, “All is vanity…”
Then I, Sol echoed him. “Meaningless
meaningless…”
*
A friend had introduced me to this
book, Ecclesiastes. It was a part of the Bible, a book which I later read from
cover to cover. He said it contained more or less the same philosophical tone I
had clung to throughout college. I believed life was meaningless and had no
inherent value, Solomon observed the same, and he said all there was to do was
to fear God and honour his commandments.
Except for the part about God, we more
or less agreed that trying to find meaning in life was a colossal waste of
time. I took the book from my friend and in a day had read it twice, cover to
cover.
In those days I was a bitter cynic. I
think I still am.
What kept me going was the pictures of
the beautiful things I captured on my camera. People, places, objects, I snapped
everything with character. I was afraid to lose the last trace of meaning I’d
found in any of them.
Photographs sealed in time for me
moments which I found too authentic to lose. A look, a grin, a laugh, a
grimace, these things exposed what it meant to be a human being and like a mad
fool I hoarded the examples just to make sense of the world.
In most of the photographs I took, people
sought to cover the true nature of their personalities. I hated them for it. They
smiled innocently though I knew them to be great posers. I could see through
their facades. I always despaired that none of them had anything authentic to
offer, that is, until I met Lizzie. She redefined what authenticity meant. She
was a novice at concealing her heart and her face was the canvass of her soul.
Lizzie never had that ancient
troubling of mine, the act of questioning what is, what was, and what shall be.
She simply was. And I couldn’t understand how she lived from moment to moment
without questioning how she had gotten there; knowing any moment could be her
last, and that death had sealed her fate since her birth.
I woke up with a start. Lizzie was
waiting for me at the Villa Rosa I remembered.
It’s nice to know that hope makes the
world go around.
*
I got into the convertible, put the
roof up, and made the rest of the trip along a winding path to the doorstep of
Villa Rosa. As I drove up the drive way, I saw Lizzie. Dressed in a black and
white polka dot cotton dress she was carrying a basket into which she was
cutting and placing red roses. I honked to get her attention and without
opening the door jumped out. Let her see how agile I still was.
“Sol!” cried Lizzie and came walking
towards me, “It’s you! When did you get here?”
She gave me a quick hug, without
lingering, without much contact, and smiled her smile for old acquaintances
that haven’t broken her heart. A couple of dogs barked in frenzy at my presence.
“What a pleasant surprise! You
should’ve told me you were coming today, I would have made you lunch. When did
you get here?”
“Today,” I said and daringly kissed
her on the cheek. She neither flinched nor pushed me away. I stepped back and
scrutinised her face pointedly. I wanted to note the differences, but they were
few. The same fire blazed in her eyes. On her mouth danced the full force of
life. She looked exactly as the Lizzie of my past, only this time the fire was
wild no longer, it burned with a quiet contentment.
I could guess at the cause behind it,
and my soul broke to know that she had allowed another man to tend the furnace
and quieten it down to fit a hearth.
“Would you like something to eat?” she
asked.
“Yes,” I said, suddenly embarrassed to
be there on another man’s patch, “I’m starving. Put out Italy’s finest for me,
Lizzie.”
She laughed, “No, I can’t. Bread and
cheese are all I have, and a little stew left over from lunch. If that will
suffice, come in doors. I’m glad to see you. How many years has it been?”
Without bothering to calculate the
number of years it had been, I meekly followed her indoors.
Where was he? Where was the man I was
up against? Sooner or later one of us would have to bring up the fian…
“My fiancée isn’t home. He’s gone to
Florence to visit the bank,” she said laying a place for me at the kitchen
table.
I smiled a wicked smile the meaning
which she caught, but fought off with the edge of the dining knife. “None of
that anymore, this time it is real and it’s for keeps,” she said, with quiet
force that if I overstepped my boundary it would be the end of the friendship.
“All right,” I agreed and begin to
attack the small repast she had laid in front of me.
“Where are the papers?” she asked.
“In the car,” I said, “Why the hurry,
I was hoping you would show me around this property of yours.”
Lizzie looked at me to check if I was
serious then said, “I’m sorry your father died, Sol.”
“Don’t be,” I replied, “Everyone’s got
to go at some point. Life’s quite certain in that respect.”
She nodded and then began questioning
me about my work. I told her about the Amazon, the Pyrenes, Andalusia, Cape Cod
and Montenegro, and when I got to Venice she stopped me and said, “Sol, you
should have visited me when you came to Venice.”
No, I thought to myself, in those days
I was still sore, upset at having lost her, upset that she seemed happy after
the split. For some ego-boosting reason I had wanted Lizzie to feel miserable
without me, but from whatever news I got of her, she was still the same
high-spirited Lizzie, colouring life with all the colours of the rainbow.
After my father passed away I felt
more lost and alienated from the world. I didn’t have a home to return to, and
that made me wander the planet like a madman.
Lizzie sensed some of my angst and not
wanting to be to cruel said, “Eat up! I’ll go get the papers.”
She left me alone in that large
kitchen, and I understood that there was something about me Lizzie did not want
to put up with anymore.
I was afraid I looked like a lost puppy,
asking to be taken back into her arms, having walked out in the first place.
She was treating me kindly because I was now an orphan. I bent my head and ate
my food quietly and like a scolded dog, put my tail between my legs and gave
up.
*
But the feeling of submission didn’t
last long. I wasn’t going back without a fight. I wanted to know why she had
allowed this new man to tend a furnace that usually burned to a conflagration
within her. Why hadn’t she done the same for me?
Lizzie returned with my bag and under
my directions extracted the papers for the house. “Where do I sign?” she asked.
And I told her. In a couple of minutes she was done. She’s in a rush to get me
out of here, I thought.
“I’m all finished,” she announced.
“Lizzie,” I said suddenly, “I had a
strange dream on the way here, and I want your opinion on it.”
“Yes?” she asked doubtfully, as though
wondering if I had fallen asleep behind the wheel.
“I dreamt of Solomon.”
Lizzie gave me a look. A look which I interpreted to mean that she was tired of all
talk of Solomon.
When we had been married I used to
pick her brain a lot with my questions. At first, she had been patient with me
and helped me understand her way of seeing the world.
Didn’t she think Death was a nasty
cheat to walk in at the very end of a grand party and announce that he was
making away with all the living? No, she said, she believed in an afterlife,
and Death wasn’t terrible news to her. In the afterlife she would be in heaven,
with a God who loved her and who was her Father. I could either believe this or
else live in despair. We usually ended the argument with a full-blown fight.
I found her beliefs preposterous and
chose to live in despair, or rather, as I said to myself, I chose to live still
looking for answers.
“Don’t look at me like that,” I
pleaded, “I’ve got to understand this before I leave here, Lizzie. There’s a
storm inside me.”
“Understand what, Sol?” she cried in
irritation, “Do you really believe the world to have no meaning? How can that
be? Yet, we live, struggle, strive, plan, fall in love, marry and have kids. We
bring new life into this world, Sol! Why do we bring new life into this world
if it was so meaningless?”
“I don’t know,” I shot back, “we
shouldn’t! We shouldn’t bring children in to this world to share in its
inherent meaninglessness.”
This was turning into a scene on a
page right out of our marriage.
“That’s because I don’t believe the
world to be meaningless! Why have you never read Solomon’s other book, Sol? The
Song of Songs?”
I know this book. It describes the
deep love Solomon and a Shulamite woman share. What is Lizzie trying to tell
me?
“I never read the book either until
recently. And when I did, I wanted to tell you that I’d found the answer to
your stupid question! But you disappeared out of my life and I couldn’t get a
hold of you! Lovers don’t ask for meaning, Sol,” Lizzie yelled, “They are the
meaning. What meaning can they find except in simply being?
*
I was silenced by this seemingly innocuous statement.
But more than that, I was crushed to
know that she had wanted to find me and I had disappeared out of her life.
When we were younger and I used to get
burdened by my thoughts, Lizzie was the one I used to go see to find some
relief. As soon as my eyes clapped on her, all my questions evaporated as
quickly as they had come. Lizzie was the light. Her face, her laugh, her
thoughts, her look of welcome, they were enough to dispel the gloom which
inevitably came over me. Being with her made so much sense, I forgot to
question it.
But then even Lizzie’s love let me
down.
“How come it never worked out for us,
Lizzie?”
She sighed and shrugged. “We were
unlucky. That doesn’t mean that kind of love doesn’t exist. It probably exists
for you with someone else, just as it exists for me with someone else.”
“You can’t disbelieve the power of
Love just because you haven’t found it,” she mumbled, and I could tell that
Lizzie too had felt let down by the hope ‘true love’ offers this world.
“Lizzie,” I ask, “why can’t we get
back together?”
“Sol,” she said and paused, “I’m
sorry. You came too late.”
I looked in those lovely eyes for a
while. The whole of spring and summer shone through them. How could someone so
beautiful and tender strike a blow so crushing?
“I know that,” I said truthfully.
Lizzie is the kind of soul who loathes
causing hurt but when the disagreeable thing needs to be said, she doesn’t shy
away from it.
“What am I supposed to do Lizzie? You
offer me the solution yet you won’t be part of the answer.”
“It isn’t love if it breaks up. We haven’t
got that between us, the love of Solomon and his Shulamite, ours is a broken
down fence, a tower that has crumbled. Why do you want to go about rebuilding
it when the foundation can’t hold it up?”
“I’m lonely without you Lizzie. And
I’m afraid of being lonely much longer.”
She looked at me and said bitterly,
“Your father was right about you. You’re most selfish man on the planet.”
*
I left sooner than I expected to
leave. Lizzie said goodbye to me civilly enough. I could tell she was angry and
trying hard to forgive me.
On the drive back home I pondered over
my ex-wife’s words. Her words cut to the very depth of my soul. Was I selfish
to want Lizzie simply to cover up this gaping hole of loneliness?
Yes, I admit I was.
I think back to the joy Solomon and
the Shulamite woman experienced in each other. They were united by bonds of
mutual love, a love so beautiful it made redundant all the questions of the world.
And that is what is at the foundation of the world—the love of a man for a
woman and the reciprocal love of a woman for a man.
The setting sun lit up for a moment
the sky in shades of pink. I watched silently as I drove back the way I came. Tomorrow,
I would board a flight back home and visit the house in New York. It was time
to put the past in its place and begin afresh.
Saturday, November 14, 2020
Poem #010: Time out
Time out
May I lean against you until
I feel better?
I promise not to take up too
much of your time.
I just want to hear your
heartbeat thunder,
Because it tells me we're
going to be fine.
I know I'm being selfish by
keeping you out,
I've never told you where
these scars come from,
But please let me stay next
to you until I'm warm,
Before the sun comes up I've
got to get down to the war.
You're the person I come to
in a time out,
I am safest when I'm close to
you,
But I can't let you battle
the world on my behalf,
I've got to vanquish it and
come through.
I can take my armor off at
your door,
I don't have to be strong,
because I'm not,
You own the blueprints to my
soul,
So you know when I'm falling
apart.
Let me lay my head to rest on
your shoulder.
Let us watch the stars
silently go down.
We're both battle weary and
aching within,
This is just a momentary
respite from the storm.
Saturday, November 7, 2020
Poem #009: Love Poem
Monday, November 2, 2020
Poem #008: Cloud Face 2
Cloud
Face 2
Old friend is talking to new
friend,
Says—"Now we're just
friends,
It was so long ago."
All pretend to believe that.
New friend smiles stoically,
But secretly wants to hurt.
Old friend is way prettier
than her.
Old friend is ecstatic at
creating this jealousy.
"Do you still love
her?"
Asks new friend when,
Old friend has flounced off.
The future depends on this
answer.
Yes. And I always will.
I want to point out that,
I will extend to her the same
courtesy.
Instead, I say, " I
don't know."
New friend scowls at me.
This could get ugly.
Wish old friend would
disappear,
As only old friend knows how
to.
"Why did she leave
you?"
We were never on the same
page.
I was cruising along but she,
Said I was dragging her down.
Why are you feeling so
vulnerable?
I love you.
Just ask CloudFace-
What it feels like to be
stuck in the past.
I promised to love not hate.
Don't want to stop just
because,
I don't see her every day.
Only CloudFace weeps for what
he can't change.
Thursday, October 22, 2020
Poem #007: Horizon and View
Horizon and View
Horizon dragged View by her
hair,
And went off to kill Nowhere,
Because he’d cheated on her.
The people cried after her—"Stop!"
But she wouldn't stop
walking.
The Sky and the Earth
laughed,
"Horizon, forget the
lout!"
But she madly strove on,
Dragging View behind her,
Weeping for the pain caused.
The Sun watched this scene
sadly,
Nowhere fleeing before
Horizon,
And View trailing after,
"Horizon! Stop! You will
go round and round!
Forgive him, love, and come to
me."
"I know where you lie at night,
In the home of the Sea,
So the love you offer is not for me!"
So she keeps chasing after
Nowhere,
Dragging View behind her.