(Continued from below)
A few weeks
after we split, I remember bumping into S: he asked about you. I was still
reeling under the new sense of freedom I had acquired after the split, the loss hadn't sunk in. I must have been in a talkative mood, for I remember we ordered
several rounds of coffee—we were at that South Indian place you and I used to
frequent ever so often, with its laminated table-cloth and steel tumblers and davaras
and wooden benches.
We broke
up, I said solemnly. He was taken aback: ‘But, you seemed so happy. I met P
last month, he said you both were going strong’. I made a mental note to tell P
not to air his assumptions about my personal life to all and sundry, and
proceeded to explain, like a talking head on television, the reasons for the
split: one, two, three, four, I reeled off reasons. S had tried interrupting
and I remember saying, in the same clinical vein: ‘Let me finish, you will get
a chance to speak soon’ (See what I mean by talking head?).
It was a
good show: I had done this often in the recent past and I was getting to be
adept at it. Just the previous week, I had put on a similar performance for
Uttam, who, subsequently, seemed thoroughly convinced that the break-up was the
only logical option available.
But S was
different: younger and wiser. He listened to what I had to say, waited
patiently for me to finish and watched as I slurped my fourth coffee, fully
pleased with myself. You speak like a lawyer, he said eventually, but when did
love and logic become best friends?
Later that
evening, one I had whiled away staring at the skies from the terrace with not a
shred of responsibility on my mind, I received an email from S. It had no
subject, no greeting, and abruptly began
with an extract from Ghosh’s The Shadow Lines:
“ … It is because that state, love, is so utterly alien to that other idea without which we cannot live as human beings—the idea of justice. It is because love is so profoundly the enemy of justice that our minds, shrinking in horror from its true nature, try to tame it by uniting it with its opposite [...] in the hope that if we apply all the metaphors of normality, that if we heap them high enough, we shall, in the end, be able to approximate that state metaphorically. And yet, between the state and it’s metaphors there is no more a connection than there is between a word, such as a mat, and the thing itself … ”
Underneath, in stately Times New Roman, was the sentence:
“Lawyer saab, what do you think?”
My reply to that email was characteristically flippant,
reflecting the state of my mind: ":D"
*
Some
memories, surreal, stand out. ‘Memory resides at the intersection of truth and
imagination’, your balding literature professor used to remark, drawing circles
in the air with a bent forefinger.
But, what
if, as in this case, the truth feels so impossible that it seems imagined?
I do not
know why we climbed the tree: I did, because it was one climb-worthy
tree too many to resist. Growing up where I did, in the midst of mangoes and
guavas and neems and peepals, trees seemed to exist to be scaled, their
branches beckoned me— bent forefingers wagging, ushering. It was a quiet
afternoon, the sort where lunches snoozed in blown-up bellies. The odd bird
purred contently, the traffic beyond the college’s walls was refreshingly
absent.
Half-way up
the tree, I turned around, and crinkled my nose: coming? You had a
desirable body, but it would be a stretch to call it athletic—I half-expected
you to decline, even look down on my own childish urge to climb trees. Instead,
you threw your bag on the unkempt lawns and made for the tree.
The scene
remains etched in my mind: your nose-ring glinting in the afternoon sun, your
bag—abandoned, gay—it’s many hues standing out against the soft yellow-green of
the grass; and the guitar that, on cue, strummed in the distance: C-G-G-C.
In seconds,
you were beside me, perched somewhat uncomfortably on a strip of dull-brown
that nonchalantly bore our combined weights; I stood up, my head brushed
against a branch, we were showered with dry, crisp leaves, you rose too, we
kissed, my hands slipped under your kurta, you shut your eyes, we kissed
some more, the branch underneath began to crack, you wrapped your legs around
my waist, hoisting yourself with the help of the base of a branch above that
snaked from the trunk, I bit your neck, you threw your head back, the branch
cracked some more, tilting precariously, more leaves swirled and swung, the sun
hid behind some clouds, I used my free hand to grip a branch above, the branch
beneath our feet broke, my legs dangled free, you almost shrieked, but then,
when we didn’t fall, your legs wrapped themselves tightly around me, relief
flooded your face, tickled your eyes, your eyes sparkled like ripples caught by
summer sunlight, and there we were, two souls torch-lighting into each other’s
beings, dangling from trees and breathlessly kissing, barely concerned about
how our arms would ache afterwards, or the mini-fall that would bruise our
knees and elbows, or the tree-huggers joke that would haunt us for
months to come, but we didn’t care yet, because then, that moment, you were
there and so was I and even the passionately poor voice that accompanied the guitar
strumming couldn’t distract us from knowing it.
*
At our
best, art spoke to me. You lit up and exposed sides of me I hadn’t explored previously,
allowing art to seep into and imbue these corners with life. An evocative
passage, filled with direct, bland prose, but brimming with poignant meaning—
the sort I would dismiss previously as unimaginative— seemed to tease out a wry
smile, a soft tear.
I have
always been cinema’s genial uncle, nodding encouragingly at all the bilge that
passes for mass entertainment. But, ever
since we met, these darkened halls have come to seize me by the scruff of my
neck: I have scarcely come out of a theatre—pop-corn and butterflies swirling
and dancing in my insides—not being affected by it all.
Indeed, people
speak of how love is blind, I sometimes find it laughable. If anything, love is
blinding: every pore in your being is alive, a crackling receptor of a
profound, sensory assault. As your brain
grapples with the impossible task of indexing, neatly filing and storing all
the beauty and the madness the world constantly churns out and one you’re only now
suddenly experiencing, love, in a wonderfully self-referential manner, drives
home the fact that love is incomprehensible. To love is to first give in, then
give up.
In some
ways—and I say this without the sentimental extravagance of the romantic, but
the pragmatism of a logician—you made life speak to me.
*
There is a
photograph of us somewhere: you are saying something, your forehead is creased
with exquisite, premature lines; I listen on, rapt, my eyes hidden behind my
spectacles. Between us is an upturned fork, I cannot tell whose hand holds it,
I cannot even tell if there is a hand holding it all. There is a sense of
timelessness to the photograph, not because it could be from today, but because
I do not remember when exactly it was taken.
I can
guess, however.
We seem
happy, like we haven’t yet tired from reaching out to the other’s hand in the
middle of a conversation. On the other hand, it feels like we are no longer
bewildered by love, no longer willing
happenstance to bend on demand: we don’t exude that aura of utter
assuredness—of togetherness, of deterministic meaning— that marked the first
half of our time together. The fork that stands between us, apparently defying
gravity, seems to stand for something larger, something indescribable but
appropriate.
I stared at
that picture for long, watching something within me swell and ebb, hiss and
leap. In that instant, my mind shot through our galaxy: words, images,
conversations—all garbled and clear, quietly overwhelming—flickered in its
wake, the incandescent tail of a shooting star.
A proud sadness
descended upon me, the kind usually reserved for martyrs: it felt like something
great had fleetingly touched me and escaped me forever. And, like martyrdom,
the essence of this greatness lay as much in its occurrence as its subsequent vanishing.
*
To conclude.
4 comments:
"Love is a kind of grief" Chimamanda Adichie says somewhere in the book I'm reading. It's more than 450 pages long, and I've tried to find where she says it but I haven't been able to.
So I'll quote someone else. "People are wrong when they talk of love at first sight. It is neither love nor lust. No. As she walks away from you, what you feel is loss. A premonition of loss." (Aminatta Forna, from The Memory of Love). That's what it feels to me you are writing about - love as grief, loss, longing.
This is the most personal thing I've seen you write Sharan, and I think you're doing it superbly.
Hug.
Hello. And Bye.
@Sita: It has been a while since I read an idea (that of 'Love as grief') being voiced so succinctly.
:)
Thanks!
@Anonymous: I am certain you are capable of words less profound. Keep visiting!
your writing is beautiful as you.bye!
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