(Continues from below)
Do you
remember our argument before the first split? It wasn’t a fight as much as the
voicing of an end, a comma, perhaps a full-stop. At least, that’s what I
felt.
I
celebrated at Keventer's. I bought myself a strawberry shake: thirty rupees,
one giant glass, seven sublime slurps, a burst of dreamy whistling somewhere in
between. I was sitting on the second stair of a flight of steps that led into
the higher levels of the marketplace, my head four-feet above the ground, my
eyes level with the waists of the many students who walked past, oblivious to
my presence, gripped as they were by the complete sense of self-absorbedness
that affects one at that age.
What did I
do? I watched legs: some bare, some hairy, mostly blue.
One pair of
legs really caught my attention: they belonged to a fashionable young girl, who
wore, as December would demand, a warm black blazer above her waist and, as
fashion would demand, a pair of skimpy shorts that barely extended beyond the
upper half of her thighs. On another day, I wouldn’t have noticed those legs at
all; on another day, had you pointed them out to me, I would have pooh-poohed
them, scoffing the peculiar demands that fashion makes of people.
And yet,
that day was not just another day: I watched them approach and I felt
myself breathe heavier; they were a beautiful pair of legs— long, sexy, suave
– the cobblestones seemed to roll-out in
front of them like red-carpets. I watched them all the way to the corner of the
road. Only then, did I notice my own self.
I was
whistling softly, an old, flirty duet.
I was ogling.
I was free.
*
Recently, a
friend of mine told me she always sensed I was distracted, like I was running
multiple trains of thought inside my head. I had this image of my brain as a
giant railway junction: Neuron-Sarai, thought-trains
criss-crossing, running in parallels, a
series of signals at the many intersections; and my own hassled self, working
overtime on a single switch-board, pulling levers and ensuring the absence of
collisions and cross-connections.
As my friend spoke, I was struck by the memory of a
conversation you and I had, strangely also at a railway station. As you chatted
about some character you had read in a play, a segment of my mind wandered with
my eyes as they followed a greying man in a frayed suit, presumably the Station
Master. He seemed flustered, like all the world had dumped its problems on him.
I think you noticed my attention drift and paused. Almost on cue, I said, surprising
myself: “But wasn't Igor an anarcho-communist?” “Exactly", you said, beaming, as though pleased with the
fact that I was indeed listening. I smiled, because it was wonderful to see you
satisfied and talk away, a wave of stray, luscious hair reaching for your ears
from across your forehead.
I smiled some more, barely believing my luck.
When I pictured myself in my head, as the switch-board
operator of Neuron-Sarai, I seemed to bear a striking resemblance to that
Station Master.
“See?” I found my friend telling me, “there you go off again,
smiling to yourself”
*
If only love died abruptly. And if only such deaths could be
foretold.
On his last night, Radheya, son of the Sun and the Mahabharata’s
most heart-wrenching creation, sat by himself in his war-tent and recapped his
life. I don’t know if we ever discussed this event: I don’t remember doing so.
Fully aware of his impending death, Radheya
sits alone and walks his memory, deliberately—every thought, every event, every
person is carefully (even lovingly) plucked out of his past, turned around,
examined, and dropped back into the basket of forgetfulness. He could afford
such an act, because he couldn’t bother with forgetting: death spells the end for
things far worse than memory and regret.
I wish I could have done the same when you had moved on:
mark out a night, drench myself in nostalgia’s heady wine, and walk out into a
fresh dew-drenched morning, a new soul within, a new life to look forward to.
But, I never gathered the courage to voluntarily walk down our past; and
forgetfulness slowly chipped away at memory’s walls, until all I have now is a confused collection of thoughts, full of wonderful, visceral, floating
emotions, not always moored to any context.
*
I bought myself a string of fancy, decorative lights a few
months ago. They are a series of small, yellow bulbs, encased in punctured,
perfectly geometric, octagonal (almost circular) cases; and, as they glow, they
throw the most fantastic, interconnected patterns of shadows on the walls. I
love staring at those lights, they seem to stand for something new every time I
look at them.
There are fourteen lights, the eighth doesn't glow, the bulb
long being fused. Sometimes, I see those lights as metaphoric for my own self:
difference facets of the same base working in various directions simultaneously
and frantically, yet outwardly, projecting one whole image. An isomorphism—a
real-world, visual equivalent of the Neuron-Sarai.
The last time I looked at them, I thought of the one light
that didn't glow: it stood, like the great Godel's Proof, as testimony to the
fact that the most beautiful things are never complete, never perfect. What is
the self, after all, but a continuous, iterative collection of past selves? Of
a conscious made from memories, some scattered, some diffused, some
fused with a being residing deep inside one’s subconscious? And memory, by nature,
is chaotic, murky and often indeterminable. Consequently, the self, built on
the bedrock of memory, is imprecise, yet affectingly beautiful.
Once I dreamt that you had married a rich, old businessman:
his face was lined, but he wore a smart suit and a tie, and the news of his
marrying such a pretty, young thing as yourself was the toast of the town,
splashed across newspapers. When I woke up, I remembered that, in the dream, I hadn’t
felt terrible that you had married, thereby rendering the idea of us, as
two letters fused into one whole, forever lost to the realm of possibilities. I
also remember being surprised by how long it had been since I had seen you and
yet, how strange it was that I had dreamt of you.
Sometimes, the bulb that doesn’t glow stands for you: as the
one that got away, yet exists somewhere, casting its own shadow on the rest,
quietly, perceptibly: the beautiful blemish of imperfection on an incomplete
self.
(Concludes)
13 comments:
marvellous!
marvellous!
Chinmay -- Thank you!
Are you the same Chinmay who was in my class in DSE? If yes, what's up?
yes. I am alright, how are you?
where are you these days ?
yes. I am alright, how are you?
where are you these days ?
stumbling onto beautifully articulated pieces like these make my day. What you touch upon so bravely and beautifully, are the myriad emotions involved in love, which seem so different from mine and yet so close. heartfelt and touching.
@Chinmay: I am in Delhi. We should meet if you are here too!
@Irrational Romantic: Thanks!
Another stumbler. This is absolutely brilliant. Just like my truly beloved dark chocolate, enough parts exquisitely sweet and bitter.
Nicely done :)
@Sush: Thanks, great to know there are people still coming to this space. :D
Who is the sixth-degree -- the source -- friend you speak of in the other comment?
Haha, I like how you asked the question here and I felt the need to reply in the original comment thread. My OCD is scary.
You should write more!
‘the measure of love is not loss but residue’ sridala swami
‘the measure of love is not loss but residue’ sridala swami
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