Saturday, September 25, 2010

Shreds


Shreds

Today, on my way to work, I came across an old friend in the street. They always feel awkward, those encounters, with people you cease to know anything about. In your head, their image is drawn the way you last saw them in but then, you discover that they’ve had their own share of  noise in their life. I’d lost all contact with her after leaving the country , so it was quite a good chance for us to catch up on what we’d missed. Our short conversation would have been perfectly normal for two people seeing each other for the first time in years, if not for the remark she made before leaving.
“You look so changed,” she said.
    When you wear eyeglasses that have a mud  stain on one of its lenses, there is not a thing you see that is not colored brown. That was how her words seemed to add shades of feelings to my day.  I wanted to ask her what she’d meant but something hindered me from it; perhaps I was afraid of what the answer might be. And perhaps, I just didn’t want to know.
    My first day in this country, everything was so shiny I had to cover my eyes so they wouldn’t be blinded. But it was never that sort of light the sun emits, it was more like the luster of cold metal. And as I came to know, nothing in here had a hint of life about it. Sometimes, I felt the coldness clambering my bones deep in summer and had to clutch the quilts tightly.
    It took me quite some time to learn their language. Before that, I made a hobby of guessing what people were saying. I made imaginary scenarios that made no sense giving myself a good laugh. But then, it constantly reminded me of how far away from home I was. I’d then throw my head against the wall and look at the moon. It sure was the only thing that still looked the same in my life. Now, I could talk their language but had I lost myself in the process?
   I had not asked  her about home. It slipped out of my mind, I kept on convincing myself. But how could such a thing be so easily forgotten? I rushed to my room rummaging the wardrobe for something, anything, from there. A small mirror fell on the ground and broke in what seemed a dozen pieces.
In all these shreds, I couldn’t see the girl I recognized as myself. 

9 comments:

  1. wondering if shards would not work better than shreds...especially in light of the broken mirror. i do like the touch in the second paragraph about the mud on the glasses...and the contrast of the shininess in the next paragraph...

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  2. I loved the longing in this...it was never mentioned, but it rang with every word.

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  3. Until we can recognize ourselves in the mirror, nothing else matters. This is what I believe, because the day we change, our mirror is the first object to reject our presence.

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  4. I like the idea of an akward meeting with an old freind

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  5. Each time I visit you I fall in love with your writing all over again. Wonderfully visual and eloquent Maha.

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  6. love how you described this process after meeting this friend in the streets - how the remark of her started a flow of thinking and brought up a lot of questions - also like the mud on the glasses - think we all have lots of it on our glasses and sometimes it takes someone to wipe it away...

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  7. That mirror broken is to me like the summary of it all...
    One gets used to a new world only to a certain extent...

    One looks too much outside and when you get to look inside you almost have forgotten who you are...

    Great piece MAHA!

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  8. The last line is breathtaking, Maha. A shattering moment so many of us have experienced.

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  9. I loved this... it was short, but it held so much meaning

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