Tatters of a Hungry Shirt
[A]
What do you have to do
With them, clamped shut
By rules of etiquette? Run
Into the field where sun
Shines on the grass, and Mother awaits you with Her milk heavy breast.
Touch the earth with Your lips. Enjoy this Ecstatic gift given free!
[B] When we were born, There was so much Clarity in our eyes
That people walking Down the street used To bend over, and dip Their hands in that.
But now the mirrors are Scratched and peeling.
They no longer reflect The Face, and we are Hungry for that light Dance, which we recall.
[C] Searching for you, I have only polished This knife of intellect.
I have read many philosophers, Heard many wise men speak About you, tasted the wine of Beauty, wrote song and poetry.
Yet I find myself in the crib, Where I was at the beginning. And I am sick of being an infant.
My Poems
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Stations of Non Arrival ~ Fragments of a Memior of Ideas
Station Awareness
[1] My first awareness of the otherness, I suppose, arrived one summer afternoon (I now forget how old I was exactly, all I am sure about is that when this happened I was still in primary school) in the form of a shiny white Ambassador car, which pulled into the lane at whose end stood the house (thatched with straw, and with no plumbing) of my parental grandparents. I was spending the vacation between school terms, with my cousins, uncles, and aunts in that village, which was (and is) not much different from any others in the vicinity.
It is located some two hundred miles away from the city, where my parents have migrated to, with whatever education they could afford to get, seeking and finding good and steady employment. Our family was then situated somewhere between the lower and middle-middle class, or to use the bureaucratic acronyms of housing development boards that partitioned farm land into suburban colonies, somewhere in the LIG (lower income group) or the MIG (middle income group, and in my boyhood phase of militaristic obsession, this also stood for a Russian fighter plane that was the mainstay of Indian Air Force).
Into this physical and psychological milieu of a reasonably comfortable childhood, the two young men who disembarked from that car appeared as almost young gods. I don’t remember very vividly what they wore exactly, apart from striped t-shirts, jeans and shoes. They had big earnest smiles, and spoke in English, very quickly and confidently, in a thick American accent. My aunt, my father’s cousin, and the mother of these young gods, had to translate what they were saying, into our mother tongue for all of us (I, my grandparents, aunts etc) who were gathered in that front room, which also doubled as the bedroom and the dining room. Yes, so these young men were my distant cousins, who were born in U.S.A and lived there, and who were visiting India.
I don’t recall the contents of that conversation (I suppose there were the usual introductions, which would no doubt wouldn’t have meant much for those young men, who were no doubt subjects to many such introductions in the recent days by their mom) except that one of these young men had asked for a slice of an onion, as he sat there eating a late lunch. Much to my shame (I was going to an ‘English medium’ school, used English to speak with my teachers, and my grandmother prided in telling other villagers this fact about her oldest grandchild), I didn’t know what an onion was till my aunt translated it for us. So it was with this sense of shame of not knowing what the word ‘onion’ meant, that awareness of another world, which lay beyond the world I was then a part of, arrived.
[2] I suppose that this was also a concrete lesson in geography, which no doubt bought with it a sense of lack, a sense of limitations of the world I was born into. This awareness persisted, if only in a mild form, through out my childhood. I was also undoubtedly envious of some of my classmates (usually children of officers in the Indian Armed Forces) who had traveled and lived in distant and exotic cities all around the country. This kind of envy was mostly sublimated via petty academic rivalry, and jockeying for being a teacher’s pet student. However I do remember very vividly how this envy once spilled over into pilferage.
There was a pretty girl (she was ‘fair’, a semi-racist Indian euphemism for being light skinned and quite sophisticated) who traveled in the school bus with me, and who at that point of time showed up a Swiss pencil sharpener shaped liked a motorcycle helmet. The glassy helmet held the wood shaving after one sharpened the pencils. And I wanted to possess this, not because it was shaped like a helmet, but because it was Swiss.
So I stole it one afternoon on the way back home from school. And when I got home, there was again the old feeling of shape awaiting me. Shame and the sudden realization that I couldn’t show off this exotic sharpener to anyone else as my own, because I possibly couldn’t have gotten something like that. So I had to break it apart, and bury the pieces somewhere deep in my backyard.
In recalling this memory of me as a thief, I now remember other things that originated in this other place that I coveted, and which seemed to me in a way to symbolize the larger inadequacies I was seeking to escape. There were various telescopes, home chemistry sets, tents, fishing rods, bicycles, tennis rackets etc advertised in old and yellowing issues of Archie comics. There were the spaceships, castles etc made out of Lego bricks at my cousins’, who in turned received them as gifts from their American uncle, which I took out every time I visited them from the showcase to gaze and marvel at.
to be continued...
My Daily Notes
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