Monday, December 12, 2005

An Ode to Pain

It was a glorious world a long time ago. There were summers and springs and colours falling gently in a soothing breeze. There were smiling faces and happy thoughts and loads of cheerful things to talk about. There were merry sounds circling in the wind; but of course that was a long long time ago. Now there is only a perpetual winter and no warmth even to relieve the pain of a dead, cold monotony. But atleast the wall does not move. It is a thing of white layered over with the ashes of a hundred memories. A projector into the past and the future. A reminder of things that blur in the brain, of all the nothingness that awaits in the future. A brick wall. A wall of burnt clay. And I can stare at it and know I still am, as it is. Not much more to do now.

I am alive. I eat, breathe, sleep, shit and do all those vulgar things that make up everyday life. Or is it the daily death. And I breed maggots near the window too where the sun glances in occassionally. Of course I was not always like this. I used to believe too in movement and the frustration of hopes. I used to run and jump and conjure ideas to change the world. I remember vividly picking up my first yellow banana peel lying on the gray, cold cobblestones in a far away city and dumping it into a cold, gray dustbin on the busy corner so nobody slipped on it in their hurry to get to where they were going. It was a Sunday and I think now it was odd there were no carnivals that day. Sundays seem to remind me now of carnivals when people danced merry jigs on the streets and traipsed home jolly. But maybe I do not have a good memory. Or they just stayed in to rest from their Creations.

There were rats where I live now. Rats. Now I. Living off the refuse of the daily drones. And before the rats, there was a nightclub where people used to dance Friday nights and Saturdays too. Shows how things change. The worm that eats the king that eats the fish that eats the worm. Full circle. Men in between so things go their sweet way in a hurry. The rats were chased off of course when I still had the mind to. Now I just sit and stare.

Someone once told me I was destined for great things. He made me what I am. Not that he knew I would end up this way but still. Maybe I should just get up now and walk away. Only I have forgotten how to. Not to walk but to walk away. He taught me that too. You just don't walk away from things. You take them on. And I am still fighting the good fight, am I not? Waiting. Sitting. Refusing to walk out through the tempting door that brings in voices every now and then, voices that make me want to shout out loud sometimes, "Help" maybe, or "Save yourselves". There is no knowing what I would shout. Not when I know I will not.

I see her face often these days. A pity. I couldn't when she was near and now she will never be here. To see what I see. Those eyes in the first days were always lighted with some pretty fire. And her hands used to dance. Strange ways hands have of calling you near and pushing you away. And then slowly the light died from the eyes and the hands couldn't move any more. They could not even hold mine for support as she fell away. But there was no time then as there is now. Let the lost bury the lost. It was a time to strive, to seek and to find. And now I find her here. Strange.

Words too come to mind. Pretty poems and pointless rhymes. And the Moonlight Sonata blaring from the icecream vendor's moving cart. Painted red and blue with shades of white and gold, he used to be a favorite after school. After playtime. Before homework. I went to his funeral too. By chance. Was on the grounds for a friend's and they brought him in. Recognized the Beethoven and couldn't stop crying for a while. Red eyes. Good after a friend's funeral. Leaves an impression of trustworthiness.

The lizards on the wall make funny sounds. Not like the ones back home. They used to hide from mother. Came out only when it was really dark and I the only one to spot them. Mother was always one for order. The lizards their due and the milkman his. Cried a lot when I went off to college. Cost her a lot of second jobs. And early breakfasts. She was always there to see me off. To school, to college, to work. Had to see her off myself when the complications came. Heart troubles they said. A fist's worth of a life's pain.

Father took it pretty well considering. He had second jobs too and sometimes a third. Never was around long enough to see movies with. Friends are for seeing movies with. Fathers bring in the money to get popcorn and tickets. There were sounds at night of doors opening and the wood creaking but not much to recall from the early days. Later, he used to hold hands with Mother when the train was leaving, waving after it was out of sight. But he is out of sight now. Has been a long time since I did not see him.

There were a lot of friends in school and lots more in college. Fun to spend time and money with. Laze around, fool around, do fun things with, and then it is time to leave. Some stayed but not many. I still talked to them until it was time to move up or down - depends on who was on which elevator. And a few of them will come too if I send out invitations to my own funeral. Have to do it and see how many do come. Like Mark Twain or Huck Finn.

Then work. Lots of it. More than anything else. The great race and the big dreams. Offices all shiny and money crisp like cardboard or plastic. Thing you buy things with to do things with. Had lots of it in my time and lots of them too. Now no place to keep them. So dumped it all outside a friend's house. Might be of help to him. No use to me any more.

I came here quite by accident. Don't remember exactly when or how but I do remember not looking for this place. One of those things that strike your fancy at first sight. Draw you in and you don't want to leave. A symbol. Of what you are, what you have been, what you want to be. An old, failing place where worms breed. Eating away slowly what was once a nightclub, a dump. A memory of things that have been. I don't have much now, don't see much, don't eat much and consequently don't shit much. But I am alive. And there is the wall. In front of me. All the time.

6 comments:

arethusa said...

OMG!
You ought to be writing..you really do!

madatadam said...

Thanks.. wish i had the time.. and u ought to write more too..

madatadam said...

When the plod is just a meaningless drifting away from ennui i dont see why it is more tolerable. the thing taken for granted, to me it seems, is that man has to move. i find it intolerable to stay in one place but does it mean it is really better to move even when i know in moving i will move back to the same place. and i dont really which is better - to lose trust in oneself or to lose trust it in God. i would take the latter though more often than not even if i dont like it. as for inspiration, i can only repeat the words of a writer who said when i write it is only of me. of course from different perspectives and in different possible roles and attires.

meghjanmi said...

shyam..i always fear ur blog..so is been a time since i dropped by..u have proved it agn..profound insight into pain..ur style reminds me of camus..and of chekov..good work..when(not if)u publish a book,i'll surely buy it..!!

her said...

I could not read beyond half of it..just too much of pain in it for me to take...worst part was it reminded me of myself!

madatadam said...

MJ,
thanks i guess :)

lioness,
my idea was to distil pain and thats why i ditched the more ostentatious(brighter) title "A Paean to Pain". i feel its sometimes bracing to look at life with dark-tinted glasses so we can purge ourselves of certain depressing thoughts. and if this reminded u of urself, i guess what u write might remind me of myself, especially considering the profile in B/W i see in ur profile!