I remember when I was little, I'd often hear the adults talk about how the family was suffering once the watchful eye of an elder had long gone. I never understood it then and never thought I would.
Reflection is never far from those who are obsessively committed to analysis, re-analysis and over analysis. Yet, for some reason, at this time of year my brain goes into overdrive. Maybe it's because I recall so much of what was good about this time of year, so very long ago.
Eid, I remember, was a reward for the month of sacrifice, strength and determination that came before it. New clothes, new jewellery, money, feasts - all very extravagant and rich. What I failed to observe as a child, however, was that Eid wasn't at all about those things. It was simply about family and love. And we all loved our grandmother. She was the centre of my universe and most definitely, the most important person to all of us individually.
Waking up in my grandmother's house is a feeling I have never experienced again. She'd be sat at her special, mahogany chair by the table with a bowl of Quaker oats cereal and her newspaper. Her matt gold-rimmed glasses would sit just above the tip of her nose - miraculously glued in place, defying gravity altogether. I'd watch as she'd turn the pages of the newspaper; so engrossed in what was happening in the world. At that age, I was completely oblivious to the fact that my grandmother was completely uneducated. And yet I have never observed such poise, sophistication and etiquette in any woman.
She had such a beautiful smile; comforting and playful and a voice I had never heard before. That sounds odd, I guess. Voices tend to be individual. But I guess to me - to us- everything about my grandmother was untouchable, incomparable. She called me her 'shaizaadi', the same term she used for all of us. And yet she somehow made it seem so personal, so unique. Her tone was different, I guess. She'd look at us all differently. We all had a special relationship with her.
At this time of year, I miss her face. Her loving gaze as I'd walk into the room; her warm embrace; her comforting smile; the way she'd affectionately tuck my hair behind my ears when I'd lean against her shoulder; her smell. I would have given the world for my grandmother.
During the years she was ill, I'd sit beside her and she'd secretly make me promise her things. She made me promise I'd be happy and successful. She made me promise I'd be a good person, a kind person and that I'd take care of my mother. But most of all she made me promise that I'd never forget I was her 'shaizaadi', her princess. I'd look at her lovingly and make all these promises. Then, when her illness would soothe her to sleep, I'd go upstairs into the bathroom and weep. I still remember the way she'd look at me after she was diagnosed with cancer. It was a changed look. She was still familiar, still the same - but she knew something that I didn't. As I'd sit on the floor and take her feet in my lap to lather with creams and oils, she'd look down at me from her favourite chair and her loving smile would morph into something else. I never understood what it was until the day she died.
Six years on and whenever I hear someone say 'grandma', there's a little pang of bitterness that sweeps swiftly through my body. And then just tiny remnants of her memory linger until I brush them away and convince myself there's no room for them in reality.
The day we buried her, we all gathered in one room and got under the covers: all eight of us. Something shifted in the universe that day, something happened. Between that day and today, six years later, not one of us have felt any desire to celebrate Eid. We moan, we bicker, we laze - anything we can to avoid embracing something that was once so beautiful. The first Eid without her was classified by the adults as being non existent, 'She's in this room with us', they said. 'Her spirit is here; in each and every one of us'. As I looked round the room at my girls, we all shared one expression - resentment. Resentment for something that we deemed untrue. Her spirit wasn't good enough; we wanted her. We wanted to hug her and touch her and tell her how much we loved her and missed her and how Eid and everything else would never be the same again. We smiled to each other knowingly and one by one, got up and left the room until we all ended up - rather coincidentally- in what used to be her room.