There is a saying that goes something like, 'Change is the only constant'. I hate change. I sobbed hysterically on my last day of year 6. 'I know everyone, everyone knows me, how can I leave this place where I grew up?' I weeped as I walked the corridors on the last day of my time as a high-schooler. I wasn't leaving the school, only moving up a year. But without half of my year group; my friends, my confidants, my safety net. Tears trickled down my face as I turned back to look at the institute which had raised me on my last day of year 13. 'I'm grown-up now', I thought. Things will never be the same again. 3 years later, I had that same sickly feeling when leaving university. And then again 3 years after that, on my last day in the office where I actually 'grew up'.
Monday, 17 September 2012
History Books
There is a saying that goes something like, 'Change is the only constant'. I hate change. I sobbed hysterically on my last day of year 6. 'I know everyone, everyone knows me, how can I leave this place where I grew up?' I weeped as I walked the corridors on the last day of my time as a high-schooler. I wasn't leaving the school, only moving up a year. But without half of my year group; my friends, my confidants, my safety net. Tears trickled down my face as I turned back to look at the institute which had raised me on my last day of year 13. 'I'm grown-up now', I thought. Things will never be the same again. 3 years later, I had that same sickly feeling when leaving university. And then again 3 years after that, on my last day in the office where I actually 'grew up'.
Tuesday, 28 August 2012
The 'God' Conversation
The month of Ramadan has come to an end, like everything does. I fasted for 30 days: without food or water, from sunrise to sunset. The fasts this year were 18 hours, and to many that seemed a colossal number. I must admit, unlike last year, I did not find this Ramadan physically challenging. Admittedly, this year, I was committed to nothing but the fast itself. The previous year, I was working unfathomable hours, functioning on minimal sleep, with my every nerve and sinew invested in deadlines. The restriction on food and water, coupled with the 2hour journey to work both ways left me pretty empty.
This year, though the physical challenge wasn't there, the emotional one was. Last year, the most important thing to me was meeting deadlines. If so and so didn't get their report by x time, the world would end. I was sure of it. If I didn't edit this last piece, or find twelve more images, the entire system would cease to function and I would be solely responsible. Such deep-rooted arrogance and self-involvement meant that I had little time to comprehend anything else - including my fast.
As Ramadan approached this year, I was stripped of my bravado. No longer employed, I had nothing to hide behind or bury my head under. Worse, still, I would now have to confront who I had just spent weeks running from - God. He had taken something, someone, who I had begged Him not to. Someone who I was sure wasn't ready to go. So I had begged. I don't do that very often. My sarcasm and casual spirituality have allowed me to go through life thus far without having to grovel. Aside from this occasion, I can only remember one other. If anything, that should evoke gratitude in me. That I have, by the grace of God, never needed to grovel for much. And yet I am irked…
The first time I actually spoke to God, I must have been around 10. It went something like:
"I know I'm supposed to believe that you exist but I don't think I do. I don't want to go to hell, though. But I don't want to believe in you just because I have to. That's not really believing, is it? I'd just be lying, and you would know because you're God."
I was a smart kid, with a big mouth. I wanted to reach my own conclusions about everything - even God. I would listen quietly to the tirade of 'God-talk' from relatives and family friends. Their declarations on what we "had to believe" and "had to do" as Muslims drove me insane. God did not mean love. God did not mean safety, or comfort. God just meant punishment and hellfire, it seemed. But not my grandmother's God. When she would lift her hands in prayer, her face lit up. It was like she was up there somewhere, sitting by God, immersed in conversation. I would watch her with my breath held - transfixed on this God of hers.
When she fell ill, I tried hard to find Him - this God of hers. She led me, very gently, to Him. Her faith was unwavering. A foreign, vicious disease was invading her very being and yet she remained steadfast. And even under the burden of cancer and that terrible greyness that comes with chemo, her face would still light up when she prayed. One day, I came into her room as she was praying, and cupped my hands around hers as she prayed. Her warmth, her smell, her soft hands - they convinced me her God was real. She was given to me, and I to her. And all that love in my heart for her, well, that had to come from somewhere.
When she died, that same love almost suffocated me. I wanted her back - her smell, her hands, her face. It was too soon. I still needed her. Almost 10 years later, these sentiments came rushing back when someone I thought was too young to go died. She left behind a besotted 3 year old, and a newborn daughter she never had the chance to hold. That little girl will grow up without any recollections of her mother's smell, her hands, her face, but she will grow up with that suffocating love - a void of suffocating love for the mother she never had. I wonder now how her first conversation with God will go...
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
Home-grown
When I was two, we moved to Pakistan for
two years. My parents missed the country they had grown up in, and wanted to be
around friends and family again.
My grandfather always had a government
post, which meant our house was in a gated area, outside the city centre. To
me, the house was a haven: stone staircases, secret doorways, and a rooftop
terrace – it was incredible. We lived there for two years, and I vividly
remember the strange and wonderful sights and sounds.
What I remember most, however, is ‘the
help’. Shehnaz, Nazia, Imtiaz and Asma. I’m sure there was a fifth sister, but
her name escapes me. These girls, under the management of their mother,
maintained our household: cleaning, washing, sorting, shopping – everything,
except maybe the cooking. And even then, they were still expected to be
available at all times – just in case a new daughter in law didn’t know where
the spices were kept, and risked being shown up in front of her army of sister
in laws.
Shehnaz was my companion. We met when I was
two, and she couldn’t have been much older than 10 herself. I would sit by her,
moving from room to room as she performed her daily duties. She would sing to
me, or tell me stories – taking my dolls and us on the most wondrous
adventures. We were inseparable.
Dinnertime was a particularly challenging time for my mum. Having spent
the entire day with Shehnaz, I would insist on eating dinner with her too. My
mum would try desperately to explain that Shehnaz was ‘the working girl’ (a
phrase which carries a completely different connotation back home), and that my
place belonged with my family at the dining table. But I would not take ‘no’
for an answer.
After all the pleading a blistering summer
evening would allow, she would angrily push my plate away from hers and tell me
to do as I pleased. Having won what seemed to me as being the most important
battle of the night, I would proudly lift my plate and go and join Shehnaz and
her sisters in the storeroom next to the kitchen. My tiny feet made such a loud
noise on that cold, concrete floor, as I would run hurriedly to the kitchen,
before anyone had time to scoop me up and bring me back to the main dining
room.
The storeroom always smelt of wet dough. It
was a cool, dark hole in the wall – stacked high with produce of all sorts. In
the middle of the room, Shehnaz and her family would sit on tiny stools, and
share food from a large platter. I loved that experience – huddling close,
catching each other’s eye as rice fell from someone’s hand, and the subsequent burst
of giggles it would induce. I have never known such pure love and genuine
warmth. Those girls loved me, and I them. They were my own, before my own were.
We came back to England when I was four.
And I hated it. I would call our house ‘Daddy’s house’, and demanded we return
to ‘our house’. A year later we did go back. I remember being dressed in a deep
red and black velvet coat, with a matching hat. The gate opened to let our car
in and all I could think of was Shehnaz. The family greeted us and we all
settled in the formal living room. The adults discussed my growing height, the
weather, politics. Even though it had been my own home, there was a reservation
in my manner that wouldn’t allow me to even ask about Shehnaz, let alone roam
the entire house to find her.
After what felt like hours, I realised if I
didn’t pluck up the courage to move, I probably wouldn’t get to see her that
night. I put on my most adorable face, and asked my uncle if I could go to the
kitchen. “Of course!” he bellowed, and promptly pulled my small frame in for a
suffocating cuddle. Breaking free, I nervously headed towards the corridor.
Turning right, I found myself stood directly opposite the kitchen. And there
she was, standing in the doorway, with the biggest smile on her face and a
yearning in her eyes I have never again seen in anyone. She put out her arms
and I ran like the wind – my small beret flying off in the process. She lifted
me up into her arms and held on for dear life. And I felt like nothing in the
world could hurt me. I would be safe for the rest of my life. This bond, this
secret beautiful bond would protect me forever.
When I left that year, I tried to postpone
our departure as long as possible. Shehnaz still hadn’t arrived to see me off,
and I couldn’t leave without saying goodbye. I stalled and I stalled. But it
was no use. We had to leave. I tried to wipe away my tears, lest anyone see me
upset and ask why. ‘Crying over the help? She’s crazy!’ We got in the car and
drove off. And then I heard her – calling my name. I turned to look out the
window, and there she was, waving madly and running behind our car. No matter
how much my mind pleaded with him to stop, the driver kept going – immune to
the telepathy I so desperately wished we shared.
That was the last time I ever saw her. When I was 12, my mum invited some of her friends over for a garden dinner party. There, she casually let slip that one of the girls from ‘the help’ had died a month ago. And that it was sad because she was the youngest, and such a sweet girl. My heart came up into my mouth. I could not breathe. Dead? How is that possible? She must be, what, 20? It can’t be. Only old people die. I ran inside and sat very still, waiting for the wave of pain to pass over me. And then it came – crashing out in tears and yelps I didn’t even know existed in such a little person.
One evening, whilst finishing her final
chore, my uncle asked if she was okay, as she looked pale. She said she was
fine but felt a little dizzy. Those were her last words. Shortly afterwards,
she fell unconscious in that same kitchen corridor. My uncle put her in a car
and drove to his friend’s hospital as fast as he could. But it was too
late. Shehnaz had an undetected heart
defect. It remained undetected because the poor never went for health
check-ups. That was 11 years ago. And nothing has changed.
Two months ago, my perfectly healthy
26-year-old cousin drank a glass of water. A month ago she complained of pain
to her OB. A week ago, she died, having contracted Hepatitis E, which too lay
undetected.
There are 127,859 medical professionals in
Pakistan to oversee a population of over 160 million. Medicine is too
expensive, yet the health industry is a trade. So, practitioners charge premium
prices for ‘life-saving’ drugs, cop-offs of which are administered to the dying
patient, whilst the practitioner pockets the profit. Meanwhile, families’ race
up and down the hospital halls, filling prescriptions they themselves can’t
even read to save the person they love – selling property, personal items,
anything of value to raise cash for the ‘life-saving’ drugs.
Of course that is not everywhere. Where the
practitioners are legitimate, and capable of performing ‘life-saving’
procedures, there is no money. So, people die. But someone still has to foot
the bill left over from the now-empty bed in ICU previously inhabited by his or
her deceased loved one.
But then I guess the working class suffers
everywhere. What of those who can comfortably afford a living? Well, provided
electricity finds its technologically advanced way to said house that is
paying for it, most of their time is spent on the Internet, asking Google what
makes the most credible visa application so they can get the hell out.
But wouldn’t I do exactly the same if I were
living in a country where corruption seems inherent at birth, and money will
buy you a man’s dignity? Where young, ambitious, beautiful young people
contract absurd viruses from the water they confidently drink from a plastic bottle
– believing it to be mineral and never wake up the next day? Where people and
their aspirations are disposable? Where greed and vanity are more apparent than
honesty and gratitude?
Change is inevitable when a force large
enough demands it. With 90% of an under 25 population, one would imagine
Pakistan to be a ticking time bomb; ready to finally explode and rid itself of
the vile infestation of age-old corrupt politics and regressive thinking.
Young, dynamic, forthright minds would take centre stage, and demand answers; make
valid assessments of the country’s financial position, explore energy-efficient
ways to tackle the absurdity of waterborne diseases in the 21st
century, create jobs for the young and able, build state of the art medical
facilities – prompting those 17,000+ medical professionals of Pakistani origin
in the US – and those who would follow in their footsteps to take advantage of
their own scientific development and invest in cementing a positive, healthy
future for their people.
Effectively, I am no better. Surrounded by
my gadgets, in my very comfortable home, moaning about the lack of jobs and having
nothing but my diminishing savings to worry about, I am no better than the credible
visa application web surfers. My musings are always about these wonderful
people who have entered my life, and made it worthwhile. Yet I myself exist
without purpose or direction, having achieved little to nothing in (almost) 24
years of existence. What have I given them back? What have I given back to that
place I called home all those years ago?
Friday, 6 July 2012
One of Us
A few days ago, I wrote about my (almost) 24 years of life. My arrogance was ever-present; reflecting and writing about my 24 years as if they were a birth-right, something guaranteed to me, a contract. I wrote about accepting things as they were sometimes - 'it is what it is' - and whilst I wrote about the irony of that simple reality being so difficult to accept, I boasted proudly about how it was a lesson I was fast learning.
Admittedly, that was a lie. I know it was a lie because late last night, my cousin died. And despite what my self-assured ramblings may project, I could not be further from 'it is what it is'. Because what it is, is a fucking joke. A joke I just cannot understand.
At 26, she was a graduate, happily married with a beautiful 3 year old boy. A few weeks ago, at 7 months pregnant, she began feeling ill. 8 days ago, life happened, and after giving birth to a baby girl, she never woke up. Her body slowly failed her, and last night, it decided it was done.
Despite all my realism, I cannot count how many times I have wished this to be a mistake. She has been buried, and yet I cannot seem to stop wishing her alive. You read in newspapers sometimes that people just come back to life. I keep telling myself that happens to some people. Maybe those people could be us? And that's just it - it could have been us. Any one of us. All us girls are the same. We were raised the same, we played together, we led similar lives. As we all sit, immersed in disbelief, and seeing ourselves in her - that's all we can think. It could have been any one of us. Until we realise, it was one of us.
But why? Why such arrogance, such vanity, such solid belief that life is guaranteed more to us than any other because we still have our youth? Babies are born into the world lifeless. Mothers lose their newborns as they cradle them in their arms. Children stop breathing. Teenagers sometimes go to sleep, and don't wake up. Young people die all the time - casually defying the natural cycle of life. So why not one of us?
When I was young, I used to scoff at people who used to throw themselves at God's mercy when something was wrong, or they needed help. "That's so hypocritical" I'd say. "You only pray when you need God's help. What about all the other times when you're just living? You don't pray then." Yesterday, for the third time in my adult life, I was once again that very hypocrite. As I grovelled before God, I asked what was hurting me more: begging for the life of one of us, or knowing that I was not worthy of begging for anything, let alone expecting that prayer to be answered.
This beautiful girl, who was so happy and content in her life, had ambitions and desires for her future, a husband who loved her dearly and whom she adored - just stopped living. Her reflections on her years were only going to take her this far. Somewhere, it was written that this absurd tragedy, this completely senseless and twisted reality, was going to play out exactly like this. And whilst we all existed, blissfully unaware, we all played our parts in getting to this very moment. It's funny - you try to play the game your way, not realising you're actually just another piece on the board whose moves have been numbered. And yet, I cannot help but feel slighted, cheated, betrayed, even. But why? Because my own illusion of 'forever' was shattered? People don't belong to us. And yet such is the toxic nature of love - it fills you with the disease of 'forever'.
Then I think, perhaps her 26 years were plenty. She had such a beautiful soul; always smiling, always content, never a bad word about anyone. Perhaps 26 years of leading a life full of gratitude, and with contentment meant that she had passed. She had proven herself to be what the human mechanism strives for - kind, patient, and loving. So why drag her through the trials and tribulations, pains and slights, ups and downs of this unsteady life? I guess that's one way to make peace with it. Truthfully, however, peace is far from it. For those two innocent children, who deserve the love of their mother, there is no peace. For the man who had planned to grow old with the love of his life, there is no peace. For the parents who have had to bury their wonderful daughter, there is no peace.
In the shadows of this great despair, you can but only hope that peace comes in the form of realisation - that life is fragile, and people don't live forever. That love and kindness are the foundations of living well. And that without one another, we are merely empty vessels, floating aimlessly.
In the shadows of this great despair, you can but only hope that peace comes in the form of realisation - that life is fragile, and people don't live forever. That love and kindness are the foundations of living well. And that without one another, we are merely empty vessels, floating aimlessly.
"And it is He who has brought you all into being out of one living entity, and has appointed for each of you a time limit on earth and a resting place after death." (6:98)
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Countdowns
Next month, I’ll be twenty-four. I wish
that meant something significant. Of course I am grateful; for my health, my
reliable old heart and the wonderful people in my life who make it all
worthwhile. But for as long as I can remember, my age, or rather, the ‘number’,
never quite felt right. I think I’ve always had what people call an ‘old soul’.
I don’t know where it came from, but I’m pretty sure it’s there.
Twenty-four isn’t a particularly large
number (albeit the rest of me seems to be filling up on the dimensions fairly
quickly) – especially when I consider that I have a friend who is in her 70s.
And yet, despite the fact that our relationship would warrant a
granddaughter-grandmother label, we are friends. She confides in me, shouts and
curses when she’s angry, seeks comfort when her morale is low, and loves me as
if I were her only confidant. Admittedly, I do the same.
I have come to learn that relationships
aren’t defined by any particular characteristic; neither are matters of the
heart governed by points on an agenda. You love because you choose to love.
I’ve faced the reality that nothing lasts forever, although I seem to be struggling
to ‘practically’ accept that. I’ve learnt that actually, my ‘number’ means
nothing. You can learn in twenty years what some can’t in forty. And every day
is an opportunity for a new experience.
As a writer, the most valuable lesson I’ve
learnt over the past few years is that ‘writer’s block’ is a nonsense excuse.
In fact, it’s such a painstakingly embarrassing sentiment that even the word
‘excuse’ seems too sophisticated for it. When all else fails me, words never
do. To those who know me well, that will not come as a surprise. The motor on
my mouth laughs manically in the face of energy sources, for it almost never
requires its battery to be recharged.
On the odd occasion, however, even words fail me…
On the odd occasion, however, even words fail me…
I am a wordsmith. Words are what I do. I
will refrain from saying words are what ‘I am’, because (almost) twenty-four
years of life have also taught me that ‘I am’ more than just a singular matter.
In reality, the fact that so many definitions string together to explain the
one me there is, should illustrate that I serve a purpose. Sometimes, however,
you find yourself existing without one – a purpose, that is. So, you attach what you ‘do’, with what you
‘are’. But the problem is, sometimes what you ‘do’ decides to show you up. In
this case, words.
Words, which to me are like a lifeline,
have become stifled as of late. I
realise that my experiences over the past few years have been so unlike any
other, that I am at a loss for words to describe them, to communicate them –
even, simply, to understand them. Life
is guilty of that often. One may even argue that those experiences are life: moments which dazzle you,
beguile you, leave you stunned and confused, moments which make you long for
more, moments which puncture your core with wounds. All of them are life. Thus all of them must serve a
purpose, or so we like to believe.
Some things are just supposed to happen –
without rhyme or reason. They were, as the phrase is so casually uttered today,
‘meant to be’. But how do you explain that to your ever-logical mind, the Chief
Immigration Officer of the ‘You’ sphere – poking and prodding at everything in
sight? How do you explain to a small child why he’s lost both his parents in
the space of a year? How do you provide justifications to your best friend about why
the man she loved left her stranded? How do you forgive someone who you feel
has taken everything from you, and given nothing in return?
I think the hardest thing I’ve learnt (and admittedly, am still learning), is that at some point you have to relinquish control. Sometimes, there just isn’t a justification. Sometimes, there isn’t a comprehensive explanation to alleviate your unsettled heart. Sometimes, it is what it is. And there lies the irony – despite its simplicity, that is perhaps the most difficult lesson to grasp.
As my countdown continues, I realise with every year that I am more willing to acknowledge and accept my flaws. I never realised how difficult that was before. Was I ever foolish and self-absorbed enough to think that I was perfect? Or is it just that experience taps relentlessly at that hard exterior shell, until you are forced to confront those uncomfortable realities you’ve been trying so hard to conceal all this time?
However it happened, they are very much
alive and present – my impatience, my greed, my destructive need for control.
They perhaps don’t manifest in the ‘conventional’ way that one would interpret
them, but they are very much real and bear their ugliness when I least expect
it (much to the dismay of Monsieur Control, of course). So what do you do? It
all comes back to that incredible feat of learning to relinquish control. To
allow situations, experiences, life itself to soften you, to sweeten you. To
accept that just as you acknowledge the existence of a new flaw inside you at
each hurdle, so too is the world and its people. Love, in whichever capacity it
is given, is not to be regretted. Ever. However many bridges you’ve built and
broken, however many hurts and slights, however many losses – this moment right
now is what it is.
Countdowns seem only to live in the present
– willing this moment, this now, to be, so that it may run its course until the
next.
Sunday, 1 July 2012
'The One'
A vintage snap of a Victorian couple sitting down for a portrait
A few months ago, I
was enthralled one evening by a cousin’s horrific account of a ‘set up’,
orchestrated by her eager parents. As I listened mortified to the details of
what seemed like ample material for Quentin Tarantino’s next cinematic display
of gruesome violence, the thought finally dawned on me: ‘There is a very real
possibility I will never fall in love’.
Hearing my cousin’s
account of the horrific set up made my insides churn. I’m not unrealistic, am
I? I know fairy-tales are bogus. But surely the notion of ‘real love’ isn’t
completely dead? Today, I can tell you,
it is well and truly dead. It was slowly tormented and mutilated in a
‘Reservoir Dogs’-style torture scene by the birth of Asian matrimonial
services. For today, I experienced my first, and what I desperately hope to God
was my last ‘Muslim matrimonial event’.
Firstly: Shannon’s
Night Club – really? Yes, I realise there is a banqueting hall beside it, and
that’s where your event was technically held, but it doesn’t do much for
first-impressions, does it? For those of you who don’t know, Shannon’s is like
the ‘Faces’ of Essex, circa 1993. Now, imagine within this very haven, a room filled with round tables, and chairs
draped in white head covers, with purple organza bows, a stage at the end covered
in large, plastic-floral arrangements, and a division running down a quarter of
the room with bits of fabric. No, I’m not describing a poorly decorated Asian
wedding reception. This was my setting to find ‘love’…supposedly. Of course it
wouldn’t be complete without the sound of instrumental Bollywood music, flowing
softly from the speakers above my head, serenading me into the arms of Number
39 – whoever he may be – so that I, for one second in my life, can feel like
Kajol, and he, Shahrukh Khan.
‘Stab me in the eye
with a fork now, please!’ my brain yells. No, no – be realistic. You came to
support your cousin. Who, by the way, is sharp, witty,
beautiful, creative, ambitious, loving, and 5’10. Yes, I know what you’re
thinking. ‘Did you run out of adjectives?’ No. In fact, there aren’t enough
words in the English language to convey the delights of her character. And yet,
she is defined in the eyes of said matrimonial service and its attendees by the
fact that she is, first and foremost, 5’10. 5’10 for an Asian girl is a slight predicament, in that on average, Pakistani
men don’t exceed 5’7. But Pakistani men above 5’10 are not unicorns – they
exist. Difficult to find, perhaps. But they exist. Somewhere. Just like
normality exists. Somewhere. At least that’s what I hoped after this afternoon…
It’s difficult, of course. One table, four girls and four boys – five minutes to introduce yourselves to one another, and then the boys rotate to another table. The idea is that you get a fair idea of the person, and note down their ‘badge number’ should you want to talk to them further. Once that’s over, lunch is served and you are free to proceed to ‘The Wall of Profiles’ to find out more about your badge-crush. Should you be satisfied by what you read, mount your steed in search for the fair maiden, and ask to speak with her further. The idea isn’t abominable. The potentials, however, are.
It’s difficult, of course. One table, four girls and four boys – five minutes to introduce yourselves to one another, and then the boys rotate to another table. The idea is that you get a fair idea of the person, and note down their ‘badge number’ should you want to talk to them further. Once that’s over, lunch is served and you are free to proceed to ‘The Wall of Profiles’ to find out more about your badge-crush. Should you be satisfied by what you read, mount your steed in search for the fair maiden, and ask to speak with her further. The idea isn’t abominable. The potentials, however, are.
I know it’s difficult, men. There’s a lot
of pressure on you. You are encouraged to begin the conversation, fill the
awkward silences, and seem interested without appearing to be a pervert all in
the same breath. It’s a hard job. And I sympathise, I do. But it’s really not a
good idea for basic etiquette to leave you at such a crucial time. And if you feel
you don’t have any – basic etiquette, that is – please, for your sake and ours,
pretend. If you’re a Bollywood-fan, in that moment, channel Shahrukh Khan in
Kabhi Kushi Kabhi Gham as best as you can (we both know you try in your bedroom
mirror at home, anyway – so now is your time to shine) If you’re a Hollywood
fan, think Robert Redford in Out of Africa or Leonardo DiCapiro in Revolutionary
Road. It’s really not difficult. You just have to exude some poise and decorum.
It will save you from the following fatal car crash:
Badge Number X: I’m X, 27, I live in Ilford, I’m a businessman; I own three chicken shops – you know – us Asians – gotta’ have the chicken *pervy and unnecessary wink and nudge, followed by snorting laughter*….You know Ilford Station, yeah?
Me: yes…
Badge Number X: Turn right, yeah – an’ you see those ‘free shops on the right, yeah? They’re ALL mine.
Me: …
Badge Number X: I’m X, 27, I live in Ilford, I’m a businessman; I own three chicken shops – you know – us Asians – gotta’ have the chicken *pervy and unnecessary wink and nudge, followed by snorting laughter*….You know Ilford Station, yeah?
Me: yes…
Badge Number X: Turn right, yeah – an’ you see those ‘free shops on the right, yeah? They’re ALL mine.
Me: …
Lesson number two: I promise you we don’t
award brownie points for number of chickens shops owned. I know it may appear
that way – given that I obviously look like I enjoy my food, and value it
greatly in my life – but I assure you that your chicken-shop inheritance will
not be sealing the deal for us.
Also, your mother is lovely - in her
fluorescent pink shalwar kameez with gold embroidery. I can tell that she has
made a great effort to pick out her largest set of silver costume jewellery,
bedazzled in large cubic zirconia, with an equally impressive, subtly dyed hairpiece.
She has taken time to apply a myriad of eye shadow colours at 11am on a Sunday
morning to look ‘just right’ for her search for a daughter in law. I see that
she is smiling lovingly at me, and has already been over to The Wall of
Profiles to decipher my credentials. As she continues to spy on our table, I
can see her already envisioning our impending nuptials. I will fit in perfectly
with your family – you are very fair, and short, and overweight. I am – well –
exactly that. You see – it is fate. We are meant to be…
These, my dear fellow blood-liners, are not
‘credentials’. Fair, skinny (or should I say malnourished), 5’6 – how, HOW on
God’s green earth is this the criteria for love? Ah, but it isn’t. It is the
criteria for marriage. And how depressing is that sentiment alone? In my
(almost) twenty-four years, I have only seen one – maximum two – examples of a
loving marriage. Otherwise, the idea basically seems to be a ploy to
pro-create. Or if you’re Asian, have an extravagant party.
If anything has saved, and simultaneously destroyed the idea of marriage, it is those infuriating Hollywood rom-coms, with the dazzlingly unobtainable Ryan Gosling, gushing with love for the woman of his dreams – who, by the way, is always much less attractive and ‘obtainable’, but realistically, will never be one of us.
But here we are, at Shannon’s Nightclub, obviously with a view of getting married, and me having accepted that you will never be Ryan Gosling, just like I will never be J Lo. But perhaps we can be the starring couple in our own love story? Let’s give it a go. What would you like to ask me?
“Would you live with your in-laws?”
Yes, your situation may require that question to be asked first. But here’s some advice: deliver the question with a little more enthusiasm instead of your current, grim reaper expression. How am I to envision you as being someone I could love, when you currently look like my executioner? With that face, I am AFRAID to live with my potential in-laws – are they part of a cult? Do they gut daughters in law like fish? “I’m a doctor.” I’m going to assume that’s your attempt at remedying the current situation. Okay, I’ll happily meet you half way. “Oh, that’s interesting. Have you specialised in anything?”
“I’m a General Practitioner.” … Please, tell me more… Or not. Yes, that’s a better idea – just sit there with your arms folded, and that foul expression on your face. I will consequently think of and sympathise with London’s diseased and decapitated who will have to face a doctor with no bedside manner – or any manners at all, for that matter.
And there goes that bell. Lunch is served.
The aunty in the fluorescent pink hovers at our table and smiles at me lovingly
once again. Before I have a chance to speak, my cousin yanks me towards her,
“Please let’s go home now”. Yes, let’s go home…
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