Welcome dear readers, to yet another edition of 'IGCSE English Coursework as a Substitute for Actual Blog Posts!' I'll hope you forgive me this again for not posting... I've been so horribly busy with not being busy. Then again, this statement only means anything if there's anybody reading it... or writing it? Is There Anybody Out There?
Also, Check the blog soon for a review of 'Tseleng,' an amazing show that recently played at the Maitisong Theatre in Botswana.
ATOMS AND ORIGAMI.
.
“I like that we’re both made of
atoms.
It means we have so much in
common…
So much that we think
that we’re actually different.
It’s wonderful.”
Wonderful.
These
were his infinite last words which stretched the propagation of the sound waves
in the air, back and forth, forever and ever… until the ceaseless longitudinal
vibrations creased out into nothing-
black and never ending silence- dead and printed words on white paper.
That was all that was left of him: his face, his skin, his feelings, his heart,
his blood, his mouth, his sound- all but dead and printed words on white paper.
I
was beginning to think that he had planned this all out- for me to be there. To
be there not with pen and paper, to be there not with a laptop- but to be there
with an old school typing machine with all the click-click clanging noises. Not
only that, but to think his dying words just happened to be that poetic and that meaningful… no. It could only mean that he had planned this
all out. For some odd reason he knew he was going to die today, old and grey,
and he wanted me to type out the final chapter of his life on an anachronism.
It
would have been easier to record it all on my phone and send it as an audio
message, or better yet, just get him to make the damned phone call. But no,
that wasn't how my father wanted to say goodbye to my mother. It had to be
layered, and it had to be on paper. And it had now needed an envelope. And I
had now needed to leave the modern hospital to buy one. The hospital with its
very modern and discontinuous, thin beep of a heart-rate monitor… It’s not that
it was actually discontinuous: he was dead now and had gasped out the last page
of his breath. It was only that my father loved contradictions. It would be far
more fitting to describe the unbeating of his quiet heart as discontinuous. He
was after all, discontinued.
The
photons of the sun flew violently and proudly, ignoring whatever barrier the
windows pretended to provide, and the molecules in the air around us jumped
heartily in response. In short, said my mother, it was a hot day. She was
mirthless as she used her plastic teaspoon to gently swirl her coffee. She had
turned it into a tiny black whirlpool of transferred epithet- the coffee was so
saturated with sugar that it refused to be anything but latently bittersweet.
One could only tell this by the curl of her lips once she had actually sipped
the thing. She hadn't burnt her tongue, she just wasn't satisfied.
Bittersweet.
Coffee on a hot day. A healthy old girl in a hospital. My father loves…loved
contradictions. Though my mother, being my mother, had only just arrived and was
thus in a position to bother with me questions I didn't want to answer. I was
only happy that I didn't have to answer any questions about typewriters- I had
left that in my father’s room. I had, however, managed to neatly stuff the
remnants of my father into my back pocket.
Mother hadn't noticed- she had been too busy trying to find meaning in
my eyes.
“I’m
not too late am I?” she asked.
It
was just then that an open window let in a breeze- another hearty stream of air
molecules. I sighed and released a little draft of my own.
“Depends
on how you define late.” I said.
My
mother smiled for a second, and then took another, unsatisfying sip of her
coffee.
“I
don’t.” she replied.
“Neither
do I.”
It was only something to say. I still needed
to go and find an envelope.
Luckily
her phone rang and she gleefully began to flirt with god-knows-which-man-now as
I left the waiting room. I trekked to the post office across the burning road.
Each footstep actually felt hot- each lifting and stepping movement caused the
constituent particles of my rubber soles to vibrate, and heat conducted from asphalt
to shoe. Such was the heat on a cancerous day, completely resistant to
insulation, spreading at will.
When
I returned I hadn't even bothered asking my mother who had called her- it
really didn’t matter. My mother and father had long been past being actually
married anymore. This is not to say that they weren’t married, it is only to
say that the continuation of that marriage existed only in titles on funeral
cards, greetings at social gatherings, the front of my report card and in my
father’s poetry… It took me some time to notice that my mother was sitting down
with no signs of post-flirtation glee. The heat of her coffee had dissipated to
the environment… if it had any further decrease in volume since I had left; it
was probably due only to evaporation rather than actual drinking.
I
came to the conclusion that someone other than myself had told my mother of my
father’s current non-existence. I then took my time to pull what was left of
him out of my back pocket, the dead and printed words on white paper, and
neatly stuffed it in into the envelope I had just bought… Father’s dying wish.
I licked the seal and did not recoil from the bitter taste as I thought I would. I was instead intrigued by its disturbingly
inappropriate after-taste, sweet and sharp, and carefully folded the envelope
to a soft and gentle close.
Of
course my father’s funeral casket had to be a paper masterpiece. Of course each
letter of ink was filled with a countless amount of tinier than tiny black
atoms. Of course my father was and had been a complex and layered little
origami swan, as my mother was and is the little cute girl who had folded and
unfolded him. Of course she didn't quite know what to do with him once the
novelty wore off.
And
of course I’ll hand over the envelope with my father’s infinite, poetic and
meaningful last words to a mother who will most likely never understand them.
Never understand him. All this and nothing, and all at once and never… I too,
had once loved contradictions.
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