Friday, February 19, 2010

Muss Es Sein?

Must it be?

“I have seated ugliness on my knee, and almost immediately grew tired of it” – Salvador Dali

I have been told that I possess a lens people wait for: the stolen secret, that elusive key into people’s faces. It isn’t all that surprising really, I have been reading faces and pre-empting my responses in accordance to what they share for quite some time now. I no longer even need to make an effort because all I see when I unlock them is the Ugly.

It is why they terrify me still.

There are no honest faces, mine least of all.

It is rather tiresome to realise that I can affect almost anything by making people believe what they want to about themselves. All people want, really, is to be validated. I suppose, if I am honest with myself that is what I have wanted practically all of my life. A silent, salient nod of approval from Them.

This year finds me working on myself, which is something I have never really admitted to be doing before. I have, in the past, sought great solace in the pretty premise that my flaws make me unique and are therefore a worthy foil to drag around for the rest of my life. I am revising that assumption now, only because I find myself alone again at much the inconvenient juncture to be alone. Confronted and caught by that catch-22, bouncing up and out of its perimeter again, I must deal with an old adversary: 'Marriage'. Having been asked by too many to consider ‘where I am going next' has made me recognise that this proposed hypothetical tangent certainly doesn’t involve an altar or ruining some poor, normal, innocent, human’s life. For some reason, those I meet do not find my carefully cultivated empathy for the happiness and welfare of strangers to be as endearing as I had hoped. 

My family has expressed collective relief over my abandoning my antiquated notions of fidelity, love and soul-mate-ship as pre-requisites for matrimony. But are rather upset at my insistence that my recourse lies in working my way back out of Pakistan, hopefully on a more permanent basis this time around and hopefully towards a PhD.

I often feel bad for them, because they haven’t managed to ‘fix me’ and Lord knows they have tried with the best of intentions. I am currently nurturing a most constant guilt for insisting on being ‘that girl’ who just won’t settle and be and want like everyone else. Who is ‘headstrong’ and ‘stubborn’ and ‘wrong’ because she felt abandoned at some twisted trajectory by two parents who both managed to move on with their lives but couldn’t possibly figure out what to do with this thing they’d created. Sure, it doesn’t help that she read herself into a cemented, unshakeable skepticism, unwilling to settle for anything less than a fairytale that the fore mentioned doubting default knows to be, well…a fairytale.

I have been presented with a long list of ‘musts’ for life, and depressingly (but unsurprisingly), my own musts completely circumvent it. The list is pretty standard: Marriage, Money, Children, Stability and Society, the latter pertaining to the opinion thereof (sic). Mine reads something like this: Writing, Studying, Working, Adopting (alas a compromise of wants) and …Alone. I am also presented with an ad hoc alternative: find a friend. Because, of course, finding friends has always been my strong suit. Let alone the kind of friend I could convince to covet my neuroses ad nauseam.

Recently, I stumbled upon a film called ‘Immortal Beloved’, a superb depiction of Beethoven’s life and love for the woman he alluded to in his will merely as ‘beloved.’ The film struck several chords with me and I now find myself listening to ‘Ode to Joy’ on loop every day as I drive over Cavalry Bridge on my way to work on Ferozpur road. There is a perverse magic in listening to a deaf man’s epic dance as one drives past cracked pavements, starving children and scuttling amputees. It makes for bitterness that I feel, he would have appreciated, nay …cultivated.

It was said of Beethoven, that he was a proud, boorish fellow. So consumed was he, with his genius that he deemed answering people’s casual greetings in streets as a common courtesy far beneath him. It took twenty years before he was vindicated and excused for having been deaf and thereby…a tad defensive. I can love him for this, for my disability lies in a floundering mind, a feeble tongue and a defensive heart. I would rather choose my failing though, so I have to add an element of cowardice to the collective crutch I use as an excuse to shun others.

If only it were all real! I wish I could mean my mind. I wish that I did not crave a friend. That I did not dream of a home and a false sense security that came from knowing that money had little place in happiness but a large part in the appearance of it. That I could somehow, transcend my need to look for broken people to be with and around, simply because I felt that they would not judge me.
Which is nonsense, of course, the broken thrive on judgment.
I should know.

At the end of the day, I recognize that there is a surreal sibilant romance in seeking after the crutch, the scar, the spill, the smash and the corner. As Cohen put it “There is a crack, a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.” While my rational self rebukes and reviles me for still cradling those shards, my mind must give way to habit. For it is said, that of all the Greats: Mozart, the Prodigy; Bach as Gods Violin; Tchaikovsky, the Weaver of Beautiful Nightmares; Vivaldi, the Romancer and Liszt, the Thunderer…there has only ever been one, whom they call, simply ‘Maestro’.

Es Muss Sein. It must be.

Es Muss Sein. It must be.

8 comments:

  1. Anonymous1:02 pm

    i'm sorry i have been secretly exploring your blog since last week or so. i wish i had a little bit of gift you have of being a freethinker and express yourself, and even half of the courage you have of writing about things that many wouldn't dare.

    it will be unfair if you settle for anything less than a fairytale. I really hope you turn out to be the lucky one.

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  2. Thank you so very much for your kind words.

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  3. You do really have a gift when it comes to writing. Tell me you have at least tried your hand at fiction. I think that wouldn't be any different than validating people's...dreams.

    I won't even comment about the marriage scenario, I think it holds a surprise for everybody, no matter what your preconceived notions are.

    I do want to ask you about PhD though. How do you fight with yourself between doing a soothing/self-satisfying 5 year research vs. working in a money-printing/self-sacrificing/socially-pressuring 9-5 monkey work? Or you don't!

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  4. Thank you so much for the encouragement. I havent tried my hand at fiction yet, at least not 'real' fiction, mostly abstracts. But yes, I hope to manage it somehow. we will see.

    Regarding the marriage scenario, I take your point about surprises. Sadly those seem to be what i am most apprehensive about :)

    Well, to answer your final question, the tussle between doing what you want and what you have to has and always will be excruciating. I tend to think of one being the route to the other which helps. I do the 'money-printing/ self-sacrificing/ socially pressuring 2-11pm, work so that i can afford to apply for a PhD and manage my way out. But yes, if one feels truly comfortable no where but in a library, the so-called 'real world'....sucks.

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  5. You inspire me to go get that PhD in history that's been lurking in some lousy corner of my mind since last couple years. But..ahh obligations!

    What would be yours in?

    Also, is it just me who feels like a wanna be polymath? Why are there more than 4-5 subjects I'd like to study in depth!

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  6. I do hope you manage that PhD. Im hoping for one in Theology, specifically a historical reading of Surah-Nisa of the Quran.

    As for Polymathy, are you kidding, it is the most brilliant aspiration. Ive often maintained that if someone would fund me i would love to be one of those perpetual students, follow the PhD up with a Masters in Philosophy, history, anthropology.

    If I had any math abilities whatsoever, then theoretical physics :)

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  7. Goodluck with it. I think you'll get some good answers for your gender's sake.

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  8. You are awesome. :D

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