Saturday, April 26, 2014

The Sixth Man: A Parable

The boy looks down at the scale model of the world lying shattered at his feet and thinks, there's that. 

The boy reads a newspaper report in which Mad-Eye Moody kills someone. Then it turns out he's not called Mad-Eye anymore, on account of having two perfectly-aligned non-enchanted eyes, and he's spelling his surname differently, too, and he's not killed anyone in recent memory, just given a speech.

Oh, dear, the boy thinks, I've got the wrong man. How now?

He knows the answer to that question and doesn't like it much. He decides, instead, to concentrate on a digression. The digression is this:

In the middling-to-distant past the boys and his friends watch a ludicrous movie about a ludicrous anchorman whose ticks include, among latent bigotry and other not-so-subtle-isms, a tendency to spout incredibly weird and/or inane catechisms in place of the usual tongue twister warm-ups before broadcasts.
How now, brown cow? goes one particularly memorable illogism, and the boy and his friends consider themselves indoctrinated. The phrase (and its informal shortening How now) become near-talismanic, uttered with varying degrees of gusto and wistful nostalgia over almost a decade. It comes to a point where the words themselves grate for repetition, and the group simply copies the anchorman's ludicrous facial contortions instead.
This continues until the oldest member of the gang decides to settle down. Everyone gathers at a swanky resort next to the Atlantic, eats and drinks a bit too much, and during one photo op the boy lumbers onstage to clasp the hands of the newlyweds, working his bearded jaw up-and-down in the old exaggerated fashion.
The bride lets out a high-pitched shriek and faints.
Nobody appends HNBC at the end of an email again.

The boy ponders over the meaning of everything. It's a task made unequal by the incomparable vastness of everything and the fact that the boy's attention-span has often been compared to that of a deceased goldfish.

On the bright side the sequel to the ludicrous anchorman picture is on television.

The boy watches the first fifteen minutes and realizes the only ludicrous thing about this picture is the degree of its awfulness.

Oh dear, the boy thinks, another idol claimed by the twilight. How now?

This time the answer transitions promptly and smoothly:
Better kill myself.

It is only 11 in the morning and the boy knows it's going to be a long day if the answer has already managed to register itself. He sits in front of the TV.

On one channel, not-Moody giving a speech about Mandrakes segues effortlessly into a soliloquy on farmer suicides in the Vidarbha region. What bullshit, the boy thinks. Moody taught Defense Against the Dark Arts, not Herbology. Is even Pottermania not sacrosanct?

Better kill myself.

The internet is no help, either. Most of its information is in the form of blocky white text superimposed upon a rotating roster of the same set of images.

One does not simply stop procrastinating, one reads.
Typical.

Better drink my own piss, suggests another.
Or better yet - kill myself.

 He wanders into a neighbouring story to watch a game of Russian roulette. The participants all look suitably rough, suitably dangerous, but none can help looking afraid during the cocking of the hammer, the pulling of the trigger.

What a grand way to miss the point, the boy thinks. He pockets the revolver and leaves before the sixth man can realize his misfortune.

The boy walks until he comes upon the familiar redbrick building of his school, the scrappy countenance now marred by tiling and a glass lobby that is lit 24/7 by bright halogen that must greatly reduce visibility at night.

"Rest if you must but don't you quit!" someone yells from inside the gate. 

The boy starts and then moves closer to peer in. 
He sees nobody.

"Neatness is next to Godness!" the voice continues. "You are stepping into the best years of your life! Moab is your washpot! The world is your oyster! Please affix poster-size blowup duly attested by a competent authority! Youth once lost is irrecoverable! The transit authority is not responsible for the safety of your belongings! Lefty loosey rightie tightie."

The boy wakes up and realizes he's been sobbing into his pillow.
What a frightful cliché, the boy thinks. Better kill myself.

He doesn't move until the little hand on the clock has crept beyond 4. The big hand hops disdainfully over 2, almost as if it doesn't want to cross the little hand.

The third hand just jerks wildly around the circle, making good time but generally ignored by all else.

The analogy folded in on itself, the boy thinks. Do I kill myself?

He walks to a hall where a stark black-and-white banner draped above the entrance proclaims Orientation.

The boy thinks briefly about Chitrangada Singh and Arjun Rampal, decides his preferences are still in their original configuration, is depressed enough to walk inside.

The man on the lectern is more lucid than the voice in the gateway, but makes even less sense. "School is supposed to groom you and strengthen your understanding of societal norms," he says gravely, "but it is college where you discover your specialization, where you sharpen your focus before cutting through the layer of bullshit that covers all worthwhile opportunities. It is also where you find yourself, where the next phase of your growth occurs. So get out there and find yourself!"

I'd like to find myself, the boy thinks. I bet I can kill that sumbitch too.

Then he realizes he has been standing in one place and looking back too long, that the Orientation happened ten years ago and it's been almost twice as long since that gateway speech was delivered to him in person, that his beard contains enough salt to throw the pepper into sharp relief, that the last of his opportunities withered and died about the time he forgot which way the screws that held him together were fastened. He also realizes that everyone has been speaking to him in clichés, that it has always been his own choice to listen, that he has knocked over a dusty globe that lay on a sill with glue drying in the network of cracks running over its surface.

The boy looks down at the scale model of the world lying shattered at his feet and thinks, there's that.

He can step anywhere on the planet now. Nobody can stop him. He pulls a cocked revolver from his pocket.

So that's what happens when the world is your oyster: 
it gets cracked open.

Then he picks up a faded blue shard, holds it to the light, tries to decipher what ocean he's holding, can't.

It's probably the Atlantic, he thinks, and best years my arse, and finally, just in case there are any faint-hearted people in the Orientation crowd, how now, brown cow?

Just in case there is an Orientation crowd.

He puts the gun to his head, closes his eyes, and steals a ride from the sixth man.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

A Lonely Place To Die

A friend of mine expired yesterday.

We used to go to school together. Didn't meet too often afterwards, given I have all the social skills of a baked potato, but one of us (generally her) regularly made the effort of calling up and staying in touch, talking about the good old days and making fun of hapless idiots from Ahlcon (generally me). You know? Reminiscing. And she never forgot birthdays. And she had a killer smile.

I keep having to go back and change clauses as I write this. I still haven't gotten used to referring to her in the past sense.

Maybe I shouldn't be referring to her at all.

I mean, grief is a relatively private emotion, right?

A few of us went down to her place today. A lot of tears were shed. No direct interaction was required with her parents, and to be honest I am massively grateful for that. What do you say to somebody whose child sat in the same classroom as you for over a decade? How do you even justify your continued existence, given that the center of their universe was younger than you and is now gone?

I shouldn't be here writing this. Why am I writing this?

Because she died in a lonely place.

I don't think her absence has sunk in yet. I don't think any of us has completely registered the fact that a chunk of our formative years no longer exists except in photographs. But the prevailing undercurrent should be one of sorrow, right?

I don't feel anything but anger. More than just that. I am livid. Furious. I could rip your throat out.

That's right, your throat. This is all your fault.

It was a road accident, as a tiny sidebar in a Hindi daily read today. Girl hit by private bus near Pandav Nagar, dies on the spot. They got her name wrong.

What they completely forgot to mention was that all this occured near one of the busiest intersections in the trans-Yamuna region, during the peak morning hour, when roughly 20% of the daily traffic volume both to and from the Noida Expressway travels next to that spot.

And she didn't die on the spot. She succumbed to her injuries en route to the hospital. With her father. Who came all the way from Connaught Place to get her.

Does this make any more sense to you now?

A young girl lies bleeding on the roadside. You speed past on your bike or in your car, you say nothing as the person who is driving pretends not to notice, you tell your driver to gun the pedal in case (heaven forbid) you miss the next redlight.

You, you, you.
You worthless indolent fucks.

She was still conscious afterwards, see. Some girls who happened to be passing by stopped to help her, to call her family, but for almost twenty minutes the commuters around her were kind enough not to disturb her.

Imagine that if you can. Surrounded by rush hour traffic and yet completely on her own. The rest of Delhi could stop existing and it would not make an iota of difference to her. And this from a city which takes to the streets almost every other week in support of some cause. Because rubbernecking isn't as alarming as rape, right? Apathy is not as newsworthy as anarchy.

Give me a fucking break.You are as culpable as that bus driver was. Perhaps more, because you simply decided to look elsewhere. You voluntarily thought of something else. What were you thinking? Oh, that cannot be anyone I know?

And the worst part is, I am as culpable as you.

I couldn't have been there. I still don't know half the details - news travels slow when our media doesn't feel something is catchy enough to champion - but if this hadn't been somebody I already knew and cared about I probably would've skimmed that tiny byline the same as you did. I wouldn't be ranting and raving right now.

It's the same idea that is force-fed to us ever since we're kids, isn't it? We're told not to bother ourselves with the plight of strangers. It is best not to get involved. Or maybe it was someone else's problem.

Luckily for you, it still is. I bet you cannot imagine what her parents look like. I bet you are still reading this with a clear conscience, you burning pile of canine excrement.

When I started writing I was sure the punchline at the end was going to be a call for you to read about losing a loved one in some ill-researched local news item. But I don't think I can wish that on anyone. Anger will give way to helplessness, to acceptance, to forgetting... And an article calling for empathy (instead of the usual indignation) will be the textual equivalent of pissing into the ocean and hoping it turns yellow.

But tomorrow, if it happens to be you or I bleeding out on the roadside, I pray to God our final moments are tempered by chaos and the kindness of strangers rather than the peace and quiet that we both deserve.