The spirited flautist & broken dreams
I am
a bubble, frail and diaphanous;
I am
a rock, solid and opaque.
I am
tiny grains of sand completely formed,
yet
ready to scatter when airborne.
I am
the Sun, burning bright;
I am
the Sun turning cold at my own plight.
I am
water flowing freely,
or
caught in the endless wait
to
convert myself so others,
can
see or feel me once again.
I am
so many things yet none,
I am
a king at one moment or just
dust,
ready to merge with the scum.
I am
who I am, so let me be,
I am
who I am, I am me…
He
stood precariously balancing himself at the edge of the wall, teetering almost
ready to fall off. What others couldn’t tell and least of all see, was the
steely resolve in his eyes as he poised himself. Everything around him had been
tumultuous from the very beginning; at first he hadn’t noticed that it was on
the inside, he always felt he was queer, perhaps different.
He levitated toward the sound as it came closer he
felt a sudden sense of calm wash over him. Transfixed and lost in thought he
let out a sigh, more a groan of sudden pain, crouching down as if afflicted by
a sharp spasm, his face contorted he remained. “What’s wrong dear, step into the light; please come toward me so I can see you, as I can’t walk,” said the softest voice; a voice laced with honey and pepper
as it were, silky smooth and bass at one level and hoarsely granular on the
other hand.
He took a grip on himself as he realized the music had suddenly ceased and as he focused in the dim light he caught a glimpse of a man, frail and wasted, with barely any legs to call his own. Emaciated and drooping he sat, huddled in a corner. But his hands were a contrast to the rest of his body, almost as if they were a different age.
He took a grip on himself as he realized the music had suddenly ceased and as he focused in the dim light he caught a glimpse of a man, frail and wasted, with barely any legs to call his own. Emaciated and drooping he sat, huddled in a corner. But his hands were a contrast to the rest of his body, almost as if they were a different age.
Loosely dangling from one hand was a flute, that’s
when the boy, all of ten then, had been lured by the lilting music, tugging at
his heartstrings. He sat down in front of the gaunt old man and said, “Could
you play the same tune for me again?” The old man just smiled and relented. The
little boy felt a wave of calm wash over him again: he stretched out languidly, urging the man to
continue with his mellifluous rendering and before he knew it he had drifted off
into a dreamless slumber.
Today, as a young man, once again at the brink, at the
edge of himself, at the edge of a promised tomorrow that refused to materialize,
he decided enough was enough. From the time that he was ten, the several
evenings that he had spent listening to the old man’s music sprinkled by tales
of yore and yonder, some coherent and
some as gnarled as him, with wisps of the ethereal woven in, he had decided
deep down to never succumb to defeat.
He had a wonderful family with all the support that one
could ever ask for; loved and pampered, he had also been given a taste of the
real world. But yet there was a missing link, there was a void, an emptiness
that refused to go. Every time he met the old man with the golden flute over
the next few years he committed to never let the outside world affect him so
bad.
He was shaken and broken when he heard of the sad and
sudden demise of the old man when he had returned one day from work, now much
older and perhaps more stable.
The old man though, had already gifted him his flute
and a new one a few days ago saying, “Learn to play it if you can, or keep it
with you, to remind you of the fact that life is beautiful and worth
celebrating. It is up to you how you treat it. I could have kept complaining
about my wasted legs and would have lost my voice in such a futile endeavour; instead I looked inward and discovered another
strength. I didn’t give in and here I am, stronger and resolute, I lived on my
terms, ”his baritone had suddenly sounded like a whimper on a faded trail.
It all came rushing back every now and then, sometimes
like a tide and oftentimes like a trace, a shadow, a faint hue on an already faded palette. Every
time he would overcome, every time he would emerge yet again, bruised and
affected perhaps, but never down and out.
He
stood precariously balancing himself yet again, at the edge of the wall,
teetering almost ready to fall off. What others couldn’t tell and least of all see
was the steely resolve in his eyes as he poised himself, refreshed and complete.
Everything around him was still tumultuous, but he noticed a unique quietude
within, an energy that seemed to suffuse him with vigor. The flute hung on a string
around his neck, he had always felt he was queer, perhaps different, he looked
Heavenward, smiling almost slyly, the tune seemed to be playing in his head, or
was it real it was hard to tell. It reverberated as he tottered and wobbled,
fumbled and internally squabbled. Rocking back and forth on just the soles of
his feet at the edge of the wall, he finally felt complete.
©
Copyright Suverchala Kashyap
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