When I was a little girl, my father used to take me to the sea. This was not just any ordinary visit, we had to make sure it was the fourteenth night of the moon, so I counted all I could on my little fingers that the moon would come faster, but the moon only came when it will. Years later, he gave me a ring which could have been stolen from one of the moon’s fingers.
When I was a little girl, my
father used to take me to the sea. This was not just any ordinary visit, we had
to make sure it was the fourteenth night of the moon, so I counted all I could
on my little fingers that the moon would come faster, but the moon only came
when it will. Years later, he gave me a ring which could have been stolen from
one of the moon’s fingers.
I used to run after the moon, but in the car that
my father drove, the moon was always running after him. I could watch it come
so near to us, the wind sending it our way. The car used to be driving fast on
Mai Kolachi, that new road they build only so that he and I could travel faster
to the sea, and also that there was a reference point now, ‘lets take Mai
Kolachi that one that runs to the sea.’
In time, words and phrases erode, just like the
color on your hair does, and we started saying “oh just to Mai Kolachi” each
time someone had asked us where it was we were going. My mother and sister
never came along, though my father had wanted us three to go together.
I sometimes liked to visit alone, and hear the
cars passing by on the street. These were the days when my father and I
pretended the two of us didn’t exist for each other. The wind would embrace my
calm then, and while he drove the car, I spoke several things in its ears. I
once told the wind, “I’m about to sink into solitude.”
When Abu liked to talk of the moon, sitting by the
sea, he was quite the man. He would tell me complicated things about life, and
how to live it as a running clock with no hands. To feel its essential present.
The waves would crash on their shores. Each word of the sea, brought calm to
the mind of water. Everything came back to its own roots and shores.
At around fourteen, when I declared to my father
that perhaps God didn’t exist after all. He mentioned his own period of burnt
atheism in his life, and said: “one comes back to one’s roots.” I despised his
response. It was allowing me freedom, but only at the cost of a certainty I
couldn’t really care for. I was just embarking towards my life and the subtlety
of his questioning glance burnt me deeper still. In any case, he said “yes, you
can.” And I did.
A couple of years later I told him: “one is not
born into a relation, you have to create it every day, like making sun out of
yellow paint – the paint isn’t everything.” This had startled him, and he has
not understood clearly up to this day, how I could say that. When my father
speaks English I’m sometimes reminded of Spaniards or Native Americans, who speak
from their heart.
He works on theories that he calls ‘theories of
the wave.’ All the time he is talking about currency markets and foreign
exchange, and yet the constant in his language came to be, what was constant to
me as well: the moon. He had a theory that the moon affected the waves, and so
a similar pattern could emerge in the currency markets that also moved like
waves. Or this was what I understood about his sketches. He is with his paper
and pencil all day, sketching graphs that rise and fall, and keep the rhythm of
waves: each thing falls, he once said to me, and the history class teacher had
said: “nations as well as people, have their infancy, adolescence and old age.”
At an early age I learnt that the Fibonacci series
of numbers had a special significance, because it was also the number of your
fingers, and your hands, your arms, and Michelangelo believed in it too. Father
always had crazed eyes, as if he had seen something, known someone years
before, and all this was certainly very important – more important than dying,
giving up, not laughing, or laughing. Abu had a terrible friend who left him,
the way no man can ever leave another. He never told me this. I found out only
two months ago that Bali even existed.
My Bali was a musical man, he could sing or
compose a tune within a second of his fingers running on water. He played the
drums, the harmonica and the guitar. He was the friend of my father’s life.
They used to play squash together, run together and go to office-meetings
together. They used to laugh as well. Bali was someone you could rely on to
come up with a solution to every anguish, be it of why she wasn’t talking to
you, or why there wasn’t enough cash coming in. He had a solution. He had
laughter. He had music. When Bali Chacha died, I was three years old. Abu has
never been the same. And my mother, time, his contacts, all forgot to mention
this death to me. So I have pretended like it didn’t exist.
It must hurt a man. His daughter too thinking his
pain doesn’t exist. As if, Bali’s leaving and missing and singing and talking
and not talking anymore, wasn’t enough. My father is one of the best men I have
ever known. Except for one answer, he’s been able to give me all of the rest,
and except for one person, he told me about all of the rest.
I sometimes wonder at what happens to
father-daughter relations in Pakistan these days, or from always, I don’t know.
There was a time when the moon hadn’t shone so brightly on my street, at that
time I used to know the difference between right and wrong. Now the
distinctions are all not quite that clear. Perhaps fathers are our brothers,
when we become older, instead of just well-wishing friends out from the
distance in our married lives, or work lives, or party lives, or whatsoever lives.
I sometimes feel, that on coming of age, the
relationship dynamic between a father and daughter ought to change. If he never
realizes that the girl has become a mature young woman, she has a heart that is
incurable or a mind that is furious, then he’ll miss out on the beauty of the
moonlight. This would be a terrible thing to happen to a father, who has loved
his little girl – when she was a little girl – oh so very well. So very well.
He brought her all the right gifts, on all the
right birthdays, took her as a princess on those sun-died days. I know that my
father bought me the white horse I couldn’t get my eyes off of, the one that
had a magical carriage behind it, so it could trail behind the horse like the
magic that is dust-shine behind Cinderella’s pumpkin-carriage.
He got it for me, not caring it was expensive, or
inappropriate. [I mean, it was a horse, with a golden mane, and a fierce blue
red light on its forehead, it struck me then, it was an ordinary horse that
could become a unicorn at will, upon a lighted touch.] It was important for me,
his little girl, and he made sure I had it. Just like he made sure I had silver
earrings, matching shoes, and an exquisite bracelet.
When one grows older, these things shouldn’t slip
off our minds, like old shoes. It is so important an hour for a father. He is
going to miss this for the rest of his life.
I think between fathers and daughters, is a sacred
trust – but I also think, if this trust doesn’t reach its own avenues of
beauty, and change shape over the years, then the life that is lived, will be
lost to the life that could have been lived. In my case, it was my poetry that
did it. When I had my book of poems ready, I called my father after several
months of agitated absence and said: “Abu now I am like you, I’m an
entrepreneur too. I wrote my book, it’s a risk I took on life, just like you.”
Little girls want to be like their fathers too,
it’s not just the boys that harbor this desire. I was a poet to the moon, he
was a sketcher of graphs that made sense to no one but himself. We did have a
meeting point, it’s just that it took us several years to realize this. A woman
in love, is altogether a mystery to a father, he approaches it like someone
coming near mysterious white birds on the Karachi sea, that will disappear the
moment he says “Can I sit here with you?” The sea is lost, it’s uncertain, it’s
always present. This is what I am to you, father, is it not. It’s what you are
to me, as well. It’s what you are to the white bird, the sky on the Karachi
retreat, to Bali’s haunting voice that keeps singing, over all of my life and
yours. He is with us as well.
Abu didn’t realize I was going to be Bali for him,
when I grew up. He didn’t see it coming, but friends like metamorphosis on
Greek nymphs, can take place anywhere. We are to be friends, I just know it.
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