On Plucking the Bitter Fruit

They asked me to describe 
what it is that
I am feeling right now:

The disappointment of a son
and the alienation of a man
the bitterness of hopes
and the sweetness of vindication
the smallness of petty disagreements
and the enormity of loss
even if it is just the losing of you

I buried you yesterday
and I accepted your mantle
but I refuse this myth-making
this farce of false memories

You left us yesterday
but I left you long ago.

On Winning

I came home and
opened the door
It was early morning
and my cat meowed
welcoming me home

I stooped down to pet her
with tears in my eyes, saying
“You won, Monkey. You won.”

On Passing Away

Gaunt and thin
Shallow breath
Frenzied beat
and then a sharp swift fall

He takes a final breath
and leaps heavenward
leaving us behind to
grieve.

Tentang Jenuh Pencarian

Jenuh kau mencari 
Jalan pulang ke azali
Setapak demi setapak
Kau harungi titian rapuh
Kau susuri setiap selekoh

Dan kini akhirnya
Kau bertemu jalan penghujung
Setiap onak duri
Setiap luka ngeri
Telah mengiring kau ke sini

Kini, di medan ini
Segala dosa pahala
Segala gundah gembira
Segala sengit saksama
Tamat dan bersemadi
Pupus tiada kembali.

On Reading as a Means of Coping

A few weeks ago, there was a sense of deep concern and foreboding in our household. In very quick succession, we had two of our family members who received notice that they could be coming down with a severe illness. I would have dearly liked to be able to report here that both instances were cases of false alarm, but alas the fact of the matter is that my stepfather has been recently diagnosed with what appears to be a severe and somewhat advanced case of cancer.

Amidst these discoveries, at a time which now feels like quite an age ago, I tried my best to carry myself with the usual and expected dignity of a Malay man: no overt or unnecessary displays of emotion or anguish, and to show concern without allowing the maelstrom of feelings to affect my day-to-day doings too much. I would like to think, in fact, that as I have gotten older, I am becoming better at being able to be genuine and sincere in my dealings with my emotions: not to hide them, or ignore them, nor to allow them to overpower me. I wanted to feel, without being buried or thrown overboard by those feelings.

So I reached for my usual method of coping in times of difficulty and anguish: I looked for something to read, that would help me make sense of what was going on. The idea is that with more that you know about something, the less mysterious, and hopefully the less scary that thing becomes. I reached out to Siddhartha Mukherjee’s The Emperor of all Maladies, a Pulitzer Prize-winning exploration of cancer, and the ongoing medical and scientific efforts to understand, treat, and conquer cancer. It was calming to know that this disease, which was and is eating up a loved one, had a name, and a history, and a present and future chronicle of valiant efforts to combat and defeat it. Learning and understanding helped me to know what it was that our family would have to deal with.

I had a similar episode for this, a few years ago. The demise of my father-in-law in 2018 threw me into my own form of soul-searching. Knowing what I knew of his life, and how he struggled to cope with his final years on this earth, I was struggling on my own with the idea of death, and what it means to live a good life so that one could welcome a good death. I went into a sprint of reading: books like Katherine Mannix’s With the End in Mind and Paul Kalanithi’s When Breath Becomes Air were my guides and companions in a process that lasted for many months (and, in truth, probably is still ongoing.) I went back to the Qur’an, sometimes reading the translations and exegeses to comprehend the meanings of the words, but most often, just reciting the words out loud and meditating with the melody and grammar of Holy Scripture.

There are many ways to cope with shock and sadness and grief – my weapon of choice is the soothing rain of words and understanding. None of this is going to take away the sharp pain of loss that I am bracing myself for, knowing that it will come, perhaps sooner than I am prepared for. But I also know that this is part of what it means to be truly alive.

In an interview with The Times Magazine, Cormac McCarthy, one of my favourite authors who had passed away only recently, had said that he considered only a short list of authors, including Melville, Dostoyevsky and Faulker, as “good writers”, and omitted many others such as Proust and James who do not “deal with issues of life and death”. In the McCarthyian scheme of literature and life, it is the contest with death that is the one and true genuine drama of human existence.

These words, these words
they come down upon me
like gentle rain at night

They tell me,
"it's going to be okay"
as my courage takes flight

Amidst the pain, amidst the blight
A thousand curses I defied
.

Tentang Pengakhiran

Dihujung hayat aku terlantar
Minda terjerat dibawah sedar
Sepuluh jari terketarsusun
Merontajerit memohon ampun

Wahai Tuhanku! Aku bermohon
Berilah aku sedikit masa!
Nyawaku ini jangan Kau runtun
Hamba Mu masih belum bersedia

Belum masanya mandi gaharu
Barkapur barus - tunggu dahulu!
Belum masanya berhijab kafan
Berkuburtalqin, kumohon: Jangan!

Berikan aku sedikit masa
Jiwaku masih berlumur dosa
Berikan aku ruang bertaubat
Sebelum jasad beku termayat

Belum masanya Ya Rabbul Jalal
Jangan biarkan aku tersial!

Three Things I am Thinking about Today #7

  1. There has been a lot of discussion about broadening the tax base in Malaysia, especially since the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax, which was eventually abolished by the Pakatan Harapan government. In an age when income inequality is foremost on the minds of policymakers and commentators, it is interesting to see the Malaysian Socialist Party (“PSM”) and the Democratic Action Party (“DAP”) at loggerheads over the idea of a Capital Gains Tax. My take is that policy choices in Malaysia would become much, much clearer on that day when we finally introduce clear rules around transparency of political financing. Then we will see, who exactly is fighting for the people, vs. those who merely talk a good game. 
  1. Being married to Kat Rahmat inevitably means that there will be a lot of conversations around the meaning of Life and Death. In particular, the two of us often have conversations around the fear – nay, terror – of impending death, and how we engage in various convolutions and distractions, to take our eye off the stark reality of permanent departure from this world. This piece is consoling: that even physicists, who we would imagine to be the most rational of the best of us, cannot escape postulations that help us to find peace with the idea of our eventual expiration.  
  1. The Great Resignation is real, and it is coming. As many workers have spent months away from the office, they have had time to evaluate their lives and careers, and many have begun to explore different options for how to live their post-pandemic lives. This article reminds us that it is okay for people to leave, and it is equally as important to pay attention on those who choose to stay. As for me, I look back at my career over the past decade and realise that even though I have technically moved jobs 5 times since 2010, those job moves have actually involved me shuttling back-and-forth between just Pemandu and Ekuinas. I would like to think it is a good sign that I have been able to return back to old stomping grounds, not just once but twice. Loyalty and trust can be hard to build, but they are very powerful currencies in our journey through life.