I haven’t really thought about the ‘animatedness’ of things
inanimate, but this morning something caught my eye that made me consider the
possibility and reminded me of the above anecdote. I was buying a chew of betal
from a roadside kiosk. Well, not exactly
‘road side’ because the said ‘outlet’ was located a few feet into a by-way in
Thimbirigasyaya, Thunmulla to be exact, the kind which led to one of the 500
plus shanty-communities in the City of Colombo.
A truck had arrived to pick up garbage and people started
coming out with their trash. Among them was a little boy. He had a bag. He came
up to a contained which was already half full. He emptied the bag and out fell
a small shoe. A tennis shoe that might fit a 7 year old child. A single
shoe. I wondered immediately what
happened to the other shoe. I wondered also what kind of places the shoes had
carried its ex-wearer and what kind of feet he or she had, what kind of attachment
to shoes and things, what paths he or she wanted to walk but did not or could
not.
The old man at the kiosk gave me the bulath vita. All of a sudden I thought of something that
was not inanimate but was nevertheless absent.
A leg. Suppiah Vijayan lost a
leg, courtesy the LTTE (pro-Eelam Diaspora, please take note) on the 2nd
of March 1991, less than 50m away from his bulath-vita shop, which by
the way is also his residence. That was
when Ranjan Wijeratne was assassinated in a bomb blast. He spends all day on his perch (which is also
his bed), behind the ‘counter’ of his super market. He doesn’t dream any more about places he
wants to visit and doesn’t think of places he’s been, the job he did. He sells
betal and says he needs around Rs.20,000 a month, which he says he earns
somehow.
Where do lost legs go?
What kind of dreams do they dream?
Do shoeless soles experience tar and grass in different ways than those
that are shoed? Do road-stories and
grass-stories silently communicated get read the way they are related or is the
level of distortion enhance by the roadblock of shoe-sole?
The shoe that was trashed (and I have no doubt that it’s
usefulness had expired) does not fit Vije and even if it did, he does not need
it to go to the toilet (which is the place he visits most frequently when he
does venture out of his home-shop). This
is however not about legs or shoes, bomb blasts and decapitation, loss of
livelihood and lifestyle, tragedy and coping.
That shoe, like that leg, must have experienced something. Or, if one were to be boringly scientific
about it, must have not. It is good to
believe, even if just for mental exercise, that shoes have hearts, amputated or
shot-to-nothing legs have minds; if not for anything, but so that we respect
things and all the labour that is congealed therein.
Vije is very particular about things he owns. His shop.
The little drawer where he keeps his coins and notes. I don’t know if he has inscribed ‘life’ into
things inanimate, but he certainly treats his belongings with a great deal of
respect.
In the very least, such respect can add time to an object’s
life. We were not born to a culture that
believed in throw-away, but we are quickly mimicking the West in this. Take a
look around. You won’t see eyes and ears in a bookcase. You won’t hear
heartbeat as you turn a page. You will not detect wistfulness in the blade of a
knife or longing drip from the rim of a glass.
You will not believe me if I said that there’s a love-hate relationship
between foot and football. It is good to
imagine that all these things are true, though, not for the purpose of feeding
delusion, but as a harmless trick to enhance respect.
The artisan brings his hands together to worship his tools.
That’s not conferring divinity to chisel and paintbrush. It is acknowledgment of value. It is the clay that makes me, I heard a
potter repeat in Sinhala what Khayyam said in verse. I saw an Indian creative director working in
a local advertising agency worship his computer the moment has began his work
day at his desk. I’ve seen drivers run
their hands several times around the steering wheel and then bringing them
together solemnly before getting on the road.
I don’t know steering-wheel language nor the preferred music
of a paintbrush. I don’t know how
newspapers read me, or what kind of mischief the words I strew on a word file
on my lap top are up to. I saw a shoe
and a leg. That’s all. I realized there are a hundred stories that can be
written about each; the one that’s now in a garbage dump and the other whose
trajectories will never be traced again.
Unionized or not, I think it is good to treat all things
with respect, those that breathe and those that are deemed by consensus to be
inanimate. I am open to correction.
[This was written and published in December 2010 in the Daily News]
Postscript: Will follow.
malinsene@gmail.com
4 comments:
Excellent then and excellent now.
Awaiting postscript!
How trouble-free the world would be if everyone respected everyone/thing else
Suppiah Vijayan passed on a few months ago. I didn't know until two months had passed. My visits had become infrequent after I found a permanent job. His sons didn't have my telephone number. I walked in. The 'architecture' had changed. I was surprised. I asked. Was told. Suppiah Vijayan, my one-legged friend who walked with me along strange pathways had suffered a heart attack one day and died not too long afterwards.
I can remember reading this as 'morning inspection' in 2010.Beautifully written this article actually opened my eyes to respect inanimate we are using day to day.Thanks so much ,and all past few years I take a minute to silently thank such things and the feeling is beautiful.
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