Time has a way of whittling away the discomforting slices of
the past. It erases completely things
that made one sad as well as things one regrets. It offers in sharper focus things that made
us smile and these appear as the markers that help memory navigate the years
that have rolled by.
These are days of rain: music on the roof and tears through
fissures whose repair has been postponed on account of financial-lack, lethargy
and the intervention of things considered to be more urgently in need of response;
inadequate drainage systems turning gardens into pools; overflowing
drains. Rain-days are paper boats
days.
My childhood was magical.
I never went to school as a child in this magical childhood.
There were only holidays. I think
others my age must have attended school. My mother was a teacher so she had to
go to school too. When schools closed
for the holidays, she was free. She was
free the day after to take her three children to Kurunegala, her mahagedara. The bus fare for children was 1.75 rupees
back then. The adult fare was 3.50. She
took us to Malkaduwawa and returned the next day. She came back again the day
before the next term began and brought us back.
Back in those days the year was made of three months: April,
August and December. Back then I didn’t
know the names of those other months people said were also part of a year. Things might have happened in those other
months whose existence I was suspicious of, but none of it could have been
important. I just don’t remember.
I remember, however, those three months and especially
rain-days, monsoonal and non-seasonal. I
loved watching the water draining off the roof, neatly arriving at one corner
and pouring out like a waterfall. When
it rained hard, the water came gushing out.
Showering in the rain beat anything that a bathroom could offer.
The back garden was a square patch bordered by two sections
of that old house. It was a hollow and shaded by a massive mango tree on one
side and a jak tree on the other. When
it rained hard, this lawn became a pool.
Not a swimming pool, but above-ankle deep was pleasurable enough. Once the rain ceased the air was new-born
fresh and baptized by the croaking of frogs in the presence of kakkuttas scurrying hither and thither
in the elegant sideways dance that was species-signifier. Through it all, there were paper boats.
They were made of all kinds of paper. Scrap paper, pages torn from old exercise
books and newspapers. Homerun Pas
crayons were used to colour them. Little
flags were made and stuck on them. They
were given names remembered from a visit to the Harbours: ‘Lanka Rani’ and
‘Lanka Gajaba’ or whatever grand name came to mind. They were placed in the drain that ran around
the house. We screamed as the water
carried them away. Their progress was
observed from beginning to end, the three of us running from window to window.
They all ended up in a small pool that had formed where the drain ended. Some must have not made it that far, but
that’s not something I remember. Bad
craftsmanship combined with the weight of rainwater wrecked them into pulp by
and by, but we didn’t wait to see. At the end of the journey there’s another
paper boat, we figured out. We rushed to
make it.
A few months ago I saw a wonderful photograph. The subject was paper boats. It is an elegant
composition. Hiranya Malwatta takes
amazing pictures that captures amazing dimensions of Sri Lanka and Sri Lankans,
their history and heritage, and the paradise this country is. Her photography
describes our land that confer poverty on word-description. That photograph inspired a poem to which I
gave the natural title, ‘Paper Boats’:
Perfection
in line and fold
clarity in light-shadow constituency
the promise of plain sailing;
love is always Paradisial
and blinding in prediction,
until the touch of life
wets, weighs and breaks
the parchment of togetherness.
Life has a way of wrecking paper
boats, of smudging the elegant composition, and subverting perfection. Memory, however, is illusion’s best friend and
loyal accomplice. There are things that
are broken that remembrance re-makes, often in a crispness that was sorely
absent in the original crafting.
Holidays, like love affairs, are said to be anticipated with relish,
experienced with discomfort and remembered with nostalgia.
Our paper boats were never
fine-lined and creaseless. Their
decoration wasn’t anywhere close to perfection.
They were made, knowing well that Disintegration was their inescapable
fate. Life was so honest, back then, I
realize now. Perhaps this is why we
return again and again, become children again and again, and indulge in the
timeless pastime of ‘paper boating’, learning and re-learning a truth that
‘adulting’ seeks to rob us of.
All things are transient. Some last longer than others. Like paper
boats and memories.
Malinda Seneviratne is
a freelance writer. Email: malindasenevi@gmail.com. Twitter: malindasene
1 comments:
Here's the original picture:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/hiranyamm/2257825612/
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