Getting from A to B

I hadnโ€™t much considered the prospects of tomorrow. Perhaps it was that tomorrow existed in a space and time that I could never quite wrap my head around. The unpredictable nature of it all made it feel more like an illusion then a place I may one day visit, much like a mirage in the desert. And just like a mirage perhaps it is a symptom of dehydration. It may be that any disease that causes the warping of the concept of reality, or even reality itself, in oneโ€™s mind is where it comes from. The result of a sickness that has long since taken itโ€™s hold on humanity. Replacing any fragment of cynicism with hope, and the avenue through which this was achieved was with the destination of tomorrow, and the logic that if you add all your tomorrows up, you may arrive at an even more astonishing place.

The sum of tomorrows is bliss

Walking through the desert, sand blistering against your skin, your body slowly betraying you, achingly moving towards ultimate demise. Then the allusion to water; an unfulfilled promise, yet a promise that relies on your body acting against itโ€™s natural deterioration, finding within itself a reserve energy bank, kept locked deep and hidden away, but awakened at the prospect of survival. Awakened by the hope that the images are real, that there are in fact palm trees, in the desert, that those ancient palms may bear fruit. That, if there are trees, there must be a source of water, because vegetation needs hydration to sustain itself. And if there may be but a drop of water in a dried up basin, that the basin may be the result of a much larger body of water. And if there is water in the desert, then surely there will be a town, and the town will undoubtedly see merchants come and go, and those merchants may travel as far as the sea. Should they travel that far then there would be a dock with ships, and perhaps one weary old captain would take pity on one who had such a long and tiresome journey that he would agree to take you aboard and all you need do is pull your weight on deck, and soon you would be home and far from the desert and itโ€™s unforgiving sun and sand.

So, in the desert, it was not just the palm trees that give the traveller strength, but rather the sum of the possibilities. Similarly, there is tomorrow, which is often difficult and dreaded, but the sum of tomorrows is bliss. 

Herein, I find my heart heavy. Of course, we do not always consider each and every link in the chain reaction, our minds do that for us; quickly deducing all the possibilities and most likely outcomes. In this way, it is understandable that we only see the point A, which is here and now, and point B, which is somewhere and sometime in the future that is not quantifiable. There could be the breadth of infinity between A and B, yet somehow, our minds force us to see the endpoint, often, without considering the journey it would take to get there. So when thinking of the amount of possible miles between point A and point B, I feel my heart sink; how could we ever hope to get there? To get to a place and time where you feel at complete ease with the universe and that everything you had come to desire along the way, had somehow become part of a tangible reality, that is arguably the goal of the majority of mankind. 

The only tricky thing about a mirage in the desert is that you have to be awake to see it. In order to see one, you have to wake up every day, and keep moving. Eventually, your body will see something that sends overflowing waves of hope through you. And so, you are able to carry on, on your journey to tomorrow. There will always be things to reignite a spark.

My inability to fathom the existence of a time and place completely separate, yet not removed from this moment is definitely challenging. While I know that the existence of such a place is undoubtedly true, as I have experienced a good deal of tomorrows, I also know that the mirage serves a greater purpose than simply to keep us searching for water in the desert. The journey to tomorrow can often be tiring, just as trudging through a desert is, though I think tomorrow serves as an opportunity for us to get better along the journey. That on our way to tomorrow we grow and learn, so that when we arrive in โ€œtomorrowโ€ we might be able to handle greater dunes in the desert or more venomous snakes hiding in the sand. 

It isnโ€™t just about the first mirage, or the second, itโ€™s all of them, all of the hopes for the future, and all of the experience of all the yesterdays and tomorrows that contribute to an arrival at point B; somewhere and sometime quite unquantifiable.

Living in a post card


The air in the lounge had been borderline suffocating. My glass had almost slipped from my hand as I brought it to my lips due to the perspiration on my fingers. It was not so much the sweltering heat of the evening, but rather my nervousness that had gotten the better of me. If I did not calm down I would turn into a puddle soon. Not to mention the effort I had put in to doing my makeup just right and applying the exact amount of perfume to the soft skin of my neck and wrists, and of course, the red dress would all be for nothing if I continued to perspire.


It was all a bunch of sillyness really. And the biggest silly of it all was the dress. I knew it. I had asked myself what I was thinking when I had bought it. Even if I had just bought it I would be able to forgive myself, but I specifically went looking for it, knowing full well that this grand sherade I had meticulously thought out would amount to absolutely nothing but tears. Yet still, I could not restrain my feet from carrying me through the roads in town, strolling past all the store windows. I could not stop my eyes from wandering over the displays and the mannequins. I could not even stop myself from trying the blasted dress on when I finally found it, and I could not stop myself from buying it either. Rediculous, truly rediculous.


I sit there, on the emerald sofa, glass in had, wondering just how much of a fool I am about to make of myself. The sigh I release as I place the glass back on the coffee table is dismal and as much as I want to collapse back on to the sofa I decide it is probably best if I move to the belcony. I would go and change out of the dress and into something less desparate but my guest is set to arrive any minute now, so the only resort I have left is to move to the balcony in order to save what is left of my frayed nerves.
The instant rejuvenation the evening air offers is a brief reprieve from my overbearing sense of disappointment in my complete lack of self preservation. All because of a red dress. In fact, the red dress was not the primary source of the issue, the source was in fact, a great deal smaller.
I had been sitting at a corner Cafe nursing a cup of coffee some years ago. The table I sat at had been right next to the entrance, and was the one I reserved every morning at eight for half an hour. I had already read my paper when a man I was not familiar with had slumped himself into a seat at the table on the opposite side of the door. He carried a satchel with a great number of sheets of paper sticking put here and there, a pen stain on the bottom left side of the bag, a pair of gloves clipped to one of the rings on the strap and a pair of spectacles peaking out the front pocket.


When the waitress came over to take his order he replied with “I’ll have whatever she is having, to go, please” while gesturing towards me with a shrug of his shoulders and a slight nod of his head. When the waitress left he carried on by saying “I’m too tired to care very much about what coffee I have.”
“Hangovers will do that to you.” I replied. To which he laughed briefly.
“I’m not hungover,” he said simply “I was interviewing a rockstar that lives around here last night.” at that I almost spat out my coffee.
“You don’t meanโ€ฆ” I said sceptically.
“Precisely,” he smiled. “So I think it’s rather self explanatory how it is the evening ended up going, but I was working so I wasn’t drinking,” he explained, “I was, however, rather close to a couple of men with a funky smelling cigarette and so I think that is the cause of my blinding headache.” I tried to control myself, but burst into a fit of giggles.
“I’m so glad my pain amuses you” he says in the midst of my laughter.
“I’m sorry” I said, placing my hand on my chest to calm myself “it’s not so much the fact that you’ve gotten yourself a migraine off of second hand smoke, it’s just-“
“Yes?” he interjected curiously with a slight upturn of his lips
“You seem so ordinary.”
“Ordinary?”
“Yes,” I giggle “orginary.”
“Well,” he says, pulling a pen from his bag and bringing out a postcard from the front pocket, “I’ll have to immediately write to my sister telling her about a mad-woman I met at the coffee house who had the audacity to call me ordinary.”
“You can’t exactly do that without your glasses can you?” I ask pointedly while referring to his spectacles still peeking out the front pocket of the untidy bag.


He looked to the bag, the spectacles, did an almost unnoticeable head shake, and lifted his gaze to meet mine. He had a look of amused bewilderment, the look you get when you just witnessed a magic trick happen before your eyes; you didn’t know exactly what had just transpired, yet you found that somehow you find the one side of your mouth turned upwards in a smirk at the very nature of simple astonishment. And so our eyes stayed on eachother, as I found my own expression mirroring his; equally astonished.


It was not until the waitress had repeated “Sir, your coffee” for the forth time that we broke eye contact rather sheepishly. Embarrassed at the whole situation, I turned my attention back to my now cold coffee. Out of the corner of my eye I was mildly aware of him paying the waitress, her going back into the Cafe and him emptying about five sugar sachets into his to go cup. Then I heard the scraping of his chair as he got up and dared myself to raise my gaze as he was slinging his satchel over his arm.
Once he did, he looked at me, smiled again, then looked gown at his bag, and rifled around in it for a few moments, then felt the pockets of his trousers, growing a bit antsy, and finally feeling the pocket of his large tan coat. From there, he pulled out a pen, retrieved the post card he had discarded on the table earlier and began to scribble a note on the back.


“Look, I’m going out of town this evening,” he said as he turned to me, “but I’ll be back next week. If you like, give me a ring and maybe I can introduce you to that Rockstar fellow.” He placed the postcard on my table, and looked at me once again.
“It was lovely to meet youโ€ฆ” he said, waiting for me to give him my name. Looking up at him, I found myself on the verge of blushing.
“I’ll give you my name after I meet the Rockstar,” I said, with a laugh playing on my lips.
At that he nodded and let out a low chuckle.
“I can live with that.”


I did meet the musician, though he failed to live up to my expectations. And so it was at that Cafe, all those years ago, that we became friends and I let that damned girl in the red dress on the postcard work it’s way into my mind. And here I am nursing a cocktail instead of a coffee, and hoping, beyond hope, really, that there is something more to the years of wishing that I lived in that postcard.


At the very least, the breeze had calmed my nerves, and I’m sure the alcohol had contributed to that. Nevertheless, I felt more comfortable in my dress, less nervous. Then, finally, the doorbell rang, and I knew I had to step out of the postcard.


By: Leilah Bhyat


The beautiful, Xhosa woman

I have never been one for beauty pageants, in fact, in took me about five attempts to spell the word ‘pageant’ right. It just was not something I was introduced to as a child. When I met my best friend, that all changed.

Bongisisiwe Mbukwase Ndumela. Actress, Singer, Artist, Dancer, Future Miss South Africa

I am a daughter of African soil and I am beautiful.

Zozibini Tunzi, Miss Universe

I met Bongi when we was were in our first year of high school, and since then most of what I have heard about have been Justin Bieber facts, skin tutorials, Ruby Rose, Billie Eilish, and most importantly, that she wants to be Miss South Africa, and then Miss World (at this point I’m really hoping that I remembered correctly.) And I wouldn’t trade a single second of being in her company for all the money in the world (well maybe I would, then I could take her out to eat sushi and she would forgive me.)

Upon first meeting Bongi, it became clear that she was someone people loved being around. We had first become close when we were both cast in The oyster and the pearl as part of one of our school plays. Unfortunately, the play was a wreck, and we all knew it, but that never stopped Bongi from acting the fool and bringing a smile to everyone’s faces, just as she always had. She even had us all dancing the waltz in one of our rehearsals (probably why the play was so awful.)

We became quite close for some time, then, through no fault of my own (I may have liked the boy she liked) we stopped speaking until a year later when she was holding auditions for one of her plays. Needless to say, she made me really work for that part! It payed off though, we came 2nd that year at plays festival. That was the first of many victories we would see together.

We directed a few more plays, broke a few hearts, had our hearts broken, and most importantly, I think, found our sister, Hannah. I don’t think the three of us would have made it through high school without each other. Together, the two of them raised hell to say the least. I heard stories about how they were always talking in Afrikaans class (more like yelling because Bongi loved to hit Hannah’s legs and watch as she tried not to retaliate in front of poor Mr Du Preez who definitely had not done anything to deserve the hell of having those two together in his class.) Hannah used to get Bongi back by making funny noises right next to Bongi’s ears. All in all it was a never ending cycle.

My sisters. Now and always.

The three of us were inseparable, I’m sure that it would even have been difficult for someone to think of one of us without thinking of the other two. And Bongi held us together. She offered our little trio a place within her heart that we could call home. She loved us so much, she even shared her food with us (she is very protective of her food.) Bongi is particularly well known (within our friend group) for making the best EVER sandwiches. I kid you not, she could have a fall back career as a chef (unless you hurt her feelings, she is one of those people that is probably inclined to spit in peoples’ food should they offend her.)

Jokes aside, Bongisisiwe Mbukwase Ndumela is one of the most outstanding individuals I have the great privilege of knowing. She is an inspiration and touches so many hearts. She is a true Xhosa queen, and definitely a beautiful daughter of African soil. My opinion is biased though (and this walk down memory lane is making me tear up) so here are a few more opinions.

WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE THING ABOUT BONGI?

“Her resilience and strength.” – Assante

“She was like a big sister to me. For our final exams she spent hours rehearsing a piece that was a few minutes long with me, just so I could get a few extra marks. She always had time for me. That’s unconditional love.” – Immaculate

“Her laugh and her smile” – Glorious

“The nails of her toes.” – Ali

” Her honesty. Or her lips, whichever is best for the ego.” – Dillon

“She is such a loving person and checked up on me when I really needed it, I didn’t tell her how that touched my heart. Also, she is beautiful, we won’t lie, we can’t lie, she is beautiful.” – Brighton

“Bongi herself is my favourite thing. I can’t pick one thing that stands out because she, herself, stands out.” – Yamilah

“How passionate she is about her goals.” – Selisha

“How she always makes me laugh.” – Lwazi

“She looks good in everything and she is going to be Miss Multiverse one day.” – Malikah

“Just the fact that she’s Bongi, everything about her.” – Alfred

“Her ability to walk into a room and fill it with energy and joy immediately.” – Hannah

Bongi and her loving father

Dearest Bongi,

I hope that when you read this you see that you have made an impact on so many lives. Mostly I hope that you can see you are never forgotten and that you are loved, unconditionally. I’m sure everyone can agree, that we are sad we can’t share this beautiful day with you, rest assured, we will see you soon and you are never out of our hearts or our prayers. May God grant you many more beautiful days.

We love you Bongisisiwe Mbukwase Ndumela. Keep shining Xhosa queen.

Happy Birthday!


@bongisisiwe.n

Thank you does not suffice.


My life in beds

Eighteen seems to be a significant number for everyone. Whether it be because you become a โ€˜legal eagleโ€™ at the age of eighteen, or perhaps some like to spend their days playing eighteen holes on a golf course . Eighteen is the amount of places I have lived. My sister likes to say she has ‘sojourned’ at as many places, and I must say, it does add an air of class to an otherwise rather blique chain of events.

If I was in a sour mood, I would say that looking back on it, my life for the most part, has been lived between the packing and unpacking of suitcases. Going from one place to another and starting afresh. Something that puzzles me is the thought of living somewhere new with all the old furniture from the previous place you lived and trying to create a homely feeling with pieces of a past life. In the many places I lived, I also had many beds. And so, a homely and comfortable feeling had to be created over and over again.

When I think back to all the beds I slept in, the memories tend to become muddled with the unfortunate reasons for having to move houses so many times or having to sell furniture so many times. Yet, somehow, embedded in the mess, the first memory that comes to mind is that of my futon. It was my only double bed, and it is the one I remember best. At the time I had been obsessed with cherry blossom trees and insisted that my linen have cherry blossoms on it. With a light, pale blue background that made the intricate, pick flowers pop, my linen was beautiful. It was my favorite. From thinking of this, I have come across memories of my many beds that have made me think more fondly of them than I had previously.

Beds seem to hold a significant place in our lives, especially as children. Scenes from films come to mind of a parent sharing bed time stories with their sleepy child. Crawling into your parents bed when you had a nightmare and waking up sausaged between your greatest protectors, then realising you lived another day to face the monster under the bed. And of course, there are the scenes of praying before you go to sleep.

For me the monster under my bed was actually the bats outside my window. My family used to live on a large property with a huge garden and many giant, old trees, hence, bats. To this day they scare the โ€˜bejeezusโ€™ out of me. Though I think I have gotten to an age where climbing into my parentsโ€™ bed in the middle of the night has become socially unacceptable. Practically unacceptable as well; I am too big to fit these days. It would seem I have also gotten too big for bedtime prayers. Even though my parents would pray with me before bed, it is actually my Grandfatherโ€™s bedtime prayers that I remember best. The Arabic rolled off his tongue effortlessly when he used to tuck me into bed and rub my brow to lull me into a peaceful sleep. He had done this since I was a baby. My great Aunt used to say my Grandfather was a lovely singer and he would always deny it, but the way he would recite the prayers sounded as though they were meant to fly on the wind over desert dunes and to the ears of a weary traveller. All these years later, he still claims he can not sing.

Much like my memories of my Grandfather putting me to sleep, my mother also had a set routine for bedtime.She is gifted at reading childrenโ€™s stories. My favorite, to this day, is The Gruffulo. If you have not read it yet, I highly recommend it. My mother read the books with all the different characters’ voices. She would change from one to the other seamlessly and even added accents when we were well behaved; she always had my sisters and I in stitches. In hindsight, she probably shouldnโ€™t have done that seeing as we always ended up more awake then asleep by the end of the story. I know she did it because she loved seeing us laugh.

Before I can recall her telling stories, I distinctly remember falling asleep in my parentsโ€™ bed years before. Like most children under ten, I liked falling asleep on my stomach. So, after I would attack the pillow face-first, my mother would scratch my back. Sometimes, when Iโ€™m blue, I go to her room and ask her to scratch my back just as she used to all those years before. Her fingers tracing shapes on my back would instantly make my worries evaporate, so I could go to sleep peacefully.

Another very fond memory I have with my mother used to take place every few months or so. When I was between the ages of fifteen and eighteen, I would come home from school every once in a while, and rather out of the blue, decide that I needed to rearrange my room. She will probably deny it if anyone asked her, but one of my Motherโ€™s favorite things is moving and rearranging furniture. So, she would always end up in my bedroom helping me move my shelves which I never bothered to unpack before moving them. The truth is, I have no upper body strength, and so, I ran to my mom for help. One time, I decided to unpack the shelves before moving them, and, through a stroke of genius, I put the entire contents of the shelves onto my bed. My mother, witnessing this display of pure superior intellect simply looked at me and calmly said:
โ€œIโ€™m going to sleep, donโ€™t try to move your bed with all of that stuff on it.โ€ She then kissed me goodnight and left.
About half an hour later I could not manage to squeeze the shelves past my bed in order to get them to the other side of the room. Long story short, I attempted to move my bed with the entire contents of the shelves on it. For the next three years one of the legs on my bed was broken. And I didnโ€™t think that was much of a problem until I threw myself on to the corner of my bed rather unceremoniously after a particularly long day at school and ended up having the bed collapse underneath me.

Some of the beds I had were not nearly as enjoyable. Most were single beds, like the one I had broken. I didnโ€™t mind those, most, I actually quite liked. Then, there were the mattresses on the floor. There were a fair number of those, but still, they were mine, and that was solace enough. There were even a few couches in between. There was one very large bed that I had to share, and then there were smaller ones I had to share. Those were my least favorite. As a result I hate sleepovers, which is a problem, because I have yet to experience a pillow fight with the girls that ends with feathers everywhere.

I also have concerns about whether or not I would ever be comfortable with sharing a bed in the future. One day, not too long ago, I had woken up to my little sister, Malikah, sitting at the end of my bed. She had not woken me up, or made a sound, I had not even woken up to my bed shifting under her weight as she sat down. I woke up without a care in the world, then, when I saw her sitting there innocently, I felt like my space had been violated. She had come in to charge her tablet so she could play games because we had chastised her about waking us up too early on the weekends. Yet there I was, livid. Immediately I felt as though I had not slept the entire night. This was an enormous problem for me, even though it may seem like an overreaction. At the time, I had just started to sleep in my own bed and in my own room again after we had moved houses. It was a Godsend to say the least. I had started having less scarring nightmares, and they would come less frequently. So, looking back at it, my reaction had been completely understandable when considering the circumstances. I felt like a monster for thinking, even if it was just for a moment, that my sister had done something wrong. I never spoke to Malikah about it, I just said good morning and got out of bed. I am sure that, in itself, says something. But then again, part of me has nightmares about not fulfilling my dream of having 3000 thread count, Egyptian cotton sheets, so perhaps I should not take things so seriously, especially seeing as they don’t exist.

Take it from a person who knows beds, Egyptian cotton sheets should count as a contributor to healthy living. That, and thick, heavy fur throws. Not real fur (#saynotoanimalcruelty) but the very convincing fake animal fur that will have the animal cruelty activists waiting to drench you in fake blood. That is definitely the good life. My mother and Father had a blended brown-grey fur over their bed. When I was 15 and got my tonsils removed, I spent ten days wrapped up in that fur blanket. During that time I am fairly certain I resembled some sort of midget yeti sub species that somehow wound up living in South Africa. The genealogy of this is beyond me, though I do sincerely believe it is a very apt description. That fur moved with us from one house to the next. In a way it reminded me of the better times, the more financially stable times. Buying a fur is not light on the pocket, and I know in my heart that it had been something both of my parents had probably dreamed of having since they were newlyweds. Neither of them grew up rich and thinking about it as a young adult, someone who will have to pick my own linen and furniture someday soon, I can honestly say that the image of a fur throw will be one that I will work towards. That, coupled with Egyptian cotton sheets is going to make dreamland my favorite place.

Egyptian cotton sheets aside, I do have other dreams concerning beds. I sincerely believe that with my experience of all these types of beds, I could consider working as a bed reviewer for hotels all over the world. It is a completely untapped market. I could even offer my services to hotels in return for a few days in each exotic location the hotels are placed. In all seriousness, travelling to places all over the world is a dream that has come as a result of these unfortunate circumstances. One of the best feelings is to come back to the hotel after a long day at the beach. Half sunburned and three quarters of the way to sunstroke, slipping into the crisp white sheets and feeling the cold that clings to them soak your irritated skin. Feeling your head drop onto the oversized pillow and letting out an overly dramatic sigh of relief is like nothing on Earth. Eyes closing as your head sinks into the fluffy pillow. I have yet to feel anything like it. I was privileged in this regard for a great deal of my life.

I have come to realise that, while having as many beds as I have had, in as many places as I have lived has caused me some difficulty and pain, I am still intact, barring some never ending lower back pain. So, why be afraid of travelling to new places and finding the only accommodation that is available is in a rural village where it is custom to sleep on mattresses on the floor? It wasnโ€™t unmanageable the first time I did it, so why not have a more hectic version of Eat Pray Love? Some may argue that the germs on hotel sheets will have you worse off than the mattress on the floor. But I like to put that little discourse in the back of my mind when staying at any hotel. Moreover, it is always nice to stay somewhere that saves you the trouble of making your bed. The satisfaction of walking into a room with a made bed is unparalleled.

In South Africa, it is not uncommon to hire someone to help around the house. Long ago in a time far away they were called โ€˜maidsโ€™ but we, in the new age, have deemed that word to be inadequate. It gives off too many โ€˜bad vibesโ€™. The term used is โ€˜domestic workersโ€™ and there are many people hired around the country in this capacity. My family always employed someone, and so, I did not have to make my bed until much later in life. The first place I can recall being required to make my own bed was at my Great Auntโ€™s home where we had lived for quite some time. I was sixteen.

Aunty Shirley was very particular in her behaviour and had a set way of doing everything. Making beds was not excluded from the long list of things she liked done in a very particular way. It is no surprise that it took her a few weeks to teach my sister and I just how we should let the blanket fall, so it covered the whole base of the bed and was just the right length from the bottom of the bed to the floor. She showed us over and over again how to place the pillows because she liked the blanket to fold over the pillows. I still can not say that I understand her peculiar manner, though I do know that getting up and making my bed the way she had taught me everyday, after not having to make any bed for practically my whole life, offered a stable and familiar structure in which to do things. When I would make the bed that I shared, while she was in the room watching over my shoulder, we would always discuss things, matters of life, so to speak. Mostly it was me asking her questions because I loved to hear her talk. Those are the memories I have held closest to my heart since she passed on.

Living with Aunty Shirley definitely prepared me for living on my own. Somehow, she had managed to drum the very basics of keeping a house into my head during the two years we lived with her. This only became apparent when I went to university. I was quickly forced to employ the wisdom she had imparted to me. First, I bought a feather pillow. Most Important. Then I bought a fluffy yellow blanket and sheets covered in green leaves. It was the first time I had lived on my own, and in my dorm room there was not much space. Inevitably I ended up picking up some college student behaviour, which means I spent most of my time in bed. I even studied in bed. Some things never changed though. I woke up every day and made my bed the way she had taught me. When I would read books, I would imagine my mother was reading them to me with her many funny voices. And before I slept, I would read my prayers in Arabic, remembering how the words used to drip off my Grandfatherโ€™s tongue like honey. Things I still do to this day.

These memories did not always come about as a result of stellar circumstances. For instance, my parents got divorced when I was eleven, so even if there had been bats outside my window, I would not have been able to jump into my parentsโ€™ bed and wake up between them. My mother would read bedtime stories mostly to my younger sisters, but because we shared a bed, I was there as well. And when I used to move the furniture around in my room it would be after spending long days at school because I didnโ€™t want to be at home. Then I would move furniture so I didn’t have to sleep. This is simply life.

Everyone that has grown up was once a child that knew the feeling of having to deal with circumstances beyond their control. And once we grow up, we become part of someone else’s unfortunate circumstances in one way or another. That is the part of all of this that is truly heartbreaking. You go from dreaming of cherry blossom sheets to wondering which detergent to use on the sheets. All the while reading fewer and fewer bedtime stories in funny voices. Most significantly, you have fewer people to say your bedtime prayers with and eventually you have no one at all. But still, you make your bed, turn the lights out and have to carry on all over again. So perhaps all we do have once we grow up is our bed, and, as you’ve seen with this story, even that is uncertain.


Being ‘only human’

Something was shared with me when I was younger. I donโ€™t remember what it is that I did, but I said โ€œIโ€™m only human.โ€ The personโ€™s response was, โ€˜Well what excuse is that?โ€™

His logic is that because we are human we should be held to higher standards and we should expect more from ourselves. I donโ€™t think that there was ever any room for self doubt with him. I think that most people adopt this attitude. 

Life is not just happiness.

They are the people that promote the โ€˜good vibes onlyโ€™ lifestyle where we are supposed to look at the world through a rosy lens. That we are supposed to just be able to pick ourselves up. That if you donโ€™t have a positive outlooks you wonโ€™t ever get anywhere. 

I disagree wholeheartedly.

There are up sides to always thinking positively. Of course there are. But, you are denying yourself the full range of the human experience. Life is not just happiness. Life is not just sunshine and rainbows and pixies in the forest. And this is coming from a writer. My purpose is to tell stories that are magical and make people feel. But they aren’t meant to only make you feel happy. That isnโ€™t life.ย 

It is ridiculous to me that you would block off one of the things that makes you most human. To be in despair and to feel although your back is constantly up against a wall is where real success starts. You will not find a successful person that tells you that they got there just because they thought positively. In fact, successful people are often ones that come to know themselves better through their hardships and work through those emotions.ย 

Everyone has it hard in some way or another. Some people have a hard time at home, some fight with their parents, others canโ€™t find jobs, some kids just donโ€™t work well in the school system. There are endless amounts of things that people deal with. So to say โ€˜just be positiveโ€™ is insulting. 

Human beings are truly a work of art.

I think that is why artists capture our attention. There is no veil or facade. There is simply emotions on a canvas or words in a song. There are lines of poetry and novels filled with colourful characters. We afford characters in books and movies the opportunity to be emotional. 

Why donโ€™t we offer ourselves the same opportunity? The same decency even?

So when I think of that conversation I had all those years ago, I take a completely different stance. 

I am only human, yes. And yes, I have an endless amount of potential, and I can harness that. I do not only have to harness that potential through positivity. I could harness it through anger, or pain, or any other emotion that we so often deny ourselves, because they are considered ugly. They are ugly emotions in a world that only loves beautiful things. 

But just like those paintings we love so much, we can not say that all of those are beautiful. They are art, undeniably. But not all are beautiful. The same can be said for people and their emotions. Not all our emotions are beautiful, but they are art. And that is what makes us art. 

You are allowed to feel emotions other than happiness.

The medicine that is Sunlight

I recall vividly, tea parties and picnics my sister and I would have in the garden when we were much younger. We would lay a blanket down, talk to the fairies and invite them to join our party of teddy bears for a cup of tea and some biscuits. As we got older though, our tea parties became few and far between.

Now, we seldom enjoy sitting in the sun. And that, I think, it one of reasons people seem to get more unhappy as they get older. This is my lack-of-tea-parties theory, which I believe can be applied to any person from any walk of life, anywhere in the world.

This theory seems to go hand in hand with research studies that show that people who live in countries that get more sunlight throughout the year enjoy higher levels of serotonin, a natural hormone that the body releases when it’s happy. It’s no wonder why the tropical regions of the world are where people enjoy vacationing the most (Jamaica definately comes to mind.)

If you think of it logically, when we are children, we spend more time outside, even when we are at school. We make a point of incorporating outdoor activities into children’s routines. Then, as we get older we spend more time in classes except for a recess hour here or there. I remember writing exams in June when it is winter in South Africa. We would be cooped up in an exam hall for three hours. Not much sun came into the hall and we only had three heaters plugged in (you can imagine that three heaters between 200 teenagers is not the best situation.) The second that we handed in our papers I would find the sunniest spot on campus and bathe in the sunlight. But still, I was not doing that for enjoyment, but more for practicality. If I did not sit in the sun my fingers would have literally frozen solid and I wouldn’t be able to write the rest of my exams.

Yet still, that was the only sun I was getting, the rest of the time I was sitting at a desk.
And that is what we do, we spend more and more time indoors and at a desk as we get older (this is probably why the spray tan industry booms with adults.)

I read an article that spoke about the cities of Chicago and Manhattan, specifically the central business districts. In the early 1900’s when the cities started to really grow, people were all to happy to work in their offices. The buildings were big and offices were large. Then, as time went on, the age of the skyscraper came into being. And all of a sudden large buildings were going up less then four meters away from eachother at times. And the buildings just got higher and higher. This meant that less sunlight was coming into those large, beautiful offices I was talking about. The overall health of the people working in those offices declined, and so started rises in depression. Simply because of a lack of sunlight.

These days we have laws to counteract building being put up to close together. What we don’t have is laws saving us from our habits and routine. There are the excuses of “I’m too busy” or “just after I finish this report.” we lock ourselves in our houses staring at screens and wonder why we become so overwhelmed with work, or social media; inevitably making matters worse for ourselves. Who is to say you can’t take your cup of morning coffee outside for five minutes. (I promise, it will brighten your day.) It happens to be the small, simple things like this that happen to make a very significant impact on the way we feel about our lives.

Perhaps we need to grow down and take the time to have a tea party once in a while with those teddy bears you have hidden at the bottem of your hallway closet (Don’t even try and pretend you don’t. I have a dolphin named Pepsi, and he protects me from nightmares sometimes. Don’t judge me.)

As much as we progress through different stages of life, there is something to be said about reverting to the simple innocence of playing outside. It might do us all some good.


Being too big for your boots

Sitting in a meeting of powerful young artists and being the oldest one there really does give one a sense of authority (Just for the record Iโ€™m 19 years young.) Somehow I had the feeling that I held a certain authority that the younger members of the group didnโ€™t yet possess. Is this what older people feel? Surely it must be, otherwise where does the phrase ‘you’re too big for your bootsโ€™ come from? ( UK formal: โ€˜Youโ€™re too big for your britches.โ€™)

This seems to pose problems too big for my mind to be able to wrap itself around. The lack of faith that โ€˜grown upsโ€™ have in the youth is mind boggling. When doing research about youth culture the following headings came up:

-The historical and sociological Context of Psychological substance abuse

-The sociology of gangs

-Youth Risk Behaviour 

And many many many others.

These topics were the ones that stood out to me the most. It is true that these are definitely valid areas of research and concern. No one can blame academics for trying to understand the difficult circumstances many young people face โ€˜on the daily.โ€™ After all, it is research like this that helps us counteract the hardships faced by youth, or at the very least try to lighten the burden. However, these become the the words that we associate with young people. 

We are descibed as โ€˜lostโ€™ and โ€˜reckless.โ€™ (I may just point out that freedom fighters such as Martin Luther King jr and Nelson Mandela may have had similar labels placed on them – and no, I am not comparing every young person to the likes of these great men so donโ€™t have a heart attack.) Surely some room can be left to say that these labels are not the be all and end all of our lives. Especially to those who live in areas where hardship is perperual and simply passed down from parent to child, over and over.

Yes, of course we were pretentious โ€” what else is youth for?

~Julian Barnes

I think one area we definately beat out previous generations is in the sheer amount of problems we seem to have these days. Rises in anxiety, depression, learning related difficulties, more medication, less sunlight, too much television and social media, not enough real information, rises in chronic deseases and the big one – Suicide. 

What we do seem to forget though, is that these problems are also present in older people. (Yes kids, it is not just us. In fact, these problems are becoming the norm.)ย 

Julian Barnes said โ€œYes, of course we were pretentious – what else is youth for?โ€ and I could not resonate more with this. The stories my parents tell about how they didnโ€™t always do what their parents wanted them to, are often the stories that ended with great adventures (well of course there was that one timeโ€ฆ BUT we do not speak of such things.) Often we will make decisions our elders donโ€™t agree with or understand, well that kind of makes it a โ€˜like father, like sonโ€™ situation because they were once young too. (If you donโ€™t believe me ask your grandparents, they will give you all the dirt on your parents.)ย 

So what is the youth for? 

Well, I donโ€™t think that is a fair question. Perhaps it woud be more helpful to ask โ€˜What are you for?โ€™ (The best thing about this is a little thing called Freedom of speech. If you donโ€™t know the answer, you arenโ€™t under any obligation to say anything.) Knowing what you are for takes time, so no, we are not โ€˜lostโ€™ or โ€˜reckless.โ€™ You have to go through your life looking for peices of yourself, and eventuallyโ€ฆ you still will not have all the peices. It is impossible. I guess what I am saying is that, maybe being too big for your boots is alright. I used to dress up in my motherโ€™s high heels when I was three years old. Those boots were too big for me too, but I grew into them. Just like one day, we all grow into our opinions and beliefs. Such things make for very big boots, but donโ€™t ever convince yourself that you will never be able to fill them. 


Featured image of my beautiful mother. This my be contradictory to say but:

Happy Birthday. You never age.


Plates of gold

Letโ€™s take a trip to Japan. Kintsugi is the Japanese art of repairing broken pieces of pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum. The result of this is lovely gold and silvery streaks covering the surface of the pottery, such as bowls and plates. In this way it treats the flaws and breaks as part of the piece’s history instead of treating it as though it is something to disguise. 

I suppose we ought to be ashamed of putting broken bowls and plates out when guests come over. After all, it is just an admission that you were clumsy enough to break something, and why would anyone ever openly admit to another human being that they are less than perfect? Thatโ€™s just way too out there, I mean, what will the neighbours think of us?

Kintsugi is closely related to Mushin, a philosophy which literally translates to โ€œno mind.โ€ (loosely translated to โ€˜Hakuna matata.โ€™) It promotes a living-in-the-present attitude. This acknowledges the veins of gold instead of the break. It acknowledges that the most important part of the hurt (the break) is the healing (the gold) and that this should not be hidden, but celebrated. But again, what would the neighbours think?

What everyone seems to forget is that, you are not the only person in the whole universe who has broken a plate, and you are not the only person who has cracks of their own. So really, why not display the broken plates? Perhaps when Mrs Jones from next door comes over for dinner, you two will have something to talk about.

If we are able to admit that the gold, in something as arbitrary and mundane as the plates that have been broken, makes them more beautiful, surely we should be able to do that for ourselves. 

Just like the art of kintsugi, he knew the art of fixing up broken people with the laqcuer of his golden words.

– เคจเคฟkhz Jomraj

https://www.yourquote.in/nikhz-jomraj-dmml/quotes/just-like-art-kintsugi-knew-art-fixing-up-broken-people-his-guc85

As wonderful as this concept is, I do find a flaw in it. The only way a plate can be repaired in this way is for someone to take the time to apply the gold mixture to its broken pieces and one by one, help put them together again. (And yes, I am certainly comparing human beings to a flat piece of porcelain.) In order for this to happen, someone needs to see that the plate, is in fact, broken. (This is where humans differ from plates.) Human beings tend to be better at hiding their cracks then plates are, and so, if no one can see the cracks, they arenโ€™t going to get fixed. 

As strong as we are and as much as we believe we can do things on our own, we are fatally flawed :

We tend to not be able to see the gold that is already within us, and so we believe that none exists at all.ย 

I suppose when you woke up this morning you didnโ€™t expect to be taking advice from something you donโ€™t give a second thought to; something you eat your morning toast off of. I wonder though, if we donโ€™t give a thought to the small things, how should we expect others to give a thought to us? Especially when we make ourselves out to be less significant than a plate.


Featured image was obtained from https://www.artlovingitaly.com/the-japanese-art-of-kintsugi-explained/


Backspacing and yellow bomber jackets

I am sure we all know the feeling. The one where you are writing a text message or strongly worded email. You get half way through, or maybe you even finish it and once the adrenaline rush of telling this person your truth has passed, all you can do is sit there, catch your breath, and promptly begin to backspace furiously. 

I found myself sitting in front of my laptop doing that a lot last night, and I got to thinking. Do we really think so little of ourselves that, in addition to not wanting to take up space in this world and kind of just blend in to the crowd, we also happen to degrade the worth of our own unique life experience and what could happen if we actually spoke up about it?

Whether it be you finally telling the boy that you really see this relationship going somewhere, or maybe you are a guy who wants to slow things down a tad because you are not comfortable with the pace. Maybe your boss has dismissed your opinion one to many times and youโ€™d like to express your serious concerns in this. 

I canโ€™t count the amount of times I have sat before a keyboard furiously typing my words, unapologetically expressing myself and feeling empowered by it. Then stopping. 

I do not believe that this is a question of gender, as many people might believe it is, everyone does it. Perhaps itโ€™s a trend โ€œeveryone is bottling up their feelings, I should too,โ€ or perhaps, โ€œCrippling self doubt is the new yellow, everyone should have at least two shades.โ€ 

But even though itโ€™s in fashion, no one wants to outwardly display their yellow bomber jacket, because that is just too out-there. Yellow gets you noticed, and once you start backspacing that strong hue starts to fade. 

I think what we donโ€™t realise is that deleting the words doesnโ€™t suddenly delete the emotions. Itโ€™s the โ€˜out of sight, out of mindโ€™ mentality that has become acceptable. Effectively, you are taking yourself, tying them to a chair, making them pour their heart out and then duct taping their mouth shut once they are looking up at you with tears in their eyes. Then you leave them in a concrete room with a solid metal door, and expect them to be able to go on as if nothing happened. We do this over and over again. Each time chipping away at our voices and self worth. I think wearing the bright yellow bomber jacket might just be the lesser of two evils. 

Or better yet, maybe we should hit that send button and see what happens.


Made on Earth


My father and his best friend grew up in Apartheid South Africa. My father is of colour and his best friend, who I fondly refer to as Uncle Kimon, is white. Growing up I heard endless stories of the trouble these two used to get into. Them going to “whites only” beaches, or Uncle Kimon picking up my Dad’s girlfriends from their houses, so their parents wouldn’t think they were going out with an Indian boy.

My Father, Mohamed Bhyat on the left and my Godfather, Kimon Rousos on the right.

Although Kimon was considered run of the mill ‘white’ on paper, in reality, his parents are Greek. Because of this, people couldn’t quite place him. With his dark, almost-black hair, straight nose and olive skin, no wonder people couldn’t place him. To them he was Portuguese, or Italian, even ‘coloured’ at times. It isn’t any wonder then why, when asked, “Well, what are you?” Kimon got tired of explaining. Eventually he started giving the same answer each time.

“I’m a citizen of the world”

Knowing him, it was said as a joke or a rather cocky remark. But I like to believe that my dear Godfather accidentally stumbled on a rather timeless piece of wisdom.

Before anything else we are human. Once we are born all sorts of labels get placed on us, none of which we decide on or even ask for. Growing up in South Africa gives you a particularly unique perspective on the subject. My Dad’s side of the family gets labelled as “Indian,” my Mum’s as “white.” Both my parents look like they are from the Mediterranean.

Inevitably I get asked the same question as Uncle Kimon, “Well, what are you?” (A question, it must be noted, is not considered rude if you are well acquainted with someone where I come from.) I have a few responses to this question:

  1. “I’m Indian” (an answer reserved for the simple minded folks I meet)
  2. “Why does it matter?” (reserved for those who really believe they can know everything about me if they know the answer to this one question)
  3. “South African” (reserved for people who insist I must be from somewhere else even though I’ve already insisted that I am, indeed South African, and on some occasions, shown them my ID)
  4. “Human”

“I’m a citizen of the world.”

-Uncle Kimon

People don’t seem to like the 4th answer much.

People tend to look at their fellow human beings as things; objects that need to come with a “Made In” label. I’ve been told I’m Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Brazilian, German, Arab, Greek, Lebanese, Turkish, Egyptian, British, American, Australian and Persian. And I’m sure my mother must be exhausted from giving birth in all those places at once. The airline tickets alone must have cost a fortune, never mind the visas.

Thinking about it now, I don’t need to show anyone my label, no one needs to know what fabric I’m made of (It would definitely me satin, just for the record) or if my colour runs out if you put me in the washing machine (It doesn’t, olive skin will always be olive.) In fact, I don’t need to be put in the washing machine at all, I’m perfectly happy with a warm shower like everyone else.

I’m not “Made In,” I’m “Made, on,” I’m made on Earth to be precise, And definitely a Citizen of the World. Though I don’t think the government would be too ecstatic if i wrote that on my passport, it might cause a few problems at customs.


Thank you to Sheldon, for your never ending support. Check out his site, like and support!

https://quitequeer.wixsite.com/lgbtqiaap


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