The Suicide Tree

02.05.2024

When I was a teenager, my grandfather told me a story about a tree in the church graveyard in the corner near his house which we used to walk past every time we went to see him and my grandmother. My grandfather used to live in London, so it was always an adventure to go and see him, because we lived in Essex. London was different, exciting.

But the problem was, that we didn’t know what London was really like. In Essex, we were protected in the Indian family. We lived secure lives. We had stability. We were raised the old-fashioned way. We expected adults to be together forever. Marriage was for life. What other people did hadn’t penetrated our lives.

We were just sitting there on the sofa. My grandfather began the story. It was a very short story. One morning, just a regular morning, they found an Indian man hanging from that tree we walked past every day. Dead.

He had married a woman from India and had called her over to England. But then, shortly after the marriage, she started hanging around white people. And then, she left her husband for a white boyfriend.

Everyone said it was a suicide. That the husband had despaired of life. But, my grandfather said, how could anyone be sure? What if it had been a murder?

A story that was forgotten at the time. A mysterious affair seen through the eyes of a teenager. Shocking because it was the first realisation that an arranged marriage was not for life for everyone, like we had been taught that it was. Shocking to think that someone could break their wedding vows like that.

When I think back on that tale from the life which my grandfather told me – a tale I keep on thinking about over and over again nowadays – I remember what happened to him. My grandfather’s father deserted his family for another woman. Which meant that my grandfather was raised in absolute poverty. He later went blind in life because of malnutrition from the formative years of his childhood.

This was the man that had told me the story about the suicide tree.

The Three Dance in the Water

17.04.2024

the three dance in the water

around me

as it boils

the three dance in the water

around me

as it freezes

one clutches at the other

one whispers in the water

one she scatters liquid light

in their forms the foamy sun rises

with Aphrodite’s glamour

I the eye

I watch the water

and the water’s dance

and in it

I see the smile of Aphrodite

gliding towards me

like the dagger true

So this is the photograph I took. And this is the picture I made. This is the difference between my photographer’s eye and my digital art eye. The picture I made has become about The Three. The stars around which my planet is orbiting now. Two of them might already be gone. Maybe all of them will go. Man stands alone in the world.

in the love of the world

in the desert of the world

there is an oasis

the water is cool and fragrant

the water is the kiss of a mother

it takes the thirst of the desert

and by it

grows one lone tree

which casts a shade

which cools the water

which touches the heavens

Just to hold her hand once. To kiss it. And to put my palm against hers.

I am listening to Arabic music instrumentals on Spotify as I write. The sound is melancholic.

In a moment, I will get up and shave off this beard from my face. I want to give up. But tomorrow, I will see her again. Tomorrow is another day. Tomorrow, the Tiger will still be the Tiger. Tomorrow, the hero in love will still be the hero. If you have loved, never fear. If you have loved, you can lose everything. But you cannot lose your courage.

phenka humne phool

i cast a flower

Uskein taraf

towards her

Us mein dil tha humara

within it was my heart

phenka humne phool

i cast a flower

jis mein chehra tha uska

within it was her face

phool ne kata humein

the flower cut me

koi shikayat nahein

there is no complaint

phenka humne phool

i cast a flower

uskein taraf

towards her

usmein jaan thi humare

within it was my life

Ukrainian women are exceedingly beautiful. I talked to one today. No one knows my type. I don’t tell people.

It was a moonlight night. I was in the country of the Arabs. I was in pain. There was the water. The stars glided across the water, the lights of the night. In the crowd, I saw a beauty from the heavens, an angel. She had forgotten her way and come to earth. She walked towards me. And then? She walked towards the boat on the water. I watched her going. My heart was breaking. In the beautiful night, the invisible rain of tears knitted themselves into the fabric of the sky. She walked away, I sighed. She walked away, I was flooded with melancholy. Across the water, I watched the boat depart. That moment is caught in my mind. It was Her. It was She. I watched my life walk away from me. And I stood there like a corpse, sighing into the windless sky.

The Love Story of One of My Favourite Friends

27.02.2024

She is one of my favourite friends in museums and art galleries. She is a special person. She has helped me a lot. She promised that she would tell me this famous love story from her culture because she is as interested in psychology, people and relationships as I am. And now I have heard it. And I will share it, just like she shared it with me. Originally, her grandmother shared it with her, alongside many other folk tales.

Once, a man asked the woman that he loved how much she loved him. She answered that she loved him like the morning breeze on the flowing meadows in the mountains. He was angered. He thought himself rejected. Did she have a love for him that was like the wind, nothing, meaningless? Was he no matter at all to her? When he loved her so much? He struck her down. He killed her. It was an act of revenge for the rejection that she had given him. It was an act against the failure of reciprocity: she could not love him like he loved her. He had become ego: he thought that only he could love, that she was heartless, that only his love was important.

It happened after this – who knows how long after? – that he went up into the hills in the flowing meadows. The sun beat down on him. It punctured his skin, it vanquished his eyes, his whole body hurt from the heat. But then, like the kiss of a loving mother, the morning breeze washed over his body in a balmy embrace. And then, the tears sprung into his eyes. This. This is how she had loved him. This was the love that he could not understand. Her love for him was the love of solace, cure, repair, protection, shelter, caress, survival, everything that was needed, everything that was wanted. Her love for him was her life entire. There could be no love greater.

The ego of love was vanquished. What was his love for her compared to her love for him? Her who he had struck down and killed was the true lover. It was him that could not love in the right way. He had been a monster of delusion and insecurity. He had thought the wind had no weight, no form, no appearance, no reality. In fact, the wind was everything. It was the heart’s and the body’s greatest desires. His disbelief in the love was like the disbelief of the invisible God in the old days: he had been seduced by the devil and become an infidel, doomed to hell.

The man’s egotistical interpretation and its form of closure was a form of violence, a murder of the other. Of love and the lover.

When I was a child, my grandfather would tell me stories like these. Not about love. It was not the story of a grandmother to a beloved granddaughter. Tales of folk wisdom. From our culture. From cultures around the world. And then, when we had finished listening, he would ask us to tell him the moral to be found in each treasure. When we had interpreted the story, he would tell us the morals that were in it.

I watched my beautiful friend speaking, imagining her as a child listening to the woman that she loved so much, the storyteller. I loved my grandfather most for his stories, for teaching me. And when she finished, and I was still looking at her, we talked about what the story meant for us.

My initial thoughts were that the story was about the different languages of love that women and men speak. As someone who has had troubles himself, it seems that there are two different styles of expressing love. Some people – I am not saying they are exclusively women – express love in a veiled or concealed manner. They cannot say what they feel out loud in direct language. They think that would be too coarse, that it would expose their inner self too much. These people are scared. They are scared of love. These people – like the woman in the story – believe that their lover should be able to read their minds, know exactly what they are talking about and saying, feeling in their inner core. They imagine their lovers as the most gifted of communicators, as people able to interpret their every gesture, every tone in their voice. They forget about ambiguity which is structural to language, mistakes which are endemic, difficulties, lack of comprehension stemming from culture, background and socialisation, the gendering of people in every manner. These people feel that their lover is an extension of themselves and that communication doesn’t have to travel across a distance and a medium. For these people, the lover is an unquestionable expert in them: someone who cannot ever be wrong.

The man is like me. He wants a clear, unambiguous declaration of love that he can understand because he has difficulty understanding women. He hasn’t experienced the same world as women – the flowing meadows in the mountains and the wind there. He is not scared. He never fears. He is a man of violence, a fighter – he comes from the culture of fighters who act first and then think afterwards. That is why he speaks bluntly. He does not allude to things, he does not compare. He wants simplicity. And he does not understand people that are scared of their own love. He does not think it is coarse to share your feelings. They are what you are. They are what you experience. They are the way that you see other people and the world.

Then, while I write now, I see the story to be about the egotism of the man’s love. He cannot understand that the woman loves him in a different kind of way – the superior kind of way – and expresses this in a different kind of way. He feels he is not important to her because of this. He is insecure. He is wrong because ego has taken over. He is insecure because ego has taken over. How could he ask her how much she loved him in the first place? It is not a contest. He does not accept the love that she gives him by being with him. He has to question. Then, he makes it into a contest. For her, love truly is everything. She cannot say it out loud. It is a realisation that he has to come to later on in his life, in the solitude of the mountains, when he is close to heaven and the angels. For him, love is not everything. Because how can you lay a hand on the one that you love like that? How can you kill her? Even if she does not love you, that is her choice. Even if she loves you and for some reason, she cannot do anything about it, that is her choice. The man cannot respect a woman’s choice. He does not have respect for women. He does not understand women. When someone doesn’t love you and doesn’t return your feelings, you can’t kill your own love for them. No matter how hard you try. But that is what he tried to do by killing her – he tried to kill his own love for her.

And finally, the moral of the story is what love means to the lover. It is what only the lover understands. Love is everything. Love is the protection against this hard world and the suffering within it. Love is the greatest comfort that you can experience. Whatever happens in life, I have been protected by the love of my mother. No matter how difficult things have gotten in life or the serious problems. Other people have money to protect them. Or their race or status or class. What we have had to protect us is love. In this one area, we are the powerful. Because the love of an Indian mother from the village is the breeze in the mountains in the morning. It is the love that the Indian man looks for in a woman romantically. So he looks for kindness, comfort, release from suffering, release from the brutality and arbitrary despotism of this world and its weathers. The happiness of comfort. And the man in the story killed the one that gave him all that. It is a story about ingratitude, the privilege and complacency of the men that get that kind of love and can’t appreciate it, the men who have no value for how lucky they have been, how destiny has embraced them. The selfishness of their love, the smallness of their hearts and their minds. And also – the reality that, nonetheless, the women will be with them anyway and give them the most precious thing in the universe – their hearts and the comfort that comes with it.

Waffling; The Young V & A; Suit Kills it Again

18.01.2024

An event tonight that I’m working. So I’ve written the diary for the day before it begins.

I wore the black suit again. Everyone complimented me on it again – about six people. Everyone loves this black suit on me. That’s why I wear it. It isn’t my favourite, but it is lucky for me because of the effect it has on other people.

I was somewhere where I heard a lot of waffling and no doing. So I had to cut through the waffle and get the people doing. Of course, they listened. People almost always listen to me precisely because I don’t waffle. I was thinking about the psychology of the waffler. This individual believes that talking for the sake of talking is appealing to the audience. This person believes that the more they talk, the more attention they will get, the more they will please people, the more they think that people will credit what they are saying. This might work on someone else. It doesn’t work on me. I am only interested in content, practicality and what works to get the result. It doesn’t matter how many words you use. Always focus on the result. That’s why you are talking in the first place – to get that result.

The waffler lives in a world of distraction and diversion, with no focus. They meander about, achieving nothing, accomplishing nothing. The waffler is not just like that in conversation. Their lives are like that as well. Their lives have no direction, no purpose, no destiny. No real meaning or significance. And, believe me, my life is not that of a waffler’s life. In literature, waffling is permissible. Because there is a larger purpose that you achieve no matter what with the work, a deeper meaning. In conversation, waffling has no meaning. It is just an arbitrary flow of words that don’t really go anywhere.

I had a look around the Young V & A in the morning. I got there early and had to walk around in the park in the freezing cold. So I was pretty chilled when I got in. It is such a cool space. The architecture looks so fresh and lively. I was really impressed as soon as I walked into the building.

The most interesting exhibits for me were the ones about the different building materials with a focus on sustainability. And also, I loved looking into the model houses. Wouldn’t it be nice to have a model house with all the little people and the little bits of furniture and furnishings inside? There is something so satisfying looking into that perfectly constructed world, something so happy about being in that world. Perhaps it is the illusion of the panopticon – where you can see everything within. Perhaps it is because the idea of the home is a happy idea. It is a cherished space, after all.

There were some nice people that I talked to in the place – they recognised me from one of my other work places! A lot of people recognise me at cultural venues around London nowadays – it is a small world, even though there are so many people.

A little poem to finish off with:

she does not see the gold

she cannot feel the diamond

a veil is across her eyes

blunting gloves across her fingers

I do not even hope that

one day

she will be undeceived

I do not even hope that

one day

she will sense my feelings bereaved

the gold lies all untouched

the diamond gathers dust

the veil swims over her eyes

the gloves pinch her fingers