Showing posts with label pondering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pondering. Show all posts

80: The real currency?


I was on a plane en route to perform my Umrah last year when I had one of the most profound experiences in my life.

I knew I was supposed to do some last-minute reading on the things I needed to know and do and say when I reached my destination; to prep up for my obligations as a Muslim in one of The holiest sites on earth, but... [*excuse erased*]

Yes, I have read through the small, thick spiralled Umrah guidebook given to me by the week before tourgroup - from cover to cover countless times, in fact - but I feel guilty if I put it down or kept it in my bag.  After much contemplation I decided to wear the string attached to the book around my neck and just let it hang there, resting against my chest, just in case I felt like reading it again later.

I turned to my right talk to Mom, but she had already dozed off. In fact, I was one of the few who wasn't already blissfully in dream land. I wish I could join them, but I couldn't, for some reason.

After checking my watch for the nth time, I began to hear some kids asking the adults around them "Lambat lagi ke?" ("Are we there yet?") like a broken record.

I yawned as my eyes travelled around the cabin, trying to find something or someone to look at, and they finally landed on the entertainment screen at the back of the headrest in front of me. When I saw my reflection in the dark, imageless screen, I subconsciously held onto the umrah guidebook hanging from my neck.

"Maybe just for a while."
... is what I thought to myself.

I wasn't sure what to expect when I switched on the entertainment set. Maybe I just wanted something to do that didn't involve reading while waiting for the stewards and stewardesses to give us our refreshments. That's what I kept telling myself as I was pressing the buttons, hoping to land of something worthwhile.

The music selection wasn't very interesting (I'm not much of a fan of Middle Eastern music), so I browsed through the other things offered. As I scrolled down the movies selection, a guy with a familiar face caught my eye.

The guy was Justin Timberlake, and the movie poster had a white bolded 'IN TIME' written right at the top of the poster. I couldn't help but laugh at how corny the title was.

I mean, seriously.

The movie had already started playing for a few minutes, but I watched it anyway. Out of curiosity, and partly because, well, it's Justin, one of my ultimate celeb crushes as I was growing up.

... and the smile I had plastered on my face disappeared as soon as I started watching the movie.

The story is set in a world where 'time is money'. Literally. Every business transaction uses not bills or notes or even magnetised plastic cards, but time. Time is the mode of currency, no matter where you are in the world.

What does this mean? It means that you pay for anything and everything with the time you have left in your body. The seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, years in your life.

In such a world, those who are rich are those with a long life. They are, in theory, immortal.

Those who are poor are those who have little time left in or for themselves.

Those who are bankrupt are, well, dead.

And all that is well and good and profound and everything, but that's not what the reason why the movie affected me. What affected me throughout the movie was that I couldn't help but think of surah al-Asr.


“By Time! Indeed Man is in Loss.  Except those who have faith and do good works, 
and exhort one another to truth and exhort one another to patience.” (Q.103:1-3)


The surah kept playing again and again and again in my head throughout the movie. It made the story much more intense. It made all the characters' business transactions and conversations and decisions seem questionable. It was frightening.

When the credits started rolling in I realised that my eyes were wet. I kept trying to dry them with the sleeves of my abaya, but they continued to well up again. It just wouldn't stop.

After I took off my headset, I started to contemplate on a lot of things.
In no time, I was drowning in my thoughts, just as my eyes were drowning in my tears.

I thought about my past. My present. My future.

I began to wonder about my career path, about what I had for dinner the last night, about why of all the movies in the world, that was the one I had watched.

I began to think of all those years I wasted idolising a celebrity and memorising his shoe size, favourite pizza topping and his biggest pet peeve. (I'm relieved to say that I've completely forgotten all three -- I have better things to do with my memory).

I began to think of how right before Mom and I left for the airport with this morning, we ended up arguing - godknowswhy, over godknowswhat.

I began to think of what is going to happen to me when the people and things I have around me are no longer there.

What have I been doing all my life? What am I doing right now? What will I do when it all ends?

Justin had always had an 'effect' on me back when I was 13 - his golden curls and cheeky grins always made my heart skip a beat, but now, the only effect he left on me from the movie wasn't his boyish charms.

It was all about the message he was trying to convey, the idea that the story is trying to unfold.

The movie, in a way, carries a truth that many of us tend to forget, or perhaps one that many of us choose to ignore: "We talk of killing time, while time slowly kills us".

74: Moga Bisa

seorang
yang biasa
tapi luar biasa 

kerana bisa

melangkau jauh bila mengadap gaung
melompat tinggi biar di jambatan tali
berazam besar untuk dijadikan realiti

yang bisa

melawan arus di aliran yang deras
tersungkur jatuh terus bangun kembali
meminta maaf sekiranya menyakiti,

yang

mukanya tidak masam
lidahnya tidak menghirisi
tangannya tidak berduri, 

yang bisa

belajar 
dari kebaikan
dan kesilapan
dari kesenangan
dan kesusahan,

yang bisa

menasihat
dan merawati
mengawal
dan memerhati,

berkali kali,

tanpa keluh,
tanpa henti,
dari hadirnya ke bumi,
hingga saat dikebumi. 

ini
manusia
yang aku mahu 

jadi. 

5/3/13 3.42pm

I've been extra careless with my words and actions lately. :(

45: but we be rollin

i do want to do so many things
with, for, to, and because of
you;
but, as it were,
we keep reminding each other
(we keep reminding ourselves?)
'we are untied,
we need to be patient,
we have to hold back'.

but is that truly the reason
for this rollercoaster of emotions?

is it our circumstances that's keeping us apart,
or our doubts and scars deep inside our hearts?


27/10/12 12pm

35: eid is.

of themed new clothes in treasured family pics,
of toothy cackles against sparkles and fired sticks;

of cash in packets and kissing elderly's hands,
of devouring delicious foods and asking for amends;

of wanting peace and happiness for people the world around,
all of this and infinitely more! but not quite for everyone, i found.

- 21/8/12 4.27pm

26: Balance (Public Transport People #1)

of all the passengers
on the lrt, he stood out
like a quiet moth
against social butterflies.

wearing
an oversized security guard uniform,
a funny-looking hat,
a slightly faded backpack,
a pair of dusty black loafs and
a sullen expression,

his clumsy hands
held onto the railing as
his frail body
swayed along with the movement of the train.

yet
this dispirited man,
confused or drowning or lost or stuck
in his own world,
still managed to keep his balance
no matter how abruptly the lrt stops.

i wonder what kept him going.

3.08pm

---




i love people-watching, especially on public transports.

23: Sober


when i was 5,
i wanted to be an artist:
i wanted to make beautiful things and figure out
the best way to color a shape
without going beyond the line.

when i was 10,
i wanted to be an astronomer:
i wanted to gaze at the stars in the sky and figure out
exactly
which constellations each of them belong to.

when i was 15,
i wanted to be an engineer:
i wanted to invent awesome things and figure out
how to fix anything
and everything.

when i was 20,
i wanted to be a teacher:
i wanted to inspire people to be better and figure out
ways to capture the attention
of students with different personalities, interests and learning abilities.

but now that i'm this close to being what i wanted to be,
i've learnt that i'm not supposed to
'figure things out'.

all i needed to do is simply say:

"saya yang menurut perintah".


11.54pm

14: the thought of Death

Today,
i was
reminded that i
might die Tomorrow. i
wonder if i
have truly
Lived.

My teacher friend was discussing about the theme of death in her English class yesterday, and she asked her students to come up with a poem related to it. Me being the sad observer that I am, joined in just for fun... but now that I read this poem again, I do wonder. Hmm.

By the way, in case you were wondering what structure this is, it's a 16-word poem, structured like this:
1 word
2 words
3 words
4 words
3 words
2 words
1 word