The chocolate factory was having its 4-day maintenance shutdown, unwinding after a seasonal peak period. I was off duty on this day. The day after, I was scheduled to have a meeting that required brainstorming and regurgitating. Generally speaking, I'm not really comfortable attending board meetings, brainstorming sessions and the likes. These are the times and events when the extroverts have their upper hands whipping us, the introverts, like whipped potatoes. The Indians colleagues are all talented tellers of long tales, powered by their tilting heads and 'wordiness'. The Kenyan colleague is well-endowed with a stormy vocal cord to deliver his rich collection of analogies from his gospel and English-African literature. The Egyptians talk with pride as much as they are proud of their pyramids. Well, I have the discomfort being a player in this assorted loud orchestra. I have air locks in my verbal pipelines. Words don't come easily from my end. I have pauses that I miss my turn. In the last meeting episode, the extroverts snuffed my little light and stole my show when I should be riding the waves.
I broke free from the muted mode by dialling home. The kids were already asleep. My wife was narrating excitedly about their weekend trip to Melaka. They went on this river cruise and the kids were jumping with joy. Thank God, it wasn't a sampan. They spent the night in a hotel and they had great dinner only to be spoilt by my son, Hadiff who puked on the dinner table. I'm not surprised for this anti-climax. She was a great narrator like my Indian colleague and her narration reduced my Etisalat prepaid balance by 55 dirhams on this single long distance call. But it's worth it.
On my way back to my apartment, I had witnessed a neglected beauty. We have clusters of these garden weeds in front of our building. I have been walking up and down the building not noticing them. One night, I took series of full moon photos and these weeds made their appearance on the photos as garnishings. I sent the photos to an old friend of mine. She is now a collector of full moon sightings from all around the world, from Manchester to tepi Sungai Langat. She and the others commented well about the moon, leaving the weeds weeping unnoticed. I stared at their elegance. I watched them waving and dancing with the wind of approaching winter in Dubai. Their colour was dark, brownish with purplish tinge, unlike the plain lalang in Malaysia. They grow in small patches, that they don't seem to look messy or dominant in this ensemble of garden shrubs. They don't required much maintenance. I reckon they need less water compared to other plants, planted with the support of the irrigation lifeline on the surface of this desert. I have no idea what they are really called and where they are originally from. Nevertheless, they are here adding colours in this gloomy blog.
Nightswimming deserves a quiet night.
The photograph on the dashboard, taken years ago,
Turned around backwards so the windshield shows.
Every streetlight reveals the picture in reverse.
Still, it's so much clearer.I forgot my shirt at the water's edge.
The moon is low tonight.
Nightswimming deserves a quiet night.
I'm not sure all these people understand.
It's not like years ago,
The fear of getting caught, of recklessness and water.
They cannot see me naked.
These things, they go away, replaced by everyday.
Nightswimming, remembering that night.
September's coming soon.
I'm pining for the moon.
And what if there were two side by side in orbit
Around the fairest sun?That bright, tight forever drum
Could not describe nightswimming.
You, I thought I knew you.
You I cannot judge.
You, I thought you knew me,
this one laughing quietly underneath my breath.
Nightswimming.
The photograph reflects,
Every streetlight a reminder.
Nightswimming deserves a quiet night,
deserves a quiet night.
2 comments:
the plant in the picture is LALANG Dubai???? wahlauuu. cantik giler!
hey, back in the uni in Scotland, believe it or not i was an introvert the first 4 years, being the only Malay and practising muslim in my class.
and i was there for five.
so, hang on in there mkay...
RKM,
Thanks for the hug.
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