Floating

Life will go on, no matter what.

My mother marveled at the depth of grief her four daughters experienced, and the extent to which we missed and remembered our father when he passed. She wondered if we would feel the same way when her time would come. ‘You will remember me for a while and then get busy in your lives, and soon you’ll forget all about me. Life will simply go on.”

We never expected our parents to die when they did. My Mom followed my Dad after four years, when we all caught the dreaded virus. For months on end we avoided meeting each other, but it was January 2021, and it was her 81st birthday, and we simply had to be together to celebrate. So we gathered, bringing gifts, for a delicious tea party with Mummy’s favorite food…..chaat. Eldest Sis baked a cake for her in the shape of a sewing machine, to honour her lifelong devotion to stitching all our clothes. It was wonderful to be in each other’s presence after so long, though I was a bit doubtful about the funny cough I suddenly developed while driving to the birthday get-together.

One by one, we all fell sick, including Mummy, who suffered the most. Oh, how she suffered. A month later, after caring for her diligently at home, Eldest Sis felt the worst to be over, that Mom was on her way to recovery, and she began to plan delicious, nourishing meals she would make for her. She made her soft scrambled eggs for breakfast early one morning, and felt so happy to see her finally eat something peacefully. Little did she know that was to be my mother’s last meal.

It was a devastating, disorienting time for us all, though there was a greater sense of acceptance than when my father died. His death felt too sudden, our minds and hearts refused to take it in. Even my mother, while in her period of seclusion, would sometimes muse out loud at the idea of him being simply….gone? How could that be. He was so…here, always.

I remember I was on the rooftop, tending to my tomato plants in the soft morning sunshine, when Huz came to tell me. My brother-in-law wrote the message on our extended family group, announcing our mother’s passing. It felt unreal, like it couldn’t be happening, and yet it was. That was my mother, the deceased. How could this be? She was so…here, always. I sat holding my mother’s beautiful hands for a long time, those creative hands, her familiar fingers, always busy with something, finally lifeless. I wanted to imprint the feel of her hands in mine.

The strangest thing that happened was how little I cried then. I felt as if I had a howl trapped inside my chest, my sobs were dry. Grief felt like a huge wave that refused to come crashing down. I looked at my sisters and I saw my mother in each one of them. I looked in the mirror, and I saw her in me. It was as if her spirit flew into us all and there was no separation. We were all one.

It is the 1st of June., 2025. Since the last two weeks, I have been coming to terms with a very different sort of death, one that I felt I should write about since it affects me so much. But the story that spilled out is of an older grief. I was watching a video about the loss of animal family members, and what I heard was, ‘when we grieve, we don’t experience one loss, we experience them all.’

This is an obituary for Mowgli, my dear beloved soul-cat. My companion for the last eight years. She was plonked into my life a week before my father died, and I couldn’t help feeling that these two events were somehow linked. My father had often lectured me about my propensity to rescue kittens and keep them in my house forever, his logic being the more time I spend with cats, the less time I’d spend with him. “You’ll regret not visiting us more often one day!”

When I spotted this tiny creature huddled along the side of a road in June 2017, I slammed on the brakes and hopped out of the car to go pick it up. The poor kitten was a dreadful sight…skin and bones, sweating from every pore under a hot sun, dehydrated, one eye bulging out of its socket, mouth open in a silent scream. I often think that at that moment, it was as if the me that was I had moved aside and Spirit took over. I didn’t think …I just knew that if I didn’t stop she’d be dead very soon. It was the month of Ramadan, I was in the midst of a spiritual crisis, but turning a blind eye was not an option. So Amu and I took her home and proceeded to shower her with love and care and protection. In retrospect, my own healing lay in her healing.

We named her Mowgli, I don’t know why the name just fit. Her bulging, infected eye healed and went back into its socket, but stayed hazy and unseeing. It was a magical eye, and Mowgli was a magical cat, a beautifully spotted calico. Not a fur-baby, a person. She was crazy, playful, curious, feisty, intelligent. She got herself into so much trouble so often. We had to rescue her so many more times from all sorts of dangers. The years went by with these three cats of mine, Fuzzy, Minnie and Mowgli, wreaking havoc on our hearts, our nerves and our furniture.

I don’t feel like talking about what happened to her before she died. I don’t even want to talk about the way she died, or all the trauma she had to go through during her treatment. Amu wrote about the whole saga so poignantly on her substack, beautifully embedded with photographs from her life. It’s too painful for me to regurgitate, so I’ll let her be in peace. It goes without saying, we loved her too much, and couldn’t accept her death, it feels like too soon. She was woven into the very fabric of this home. All was well with the world as long as Mowgli was in it. I wanted many more years of her curling up like a loaf on my lap, or perched on my hip. Many more years of seeing her beautiful body, basking in the sun. I can picture her now, happily rolling around in the dust on the courtyard floor.

It’s been two weeks, and the intensity of the ache has softened. I cried nonstop for three days, and on the fourth I finally smiled at the memories, the photos, the videos. After the initial shock wore off, there was the void. Grief for an animal companion is usually of the disenfranchised kind, meaning it isn’t ‘openly acknowledged, socially validated, or publicly mourned’. But my sisters offered so much support, so much empathy, such concern for our loss. They knew what this cat meant to us. They had been witnesses to her short life. And my fellow cat-loving neighbour dropped by yesterday with a box of cake and a big hug. She knew too.

I see Mowgli everywhere, and I long to see her again. I don’t want her to be gone. The house doesn’t feel so familiar anymore. I’m trying to find solace in Minnie and Billoo….but neither of them is Mowgli. And life….what can I say. It is full of endings.

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But our love will live forever ❤️

personal and collective

After a couple of weeks of suffering from an inexplicable pain deep inside my lower back (that arose from doing mobility exercises of all things) I have diagnosed myself with a slipped disc. Apparently, the problem resolves itself with a bit of rest and tlc, two things I seem to be requiring more of with each passing day.

Summer is in full swing , high u-v indices keeping me firmly ensconced at home during daylight hours. Not that I am ever to be found otherwise. However, since a few days I have been feeling a bit too isolated for my own good, despite the fact that the thought of meeting anyone or having conversations feels impossible. What a conundrum. I wonder if this conflict between dual aspects of ones’ nature afflicts everyone. As I figure out what it is that I truly want, I am spending all my time exploring a variety of creative pursuits. Crochet has taken a backseat as I pull out my scraps and threads and put together a little sampler of patchwork and embroidery. It is a slow, aimless kind of stitching, with no end goal in mind. As a recovering perfectionist, it feels like an exercise in letting go, of relaxing, of not judging the mistakes and flaws in my needlework.

Are Pakistanis generally a loud people? Every thursday we are subjected to a litany of naats over a loudspeaker at a religious leaders’ house right next to where we live. This nonconsensual usurping of communal airspace worked me up into quite a tizzy recently, and I don’t enjoy sitting with rage. I wouldn’t be upset if the voices were soft and melodious. It bothers me that there is no concept of quiet reverence in our culture. Even the guy in charge of making announcements every evening at the mazaar of Abdullah Shah Ghazi across my home, drones on in high-pitched tones. Sadly, the double-glazed windows we installed to block sounds also block the sea breeze that keeps the air in our home in circulation.

Uncomfortable feelings need to be alchemized, or else they land you in more misery. I marched into the kitchen and whipped up some hummus, using tahini straight from the holy lands. Amazing how the frustration of achieving a creamy consistency drowns out all unpleasant noises in the outside world.

But all of this is nothing. There is an underlying anxiety that pervades the air, it cannot be wished away. As I write this, there are leaflets being dropped on Rafah by the Israeli army, ordering thousands of already displaced Palestinians to evacuate immediately. The stress and the horror reach me here, as I reflect on the fact that there are no safe spaces in Gaza for the people to evacuate to. Empathy moves painfully through and coalesces in tears. This bearing witness feels like a ton of bricks on my lungs, it’s hard to breathe when you are aware that there are people being crushed to death in an open-air concentration camp. The only thing giving me any heart these heavy days is the huge shift that seems to be happening in the collective. You’d have to be a hardcore Zionist to deny it.

A few months ago, I was invited to a party. My friend was coming all the way to Karachi from the United States of America to celebrate her mother’s 75th birthday and she asked me to join in the festivities. But when the day came, I was shaken by the news emanating from Gaza and the idea of putting myself in an environment of celebration felt inconceivable, so I didn’t go. I spent the day letting my tears flow unchecked. Later, my friend expressed her disappointment at my not showing up. I told her quite honestly how sad I was feeling, and she said she understood, but that we have to carry on living our own lives and celebrating our own joys, and she’s right in her own way. I don’t really think she understood how I felt though, and understandably or not, when my birthday rolled around, there were no wishes from her in my inbox.

It’s been 212 days, and there is no ceasefire in sight. How is this all going to end? With the complete eradication of the indigenous people of those lands? When will justice be served? is peace in Falasteen a pipe dream? Where has my hope fluttered to?

Getting to the core

Since the last couple of nights, the hamstring muscles of my right leg have been feeling tight enough to cause discomfort, due to which I’ve been having trouble getting to sleep. This bothers me on many levels, but especially because our bodies NEED sleep for repair and restoration every night. A little search online led me to find out that hamstrings tend to tighten when they are trying to protect your back. So why did my back need protection? Well, it’s because I have been experiencing pain for months, and I’ve been doing yoga to help with that…only it hasn’t really been working. I’ve also noticed other pains cropping up, in my heels and my knees. Last night I finally understood what the problem actually was though, and the clue lay in the feeling of weakness I have also lately been experiencing in my middle body as I toss and turn at night. A little voice inside me whispered…it’s not about your back or your knees or your feet my child……it’s about your core.

This little voice was all I needed to hear to guide me to seek out a very short 10 minute core yoga routine that would target the abs, and as I practiced I came to realize how much I’ve been neglecting them. Or perhaps it’s the 50’s telling me to wake up and get busy doing some real work.

It’s very easy to overlook one’s core muscles apparently, and I can’t believe I am guilty of this, knowing all I know, having heard countless instructors talk about strengthening your core to strengthen your back. And yet, I’ve never really delved into the actual anatomy of my core muscles, what they are, how many there are, and what function they each perform to keep my entire trunk working properly. Another little search provided me with all of this crucial info.

I also realize that I’ve been using my back to lift heavy things instead of my core muscles, so it’s been a loop of misuse. it’s one thing to have information stored away in your brain and quite a different thing to begin to grasp just how connected everything is. Feet, knees, hamstrings, glutes, spine, core, all working in glorious cohesion, and one weak link affects all the others. The thing to pinpoint is…what is that weakest link? Hint: It’s not where the pain manifests …

So here’s to committing myself to a much more intentional, aware and targeted daily workout routine for a month and see what difference that makes, not only to my overall strength, but also my nightly sleep. Quite excited about this! It’s time to stop scrolling fitness reels and mindlessly consuming content on Instagram and consciously put into practice all the wisdom I glean now instead of saving posts to look at later. I never visit later.

In other news, I acknowledged the loss of two very old trees I used to know, one a majestic gulmohar I used to climb and hang out in between the ages of 8 and 12. This tree died a very tragic death, apparently due to an underground gas leak that killed many trees in the entire neighbourhood. The other was a very tall and old jamun, diagonally across the’ gulmohar, which harboured a lot of birds and dropped a lot of fruit on the road below. Heaven help your car if it was parked underneath. The people who lived in the house behind this tree had it chopped down a couple of years ago, but for some reason I registered the absence of it yesterday when I happened to park my car in that corner after a long time. Without the protective foliage of both these old trees, the street outside my old home felt hot and inhospitable in the mid morning sun, as if a deeply familiar place had become a stranger. It used to be really beautiful once, with the vermilion flowers of the gulmohar and the cool shade of the jamun.

Eldest Sis said that when the neighbours chopped down that tree, they found a hollow in it filled with socks. The socks had all been stolen from the clothesline in her balcony and deposited in the tree hollow by crows. What a cute thought 😊

Jimmy has not returned. My ambivalence has given way to a deep grief that we may actually never see him again. It’s strange sometimes to realize how alone we are in feeling our feels. A few evenings ago I actually socialized and those who know me well asked how my cats were doing. I mentioned Fuzzy’s death and the loss of Jimmy but talking about it fell short of the depth of sadness felt, and my voice trailed off when I realized these things can’t really be conveyed…and I make peace with this. It boils down to this: Jimmy was love, and his presence in and around our home had a value that only those who loved him could feel, and this feeling is precious to me and the only other person privy to this very visceral knowledge is Amu, for which I am very grateful. Huz shares the sadness too in his own way. Together we will keep our love-flame lit, that eternal one that binds us all.

The great reset

It’s a peaceful time of year, it being Ramadan, and Amu and I are surprising ourselves with a willingness to fast which heretofore did not exist. Methinks this willingness has a lot to do with a dawning understanding that it is not a punishment after all, but a gift we have the ability to give our bodies. To be fair to myself, if I had known the science before, my spirituality might have kicked in sooner.

Somehow, miraculously, my migraines aren’t getting triggered this year, and I wonder how much of this has to do with setting true intentions and keeping a very positive mindset. I don’t know man. I had to figure out the best time to take my hormone pill (optimally an hour before eating anything, once every 24 hours) so I set my alarm for 3:30, I pop a pill with a glug of water, go back to sleep for another half an hour, then get up and organize sehri, which has been strangely fun, maybe because I have such companionable company, and a lot because of the greater focus on mindful nutrition. I don’t know what it is, but we’re halfway through the month, and we’re still at it, not giving up. Clearly, there has been a Great Shift.

Of course it helps that iftar is reeeaaalllyy something to look forward to, and I spend a large portion of my afternoons thinking about and preparing lovely simple meals. Most people would probably be greatly disappointed at the lack of pakoras and samosas on my table though. Early on, I decided fried things didn’t quite see eye-to-eye with my gut biome, appetizing though they were, as the cheese balls I happily gobbled on the first evening ultimately made me quite nauseous the rest of the night.

I surprise myself by beginning to see why people are so sad to reach the end of the month. I’m weirdly enjoying this upheaval of my entire day-to-day, sleeping away the mornings, awake most of the night. It all feels quite special, no stress about anything at all, and no obligation to be performative. It’s an inward time of feeling, and healing. I continue fetching-water-chopping-wood, delighting in the sunny blooms of the loofah vines.

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At the beginning of the month, Sis #1 happened to get her legs x-rayed, to find that her bones were totally out of alignment. We had all been witness to her increasingly unsteady gait after a couple of knee dislocations, for years we watched her walk like a wobbling duck, but none of us thought of taking her hand and marching her to a good chiropracter, simply took her word for it when she insisted she just needed to lose some weight. These x-rays have proved to be a wake up call, prompting her to finally give herself some love, some rest, some intensive treatment. I’m putting my faith in her body’s ability to re-align itself, so that she doesn’t need both her knees immediately replaced as per the doctor’s advice.

Sis #2 had a wake up call with her teeth and gums, which were in desperate need of help. But there is a tendency in many of us to put things off till push comes to shove, heaven knows I’m ignoring my lower back as we speak. Who the hell knows what’s going on there? In her case, it was shaky teeth and a very painful mouth which finally compelled her to go see a dentist who diagnosed her with gingivitis, something if left untreated can cause serious permanent damage, so it’s very good that she is now looking after herself more.

Meanwhile, Minnie injured her mouth while chewing a bone and before things went from bad to worse we took her to the vet where she received a few shots and was very much better the very next day. Jimmy Choo has a spasming urethra and not crystals blocking his passage as we had first thought, but he needs some ALP to relax his muscles so that he can urinate easily. It is not easy to medicate this particular cat. All three cats have fleas, and the price of the only effective flea spray in the market, already expensive to begin with, has tripled, like most imported goods. We still have to buy it of course, as there is no local alternative.

The baby sparrow fell out of the nest and died a few days later, something we realized when the sparrow-couple abandoned the nest. The balcony fell quiet, until another sparrow couple took up residence in the other birdhouse, but I’m trying not to get emotionally involved this time.

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The friend I felt disconnected from, left the city and I didn’t say goodbye. It is possible we may be estranged. I set some energetic boundaries and she sensed it and stepped back. No explanations asked, none given. And I’m cool with that.

Being of this world

I didn’t just turn 50 on the 4th of December, it has been more of a becoming. To become means ‘to grow to be’, and indeed it has been a journey to grow from 40 a decade ago to the place I am at now. Nope, it doesn’t seem like yesterday at all.

I love my birth month so much. It makes me want to hunker down and reflect on the year that has passed, to spend time in solitude, to welcome and enjoy the winter with cozy, warm mugs of coffee, and freshly squeezed orange juice, and carrots that are redder than any other time of year, and to buy salted pistachios and cashews and almonds from the dry fruit store/treasure house.

I want to spend my time being at the beach, going on walks there, watching the seagulls and the waves, the fishermen in boats and the ones casting nets at the shore. To feel the sun on my skin, to let the breeze play with my silvery hair, to dig my feet into the soft sand, to lie back and gaze at clouds, to look at pebbles and admire their shapes, colours and beauty.

It’s a challenge for someone like me to navigate wedding season, which coincides with December (it being seasonally the best time of year in Karachi) when there are invitations to events in settings I’m uncomfortable being in. Being social requires a lot of energy, and a lot of things which entail a lot of time spent in shopping places. And the thing is….I’m quite done with putting so much effort into activities that I don’t enjoy.

At 50, my soul feels wilder than ever, more fabulous and freer than ever, and to be honest, it wants to express its fabulousness now more than ever. But here’s the thing: it wants to express itself on its own time and space, it doesn’t want to spread itself thin. Sometimes I think it doesn’t want to spread itself AT ALL.

I thought a few times over the course of this last year of how I would like to celebrate this milestone birthday, and it made me a little anxious and a little pressured to think of how others would expect me to. The funny thing is, I don’t enjoy celebrations and I don’t enjoy being celebrated either. I almost wished no one would remember, as I didn’t want any birthday wishes. I appreciate seamless transitions, don’t I? But my heart knew what it wanted, and it gave me a nudge…and a very nice visual.

The usual suspects (Amu, Huz and Fatu) made a cute little fuss after which we packed some things and set off for the beach. I think we were all in our own head spaces that day, and that was okay. There was comfort to be had in being together, yet doing our own thing. One of the things I feel compelled to do is to clean up as much trash as I possibly can in the area we set up our base camp, I cannot feel at ease unless I do so. We even had a large rake to make the job a little easier (thanks to Huz, who made it a point to buy one.)

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The others helped a little but then eventually abandoned the job to go swim in the sea, or sit peacefully and take in the golden hour. I found a large, torn fishermen’s basket abandoned along the shoreline, and decided to use it as my trash bin, slowly filling it with objects like footwear, empty gin bottles, plastic bags, toothpaste tubes, chip packets, juice boxes, straws, rope, styrofoam and other flotsam. If you’re anything like me, you’d know how committed one can get to a lost cause. And yet, when the basket was full to the brim and I looked around me, I felt and saw such a big difference. Amu remarked amusedly that I must have been a professional trash collector in a past life.

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People saw me do this work, and I didn’t give much thought to whether they thought I was a loony, or if I inspired them to do something similar. What mattered was that I left the place better than I found it. There were large craters higher up in the sand, where the Olive ridleys laid their eggs, and there were so many eggshells scattered about. I smiled to think of all the little babies that must have made their instinctive path to the waiting waves, and felt even better about cleaning up. Like I had a pact with the protective nature spirits and the elementals to serve them and the original inhabitants in whatever way I could. I know I felt their welcome as soon as I entered the land of the mangroves, it felt like happiness.

The moon rose, faint at first but grew stronger as the sun went down. I took my rake and drew large concentric circles in the sand, claiming the space. We ate, drank, made merry and I couldn’t imagine a better way to have spent the day. It was perfect, even though Huz had been hangry on the way, Amu had been in a troubled mental space, Fatu had insomnia and missed Hasan, and Lums thought we were all a bit nuts. The sunset was beautiful and the twilit beach still had mysteries to reveal. I pulled a chair right up to the water and watched the shapes of little crabs scuttling along the wet sand. There was movement skimming across the surface of the water which I realized was a little flock of small birds only when they touched down on land. As it got darker, we listened to music and danced in the shallow waves that washed up gently on the shore, the tide slowly being pulled higher by the moon. The waves glowed neon with luminescent organisms.

And this was how I crossed over into my 50’s, loving my gentle, unconventional life more than ever. Isn’t it a miracle to think how rare and beautiful it is that we exist? I’m here for it all, and I will slow it down as much as I can, continuing to create my own reality in my own unique ways, so help me Great Spirit. And it was nice to read the messages on my phone as the day went by, and to remember I am loved and appreciated by humans too.

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The god of jellyfish

I have been stung by a sea creature twice in my life, both times on the beaches of Karachi’s coastline. Fishermen from the village (who doubled as local lifeguards) would warn us to watch out for bluebottles when it was the season, and as a young person I felt a mix of terror and fascination to see those glistening, gelatinous bodies washed up on the waterline.

I was around sixteen the first time, and the only one to be stung that day. All I remember is the intense ache in my stomach as the venom made its way through my blood, and I spent the rest of that miserable afternoon doubled over in a haze of bright sunshine and pain, despite the application of onion juice as an antidote.

The second time was last year, as I circled the Sun for the forty-ninth time. I was one of a group of five people in the water, all of us in the mood to stay there till sunset. As always, it felt so beautiful to be immersed, letting wave after wave lift me off my feet and set me down again on the soft sand. That sense of bliss wasn’t destined to last very long that day though. All of a sudden, I felt something wrap itself around my hand and a multitude of painful sensations ensued, making me scream and flail my arms to shake it off. Of course, I knew immediately it was a jellyfish of some kind, the nematocysts in its tentacles releasing relentless amounts of venom-covered barbs into every bit of my skin they touched. No one knew what was happening as I shrieked and flailed, and in the drama of the moment my precious moonstone ring flew off my finger and sank into the waves.

If the rapidness of the way my dismay shifted from the agonizing sting to the loss of my ring wasn’t funny enough, how my sister responded to the stricken look on my face was hilarious. She instantly directed her focus to locating the ring under the water with her feet and quite miraculously, she found it! I have never felt such gratitude and love for Fatu’s existence as I did that day. She had been with me when I bought that ring from a tiny shop in the bazaar of Kalaam on one of our trips together.

Evening effectively destroyed, we all made our way out of the water as no one wanted to be in it anymore. What followed was a series of potential antidotes to relieve the pain in my hand which had built to excruciating levels. If you’ve ever been stung by a jellyfish, you know.

Having a painful experience, whether it is physical or emotional, can be deeply isolating, and so it was with the jellyfish sting. None of the others had ever experienced it, so even though they were concerned and kind and helpful, I had to sit alone with my shock and suffering, reflecting on the why. Slowly, like a light in the darkness, it began to feel like the universe had just delivered some kind of message to me, though I had no idea what it was. There was a great sense of consciousness, not just of my own physical existence but that of unseen creatures all around, who had as much right to be where they were as I thought I did. And my hurt and distress gave way to acceptance, with this mystical glimpse into the Great Mystery.

I didn’t see the little beast, so I don’t know if it was a bluebottle or a Portuguese man o’ war or some other kind of jellyfish. My left hand swelled up for a week, and I was left with interesting dotted scars along the back of it to remind me of what had happened. The respect I feel for the sea realm, and those who dwell there, was now mixed up with enough fear to stop me from wanting to go to the beach again let alone enter the water. It made me sad, as the beach is the only expansive landscape I have access to.

It took two months for my hand to heal and the pain to fade. I wore my battle scars with pride, they told a story…like a tattoo.

And then a year passed, the scar slowly began to disappear, we moved homes again, I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, had a thyroidectomy that left me with a new scar, and Amu went on a solo trip to Nepal where she met a backpacker from Brazil, the land of the Amazon, who spoke Portuguese, and sported long hair, an earring, and a tattoo on his chest, right over his heart, and after eleven months of traveling through many different countries, he decided to make his way to Pakistan from India next door, and Amu had to write a letter of invitation for the Pakistani embassy to give him a visa, and he got it, and he bought me sarees from Delhi an hour before his flight, and we picked him up from the airport when he arrived in Karachi, and he ended up staying in our house for a month, and he turned out to be the most emotionally intelligent young man I have ever met, who learned to love desi food, and rabri was his favorite Pakistani dessert after gulab jamun, and he loved wearing shalwar qameez and talking at length with Huz about politics and Latin America and electrical circuits, and he swore not to go back if Bolsonaro won the election, but Lula won! And we all hugged and danced at the promise of it all, and we cooked together, and he said grace when we ate together, and Amu took him to St Patrick’s cathedral where she attended Mass for the first time in her life.

Why did this strange boy from Sao Paulo feel like soul family and was that why he so quickly become a comfortable presence in our home? Why did he lose his mother to Covid the same year I did? Was it her spirit that guided him to another mother when he needed one, on the other side of the planet? And what made him feel so at peace near bodies of water?

We took him to the beach, and it was in his presence that I jumped back into the sea without any fear, after more than a year, and I didn’t get stung by a jellyfish, because a little baby turtle showed up on the towel he had laid out on the sand, and after it made its way down to the water, all of us cheering him on, he told me that turtles are the natural predators of jellyfish, and I took it to be yet another sign, and the water was beautiful, and I declared him to be the Jellyfish God, not just because he broke the curse, but because the tattoo on his heart is of two dancing jellyfish, tentacles trailing over his shoulder. Image

Bolna mana hai

I think I can quite safely declare myself to be in a rather acute state of laryngitis post-thyroidectomy, and must try and completely avoid speaking, whispering, coughing or clearing my throat. That vipassana I had mentioned earlier? It begins now.

My vocal cords have been off since day 1, and I suspect the damage to the recurrent laryngeal nerve due to surgery was further exacerbated by the viral flu I contracted on day 10. It is now day 25, and last night I had to resort to painkillers as I didn’t know how else to deal with the pain and swollen feeling in my throat. This was following a cold cup of passionflower-skullcap herb tea i sipped to self-soothe.

When I google these feelings, I come across alarming words like epiglottitis and laryngitis, and I’m fairly sure I may be experiencing both to some extent. Friends and family message me every day to ask how I’m doing, if I feel better now, and I am quite literally at a loss when it comes to words. I’m still in a transition phase, still in the midst of recovery, and I’m okay, but then there’s the not-so-small matter of the cords. I don’t really know what’s going on inside my throat while Nature does its stitching up work, so all I can do is pay attention, and really effing take care of myself. If this means no visitors or talking on the phone, so be it. I really shouldn’t have to feel guilty about having laryngitis. I do have fingers though, and I can type, not just to write this post but also to communicate with the homies.

The very good news I received yesterday was the result of the blood test I was asked to get done to check my levels of serum thyroglobulin, antibodies, and TSH. There was a slight glitch when the lab sent me the antibodies and TSH result, but not the most definitive thing to rule out radio iodine therapy, which was serum thyroglobulin. We had to go back the next day and ask them if they still had some of my blood sample left, or if I would need to get more blood extracted. Thankfully I didn’t, small joy, as I’m quite tired of having my arm repeatedly jabbed in the same area, we just had to pay some more for the serum test and wait a few more days.

Serum thyroglobulin is a storage form of thyroxin, which is the hormone produced by the thyroid gland, and in a normal healthy adult it should be around 55 ng/ml. Mine came out to be less than 0.20 ng/ml, which I’m guessing indicates that all my storage was almost depleted at the end of three weeks post-thyroidectomy, and nothing was being produced by any remnants of thyroid tissue left in my body. Therefore the need for radio iodine ablation was ruled out by the nuclear physician and he as well as my surgeon said to start taking one tablet of Thyronorm 100mcg.

So this fine morning on day 25, half an hour before my usual breakfast of tea and toast, closely supervised by my sweet Huz, I swallowed my first pill. This little white pill I shall swallow every morning for the rest of my life.

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It’s so strange to reflect today on this page that has been turned to start a new chapter. The chapter that started in February 2022, but which actually started sometime in 2017, has come to an end. I should probably do a little ceremony to mark this day, maybe light a candle and burn some incense. Sit in quiet meditation and breathe it in, accept gracefully what is, embrace the new, release the old, hug myself a little.

Maybe there has been no beginning, and no ending.

Maybe it has all been a journey and an adventure and it simply continues.

Maybe my life is about deeply feeling, all the heavinesses, and all the lightnesses.

Maybe life is all about moving to the beat of my own energy, owning it unapologetically, speaking my truths, owning them, loving myself.

Maybe life is all about awareness……that my happiness and peace are all within, recognizing that the subtle nuances in my environment are created by the energy I emit, and not the other way around.

I acknowledge this immense shift and surrender to it, unafraid, making space for ever-increasing love as I move along in this blessed, never-ending transition called Life.

It is all very beautiful, even the horizontal scar on my swollen, tight neck. And I predict it will become even more peaceful than it already is.