I am lost. Hopelessly lost. I have broken off and
gotten detached. No more cohesion or uniformity. The sense of absurd is growing
more than ever, and every day I can feel myself falling into the bosom of
unfamiliarity, of incoherence and of randomness. Wasn`t it just yesterday, that
I had felt so particularly lost when she'd asked me if I loved her? I could
produce no certain answer, my conscience twisted and turned, trying to muscle
out an answer, just a simple yes or no would have been fine, actually perfect,
but then simple yes-no answers are the most difficult ones I guess, and I could
only mumble something incomprehensible in a very low bass voice, turning
scarlet with embarrassment.
But now, as I sit
here, I think I know the reason for my indecision then, it was this lost state
I am in, so perfectly lost that I have no inkling of what`s happening around.
Every passing minute seems to me like a half awake dream, a dream as unsettling
as it is uncertain. Though I wasn`t like this for ever. I used to be a fine
man, a man of aim, focus and hard work, a man who wore his responsibilities
around him like a prized piece of jewelry, I knew what I had to do and how to
do it, most of all I was sure of myself and believed in myself, but then
something happened, rather I should say I fell in bad company.
I met him every day,
sometimes even twice or thrice, in my bathroom. He always remained in the same
position, not moving, just its antennae wiggling solemnly. He was a fully grown
male cockroach and he had my acquaintance, a proof of which was that he wasn`t
scared of my presence, but rather greeted me with moving his antennae more vigorously.
Even I liked him. He was a piece of beauty, his oily brown wings hiding the
pink knotty body, a white ring separating the head from the abdomen, but what I
liked most about him was his unpretentious beauty, which wasn't like a
photoshopped picture or an ad, but was simple and plain.
He, that fat fully grown male roach, is the reason I am so lost that I
can't separate one from two, can't get a grip, he and he alone is the reason
for my misery, my pain, my suffering, for he was the one who planted those
ideas in my head, which have troubled me since, giving me sleepless nights. He
enticed me with his beauty and then left me upside down.
I used to stand
near the shitter and admire him for hours, and sometimes when he was in the
mood, we'd talk. He was quite a wise follow for his species. He told me that he
has been around for the past billion years or so, a thing which I did not
believe initially, but when he told me stories about the first humans, the Australopithecus
taking a dump next to him in stone age, about Lucy giving birth to a strange Homo
Sapien child, about the fall of Mesopotamian bronze age and the rise of the
Greek iron age civilization, I was quite taken aback. Although I could not
believe that a simple cockroach could know so much, in the face of his stories,
I had to concede.
I remember clearly,
ah! how excited I used to be about the whole thing then, I used to run to the
university library, to cross check his stories, and it is incredulous but he
was always right, down to the minutest fact. It was all etched on his amazing
memory, and an amazing memory he did have, remembering things from the depths
of history, no, rather depths of consciousness. We talked about the slow
evolution of various species, there division into different branches and how
cultures developed and I was so flabbergasted, so astonished, when the insect
told me he had helped Darwin in his research and helped him give shape to his
ideas, that I was ready to kiss his feet, or whatever closest counterpart of
them he had, but he told me to not stand on ceremony.
For many days the roach was my best friend. He told me stories and I
gave him bread crumbs to feed on. I spent hours in the bathroom with my friend
and didn't bother to get out. But how happy I was before that troublesome
creature came to my life and how easily he destroyed everything, how easily he
took my calm, my peace of mind and left me a roving madman, completely oblivious of his surroundings.
One day she had come
to meet me, at my place for I had stopped going out altogether, but I spent the
whole time she was there, in the bathroom, with my new friend, chit chatting.
It was soon after that, that she left me, screaming at me then, what I know
only too well now, ' You are fucking lost!!!Get a grip on yourself or you are
gonna shatter!'. Yeah right, I thought to myself then, and I still do, though
in a more acknowledging tone.
Then I didn't see him for a few days. He disappeared as suddenly as he
had appeared. The bathroom became empty and I lonely. Instead of the bathroom I
started spending time in the study, more or less forgetting the old cockroach,
which was no less than a tell tale china man. I had expected him not to leave
without saying goodbye and that's what happened. After a few days absence, the
roach was back again with the solemn wiggle of his antennae. He told me he had
gone to mate and soon he will be a father, if everything went well that is. But
he didn't seem happy about it, and when I asked the reason for his sadness, he
said he felt tired. ' I have been doing this for so long, old friend, that I am
tired of this all' he said and went on, ' and anyway the world has lost its
charm, there was a time when I witnessed wars, plagues, epidemics destroying a
civilization just to see it rise again as a phoenix, reborn, reincarnated.
Change used to be such a big part in the scheme of things, but now, everywhere
there is a lull, a stagnation, it's like the human world has reached a plateau,
it has achieved whatever it had to achieve and now it has hit still water,
maybe the only thing changing is technology, else everything has reached a mark
which can't be crossed.
I was taken by
surprise by this attitude of my pal and tried to console him saying, ' history
is always in the making' but he didn't want my sympathy. ' The history we are
making today, dear friend, is that of how well we survive our own created
horrors, or how well we digest our food or take in the shit that's been thrown
at us from our television sets. The world isn't what it used to be.' Not
knowing what to say, I went out , but his words kept echoing in my head, for
even I had felt the futility of existence and the only reason I tried to argue
with the roach was to prevent my own sense of hopelessness from taking over. Gauguin
had asked all the right questions and we are still seeking their answers.
Although I did feel the impact of the conversation, I wasn't much
troubled by it initially, for I believed there was hope, there was still a
possibility of revolt, of resistance, of constantly striving to achieve
nirvana, utopia, but slowly, even that left me. Think a Trotsky in his exiled
home in Mexico. Think a fat uninspiring Castro of his 70s. An ugly dead Che
with a bullet hole in his head. That was me, all hope in humanity gone, dead,
corpse like, and then as later happened, lost, neatly, impeccably lost, like a
tiny minute detail in a framed old photograph.
By then the rain had set
in, and we were slowly launching into a wet, sticky season of erratic rain,
sludge and dinge. One day I came in all drenched and doused in rain. I did not
go to meet the roach, the truth was that by then I had already started
developing a certain repulsion for him, a certain strong dislike, which
prevented me from meeting him. I spent the day in bed, thinking about Paul Gauguin`s
painting, Who are we? Where do we come from? Where are we going? and finally
when the day turned to night, and I really longed to talk to him, I couldn't
help myself going to the roach, for apart from our friendship, I was his patron
too, and without me, the old lazy bastard would be going nuts with hunger. So
with a few bread crumbs juggling in my pocket, I went into the bathroom. He was
at his same spot, wiggling those ugly projections on his head, and in the same
senile mood. He told me he was a father of five now and asked if I could spare
some bread crumbs? I gave him the bread crumbs and before he could say
anything, went out. Though I had left him, he stayed in my head, his
frustrating idea of a bleak meaningless world, a charmless world where there is
no inspiration, no motivation. And soon things got so bad that I became partly
suicidal. What was the purpose of my existence? my life? was it worth living?
and the world around? it did not hold any charm for me, for my heroes were all
dead or dying, even decaying. Gone were the days when the hippies roamed naked
on the streets, or black Negroes played mind-blowing jazz, gone were Dostoevsky
and Ginsburg and all we are left is with their memory, which in itself is a
burden. I became so engrossed in such introspection that my personal life began
to suffer, my grades in university started sinking low. It became my habit to
aimlessly haunt the lanes of the city while rain pelted on me from above.
And it was then, while getting soaked in the sticky rain of Delhi, one
evening, that I came up with that horrible idea, for which I cannot stop admonishing
myself, and to tell the truth, if today I am in this way, lost, miserable,
suffering, it's not just because of that roach, there is my involvement in it
too, for during the sleepless night which followed, I went into the bathroom
and squashed my friend, who died just like any other cockroach, with a crunch,
his antennae for the first time wiggling frantically, for a full half a minute
after the body being crushed, and I went outside, in the rain, lighting a fag,
towards her house.
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