Spanish Needles and Silent Tears from the Inconsolable

My friend Ayna killed herself last week.

It took everyone by surprise. Including me.

To come to terms with reality and figure out why she did such a horrible thing to herself, I tried to remember Ayna as a person.

If you didn’t know Ayna, you’d think she was happy. For the most part. One glance, everything seemed glued together in all the right places.

I once caught Ayna staring at a cemetery. We go to churches on quiet afternoons occasionally to stare at the light through the stained glass, our footsteps muffled by the soft carpet. For the silence. People automatically maintained a reverent hush around the six foot statue of Jesus staring down from behind the altar. I remember her pointing out that the cemetery didn’t have any tombstones. They were all unmarked graves. She told me how insignificant that made one after they died.

“Not for the ones who care” I tried to tell her.

“For all I know, they could be praying at their ex-husband’s grave instead of their husband’s”.

We laughed at that.

Ayna hated the smell of cigarettes so she started smoking. It didn’t make sense. But apparently it worked. She didn’t hate it anymore. She wasn’t a regular smoker because she felt if she smoked all the time, then it wouldn’t give her the 2 minutes of high that she got from it. She had a habit of putting herself through shit and claiming it to be for character development. She felt she was too weak for this world and she hated that.

Ayna used to write about everything that made her feel anything. Sometimes she drew it out. But almost always, she never talked about it to anyone. She made something out of it. And I thought that worked better for her than talking to anyone. People had their own ways of expressing their thoughts. She was making something out of her grief, her happiness, her anger, her messy mind. But looking back, I wish she had talked to me. I wish she had at least cried, shed a single tear. But she never did. She used to tell me that she felt more comfortable crying to strangers but found it difficult to be vulnerable in front of people she knew well. The confession box was her favourite place. I thought that was fucked up. I wish she had waited. She might have found someone she could cry to. Someone who would listen like she listened. She was always scared she’d scare people off if she told them too much about her so she never really talked. She kept a lot to herself. She hated small talks but was scared of serious conversations. She was afraid she’d talk. So she listened a lot. Whatever you said to her, she listened and whatever you told her, in the end, she’d assure you that things would get better. I thought she believed it herself too but she clearly didn’t.

Ayna had a thing for smart people. But she hated it when I told her that she was a sapiosexual. She thought she was too stupid to be one. She wasn’t. She really wasn’t. Nobody really knew this, but Ayna liked to sing. A lot. She used to send me clips of her singing her favourite songs.

A week before she took her own life. Hmm. Let’s just say she went away. I’m not ready to accept it yet.

So, a week before she went away, she sent me a recording of her singing a song called ‘Home’ by Bruno Major. I think it was the 6th song that she sent me. I told her this time that it was really good. It was. I don’t think she believed me. I don’t think she ever believed anything was good about her. She was always scared she’d stop trying after a while. She was always scared she’d give up. But, isn’t everyone?

But I considered this an accepted level of melancholy in today’s world. Who kills themselves for this? That’s what I thought too.

That’s what I thought too.

But Ayna is the person who broke down in class once and told me later that it was because it was too hot for her and she couldn’t handle it. Who cries because the weather is bad? Ayna did. And thinking about it now, I feel like it wasn’t just the weather outside. It was a tornado inside her head. A whirlwind of destruction that I wish she could let out. I guess what upsets me the most is that I never got to tell her how much she meant to me.

A few months back, Ayna bought a 24″ x 24″ stretched canvas and came home. She laid out all her art supplies on the floor on old newspapers and started painting. No explanations, nothing. She took months to complete it. Every day she painted a little bit of it. I thought it was the best painting she had ever made. It was also her last. It was a monochrome painting with just blue on it. I remember shouting at the mess she was making because of how long it took. It annoyed me. I liked my room clean at all times. But she turned a deaf ear to my rant. Once it was done, she kept the painting in my room for me and left. She had cleaned up all the mess and clipped a note on the canvas. It simply read “Here’s a piece of me for you to remember me by.”

See. This is what I didn’t like about Ayna. She made people feel too special for nothing. We didn’t really have that kind of a relationship. We were just two people brought together by fate. Sometimes I think, I don’t even like her so much. She was a little too much for everyone. Even for me. I never understood why. I just knew that she made people feel too important even if they didn’t deserve it. Even if they didn’t want to feel so important.

I keep picturing her smiling face. But now that I know, I can’t help but see a kind of sadness looming behind her smile. I keep imagining the battles that she was fighting to keep the smile plastered over her face, sometimes overdoing it with giggles. I’ve asked her from time to time why she laughs so much.

“I don’t know” She somehow managed to say in between her continuous giggles.

If you ask me, I don’t think I have ever met her. She was not this person that I am writing about. There was a lot inside her that I never got to see. I never cared to see. No one ever got to know her for real and I think the fact that nobody, absolutely nobody on this planet will ever get to know who she really was, will disturb me till death. Maybe someone does. I don’t know. Maybe you do.

On the day of her funeral, it was bright and sunny. Everything seemed disturbingly pretty. What depressed me was that her family wasn’t crying. None of them. Her mother, father and her little sister looked pale. Like they had all died with her. Like this was a funeral for all four of them. There was just the quite muffle of footsteps and the light breeze rustling the leaves. No whimpers or wails. Only the silent tears of her extended family. It was not like they liked her when she was still there with them. Maybe their tears were filled with delinquency. But it wasn’t like Ayna liked them anyway. She was never a family person. She felt her family was too happy all the time. She found it tedious to be cheerful like that. One night, after downing a bottle of cheap wine, she told me how nobody really liked talking about their struggles at home. Everyone was required to keep their troubles aside and put on a happy face at her home. It was an unspoken rule. I remember visiting her home. I loved her family. I loved her home. I felt she was being unfair complaining about her parents like that. So I just nodded.

Ayna had come home with my other friends when my mother passed away. The death was heart-breaking, but expected. We detected the unwelcomed guest growing inside her brain, a little too late. When Ayna heard that this happened, she didn’t console me. She was just there with everybody else. But she stayed for a week. We weren’t even that close then. But the whole time she was there, she never talked to me about anything. It was just silence. I remember crying a lot. But she dealt with it. Without saying a word. I think she knew that I didn’t need any consoling. My mother had passed away. It was the reality that I had to face. Alone. But, Ayna didn’t want me to do it alone. So she stayed.

I went to visit her grave yesterday. I had made a tiny bouquet of the white wild flowers near my home to place on her grave. She likes that sort of things. Liked. The white flowers were her favourite.

“It has a name. Spanish Needle. Call them by their name.” She used to tell me.

She came to class everyday with one of these tiny flowers tucked into her curls. Everyday.

“Why do you pluck them if you like them so much?” I asked once, only to annoy her.

She never wore them again. But she pressed the flower that she had on, that day and made a resin locket out of it. She wore the necklace every day since then. The girl was crazy. In a very nonchalant way.

Today morning, I received a postcard in my mail. The card looked exquisite. It had on it, a painting of a beautiful night sky with the stars of the constellation, Gemini, connected with a faint white line. I felt a lump in my throat.

Ayna and I had spotted the constellation, Gemini, on one of the nights we spent drinking on the terrace. There was very less light pollution where we lived. The night skies were worth losing some sleep for. I believed in astrology and zodiac signs. So spotting my birth sign felt special. Ayna found it funny that I thought it was a good idea to let the stars decide what I do with my life. But I liked to believe that everything wasn’t upto me to decide. Things felt lighter. Pain felt gentler.

I felt my knees go weak when I read her name written on the card, in her messy handwriting. It was sent on January 8, 2020. A day before she killed herself. I couldn’t bring myself to read what she had written. So I sat at my desk and stared at it for a good 5 minutes. I heard myself whimpering and struggling to breathe as I realised how much I needed this. An explanation. A closure of sorts.

“Dear T, I wish I had it in me to stay. I tried. I tried every day. This world is a little too much for me. I don’t know if writing to you like this is a good idea. But I needed you to know that if you ever find you blaming yourself for this, please don’t. This is how much time I had here. And this was enough.”

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On days like these.

On days like these, I feel like the protagonist in movies that revolve around an ordinary-looking main character with straight-cut shoulder-length hair, wearing a striped shirt, blue jeans, and white sneakers, doing very mundane things that aren’t really affecting anyone in any way and nothing makes sense. There is no fun. No gatherings. No plot. No reason. The character goes to churches when she doesn’t believe in God, visits graveyards of people she doesn’t know, shoplifts tiny beautiful things from carefully curated boutiques when she doesn’t even want to keep these things, cries out loud, cries without making a sound. What a boring movie it would be. My brother would absolutely detest it. My mother wouldn’t understand it, but she would still watch it. My father would just laugh in a loud and boisterous manner. The kind of laughter that makes you doubt every single thing you just thought, even in the depths of your subconscious mind.

But I would probably love it. I would take snippets from this movie and make posters of it to stick on my bedroom walls. I would probably write about it and keep thinking about it. A mumblecore movie that people around me would not like or understand.

I just spotted a baby in this church. I wish he would start crying now. It would sound so loud in this monumental space. Dark brown wood, white clean walls with plasters coming off here and there, gold stuccos, red carpets, sky blue paper flowers that the church kids made hanging on white dusty threads, black and gray tiles, cushion pads to keep your knees on, while praying.

Jesus took nails for you.

You can’t kneel for a while? Haha.

Stacks of bibles on a wooden shelf nailed to the wall, prayers in languages that I cannot understand.

Everybody is rising. I have to stand up. I don’t know why but they have started chanting something. Everyone here is murmuring things. I don’t know what they are saying so I continue writing, resting my notebook on the back support of the bench in front of me.

The baby looks almost as fascinated as I look right now, Distracted by the sounds and rituals that don’t make sense, he isn’t crying. I didn’t cry either.

I don’t understand how everyone else here thinks that this makes sense. How they find logic in this act of standing together, looking up to a photo of a man half-dead on a wooden cross. It is beyond me. I don’t think it’s crazy though. It’s not like anything makes sense anyway. But, how can you believe in something you have never seen?

Have you seen me? No.

Do you believe me? Yes.

The baby doesn’t look too fascinated anymore. He now looks dazed and is sleeping off on his grandmother’s shoulders. I saw his father look at his face for a brief moment. He then continued to pretend-focus on the chants. Chants I cannot understand. Chants that he is pretending to understand. “Stay with us” – Luke 24:29

But they urged him strongly, stay with us for it’s nearly evening; the day is almost over.” So he went in to stay with them” – Luke 24:29

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At home.

Amma says I never unpack.
That I lived vicariously through a suitcase wherever I went.
She asked me if she was wrong and I couldn’t disagree.
After all, my case was pretty weak.

5 years of college and I was still living off of a singular suitcase.
There was no trace of me anywhere I stayed.
Except a few books here and there,
there were no décor in my room or any art on my wall.
I flit from shelter to shelter like a ghost
Leaving it as empty and cold as it was before.

The first time I put up anything on the wall was at my home in Calicut.
It had three artworks that athulya made.
A white desk, an office chair and several postcards stuck on the wall.
But the clothes,
They were all in my suitcase, still.

After all that running around,
It was in this shoebox room of mine,
That I finally unpacked.
Clothes and all.
Bought a white cloth rack,
Several white cloth hangers.
I had a chest of drawers with containers labelled “medicines”, ” Hair ties”, “Rings” and so on.
There was art in every corner.
I made myself a little museum.
My guard was always down.
And everyone who visited me here,
saw Keyan unfiltered, whether they wanted to or not.

Now it’s time to leave my shoebox room in this yellow house.
A house with three broken people who fit so perfectly well together, god knows how.
And I found it to be a blessing,
To be able to live like three kids.
One obsessed with soft toys,
the other with lego blocks
And one busy making herself home.

I think the ambiguity of it all is getting to me now.
But I guess I saw this coming too.
Cause as I took out the artworks on my wall,
all the tack-its came off with no remains.
The cloth racks came off in just 10 minutes.
And my clothes and books all fit in my suitcase well.
My beer bottle decor all went into the garbage
And all the borrowed stuff went back to their homes.

Now It’s almost like I was never here.
No remains of keyan anywhere.

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Alone. With You.

I have a habit of latching myself to people. Not in a very obvious way. But mentally, I latch on to people.

When I was a kid, it used to be more than in my head.

I needed someone. It was not about romantic relationships at all. It was about having someone.

A friend.

A person.

As I grew up, the feeling of wanting a certain person with me, for me, stayed inside the walls in my head. I made myself appear to not care about who came and who left. But to be honest, I was pretty much the same. I just chose to never show it. I needed someone.

To talk. To be with.

But lately, I honestly just wanted to be by myself. It had been over an year. I didn’t want anyone.

Whoever came, I didn’t want them to stay for long. I needed them to leave so that i could go back to doing things alone. Both in my head and in real life. I needed it and I believed that I would always need this. It felt good. I felt at peace. I was getting to know myself like a person getting to know another person. And I liked me most of the times. I didn’t feel like I was a liability. The constant feeling that I am a “guest-who-stayed-too-long” wasn’t there at all.

But I met you.

And suddenly, I had this urge to be close to you. To get to know you inside out. Everything about you. There is a welsh word for it. Hiraeth. I felt inside me, a bond. A completely irrational connection. A longing which I myself couldn’t make sense of. I didn’t want you to be mine. It wasn’t about ownership. It was about knowing you. About understanding why you are the way you are. A feeling that kept tugging at me from my insides like a little girl pulling her mother’s shirt to get her an expensive toy.

But I know too well that in real life, it get’s too complicated.

Always. With anyone. Something always goes terribly wrong. So the mother never got the child, the toy because she knew better. And I let the feeling pass because I knew better.

But before that, I put on my earphones and played my favourite, Day 5: For Carol by Tom Misch, and imagined a whole life with you. We go out, we stay over, we cook together, read, kiss, cuddle, make love, look into each other’s eyes and smile, stay together in a cute place, hang out with other friends and so on and on. Visuals fleeting inside my head like movie scenes. Few minutes of concocted bliss. Ephemeral Pleasures.

I then imagined life happening. One of us leaving. Drifting apart. But in a nice way, you know. In a way that one won’t feel devastated. Just a handful of very special memories that will forever live inside my head. Like the end of a song. Calm and expected.

And then,

I imagined that I am that person right now. With all those memories in my head. That we lived through it all. At that moment, nothing felt so sad anymore. I felt like I experienced it all.

So it doesn’t matter anymore if we sleep together or kiss or never talk to each other. We lived through it all inside my head. In a very non-creepy way, I must add.

Now you might think that you are so unimportant. To get over a person like that in the duration of a song. Six Minutes Thirty Four Seconds. So brief.

But no. I can never listen to that song again. Because it all seems too real. Like I am living through it again. So I keep the song in the corner of one of my playlists never to be heard again because when I listen to it I feel like I am living through it againandagainandagain. It all seems too real. And disturbing.

So I leave it there and never think about it. The memories that I lived through. Alone. With you.

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Plymouth Fish

I once thought out loud to my friend. Just to see. Just to know if he would agree.

“Oh! Plymouth is a fish. I didn’t know there was a fish called Plymouth”

And he replied with no doubt or second thoughts,
“Of course, there is a fish called Plymouth. You didn’t know that?”

Plymouth wasn’t a fish. There is no fish called Plymouth. I never told him that.

Sigh.

Humans.

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All at once.

After twenty years of living influenced by the people around me, I did not really like what I had become.

I didn’t like that I know a bit of lot of things but that I know nothing enough to ace at it.

I didn’t like that I am not ugly, nor beautiful.

That I wasn’t stupid, yet not intelligent.

Not ignorant, but not too observant either.

It’s tiring to be okay at many things.  I study okay, I draw okay, I write okay, I run okay, I make friends okay. I talk okay. I sing okay? I am anxious, okay.

Stage one was blaming the genes. For a long time, I thought about why I didn’t inherit the good genes from my ancestors but managed to get mostly all the bad ones. I blamed my grandmother for the crooked thoughts and my tendency to lie, my mom for the submissive nature, and my dad for the unnecessary ego.

I wondered why I didn’t get my mom’s creativity or my grandad’s brains and heart.

Next was putting the blame on their ways of parenting. I blamed them for me being so anxious and for everything that I thought was wrong with me.

After that, came the self loathe. I wondered why I never dreamed big enough. Why I gave up too easily. Why I JUST DIDN’T try hard enough. Why was I so sensitive? Arrogant?

Practically, Useless.

And then came acceptance. I lost hope for a while. I believed that this was what I was, and there is no changing it. The normal-ish person that I am is what I am meant to be. No more, no less. I’d work just enough to pass. Just enough defence to not pass out. Just enough of everything to get by. No sweat.

I also happened to meet just enough people to realise that everyone … and when I say everyone, I mean everyone is a big ball of their own little insecurities and troubles. Everyone is slightly depressed or anxious or both. Everyone I craved acceptance from, the ones I looked up to, the ones I wanted to be. They all had their own insecurities which was in one way or the other evident in their actions but mostly good enough at hiding it all. If you don’t look close enough, you would never know.

And then I stopped wondering.

No. Not all at once.

Let’s say I am trying to stop wondering.

And I thought, maybe, just maybe, if I stop blaming things on everything and everyone around, I just might just find peace.

So I started figuring myself out. At least I tried.

And I realised that I liked both Logic and Hozier. and pop and indie. Quite and loud. Alone and not. I like everything. All the same. I want everything. All at once.

Is that even possible? Seems like I’ll have to figure it out in time.

I am confused. And clueless. Like anyone around me.

So for now, let me just make the Spotify algorithm go crazy, eat cheesecake on the way to the gym, read Murakami and Harari, make friends with the hustlers and the hippies and pretend like I’ll have it all.

Let me cry about the good memories and laugh at the bad ones while weeping the bad nights away before smiling the brightest the next morning.

Let me be on the way to knowing enough to be good at something, to having my own voice.

I’ll figure things out on my way there.

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