Showing posts with label Corona Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corona Times. Show all posts

Monday, 1 March 2021

Adventures in f-1 2 3 4 5

I had to do a few things in F-10 Markaz : banking, getting some groceries. I secretly photographed a fellow sitting at the Bank with the typical nose over the mask style. There aren't that many people who wear a mask but of those who do, many don't wear the mask correctly. This chap is a case in point. 

I visited 2 banks. The second one is located literally next to a kasai. We saw some ducks swimming in a big metal tub. One was waddling about and, I found it very strange to see ducks at a kasai's. I've never seen it before. The kasai kept catching it and dunking it in the tub and the duck kept asking. During this commotion, I asked the kasai whether people ate duck now. He said yes and people also buy ducks as pets. "How much"? 1200. I remembered our ducks at our house in Athens which were eaten by the neighbourhood cat. Kavita and I looked at the chickens and roosters in cages and felt sorry but also have to remind ourselves that this is where the tasty food we crave comes from. 

Kavita and I had a leisurely early dinner at Janan Restaurant, that serves Turkmen cuisine. 

I think I'm in love with the Turkmen Pilao. It is even more dizzyingly delicious. If there is a dish which I always crave when I'm away from Islamabad is the Kabuli Pilao from Kabul Restaurant. But now, the Turkmen Pilao has equally caught my fanciful taste buds. 

The weather of course is very sunny and warm. These moments of spring are to be relished. 

The peeli taxis looked even more peeli in the late afternoon light. 

There was a beautiful glow and light everywhere. The evening started getting cooler and we decided to walk home with a stop at the wooden park on the way. Kavita is obsessed with showing off in the playground now, climbing, swinging, sliding. 











My kingdom for pilao 



Peeli peeli taxi 


Sham ki dhoop , peeli peeli taxi


So, Kavita insisted on getting a new pencil box even though there's perfectly good
pencil boxes at the house, some from my own school days and many new ones. So, I 
gave in and let Kavita get a new pencil box. I have a weakness for stationery so I 
had to give in. Her kids will have a treasure of pencil boxes one day. 


Walking back home









We stopped for a bit at "The Wooden Park"









Our cozy bench 




People getting on transport vans

Thursday, 31 December 2020

2020

Reflecting on the past year and, proposing personal resolutions and, nurturing hopes for the new year can be a mental exercise. It is an attempt to make sense of , to interpret a certain time period. 

Time. 

2020 became 'frozen time' for so many, locked in homes and countries. Daily drudgery, hobbies, socialising and, plans came to a halt as the Corona Virus Pandemic came to affect everyone. It was, among other things, a year of immersing in time - traveling Netflix series like Dark and Umbrella Academy and, diving into nerdy science content like Star Talk with Neil deGrasse Tyson. 

Timespace. I felt we had entered an altogether unique timespace in 2020. If time is inherently linked to space and, speed, then, 2020 was : a spaceship hurtling even faster into a blackhole (disaster) , moving at the speed of light, but for the aloof and ignorant and privileged lot, it was as if time stood still, and everyone was stuck, bored at home. 

Militarised lockdowns sent millions of migrant workers from urban centres to rural areas and smaller towns in India. The haunting images of this violence , of this discarding of millions of lives, like ants, not only evoked the Partition but also rage at inept right wing states. The chaos of 2020 evoked rage at states and leaders for how little they seemed to be prepared for a Pandemic. The ensuing social crises emanating from lockdowns , from not only poorly managed lockdowns but also the apparent lack of scientific and social preparation , showed us a clearer glimpse of what the future looks like. 

In fact, the future had arrived. If this sense of doom, this sense of horror at the social crises, felt like this, imagine what life would be like if the planet did indeed become 2 degrees warmer. (Hint: if don't do anything about climate change) 

So, I've been thinking a lot about time and how we perceive it. Individually, it seemed as if timespace came to a standstill, nothing much happening to me, fixed constantly in one point, in the house. 

I noticed the absurdity of saying "I can't believe how times flies" or " I can't believe the year is over." Either this is small talk or, literally means, we haven't had the time to think about passing of time.  Or, accepted that things have turned out the way they have. 

If you want to read a great piece about time and 2020 , read Time in the time of coronavirus: Where did 2020 go? It's more specifically about how majority of the world in a near constant state of anxiety and uncertainty and, for us privileged folks, the little time we spent in self isolation was a tiny peek - a very privileged peek - into a nightmarish reality: 
Ringel observes that, for many, the sensation of “stuckness” is nothing new thanks to the “acceleration of time” produced by neoliberal capitalism, which has “put humanity into crisis mode for several decades already” by disappearing welfare states and job security and generally relegating the masses to infinite precariousness.
And, metaphors related to time machines, time and the universe, I assume you have read The Pandemic is a portal

Purpose, Worth, Entitlement, Place and Value

I have been in Pakistan now for almost 2 years, wholly unplanned and unimagined. So, this time for me, is even more unexplained and inspires the "I can't believe I've been here for 2 years." 

I couldn't even write a decent reflection for 2019. See this half baked from last year "An unwanted year." I couldn't clearly come to terms with it , so much so I named it an unwanted year. 

I have been seeing this time period as a limbo, an unexpected medical crisis and, the uncertainty that came with it. I have been 'stuck' here in Pakistan, away from my Monrovia apartment, away from my partner Haresh, and, having to pass time here. 

I did not have an official job either with Zoom meeting calls during this Pandemic either. That I did not have this kept popping up in my mind but I did have a whole lot of online school classes to help Kavita with. 

I have been applying for jobs for a while now, without much success. I applied for development sector jobs in Monrovia and Islamabad, hoping to line something up. I reached final interview stage many, many times. I have answered questions like " How do you prepare for a meeting?" , "How do you support struggling staff?" and, "Describe a team building exercise." How does a 41 year old answer "How do you prepare for a meeting"? All these questions seemed so elementary, so idiotic and, barely covering any serious skill or experience. I interviewed for a senior position for a women's empowerment NGO and not asked a single question about feminism or women's issue in said country. 

I have interviewed and recruited dozens and dozens of people for my little IT company with more in-depth and, honest interviews. But the interview processes I have been through have been so impersonal, vague and confusing. And, none of them have been especially very technical, making you wonder, what kind of people work in this sector? 

I reached final interviews with the UN and, wouldn't hear back for 6 months. The setback I felt in not bagging any gig in Monrovia has been a constant sore because I've given, very intentionally and passionately, at least 15 years of my adult life to Monrovia. Notwithstanding the problems with international aid in Liberia (its neocolonial nature, a whole international roving crowd of technocrats/civil servants who have no link, commitment or understanding of the said country they would serve in), I felt I have the professional experience and qualifications to get a job in Monrovia.  I felt a sense of entitlement. 

And, then I wondered my CV attractive enough? Did I need to exaggerate? Bluff? Be more specific about  my achievements? 

In the end, I realised I am not merely a job , my connection or worth isn't conditional, and jobs are what they are, contracts and, cogs in the wheel. These jobs do not define us. Competition doesn't define us. And, a job cannot connect us to a place, a land. A job cannot give us worth. 

For this, Fuck the Bread. The Bread Is Over. really spoke to me in this regard! Read it! 

Did I learn anything? What did I think about? Do I think more clearly? 

I became fascinated with time traveling series such as Dark, Umbrella Academy, and, OA. I watched some amazing horror series , too, like Haunting of Hill House , Castle Rock and Haunting of Bly Manor. Extremely beautiful and deeply moving stories were told via time travel and horror. 

The series they make today are so incredibly well produced that one really does delve into, disappear into these stories. One feels one has immersed oneself into another universe, another reality. They can be as satisfying as reading a novel. 

I often write a lot but this past year has been a dry spell. Words and the ability to process, interpret and, write about what's going on have been short. I often think more clearly when I write and, perhaps this explains the fog in my head. 

Nevertheless, I did doodle a lot and, have been trying to express myself through doodles. Kavita and I also made a lot of YouTube videos. 

I yearn for creativity and, being able to create something. 

Besides yearning for creativity, I created a WhatsApp group with some friends from all over to have some insightful conversations. Discussions about our political reality made me appreciate the strides I have made intellectually recently. It made me think about how most of us are not making the necessary links to understand problems structurally and historically.  

We may be all feminists but still struggle to link imperialism , capitalism to patriarchy. We may be feminists but don't have a sense of history. Even of our lands and peoples. We may be feminists but aren't radical enough. 

The Left organises Study Circles and, I have benefitted from the sheer learning in these spaces. Intellectual strengthening , political understanding and lucidity are crucial for all of us, especially those who want to support movements and peoples' struggles. 

Not taking a political approach to our reality is not a luxury anymore, whether you are young or old. And, the Pandemic has, if anything, made this very clear. 

One of the poignant moments for me was  - during the circus that is the American elections - realising how far one has come along since the election of Obama. How we all swooned over him, how we all swelled with happiness at the idea of a black man finally assuming the office, and, all that. This year, in all these fervent discussions about the imperialist nature of American Presidents, regardless of which Party they hail from, I realised how small Obama has become in our minds. 

I am so over personalities. 

Kavita is my companion 

You will notice in most of my evening walk posts that I'm always saying "we." This year , especially, Kavita has become my companion. She and I do everything together, especially when it comes to walking adventures, discovering new eateries, shopping for stationery together, reviewing burgers and, watching movies. 

I really enjoyed watching Stranger Things, Locke and Key and Umbrella Academy with her, I can tell you that. Many of my adult friends and partner Haresh don't even understand time travel or fantasy. 

Kavita's 7th year has been a great one to be her companion. Being 7 is truly a magical time. 

Monday, 21 September 2020

Emerging from the time space of COVID19

Things have returned to normal and, we are out and about, attending Study Circles, going to meet cousins in their homes, having friends drop in and, even sitting at restaurants. Sometimes I can’t believe that half the year ticked by already , mostly spent in an anxious, disconcerting, and quiet bubble at home. 

These past six months have been extremely surreal. So many of us, those who could, retreated into our homes, rarely venturing out , except for essential errands, going to the front gate to pick up a delivery , going deeper and deeper into oneself and the few that one was locked at home with. 

 

Now that I am re-emerging from a lock down that I personally observed much longer than Pakistani society,  I am reconnecting or re-plugging myself into a ‘normal’ life and rhythm. It is astonishing that this moment has finally arrived , after so long, and, one can truly relish and appreciate small pleasures, nay, the real pleasures of life, being with friends, attending activities which mean the world to us, and, enjoying a cup of tea with friends in the bazaar

 

Going into the lock down felt like disappearing into an unknown time space, disconnecting from one’s ‘normal’ life, the life one took for granted, I suppose. Weeks went by like this:  waking up to only to spend rest of the day on the sofa, glued to Netflix. I felt like I had miles and miles of days, endless nights, kilograms of time that I could enjoy, blamelessly devour films and series, guiltlessly oversleep and overeat. There was no inclination to do anything, to move, to make the most of this extra time space. 


Without even realising it, my heart was sad. Some kind of melancholy would settle in and, one had to move to another corner of the house for change. 

 

Thankfully, having a child as bright and delightful as Kavita, forced me to stay loyal to some type of a routine because otherwise, for sure, I would have descended into even more of a slobbering mess. Her online schooling kept me quite busy and enraged in the beginning, each mountain load of homework would send me off on an existential and social rant. The absurdity of an unimaginative work-load heavy online schooling system launched an armada of resentful ships in my mind. 

 

Weeks would go by without leaving the house for anything except for an evening walk. I did not need to go to the bazaar because everything could be delivered at home: groceries, medicines, restaurant deliveries. Even a fruit and veg truck started making regular rounds in our neighbourhood and one could go and pick one’s choice of fresh produce. This immense privilege also prompted a lot of guilt and social angst. In the first few weeks of the lock down, the posh F-11/4 neighbourhood and beyond seemed to be full of poor folks on the road, going from house to house asking for charity. 

Being at home for so long , feeling stuck, reminded me of summer holidays when my siblings and I would be bored , forced to come up with projects for fun, compelled to watch the same movies and cartoons over again, and fight and play with each other. We would explore parts of the house. 

 

Being confined to one’s home in this Pandemic forced me, as an adult, to do a lot of clean up, go through boxes of stuff , childhood toys and things, and school books, reading books, even my stationery, stationery which I still buy and never use, just to keep, which Kavita eagerly started to use. I made Kavita a makeshift tent out of sticks. My father taught Kavita Scrabble, Monopoly and chess during this time. Thankfully, Kavita has found a playing companion in her grandfather and, the two love to water the plants , drink tea, play games, and now she even cuts his hair and nails. 

 

One is so used to moving around that being at home for weeks and weeks makes one feel as if one has stopped moving. The Theory of Relativity says that time and space are relative to each other. Time moves differently depending on how fast you are moving. 

 

But during the most lethargic, lazy and depressing days, which would appear cyclically of course, it felt like I couldn’t make sense of time or space and, the larger reality that enveloped the whole world. All headlines were about were the Pandemic. All we thought about, watched, and discussed was the Pandemic and, the social and systematic rot it had exposed. There were a few moments when it felt like the world was crashing which of course, excited even a more terrible outcry from me, aimed at the online school system which did not prepare even one Pandemic related lesson for children, cheerfully plodding along, dumping maths and dull English classes, in total oblivion to a global reality. 

 

Being stuck at home for weeks and months kind of felt like a complete standstill, both in terms of time and space. Weeks and months were being sucked into this Pandemic. Without doing anything, meeting people, and being part of a normal life, I felt completely stagnant, locked in the house. Without moving much, without doing much, I felt like nothing was happening. To me.   Of course, time was still moving, even with a stagnant me on the couch, engrossed in time travel series like Dark , was consuming days and days of time, guiltlessly. But I was not moving or doing anything, stuck at home. This couldn’t be life, could it? 

 

Things got so homey and lazy and depressing that I had to start wearing ‘outside’ clothes just to  lift my spirits. 

 

The seriousness of this time really entered in me during the first half of the self isolation. As I consumed news, analysis and social commentary on bumbling and selfish states, more concerned with economies than people, as it became apparent that most of the Pakistani people weren’t too fond of wearing masks and social distancing, I became quite serious. I say this, now, with an amused smile. I became so serious about it all, about how irresponsible our own state was by lifting the lock down too soon, seeing people without masks during my evening walks, loudly bitching about it, and, internalising so much anxiety and concern. I rejected and mentally banned Eid, the idea that people were celebrating it loudly with as much fanfare as usual. I resented all the normal families who were gorging on Eid feasts while I was banning it in my mind. We should all stay at home, be miserable, sacrifice festivities until the Pandemic was completely gone, I so declared. I was so self righteous. 


I ordered Haresh to not attend an Eid party in Monrovia. He initially agreed but then of course he went. He himself was carefully isolating himself at home in our apartment. He once again tried to make his 6-pack abs and posted about a week’s worth of daily push ups on Facebook before giving up again. He tired his best to distance socially but now and then he met friends.

 

But how long can one stay serious and braced all the time for disaster? I started to feel less indignant and serious in June and July. There was a birthday party. A friend popped in to say hello. Meeting up in the Park with friends. I started yielding to socialising, gingerly, by calculating risks and yields.   

 

Of course, things were still so uncertain and still are. My travel plans back to Liberia were on indefinite hold. I haven’t been able to plan anything beyond a month at a time, hoping that eventually things will return to normal , to relative safety and, I can start going back to Liberia to be together with Haresh. 

Now, we are in 4th week of September and, things definitely feel more normal. I feel like I have emerged from this difficult time and, can sense that perhaps things will finally start looking more positive. There is a sense of relief , ease and less anxiety about Corona , the possibility of getting it, social crisis and suffering, at least in Pakistan. Somehow, it seems Pakistan has escaped a nightmare scenario with high death tolls as it was being predicted in March and April. The world is still in its grip and, idea of international traveling is tinged a little with a sense of risk. Nevertheless,  both regions of the world, South Asia and West Africa,  I associate myself with, have emerged safely. 

 

It feels like one has re-emerged into a normal life again, but in bits and pieces. Almost like going through a portal, a machine of sorts. Going in to the lock down, like with so many other billions on this planet, willingly and unwillingly, especially those who are on the fringes of our civilised societies and systems, was in bits and pieces. Mentally and rationally we entered our homes for the forseeable future, settled into these spaces and stopped going out. Then, emotionally, we accepted the long lock down, the uncertainty of it, the long long night of a melancholy fever, restless and quiet and angry. Now, in bits and pieces, I feel like I have emerged from this space, this lock down, which I seriously and self righteously stayed in, long after Pakistani society had flung aside masks and caution. I started becoming much less indignant and anxious. 

 

Now I am left with this nagging question. What were these lock downs about? What did they mean globally and what did it mean for Pakistan? What mattered most to the world? People or economies? Should poor countries have attempted lock downs ?  Can you really shut down a country which has so many poor people, servants or helpers as the privilege lot wants to call them now? Can you lock down a country where cities have slums ? Can you shut down a country where the rich order food , tech toys and gifts on their phones to be delivered by people who can’t lock down? Who really took this Pandemic seriously in Pakistan? Does anyone care about it anymore? 

 

These markers are not really very clear and, life has returned to normal in The Land of the Pure. Wear a mask, don’t wear a mask. Be socially responsible, or don’t. Continue to exercise caution. Or, who cares?  Even if so many did not die, but who died? Will we ever know or care? So many other crises befell Pakistan since then, especially the floods, most likely related to climate change and environmental degradation, and took more lives. But who cares? If we are not prepared for annual flooding, how could we ever be ready for a global Pandemic? Did we ever have enough ventilators and hospitals and doctors, whether or not you lock down a country of hundreds of millions? 

 

There so many crises, emergencies, and systemic inequalities at any given time in Pakistan but we remain oblivious to them, especially if they only affect the poorer classes or parts of the country. There are always vulnerable people, exposed to the elements, crises, poverty, inflation, and so on which we The Privileged are immune to. 

 

As I grapple with big ideas, analyse and process this year, and my own vulnerabilities and descent into a stagnant time space, I am grateful to have emerged back into a normal life with my friends and family. I am relishing these normal moments of visiting and meeting friends, sitting in a coffee shop and, and enjoying life. 


Friday, 3 July 2020

An infuriating sense of being part of a strange circus

I haven’t left the house since 3 June. I went out that day to get my mobile phone (the portal I depend now on getting car rides, food and groceries delivered to my door step and, speaking to far away ones) and some other essential errands. That day, Kavita accompanied me because I normally make her stay at home with her iPad while I make a run to the outside world.
We spent the afternoon in F-10 and F-6. I hadn’t been to F-6 in more than 2 months. 

I was lucky enough to be rewarded with an especially jovial and pleasant Careem Captain who was too happy to take me on this trip and let me take my time with my errands instead of having to book multiple rides. While discussing the COVID19 crisis in Pakistan , I complained that how could one expect Pakistanis to wear masks when they so clearly love breaking the law. The Captain immediately adjusted his mask and, we kept on with out lively discussion. This Captain also turned out to be a construction boss. He said he was ‘thakedar’ and, had construction projects going on in several sites. He pointed out a nearly completed building in F-6.

A few weeks before that I met a Careem Captain , a very nice amiable young chap, who said his father was a big business owner and he himself had a meat business, supplying steaks to restaurants. He had also worked as a waiter in Red Chilli, a restaurant in F-10. I asked him how much do these staff make? He said they can make good money as much as 40-50,000 /month. Typically restaurants offer accommodation and, food to their staff plus the salaries. However, the group housing isn’t always very good. He said he didn’t want to rely on his father and, wanted to open his own restaurant in Bahria Town, where customers could enjoy a nice atmosphere and food like burgers and sandwiches and steaks and coffee. “Do you like drinking coffee?” I asked him. He said yes and, many young people like drinking it. 

While I got my phone fixed I roamed around F-6 Market with Kavita. I had promised Kavita some new stationery so we spent quite a good time in a stationery shop. I bought a ton of stuff from my favourite United Bakery but bemoaned what a waste of space the bakery is. They have a huge shop space could be upgraded with a modern renovation and, also have a small corner for customers who would like to enjoy a coffee and sandwich in the bakery. About half the people in F-6 Markaz were wearing and half weren’t. Bigger and established places like United Bakery had their staff wearing masks but smaller places like Balochistan Dry Fruits didn’t. In fact, I asked for a receipt the guy got so pissed off at me, he first said they didn’t have a receipt book and then shoved it in my face and said I should write the receipt myself as he had other customers to serve. There was a queue of them behind me and, none of them tried to support me. They all looked embarrassed. 

What was I doing in Balochistan Dry Fruits anyway? Kavita loves nimco (she has total opposite taste, I have a crazy sweet tooth and she loves olives, spicy crisps , nimco and spicy rice) and I thought I should get some ‘organic’ honey and some wholesome nuts. 

After that I picked up the repaired phone from Tariq who has a small workshop next to Balochistan Dry Fruits and Miniso one of these Chinese shops which have cropped all over the country. Tariq is my brother’s namesake who was here in November for a short visit. We both had come to the same shop to repair the same lousy phone and Techie Tariq had given brother Tariq a special oil for his hair. In fact, a respected friend of Tariq’s had specially come over with this hair oil and some intricate instructions. He kept stressing how kindness is important and we need to be more considerate of each other. 

I am struggling to find an accurate word or phrase to describe the sense of quiet sadness that one feels while out and about. Unlike a couple of months ago, during a very short lockdown,  only grocery shops, sabzi/fruit wallah’s, bakeries and banks were open. Now, everyone is open for business. It was quite a sense of shock to visit the Markaz and see all shop fronts boarded up and , views of deserted the Markaz were shocking. One couldn’t believe that life can actually come to a standstill. 

However this time, I still had a strange sense of sadness ,  a sense of nostalgia for when one would go out to get groceries without the Pandemic, a time when one could just stop and sit at a coffee shop, a time when  one would make carefree plans to meet with friends at a restaurant to hang out. Now, there is a a slight sense of panic, an infuriating sense of being part of a strange circus where the state, the main authority which collects taxes and makes the rules and punishes those who offend it, has absolved itself of all responsibility for a Pandemic. 

Those of us who are following basic tenets to control the Pandemic, during our logical duty, we are odds with the State (and not just here in Pakistan but in many many other countries, far more advanced and wealthy than us). It feels like one is at odds with everyone , ordinary members of public who are not wearing a mask or not observing social distancing. Whether out and about in the public space or , isolating at home, one feels one is at odds with everyone, with the state of affairs, incredulous at a deepening crisis, that is getting worse day by day. 

Could there be a moment when we too would become enemies of the State? 

The sense of unease I felt in one of my favourite parts of Islamabad, F-6, was a nagging one, a stinging one, a sense that we are in a mess, in an illusion of safety. The F-6 Markaz is a wonderful part of Islamabad, it’s a very relaxed and peaceful Markaz with a lot of trees and quaint nooks. It’s never been hectic like Jinnah Super Market. It retains that sense of Islamabad with all the shops, bookshops, carpet and shawl shops, and the wonderful United Bakery. It was nice to be there but that nagging feel that all is not OK and, without a sense of end. It’s like being trapped in a very nice polite nightmare, a nightmare which thankfully has not affected me, but is creating a social crisis for so many people in this country. 

My best friend who lives in Pindi feels a sense of panic whenever she makes grocery runs because the Pindi people pile on each other and don’t give each other any space. It’s also a way more densely populated city. Here in civilised and polite Islamabad, at least the posh areas, the Markaz is not crowded and one can avoid people’s proximity. 

So, since that trip to the Markaz at the beginning of June, I’ve not left the house. That’s a month of being at home and only going out the door for a nice walk around the neighbourhood. 

Kavita’s online classes started on 1 June after a month and a half of a break and this time around, I’ve made more of an effort to attend the early morning live sessions. It added a little bit more structure to the day and, left me a little exhausted in the afternoons. The summer has sincerely set in this month. Somehow, we were graced with a very comparatively mild May, which is normally the start of the scorching summer, but the sluggishness induced by the hot days and nights has truly set in. And, that they cancelled the lockdown , there’s been a sense of outrage and shock, and combined with the summer heat, my days and nights have slipped into a strangeness. 

I don’t know where the days go, I have now spent consecutive days on the sofa (which seems to be sinking to equally low depths), binge watching Netflix series. Normally, cleaning and tidying is something I have to do, even unwillingly, because I feel otherwise, that I’m going to sink into depression. But these few weeks, I have left dishes in the sink for a couple of days , ordered food without cooking for weeks, and just sat on the sofa, without any desire to move.