I · LIFE · Story

Peace

Carrying Peace was like having a fire in my uterus. He is the first person that let me know how I truly was. If I was happy, I was and if I was sad, I was. I got sick if my thoughts were sad. I loved him whom I love with no fear or remorse. Yet, also, he pointed me to the injustices all round me. His brother’s birth had made me a warrior, his sister’s gave me courage, but he showed me what real love was, and what it wasn’t.

Peace, when I carried you, I told your father that it was like carrying a war in my stomach. You would not let things go. You would not allow me a hood over my head. Before you, everything lay open. I could feel how hot, how unrelenting you fought, so he said he would call you Zen.

Like me, you are sandwiched between, but yours is the only time I planned for. I waited for six months before you came. Eight months before, someone else had come, six weeks, and then left.

I have never felt as beautiful as I did when I carried you. I had no qualms, nothing I would add or reduce. A body shape protruding in a most elegant nature, with edges molded to my own, a light in my eyes, light and easy to carry.

When it was time to give birth, I thought April was such an uncommon month for a baby to be born. Months before, an angel had walked up to me in a hospital lobby and said that I shouldn’t be afraid and that If God took care of the animals that gave birth in the wilderness, He would take care of me too. So, when they scheduled the surgery, I did not appear. Something in me would not let me. I had heard your father speak to my own about the dates for the caesarian and for the second time in my life, I did not need approval.

Your birth started like a thunderstorm in the night. Throughout the day there had been signs. I had seen the little hand-sized cloud after weeks of desert sky. I knew it would rain. Minutes before you pushed down, the rain fell as I walked to the labour room in that open-back hospital gown.

I was squatting in the bathtub asking for hot water, telling the nurse the contents of my heart. There had been a change in shift and the second nurse’s aura had been dismissive. I looked up at her from my contractions and told her that she had abandoned me. I don’t know what she saw in my eyes but her face went pale and as she began to walk away, she said, “Tell me when you feel like you need to go.” I said to her, “I have been feeling like that for a while now.” She started to run and call for back up. I didn’t push. You came out, tilted your head towards me and you smiled. This is how you wanted to come.

The Christmas before, I had lain in bed at home with you at five months after being in hospital all morning. I had picked up COVID. Since I was carrying, all they could give me was ibuprofen. So I took ibuprofen and I hoped that the temperature would drop but it went higher and higher and my chest heaved and it was just me and you. I cried. You still would not let me hide.

You exposed my hurt. You exposed my love. You pick up on sensitivities so delicate. You are like a fire. You are both delicate and strong. You jump on the bed with blackened feet and then, you offer me a crack of a crisp. You pick up music like a maestro, praying and singing like you understand what it’s all about and then you paint the walls with markers. You come to me and you whisper, It’s okayyy, mummy. You beat your brother, who is three times bigger, with blows in his back and then at night when he is not ready to go up alone to his bed, you tell him, “Let’s go, I’ll take care of you.” No!” indignant, he responds, “I’ll take care of you, I’m the one to take care of you.”

Happy Third Birthday Zen.

*what a joy to have you all in my life*

Story · Uncategorized

The year

It’s quiet in here. Everyone’s asleep. It happens so rarely that sometimes I stay awake, against better judgement just to catch the waves of my own mind. It is in this quiet that I realise that it’s not just the house, my only social medium has been blank for more than two days. I guess when the [both real and phantom] battles cease, I have nothing left to occupy me. Maybe, I should resign from saving everyone else.

I wonder if sometimes, the noise outside, muffles the deep fears and insecurities we hold in the dim un-swept tunnels of our hearts creating such a cacophony of life; rivalries, intrigue, ruminating among the rumuor-mongers, crowning antagonists, felling the weak and watching silently as it all falls apart, our way of trying to rein it all in; and maybe, the consistency of love and domesticity so terrifying that, if everything is okay, then something must be wrong.

It is almost exactly a year ago that I was certain that I was at my most tired and most sleepless, taking care of two children without the mellowing presence of a fellow adult, especially the fellow adult with whom we shared the efforts of their creation. Then we had met again and I always say to him when asked why I can’t sleep, You can’t expect a car moving at 180 kilometres an hour to just stop. For that reason, I acquired his left-over melatonin tablets and bought a sleep inducing pillow spray in preparation for the year ahead. Then at the stroke of the New Year came, she came. Though I was convinced that it could not be, I knew when she did, landing on my uterus with a cramping thud. The first test had said most probably not, the tracking application had said nearly impossible and God must have known I was tired, but on the way back home, thousands off feet above the ground, somewhere in a desert sky, it was clear as day. I turned and saw that the youngest child had finally fallen deeply asleep and the eldest, still awake. “You’re having a baby sister.” His eyes beaming, excited. He immediately gave her a name. There had been so many signs. I was unusually hungry. I was starting to getting lost. I wanted to see the sea again, and I had been a well of tears at the airport when I said bye.

©amk

So we went back home, the four of us. I walked out of a place that I had been a part of for eight years and I left with my heart in my hands. The first morning after driving the children to school and having nowhere else to be but home, I walked in to the house to find a small damaged phone blasting the music of the day, as aggressively amorous as it came. The house was mopped. A few dishes were still in the sink. I was an intruder in my home and unknown to the new maid, I was here to stay.

She was hardworking. No cloth in the house was left un-ironed. But, the volume was turned down and I preferred that she iron the clothes inside out and also, after observation, of a game about splashing water on the young one’s nose so he playfully could decide whether to laugh or breathe, that I be the one to bathe the boys from now on. Then one day I confronted her about lying. If she could not be honest about the small things, how could I trust her with the children? I asked. Her eyes dark and burning, she began to shout. She asked me what she had lied about. I told her. She clucked her tongue at what I had said and aggressively turned back to washing the dishes. The clucking, how to describe a sound that has no vowels; a loud knock of a knuckle against a wooden door; a well known gesture of disrespect. She and I coming from amongst closely connected community, the interpretation was shared. I retreated to my room. I decided to only speak when I had to and whenever I annoyed her with an inquisition into one or other thing, she knocked things around loudly, and if in that moment, she happened to have a knife in her hand, she wielded it so expertly, swinging it and landing it with more force than the pumpkin or sugarcane needed.

On that first day when I had come back unexpectedly, between the songs on the phone-radio, there had been a commentary on the local news about a young woman, from a fairly distant trading centre, her first name rhyming with the woman in my house, her second name, of the same background. The woman in the story, a ‘woman of the night’ had killed a man in a fit of rage and run away. It crossed my mind that it was not impossible to harbor a fugitive, after all, most of the strangers I had received, were casually and contentedly lacking any form of identification papers.

My sleeping had got worse. The melatonin had gone to waste and the sleeping spray, untouched for months before I sprayed it and could not bear to breathe it in. At night, I looked forward to daybreak, the sound of neighbours hooting and policemen blowing whistles at the junction; and now that the burning January month (s) had ended, it became easier to sleep once the sun was out. One hot afternoon I woke up and the house was quiet which was unusual for a house with children. Through the glass doors I saw the littlest one busy on the smart phone I had requested be kept away from them. The older one snuggled a little too comfortably on her lap. The instant she saw me, she seamlessly grabbed the phone and kept it, startling the toddler, who began to cry but quickly stopped on account of some signal I could not decipher and the five year old tried to cover it up with laughing. She had taught them so well, undoing the years of training honesty in only a matter of weeks. In the wee hours of a morning days before, in drifts of sleep, I had heard her damningly loud ring tone somewhere close, where it should not have been. Things were starting to lean into the whimsical.

She cooked the only food I liked- katogo. It was the only meal I could eat twice consecutively. She had observed that; and the children had learned the word because of her. It was a Sunday and this time I had gone without her. I barely heard the sermon but it was clear to me when I left the gathering. She welcomed the children with enthusiasm, talked to them as she did everyday and said nothing to me as I stood there watching them. I walked away, counted the money I had. It had been two weeks after the month began. “You’re going home.”

“Of course”, she replied smugly. “I was already on my way out.”

*

The children have seen me dance before and perhaps, it had been something I did frequently, with much vigor and determined abandonment. In that moment, they can’t find ‘mummy’ so they get tired quickly, sleepy, the music too loud, someone needing to be held. I had attempted to dance that year but it was the way the children looked at me, standing quietly on the side that it appeared to me that I was not dancing, I was breaking. It was two months later, in the seventh month of that year after I knew that everything would change that I found myself, with child, taking a chance on the bygone fashion of a previously popular song to the astonishment of the people around me, the confusion on their faces clearly telling, that it had been a very long time since I had truly danced.

©amk

They say that sometimes things fall apart so that better things can come together

Remembering the pregnancy tests in O’level- always an ambush from the school nurses. All gates were locked, everyone rounded up, dormitory by dormitory. The pressure with which the nurse fell onto your stomach may have been more of a strategy than a test

*There is something about The Hallelujah Challenge that I haven’t yet figured out. I can hide on any other day but on the day after the dancing, minutes after the dancing, my heart and its contents are left open like an unguarded gate. It’s on again.