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Wednesday 30 November 2011

Grains of sand

Think of yourself on a beach...


Take your time. Imagine yourself sitting on the warm crunchy sand, a light breeze gently whistling into your ear.

Close your eyes if you need to.

Smell the salt, feel the sun’s rays lighting up your eyelids as they stay closed.

Feel your body free.

On that beach, dig your hands into the soft white sand and extract a handful. Watch as it gently flows through your fingers back to its source. Slowly let go of all of the sand in your hand.

Now open your hand and look at it. I am certain you will find that one grain, one small grain, didn’t make it down with the exodus. Possibly, it is trapped between the gentle ridges that run across your palm. Or beneath a nail. Find it. Concentrate on it.

How many grains of sand do you think you picked up when you dug your hands into the ground? Can you think of a number? How many grains of sand exist on the very beach you are now enjoying? How many grains of sand exist on all the beaches of this planet?

Like that lone rider you discovered on the palm of your hand, a human life is miniscule and irrelevant in a vast incomprehensible ocean of matter and existence. We exist in a body of around 2 meters for what, 80 or 90 rotations of the Earth around the sun? How many rotations do you think the Earth has gone through or will go through? How many rotations has the Sun done its star cluster? The star cluster in the galaxy? The galaxy amongst the estimated 500 billion galaxies?

Yet like that lone rider we are trapped in the lines of an invisible hand. We believe we and our problems are special, different, unique. Our perspective is so limited, we aspire to leave a legacy on this Earth and a mark on those around us. To be remembered.

It is insanely ironic.

Yet on the other hand, perhaps the perceived infiniteness of the universe around us is meant to discourage us from concentrating on it and to see it as the microcosm instead. If the world, as you perceive it, is merely just perception interpreted by your own senses, then perhaps it should not be the focal point of your life, of truth or of gain.

In more direct terms, life is too short and insignificant to be wasted on negativity, worry and ugliness. Place your problems in the perspective of the universe and you will have none. See your life as temporary and fragile and you will truly live it. You will never take yourself seriously again.

Friday 25 November 2011

It just so happened

It just so happened that, four weeks ago to the day at 7.00pm, I realised I had misread the invitation to the Ivy Club and, even though the party was bound to end at 8.00pm, something possessed me to catch a cab and head straight there to enjoy one drink with everyone. It just so happened that, ten minutes later when Trafalgar Square was in gridlock, I jumped out of the cab and decided to walk up St Martin’s Lane anyway, instead of giving up and heading to Soho. When I arrived, you sat right across from me. The world paused. We sat and exchanged puzzled glances and QR codes.


It just so happened that my 9.00am flight to Oslo the next morning was never to be. I showed up at check-in and Expedia had failed to make the booking on my behalf, even though they sent me a confirmation number. I have never heard of this happening to anyone. The flight was overbooked and the ticket counter lady was baffled at the error. It was a beautiful autumn day in London, and I took the express back to the city. We had a weekend of getting to know each other that may have never been.

It just so happened that the one night we could escape the eyes of our friends and consummate the brimming attraction was the night before mass demonstrations in London. I didn’t need to go to work next day. We spent the day walking around, having brunch, afternoon tea and dinner. It was your last day in London. Your parents were waiting for you in Paris.

It just so happened that, a few heart-wrenching days later, work sent me to Paris on a Friday to spend the weekend. Away from the eyes of London we built a cocoon out of pure bliss. It just so happened that your childhood friends from Paris were some of the most wonderful people I’d met in a long time, who went out of their way to make sure I was included in every event.

But it also just so happens that you live in Beirut.

I feel like I have beaten all the odds, except the most important one. One error in the perfect timing all of this plot followed could have meant an altogether different outcome. And yet, it doesn't even matter in the end.

Love is a frightful thing.

Monday 21 November 2011

Still frames

If I could freeze time, I’d probably freeze it at 5.25 pm CET last night. The sky lit up into an almost crimson red as the sun set behind the Musée D’Orsay. The air was perfectly still, the weather was docile. I sat alone on a stone bench wrapped in my black trench coat on the right bank of the Seine watching as the city’s lights began to overtake the sun’s rays. The track lighting at the top of the Tour Eiffel started beaming across the city, like a lighthouse guiding lost, sea-faring souls back to the joys of this world. Back to the beauty of what it is to be human.


If I could freeze time, I’d probably freeze it when I was finally alone with you, at 3.25 am CET last Saturday. I’d freeze it just as your hands engulfed the sides of my face and you leaned in to kiss me. I’d freeze it just as the feeling of euphoria travelled through my spine and as my arms wrapped themselves around your waist.

If I could freeze time, I’d freeze it at my high school graduation. The sense of extra-ordinary achievement, of knowing no limits to the life ahead, of being surrounded by all those I love and all those I’d spent my formative years seeing, squabbling and laughing with all the same, day in and day out. I’d freeze it just as I released my cap into the air of the giant auditorium in front of a thousand gleaming faces, my hand outstretched in mid-air and body lifted off the ground.

Or maybe, if I could freeze time, I’d freeze to before I first felt real pain. I’d freeze it to when I was foetal in my mother’s womb. Silent, unaware, warm, without flaw.

But I cannot freeze time, try as I might to hold on to fleeting moments or protect myself from heartache and tragedy. Still frames are perfect, but they are also dead. Death is a part of life and it will come in time. Until then, the best I can do in this life is to accumulate these glimpses of joy such that one day, near the very end, I can take comfort in the still frames and celebrate a life well lived, a life well conquered.

Tuesday 8 November 2011

On love, actually

Intimate relationships are a cornerstone of modern civilisation. You are expected to engage in them to procreate, to create a nuclear building block to society, and to stimulate an economy. On a very fundamental level it is about the survival of our species. Socially, it’s about finding acceptance and harmony in world where couples are the norm and where we each find the need for a personal life-long support structure. Cynically, it’s about pumping money into weddings, anniversaries, children and the constant stream of tax income that will ensue from all the above.


But personally, most of us believe intimate relationships are about finding the right person to spend the rest (or a significant portion of the rest) of our lives with.

Herein lies the problem. In the terms described above, the intimate relationships of gay men and women around the world are hardly more beneficial to society, the economy or the survival of the human species than any good friendship. Adoption is still rare, and social acceptance and harmony for gay couples has almost always been an uphill climb. Childless and without the usual dependency in male/female relationships, we spend just as much money single as we do in pairs.

Still, we crave the life-long support structure, and our presence in a generally heterosexual society means that we are constantly bombarded subtly and overtly with the culture of marriage. You cannot buy a mop or a chocolate bar without images happy families, loving partners or (for the less subtle of brands) pure lust. Naturally, with time, we begin to believe we are entitled to this lifestyle that everyone else around us seems to enjoy. We start wanting to be no different than them.

Do not misunderstand. I do not believe we are defined by our sexuality. There is an infinitely wide range of aspirations for each human being and it would be ridiculous if we allowed the gender of our ideal partner to overshadow the remaining kaleidoscope of features of a man or a woman. That said, working on knowing who we are as homosexuals means that we can target exactly what it is we want out of a relationship and love without the added baggage we inherit from the world around us.

I had my heart crushed recently. After a whirlwind romance with someone my heart led me to believe I can love very quickly and cherish for years to come, I discover any hope of a relationship is doomed by the fact that he lives 3000 miles away and that he has a boyfriend waiting for him. Experiencing that kind of intense pleasure, where your chest can only do so much to contain your soul from exploding through it with joy, only to be confronted with necessary retreat and surrender, puts love and relationships in a perspective so harsh it compels you to question why you even invested so much so quickly for so little. After all, this love story is hardly anything but a cliché these days. But you are told to “put yourself out there” and believe that it’s “better to have loved and lost then never loved at all” – and to what result?

No, I am not so sure I want to readily accept what this world has presented as the ideal for happiness and fulfilling life going forward when the reality falls so far short of that ideal. There are no happily-ever-afters or monogamous, pure relationships, despite how many Disney or Hollywood movies try to convince you otherwise. In relationships there is only emotional strife, interrupted occasionally with fleeting moments of serenity. The more you manage your expectations and satisfy yourself with the possibility that you may not find a life-long partner, the more you will focus on the more important things life: to have fun when you can, and to build strong friendships and fulfilling life in every other way possible. That is the only true life-long support structure any of us can hope to have.

Monday 7 November 2011

To Hell and Back

Dear Imaginary Reader, dear Moses of 20 years ahead


If you were to glance through the last few posts you may notice the several-month-wide gap between the last post in 2010 and the first in 2011. Forgive me for skipping the record for so long, and resuming only with my first frivolous exaltations in March and boy-crush in May. It was not the best of times.

My journey began towards the end of October, when my father’s ill health meant that he had to be transferred here to London for treatment. The poor soul was in such bad shape that he needed 24 hour attention, and I eventually had to move into his hospital room, leaving behind my job and life. Mind you the decision to move both him and me full time into the hospital came after weeks of blood spattering disease and escalation of an already horrible metastasis. I became hardened like a boulder in the face of crippling gale force winds, but even the mightiest of rocks erodes in the face of nature. I began to exhibit the first signs of trouble.

In early November, I had my first anxiety attack. It was a horrible experience, matched only by the horror of not understanding what was happening to me; why I could not breathe and why my body was going into convulsions. I was prescribed some mild beta blockers and hope that it was a freak occurrence that was probably due to stress.

By the end of November the doctors were doing all they could to put my father back on a plane to Cairo so that he could die peacefully with his family. My family were incapable of visiting London as my sister’s ex-husband had filed a abduction case in London and Paris claiming she took the child to Cairo against his will. Her visit would have meant police, court and further delays.

And so one day towards the beginning of December my father and I concealed his battered body in his now baggy clothes and I pushed his wheelchair as nonchalantly as I could across Heathrow to the door of the airplane bound for Cairo. We hoped nobody would realise how ill he was, as in such cases the airline traditionally recoils at undue responsibility forbids you to board. The charade was no easy task. There were bags of blood and urine strapped to his leg that needed to be emptied on an hourly basis. There were chills and sweats that hit him regularly as he lay prostrate throughout the five-hour flight. Somehow, we landed in Cairo without event and we delivered him to his new hospital room. I was spent. I returned to London two days later, assuming that the alleviation of responsibility would give me some peace.

It didn’t. Whilst before I had a 24-hour endeavour, a project, to keep my mind off of how I was really feeling, now I had to go back to my normal life and I found it impossible. My health deteriorated. I was not able to get out of bed for days. I needed powerful medication to sleep. Worst of all, I was beginning to have dreams and day-dreams about blood, about my blood, about razor blades and wrists. One weekend, my psychiatrist and psychologist tried intervene and send a team to my apartment to get me to move into a retreat.

By now it was the end of January, and just as I was considering the offer to go into full-time treatment the revolution began in Cairo. My father had so far survived in Cairo, but public services, even the airport at times, were suspended for at least a week. It was becoming increasingly impossible to keep him in care there, and my sister risked everything and boarded a plane with him back to London. She was arrested at the airport and her passport confiscated. I moved him into the intensive care unit at the London Clinic, the doctors there were sure he would not survive more than a couple of days. He slipped in and out of consciousness only enough to glance at us through his tired, filmy and deteriorated eyes.

I forgot about my treatment and went back into autopilot. I watched as my country descended into chaos and bravery, uncertainty and faith. I wanted every part of it, and yet all I could do was sit beside this hospital bed and stare blankly into the images of Tahrir Square on the television screen, my finger resting nervously on the court documents from my sister’s case, which was to be heard only in a few days.

In vague parallel to the revolution, we lost the first case in court, but won the appeal. It was added pressure at a harrowing time. When my father became slightly more aware of his surroundings, my sister had been exonerated, Mubarak had stepped down and the country was in a state of shock and celebration. I often wondered how he felt about that, if it mattered to his feeble mind at the time.

As ever he survived the episode in London, and we arranged the documents for an air ambulance to escort him to Cairo. My sister, now free of her chains, sat with him on the plane while I stayed behind in London. He lasted until the 3rd of May. My illness, though not entirely gone, lasted will into mid-July.

Mother Teresa once said that she knew God would never put her through something her soul could not bear, but that she also wished He didn’t trust her so much. I have never understood that thought more than I do today. But I made it through, so much is an affirmation. I experienced hell in the true sense of the word as God intended, not some fiery inferno the simpletons will have you believe but a true darkness of the mind and soul. And I climbed out of it.

It has taken a long time for me to be able to share this, but I believe this is necessary for me to move on. I believe I have seen the worst of times and I have been assured of my power to outlive. I may have lost the two anchors of my life, my parents, but if anything the events of these past 13 months have taught me is that we all need to build more anchors, surround ourselves by unconditional love and invest in those around us equally.

We have nothing if we do not have each other.