This will be an extremely personal post, so don't go reading into it too much if you don't particularly like the sorts. Remember I warned you!__________________________________________________________________________________________________________There are times when you feel utterly hopeless. Like whatever you have done, or are doing, would ultimately amount to nothing. That in the whole seventy plus years you've lived or would perhaps live, and all the work that you've done or would do, they would simply not matter in the end. That you would not matter. Your life wouldn't matter, like so many everyday. Your name wouldn't be remembered. You wouldn't be remembered. That however much you've tried doing things against that, you've ended up achieving nothing.How can anyone live knowing that?Yesterday I went to the market to get some eggs, 'Dada, I'll buy the entire tray. We'll be having guests tonight!' I added, with a smile, 'Mum is thinking Biryani!' The shopkeeper smiled and separated an entire tray from the pack, as he devised ways to pack the eggs within safely. Just then, a puny little dark-coloured boy approached and asked meekly from behind me, 'Do you have broken eggs?'I turned around and saw that he held another precariously broken egg in the other hand. I looked at his face and trust me if I say that his is the most innocent face I've seen in a really long while. With soiled, curly hair, a dirty half-shirt belonging to a discarded school uniform and shorts that were a little too short, this four foot tall kid maintained a distance from the shop and me. Compared to his otherwise dull demeanor, his gaze was strikingly sharp. And it was towards the one broken egg that the shopkeeper had kept separately.'Do you have broken eggs?' he asked again.'And what would I get in return?' said the shopkeeper, with an air of superiority.'What do you want?' asked the boy, his gaze never shifting from the egg.'No. I asked how much would YOU give me?' asked the shopkeeper.After a really long pause, the boy finally said 'Two rupees' after having thought about it carefully.'Two rupees would do. But you would have to show some respect and hand me the coin personally. Not throw it. Okay?' asked the shopkeeper.'Okay' said the kid meekly, and handed him the 2 rupees' coin in exchange of a broken egg.'Nice kid..' said the shopkeeper and winked at me slightly as the kid walked away.
'Musings'
Posted on the 11 July 2014 by Cyrus89This will be an extremely personal post, so don't go reading into it too much if you don't particularly like the sorts. Remember I warned you!__________________________________________________________________________________________________________There are times when you feel utterly hopeless. Like whatever you have done, or are doing, would ultimately amount to nothing. That in the whole seventy plus years you've lived or would perhaps live, and all the work that you've done or would do, they would simply not matter in the end. That you would not matter. Your life wouldn't matter, like so many everyday. Your name wouldn't be remembered. You wouldn't be remembered. That however much you've tried doing things against that, you've ended up achieving nothing.How can anyone live knowing that?Yesterday I went to the market to get some eggs, 'Dada, I'll buy the entire tray. We'll be having guests tonight!' I added, with a smile, 'Mum is thinking Biryani!' The shopkeeper smiled and separated an entire tray from the pack, as he devised ways to pack the eggs within safely. Just then, a puny little dark-coloured boy approached and asked meekly from behind me, 'Do you have broken eggs?'I turned around and saw that he held another precariously broken egg in the other hand. I looked at his face and trust me if I say that his is the most innocent face I've seen in a really long while. With soiled, curly hair, a dirty half-shirt belonging to a discarded school uniform and shorts that were a little too short, this four foot tall kid maintained a distance from the shop and me. Compared to his otherwise dull demeanor, his gaze was strikingly sharp. And it was towards the one broken egg that the shopkeeper had kept separately.'Do you have broken eggs?' he asked again.'And what would I get in return?' said the shopkeeper, with an air of superiority.'What do you want?' asked the boy, his gaze never shifting from the egg.'No. I asked how much would YOU give me?' asked the shopkeeper.After a really long pause, the boy finally said 'Two rupees' after having thought about it carefully.'Two rupees would do. But you would have to show some respect and hand me the coin personally. Not throw it. Okay?' asked the shopkeeper.'Okay' said the kid meekly, and handed him the 2 rupees' coin in exchange of a broken egg.'Nice kid..' said the shopkeeper and winked at me slightly as the kid walked away.