I've decided to post shallower materials from now on. What's all this serious posts business anyways? People will think I'm actually a middle aged man ready to die from cancer or something !
Friday, November 4, 2011
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
On Hassan, Whose First Word was 'Amir'
I read novels
through my teenage years. It offered asylum from the many things I didn't like
about life at the time. It offered different people to know and understand and
relate to, different countries to live in, different vehicles to ride on,
different feelings, different cultures, different troubles to think about,
different foods to eat, different lives to live and different worlds
altogether. And in most parts, these different things are much better than
reality.
We knew the
characters, their deepest, darkest secrets, we knew what they thought of, their
struggles, their preferences, their pet-peeves, their motives and their
feelings. And it wouldn't be too much of a pretense to say that we can predict
them in the entirety, how they would act or how they would feel if something
happens to them.
We know them by
heart. We know that Harry Potter would do anything to save his friends and was
the bravest boy in his school, and thus the image of an 11 year old boy going
back for a girl- friend, into the haunted girl's toilet and going against a big
monstrous beast with such composure is something we don't really question.
Neither were Artemis Fowl applying cryogenic science to delay the death of his
bodyguard, nor Alex Rider who got into his uncle's office through the outside
window of the however many storied office building. Or Hassan whose first word
was 'Amir' or Charlotte Doyle, a 13 year old girl who joined a pirate crew. We
take it as truth because we know them.
Our books became
witnesses. The pages absorbed our tears when our characters cried, they saw how
our lips curved into uncontrollable smiles, too hard to suppress when our
characters win or found redemption, they felt our breaths quicken when our
characters had to run on the way to the rendezvous. Such power these
stories and characters have on us. No wonder we feel so connected to them!
Upper class English lass turned pirate...Really...~ |
2 things I would
like to point out. The first is that these characters only belong in novels. As
much as we would like someone on the face of this huge earth to actually be
like them, we need to understand they are simply fictional.
Why do I make this
point in the first place? Its because throughout my reading, I have fallen into
the trap of thinking that they are indeed possible. That these characters are
alive in the people around me. And so I look to find perfection and such characters
in the people that I know. I looked out for Atticus Finch and Hassan.
Reepicheep and Samwise. And when real people fail to meet my expectations of
perfect courage or standing firm on their principles, or acting out on the pure
basis of friendship and love, I feel disappointed. But it's with great relief
that in recent years I have come to accept the realities of life. That there
are always real things that people worry about and real, practical (and totally
boring) reactions of people towards a situation. And hurtful it may be, it has
made accepting human flaws easier for myself.
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