Showing posts with label laughter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laughter. Show all posts

14.2.13

First Love


SEVEN YEARS AGO I began an interesting writing project which somewhat chronicled my (religiously restrained) pursuits in love from the age of ten. Clearly it was a work of humour, some chapters were girls names, another chapter entitled 'It wasn't Pinnochio's nose that grew...' which documented adolescent sexual frustrations expressed via boyhood campfire conversations about girls. I continued writing up to the age of seventeen and eventually abandoned the project after deciding that the years that followed were shaping into a long winded tragedy with dwindling amounts of humour. 

Love changes with age. Some relationships seem like vague recollections in dreams or nightmares, some like lives in parallel universes. The past can be stranger than fiction when you look at the journey. Maybe it is a sign of success if you can look back on things that way?

I wanted to write something meaningful for Valentine's day but I thought it would be more important to laugh.

An excerpt from an earlier chapter in my abandoned project. My first love ;

CASSIE

Cassie was my first ever girlfriend.  I was 11 and at Intermediate School.  I had liked her for a while and she liked me also.  She had blonde hair, blue eyes, and her nose was a little bit pointy but that was alright, she was still pretty.  One day in the playground her friend Kelly asked me out on behalf of Cassie and I paused to think about it before replying with ‘yes’.  (I paused because I did not want to seem over eager).  Cassie was waiting across the other side of the playground.  As soon as I said ‘yes', Kelly ran over to Cassie to inform her of my answer.  I watched in the distance as she did this.  They both looked ecstatic and held hands, nodded their heads, and jumped up and down in excitement. 

Having a girlfriend was a new thing for me and I wasn’t sure what it entailed.  I figured we’d hang out, hold hands and stuff, and maybe kiss but french kissing a girl kind of grossed me out. 
In the classroom Cassie asked if I wanted to move my desk into her group.  My teacher Mr Thomson let us sit in whatever desk arrangements we liked.  I agreed but said that I wanted my friends Matthew and Andrew to come with me.  Cassie and Kelly consulted each other about this arrangement and they accepted.
So there we were. Me, Cassie, Kelly, Matthew and Andrew, all sitting in a group.  It was a different group dynamic sitting with girls. We would get in more trouble because the girls would talk when Mr Thomson was talking, and they would draw in our workbooks.  One day Matthew told me that it was pissing him off and Andrew agreed so they moved out. I felt quite abandoned.

I told my parents that I had a girlfriend.  I don’t know why I did this.  Maybe it was because I was proud I had got one.  I did not know it would cause such commotion.  Mum was outraged and said I was far too young to have one, and that it was bad news.  She feared that a girl would just be trouble and she wanted me to break it off.  I, of course was outraged by this and said that it was not fair and it was my life and that it wasn’t that bad.  I was quite angry.  Mum looked at dad for support.  I don’t think dad liked the idea of me having a girlfriend either but he didn’t say much.  He could tell that I was angry with mum for her reaction.  In the end  I heard dad say to Mum, “He’s only 11, don’t worry”.  I then heard Mum say “But this will just be the start, he’s too young…”

Cassie would call me on the telephone.  I learnt that girls like talking.  They like talking a lot. We would talk for up to an hour.  Sometimes Cassie would ring me for no reason, it was just something to do.  She would ring up and say ‘Hi’ and then ask me what I was doing. 

“Watching T.V” I would say. 

“Same” she would reply. 

“Cool” I would say. 

“Cool" she would say.  “What are you watching?” 

“The Simpsons” I replied. 

“Same.  Do you think Clarence from school looks like Milhouse?” 

“Um… yeah kind of.” I said.

She laughed.  “Four eyes (Clarence) is such a geek.”

Basically Cassie would ring me up and we would occupy the phone and talk about nothing.  It was disrupting my homework.  Mum would look at me as if to remind me of this fact when I was on the phone and it made me feel bad.  I would try to get off the phone by telling Cassie that I had to go.  “No you don’t” Cassie would say and she would insist on us talking.  I would give in.  I am pathetic and weak.

I started having to get my homework done early so it was done before Cassie would ring to make mum happy.

It was hard work having a girlfriend.  They were quite needy and demanding.  Sometimes I wondered why I bothered but at the same time Cassie gave me a buzz.  I couldn’t describe it, it was like a flutter of the heart or adrenaline or something, the feeling that there was someone special in your life that shared a special part of you that no one else could.  This is what led me to sew ‘Ken Cassie Ken Cassie Ken Cassie’ all over the pencil case I was making in my clothing and textiles class at school.  It seemed like the in thing to do.  My friend Elliot had a girlfriend Joanna.  They had been together about the same time as me and Cassie.  On their respective pencil cases they wrote ‘Elliot and Joanna 4 eva’.  I showed Cassie my pencil case.  I think she was quite flattered.  I scored brownie points.  We held hands on the way back from class that day.

There were a lot of phone calls, drawing in each others exercise books, and some hand holding but me and Cassie had still not kissed.  I think Elliot and Joanna were in the same boat.  One overcast lunch time Kelly, Cassie’s friend decided that we should go over to the far side of the field where it was secluded and play dare.  Kelly dragged me and Cassie and also Elliot and Joanna.  I started to get that buzz – my heart began to flutter.  When we got there Kelly said that Cassie and I needed to kiss and so did Elliot and Joanna.  We all looked hesitant and embarrassed by being put on the spot like that.  There was a period of silence but then Kelly said “come on, who’s going to kiss first?”.  This made it a competition and I sensed shame for the couple that lost.  I looked at Elliot and Joanna who were sheepishly looking each other in the eyes, to me it was a sign that they were both developing traction in the whole procedure.  This made me look at Cassie.  I felt nervous and uncomfortable and so did Elliot.  We looked at each other and then at our girlfriends and as Elliot leant in to kiss Joanna, so I did to Cassie.  One quick peck on the lips.  It was over in a flash.

The love that Cassie and I shared began to grow old in the days that ensued.  Perhaps it was my fear of the big sloppy.  I watched older boys do it to their girlfriends at the bus stop.  I admired them.  I was just chicken.  One day in the playground Kelly came up to me and stated “You’re dumped.  From Cassie” and then ran away.  Our love had ended pretty much exactly the way it began - via personal message service informing me of my plight. This was my first experience of heart ache. I was dumped for another boy, Michael, who looked like a monkey.


3.5.11

My Dear, This is a Prelude


AS THE GLOWING orange ball slowly spluttered its way up through the Mumbai fog past India gate, I found a gang of locals slowly form a circle about me. They stretched their hands to the sky and exhaled, then started to stretch their torsos, loosened their necks. They stared at me as they went about their business. All of them. They inhaled and exhaled and proceeded to jump on the spot. A spritely elderly man yelled something in Hindi and they began to march clockwise with raised knees.
I was in the process of leaving the circle when a short wiry fellow, bones thatched together with twine, hit me and indicated that I should march too.
There was no reason for me to be in India, and such was the logic of my arrival - logical abandonment. I looked at the man seriously and raised a leg. We marched several laps and then changed direction, everyone a bizarre collection of swinging arms and onomatopoeic rhythm of stamping steps. Was this what I had actually come to expect of India? 

Perhaps.

The leader shouted something else and everyone stopped. They took deep breaths and then broke out into laughter. Were these people serious? I was thinking. And so started a series of breathing exercises; deep breaths and then slow exhalations of laughter outwards, shaking different body parts in the process.
The wiry Indian man beside me gave me a nudge and indicated that I should be doing the same as everyone else as I was also part of the circle.
And so I took a deep breath in. "Hahahahaha" I exhaled holding my right arm out in front of me, shaking it. I looked to the wiry man beside me as I did this and he nodded in approval.

"Okay" said the leader. He was serious. A man on a mission, but there was also a glint in his eye. Everyone stopped what they were doing and looked to him.

The leader proceeded to clap three times with his hand above his head and then broke out into a fit of laughter such that he started to double over and had to brace his hands on his knees to remain upright.
I watched as the circle began to follow suit. First the overhead clapping, then the hysterical laughter. Some were faking it, some were completely out of control.

I looked around me and noticed that we had some on-lookers. The wiry man beside me noticed me doing this and shook his head. He reached skyward, clapped, then looked back at me before giving an exaggerated laugh. "HA! HA! HA! HA!" he said.

I nodded and reconfigured my stance as if to postulate that I now meant business. I raised my hands above my head and clapped, then let out a laugh: "Ha? Ha? Ha? Ha?" I said.

The wiry man was disappointed. He shook his head.

He inhaled deeply and clapped again. "HA! HA! HA! HA!" he explained, with extra emphasis on each 'HA'.

I performed the exercise again. "HA. HA. HA. HA" I said.

I looked to the wiry man for approval. He scrunched his lips together and bobbed his head from side to side as if indicating that I had shown some improvement.

We performed the exercise again, but this time together.

"HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!" we let out in unison until we were both hunched forwards.

The wiry man straightened up and looked at me seriously. He nodded as he took his next breath and proceeded to clap. I did the same.

"HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!"

I started to understand the exercise. We looked at each other and smiled, then inhaled and clapped again. I learnt that laughter was better in unison, laughter was about letting yourself go. This time i decided to go for maximum volume. My lungs were bigger than his. I would destroy him with my laughter.

"HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!!!!" My laugh was a giant's and his was an ant's, only this time I did not stop laughing as I had intended to and neither did he. We both continued laughing uncontrollably, involuntarily. We laughed at each other and at ourselves. We laughed at the ridiculous exercise in which we were participating.
The Indian man smiled and petted me on the back. He indicated that I had now understood. I had been released. Self consciousness had departed.
I laughed as he laughed. We laughed together. We fanned each other's laughter flames. Soon the whole circle was engulfed in laughter, each one a catalyst for the other. I did not know these people but we were sharing one of the most amazing things there was and no words needed to be spoken.

Soon we were jumping around like kangaroos on the spot. "Australia!" said the guru. We laughed and jumped around like drunken idiots.

Next thing we were roaring at each other like lions and showing our claws. "Africa!" said the guru. "Raaarrr! Raaaarrrr!"

We followed the gurus lead as he squatted down to the ground and then frog leaped into the air. "Ribbit!" He said. "Frog!"

I was dying now. My lungs and chest were in pain. I wanted it to stop but I also wanted it to go on forever. I looked to the wiry man beside me, the old lady next to him, the guru, everyone else in the circle. When was the last time I had felt this much joy? I looked at their smiling faces and they looked at mine. I was welcome. We were one. Was it ridiculous? The fact that we had not spoken but had communicated more than could have ever been said?






The guy on the left had been my guru that day, my first in India.