For the uninitiated, I
work in the clinical field by profession. My daily grind involves making
concrete decisions based on the evidence available to me, and my own
understanding of the how the various machines within the human body work with
each other in a given clinical setting with imposed external forces. It is a
constant learning curve in logic, reasoning, and deduction – as the Gilmore
Girls would say, I’m a regular Sherlock Holmes. (Or maybe Watson. Or the
sidekick that gives Sherlock Holmes his coffee in the morning. Or… yeah, you
get the picture.). We monitor and measure everything.
Quite literally like The Police’s evergreen stalker song, ‘every breath you
take’ is watched by us. Every rise and fall in your blood pressure, every
millilitre of pee you produce, every drop of fluid you drain from your lungs –
hell, even every single step you take is observed by us like hawks. Medicine
almost has its own language. A language of acronyms and idioms of the various
processes and our tricks and potions used, to express how someone poops, pees,
farts, belches, coughs and pukes, which we learn to become fluent in as time
progresses, and as thus (and particularly with its unusual setting of being in
contact with members of the non-scientific public in a scientific environment),
is often seen as an art: because we learn to translate these figures into what
it means for you as a sick, scared, lonely person lying on a hospital bed,
bunking with five other dudes and constantly forgetting where you are and who
these nice people in blue who give you pills to take are, instead of being in
your twenties and scoring hot chicks like you must have done, back in your
days.
But really, despite it
being an art – and a wonderful, rewarding, self-fulfilling one at that – the
art that really saved me, and the art that I am more excited to share with you
than any amount of medical gobbledegook, is the art of words. Being a deaf
person (also for the uninitiated – yes, I am hearing impaired), ironically,
words became my life at a very young age. Words allowed me to literally visualise what my malfunctioning ears
could not hear. Have you ever tried being cut off from one of your five-a-life
senses when you were a seven year old? It is daunting. It is life on mute
button. Communication on mute button. It is a specialised, short-cut route to
Living In Your Own Bubble.
And then words came. In
the mind of a deaf seven year old girl, they were suddenly everywhere. (Of
course, in the mind of a semi-rational twenty four year old still-a-girl, my perception of the words around me had improved.
So they just seemed to be everywhere.
Which they already were. I just didn’t see it.) Words came in the form of
subtitles on television, in the form of notes on the blackboard, song lyrics on
websites, in text messages and the chat box of MSN messenger. Suddenly, the mute
button disappeared. I had a way to link my existence to the rest of the world!
I now have the keys to escape Living In Your Own Bubble!
Was life that simple?
Of course, everyone who has lived even a minute into the adult world (Hint: it
involves your eyes widening in excited anticipation of opening your first ever
letter addressed to you, ohmygoshhowEXCITING… and promptly your face falling
when you realise it is a bill for the implausible amounts of electricity you
have used. My advice would be to switch to a lifetime of candles, and who needs
the internet anyway?!) will be able to answer that with a resounding ‘no’. You
see, in classic Sunrise fashion, as if it wasn’t complicated enough being the
deaf little girl in a foreign country with an Indian accent, I decided to add
to the complications by just never being a regular girl. It is now such a
widely known fact that I have decided to stop pretending I am remotely ashamed
of it. I have just never fit in at primary school, or secondary school (or
university, but by default, there were other, equally mad hatters like myself
so by default, I fit in despite not fitting in, so we will leave that one out).
I was always that different girl, for lack of a nicer expression. I watched
Bollywood in a land of Boyzone, N’Sync and Vengaboys, I naively went home to my
parents in a culture of hanging out to check out boys after school in rolled-up
skirts and loosened ties (as Lorelai Gilmore would say, Britney Spears would
have been inspired. Now I have that song stuck in your head, don’t I? Oh baby baby.), and I was the girl that
was picked last for team sports. Suffice to say, ‘popularity’ wasn’t high on my
list of Things To Do Before I Leave High School.
So what does a deaf
girl who has come to see words as her bridge to communication do? She seeks
that same sense of love that comes from human contact in books, of course. Seems
I had bought a one-way ticket back to Living In Your Own Bubble. And oh, how I
loved it! I got to go on adventures with the Famous Five, become best friends
with the Naughtiest Girl, have a bunch of girlfriends for sleepovers with the
Sleepover Club, develop my high school crushes along with Sweet Valley’s famous
twins, and understand courage and magic through Harry and his crew. Words
carved delicately into the pages, each one flowing onto the next one, each one
a living proof of the one thing we all crave for – love. The love with which
the author has created a world with those words, were read and absorbed by me
with equal love. Those words had given me a friend I really needed. I had
fallen in love with art.
I developed a lot as a
person with reading. Words taught me to understand the relative differences
between right and wrong. Words taught me to appreciate the grey area of human
emotions, and of human relationships. And nowhere have words taught me so much
as – very unimaginatively – within the four walls of my English classes in
secondary school. It has taken me eight years after forever leaving English
Literature classes behind, to realise how much my English teachers shaped my
thinking, and my love for literature. I had arrived at my English Literature
lessons a fresh child with a blind (rather, deaf) love for words, and my
English teachers taught me how to tease more out of that love, and challenged
me to go hiking with that love to places I have never been to, to question what
I have been told, and to question what the world around me really is, to
understand the bigger things of life – politics, race, culture, identity,
justice, rights, finances, philosophy, religion, law and, I’m sure, much, much
more. I realised I was at my happiest when I was analysing what sections of a
book meant, what they meant to me, and what they could mean to others, and why
the writer chose those words instead
of others. I thrived on the excitement of discovering new ways the same set of
words can be understood, and through appreciating the genius of writers for
writing in such a way, I learned to love words more. They were truly art, and
they were art in an itch-scratchingly satisfying way; I could feel myself
expressed through them, and I could feel a connection. A communication. Whether
the mute button was on or off did not matter any more.
It was also then I was introduced
to a man who I later realised would be the love of my life: Atticus Finch. ‘To
Kill A Mockingbird’ truly has to be mentioned as a book milestone in my life.
It was the first ‘grown up novel’ I have ever read, and it was the first time I
had explored new horizons: from reading for imagination, to reading for
thought. And this reading for thought was what drove me – nay, compelled me –
to start to pen my own thoughts down, too. I watched others’ beautifully
sculpted words, and I wanted to do the same.
Looking back on it, ‘To
Kill A Mockingbird’ was also a life-changing moment for me; it was the first
time I had realised I thrived far better in social sciences, than I do in
clinical sciences. Setting to paper my thoughts on the creative beauty of those
words, and the intelligence of their social expression, was such a high for me.
And this love of understanding social expression grew further with my history
lessons. I learned to think. I learn
to explore with my thoughts. I understood what it meant to be ‘lost in thoughts’.
Eight years later,
looking down the various souvenirs of bricks, stones and pebbles I had laid
down with the path of my life, I can look back and see how much I owe to the
written word. (And how much I owed to my circumstances of turning deaf and
being a freshie.) I carry the torch of my obsession for expression and writing
with great joy (and likely, great annoyance of my friends). Like newlyweds
engaging in certain physical activities, I engage in debates wherever and
whenever I can, whatever time of day or night, on whatever the topic. I read
about the world, and I rant about the injustices of it. I learn from my own
poor judgement in narrow thinking. I show others the fallacy of their poor
judgement in narrow thinking. I absorb all the grey, non-measurable qualities
of life, and I keep wanting to absorb more, knowing the lessons to be learnt
are infinite. Words led me to my passion.
Through various stages
in my life, I have been complimented for being a good writer. I don’t think
this is true. I think the truth is, the power of my thoughts are in themselves
tilting the weight of my poor writing in their favour. The thinker that I have
become has saved me many times from my own insanity, helped me to cope with
some of the biggest losses of my life, and allowed me to make sense of the
jumbled mess that is my life. It has helped me to form deep, real, and very
strong friendships. Which touchwood I hope will be for life. And I owe this all
to the art that has brought me here in the first place: words.
4 comments:
So beautifully expressed. Didn't know you had hearing issues.
Glad to see you blogging again
Det-res
Thank you, Det Res. I tried to leave a comment on your blog but it keeps asking me for passwords which I have forgotten! I will figure it out and catch up on your blog. :)
I don't need password verifications on my blog. It has been acting weird and blocking legit bloggers.
Anyway, just came by to say Hi. You usually surface in this much time. Since I had not heard from you, Just wanted to make sure you were doing okay.
I am doing okay. It really means a lot to me that you checked in - thank you :)
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