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An ode to simpler memories in an urban jungle...

Sunday, 18 December 2016

THE MOON WAS JUST A PLAYTHING








“Oh, don’t let’s ask for the moon. We’ve already got the stars.”
                                       -Bette Davis

When I was younger, the moon followed my father’s bike unquestioningly on winter nights; watching over my helmet-wearing rider in a strange, brooding silence. It was just another pillion passenger in the queue. Nocturnal road-trip ally with a natural white headlight—that was moonshine. Followed us and traipsed, meandered and circled through the boisterous traffic, racing past the city’s bright lights to the suburbs’ chilly quietness, sticking by our side right until the end. Sometimes it was over our heads and sometimes I could see it on the sides. Sometimes, it wasn’t even white. A patch of red, a bloodstain, lodged itself on a crater somewhere in its expansive milkiness.

Not crime-scene red. Mostly, water-colour red.

(This year, in case somebody noticed, it was all red and glowing like a disc of deep-rose coloured strawberry milkshake. Frozen solid in the night sky.)

I decided that the moon was as much in love with blood, gore and action movies as my father. That’s what I thought, because who knows if it secretly admired Jackie Chan’s split lip on TV from behind the translucent living room curtains. Perhaps, it even smiled and winked at my father. Would they ‘hi-five’ someday?

Oh, well.
   
The bike swiftly veered away from one tarmac lane to another (and god bless the potholes that rattled our bones).  I thought, then, that we would lose the white, round smiley face following us. Lose it forever. No ally, no white headlights. Just annoying yellow beams from other ordinary vehicles.

But we never did lose it.

At the next turn, “That’s I spy, you count to ten,” said the moon and vanished from the scene. Somebody was clearly getting bored hanging (upside down?) from the sky all night. So, I agreed. And so it rushed. Its size kept on decreasing, getting away from us and getting smaller and smaller, till it was about as round as a coin. I swore that it could fit into my palm any minute now. Nobody listened. Hiding behind the giant trees lining up the road, peeking out from the houses’ rooftops and stopping when the traffic light said red—it grew infinitely larger as we slowed.

Gradually, we stopped.

And bam! It sneaked upon us from out of nowhere. 

The enormous moon was absolutely quiet, standing absolutely still, no longer reeling under the pressure to pick up its speed in order to match ours. There was that cheeky smile, of course. Who knows, perhaps it even winked. Always smiles, that one.

Nice kid.

But this was years ago, when moonshine was more important than counting lucky stars. When stars and luck and prospects and the future were all chafing in a tightly clasped bag, flung deep and far among the moon’s craters and all that mattered was childhood.

It’s not about I spy between two kids anymore.

The moon still smiles though, but in a sad sort of way, when no one is looking. Sad, because the moon is not really an ‘it’. The moon is a goddess. It’s a ‘she’, as I realised in ninth grade. The Greeks called her Selene and the Romans called her Luna. And she controlled everything, right from the huge oceanic tides to the tides of madness to a woman’s menstrual cycle. It’s not ‘her’ smile but the vestige of a smile, heavy and burdened with the weight of ceaseless myths and legends created in her honour. (What honour?)

I, the trivial human being and she, a strange goddess/mythical persona, can hardly be called friends. Devastation and tragedy. It’s like calling childhood a myth. Nobody notices the moon from their office windows while it sits there, just waiting, as if someone will come out to play. Nobody does. Everyone visits the hills to see the ‘stars’ line up above their foreheads. And for all things expedient, the moon is a de-mystified planetary body now, already conquered by man. Nothing more to see. Nothing more to say.

But that’s how it is. It’s a ‘She’.

She and I will deal with it.

The next time that this moon turns red, I’ll barely look up in wonder. That’s tragic.