I wonder at what point writing keeps
vanishing from my life. Perhaps it is because I do not care about it
as strongly as I once used to. Or maybe it is because it doesn't feed
my cravings within as fiercely as it is supposed to. Nevertheless,
and as a mild compensation, reading has been a major force to reckon
with these past few months.
Actually no.
Writing has not left me as I just
mentioned. As I look at this blog the last entry was made when I had
just started looking for new job opportunities back in December 2013.
Almost an year ago. Since then (and even though I did get a good deal
back in January of this year) a lot of other personal and
professional commitments distracted to me such an extent that writing
as a process, regrettably, was no longer my support system. Instead I
dove into my Kindle (of which I had written last) and devoured over half a dozen novels in search of that illusive spirit that periodically
ignites in me the urge, nay, the irresistible energy, in me to write.
And then there is this new life.
We moved to Doha in the gulf nation of
Qatar in August. To say that it is different from Denmark is as good
an overstatement as any. Our choice to come here was two-fold. One,
we wanted to experience a genuinely warm region's living (that said I
do miss the chilly bite of Danish winds around October) and two, the
wanderlust bug within us was jumping a little too high in hopes
of getting out feet moving to a new and strange land. And then we
were in Doha one afternoon.
The weather was leaning on the high
side of 30s when we landed. As the humid blanket wrapped us in its
familiar throes I could not help smile to myself – oh yes, this was
exactly what we needed. Something so out there that we would be
forced out of our cocoons of familiarity that had started to grow
thick back in Scandinavia.
In a few days we finish two months in
Doha. As a country this is typical gulf as I had envisioned it.
Everything here is larger than life. The villa we live in has eight
foot walls and gates. For the first time in several years we have
help in the house – a lady who comes once a week to clean the whole
place, a gardener who visits five days a week to tend to some of the
gorgeous bougainvillea peppered across our lawn (and yes, we have a
lawn too) and a team of experts who come for a couple of hours each
morning to, ahem, clean our swimming pool. As I said, this is
definitely the change we had hoped for.
Doha is a city of compounds – small
communities built over several acres of land and guarded by metal
detectors and grim looking security folk. Though we do not live in
one yet the feeling of a secure lifestyle is already here. True, the
villa is old and huge and has needed repairs of various kinds in
these short few weeks, but it is an experience we are not likely to
forget for several years. While Copenhagen was a city of straight
roads and apartments that looked exactly like each other, Doha is a
city of straighter streets and huge mansions that have similar gates
but different insides. And compounds are a big part of living here.
I have started enjoying the mornings
here. Sharp bright rays penetrate our kitchen floor as early as 6am
and the entire lawn comes alive with the short chirps of dozens of
birds – mostly sparrows. A comforting calm settles around the house
as I walk past the long hallway and make my first cup of tea in the
morning. The subtle ripples of the pool invite me for a dive as I
take a quick swim to rejuvenate my senses. As early as 4am, the call
for prayer, the Azan, rings across the city. As if in a symbolic
gesture of blessing we have a mosque both in front of our home and
behind it. So we have the pleasure of being awoken (at least stirred
out of our slumber) at the crack of dawn and several times
thereafter. I have come to realize I am falling in love with this
prayer call. Even though the folks who sing it range from
interestingly poetic to downright bored, every time I hear it a sense
of belonging surfaces within me. Why? I cannot explain yet.
The new job and lifestyle has brought a
lot of pleasant (and a couple of slightly alarming) surprises with
it. But I guess this is what J and I have craved for a long time.
This sense of being both alien and a local at the same time. The
wanderlust that took me out of my home in India back in 2000 seems to
have grown bigger and better as through it I have now had a chance to
start tasting the flavors of a country as different and unique as
Qatar. We hope to visit all the major spots in this region before the
urge to try something this new catches us again. Until then, I look
forward to another beautiful Azan from the neighborhood and another
cup of masala tea each morning.
Here is hoping I get to write about
this beautiful change more often.
0 reflections:
Post a Comment