Once upon a rain in Karachi!
My kids scream in
delight, unused to the sensation of rain water splattering down all over and
around them. The scorching Karachi sun has finally been defeated and is nowhere
to be seen on the cloudy grey horizon. I stand under an umbrella taking stock
of my surroundings. Though tempted I am
wary of stepping directly out in the rain as it drenches my spectacles and I
need to keep an eye on my girls jumping around on our roof with the not very
high boundary walls. My heart swells up with joy just watching these two out in
the rain with not a care in the world. So much more because it has finally
pulled them away from staring non-stop at their favorite Youtuber’s mundane yet
addictive life on the computer screen. Wow such is the power of nature! If only
we could engage our kids more with nature, it’s beauty and diversity they
probably wouldn’t seek so much solace in the virtual world of Youtube, Roblox
and Instagram.
Smiling to myself
I look down and around the wet neighborhood. The old lady next door comes out
to their terrace balcony and picks up an empty round white porcelain plate from
a chair. ‘She probably forgot it here….’ I think to myself only to be proven
wrong a moment later. As I looked out of the corner of my eye she picks up the
plate raises it to her mouth and drinks the rain water gathered in it and
places it back carefully to be refilled. Amazing! Must have some hidden health benefits.
I make a mental note to google it before I follow suit. However, this must be
done urgently to take advantage of this downpour, slight delay and I maybe left
waiting for the next two years.
Afraid of being
caught in my peeping tom avatar, I shift my gaze to the road where cars are speeding
past heedlessly splashing oodles of water on the helpless pedestrians. A man hurries past wearing what looks like a
plastic shirt. I squint and stare to realize it’s a long dry cleaning cover bag;
the type they put on our clothes for pickup. The creative guy has cut out arm
and neck holes to wear it and protect himself somewhat from being drenched. We
are a nation that finds creative solutions and ways to survive in limited means
or else we would have long been obsolete with the issues we face.
Suddenly a loud
rumble of generator machines announces that the electricity has left the
building rather the vicinity yet again. My heart so swelled up with the
happiness that rain brings with it starts to sink slowly. ‘How long is the
electricity gone for?’ ‘Do we have enough petrol?’ ‘What if it’s a major
breakdown?’
‘Mum look its so
much fun to jump in the water without shoes’ the twins are tugging at my sleeve.
I quickly smile and shrugging off my dark adult worries slip my feet out of my
shoes to know what they mean. Ahhh pure bliss!
‘Lake, Lake!, we
need a boat Baaji’, the girls are screaming for attention again, but not mine.
This time they are excitedly taking to our house help Saba, a young girl who
has also taken a break from the routine work and joined us on the rooftop. I
move forward to see what they are pointing at and freeze in my tracks. The plot
next to our house has turned into a huge mud colored lake as my daughters have
named it. I look at it in dismay as rain drops plop fast and heavy on the
surface of the huge water body formed due to the depression in the middle of
the plot. With colorful polythene bags and assorted objects from trash floating
on it this is a horrific lagoon. ‘Mosquitoes, Dengue, Danger’ thoughts and
worries loom large in my head. Must call
the local authority to do something about it. No one will do anything and this
lagoon of stagnant water will stay next to our house for eternity.
Saba, I notice,
doesn’t share any of my dark brooding thoughts and is happily chatting away
with the kids as excited by the emergence of ‘the lake’ as them. ‘Shouldn’t she
go back to her chores? How will she complete the dishes before her mother comes
to pick her if she will stay here this long?’ Another pragmatic and slightly
mean thought probes my mind with its sharp nudge.
I can feel familiar
anxiety slowly starting to creep up on my mood that becomes second nature when
you start to be a full time mom and a home maker. My spirit is gradually sagging
under heaviness that worries bring with them. With a herculean effort I muster
up all of my will power and say to myself that I must get out of this negative
mode and take notes from my kid’s unfazed happiness. After all it’s finally raining
properly in Karachi, we are virtually dancing out in the rain, the weather is
great and its not hot for once. Let’s just thank God for that and enjoy this
moment. ‘Alhamdolilah’ I mutter softly as we all head back down to get tea and
biscuits and return to take in more of the delightful weather. If only it would
rain pakoras also life would be just perfect right now!

Oh my God. So real !!!
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