Wednesday, 9 July 2025

“The Pain” - A piece I wrote for Kathan (an art project)

My mother, a biology teacher by profession, showed me what a uterus looked like in a picture book on human anatomy. To my five-year old self, it looked like a sports trophy made of muscles.

On a March night in 2008, very close to International Women’s Day, my baby pink pajamas were stained reddish brown (a stain caused by turmeric and detergent, I’d assumed). My mother informed me that it was blood. I didn’t believe her; I had to constantly go check if it was really blood flowing out of me.

From what I had gathered, periods were supposed to come with pain—in your lower belly, legs, back, and sometimes even your head. That’s how my mother and a few of my friends described it. But I felt nothing. And I was told that they lasted for three to seven days a month. This, I would discover, was also not how it went for me. I bled heavily for the next ten to twelve days.

I had told my mother not to tell anyone I’d started menstruating. It felt like something too personal to share. But within an hour on that March night, I was flooded with calls from both my grandmothers and all my aunts. They all said the same thing: You are a woman now. You can have babies now. So, you must protect yourself.

All I could do was cringe and think of a shiny golden trophy that I was not prepared to receive. A happy women’s day to me.

Two summers into this life of pretending to be a woman, “the pain” came. At first it was dull, but then it got sharper, like tiny knives piercing into my back and lower belly and my legs. Oftentimes, it was unbearable and made me retch. I could smell my sweat and blood and feel my muscles clench. I knew now that it did feel like both muscle and metal.

At first, my mother said the pain was normal. But then, as it got worse, she took me to a doctor, then a few doctors, then many doctors. From age 13-17, the doctors’ appointments went the same way.

“She’s overweight.”, they’d say.

“She needs to exercise more and eat less.”

Then they would check my breasts, which were only breasticles then. And check me down there. This always made me want to crumple and hide myself into a corner.

“Everything seems normal except her weight. No thyroid issues either. The pain will go away after marriage, you’ll see.”

“But you should get an ultrasound”

“No cysts.”, at which my mother, a guilt-struck carrier of PCOD, would heave a sigh of relief. At least it was not PCOD. At least her daughter’s periods are regular and five-days long now. At least she won’t have to spend her life plucking stray hairs off her chin. So, my mother, with an “if I can do it, so can she” attitude, sent me to school even when I told her I could not even sit for long.

I always overbled through my white skirt uniform at school on those days. And to hide, I would park myself in an empty corner of the classroom, with my head down. Girls often took pity on me and walked behind me to hide my stain. Boys, who I assume didn’t have sisters, would point and ask, “What’s that?”

Some days, I would crouch in a corner of the perpetually stinky and dirty girls’ washroom and beg for the teacher to call my mother.

“Why do you come to school when you know you are sick?” they’d tut tut at me, unless it was a male teacher. The male teachers just avoided all eye contact and let me be. Somehow that was more comfortable than explaining to a female teacher that it felt like I was going to die.

At home, my father would say “Natok korona (don’t act dramatically)”. Even my mother could not fathom how or why I was in so much pain. Was it just an excuse to miss school? I wondered that too. Was I just a liar? Was I just extremely sensitive? Was I just acting? Was this even real?

I learned to separate my mind and my body. I learned to categorise everything around “the pain”.

Before pain: Finish revision for Monday’s test.

During pain: Lie down in a corner without muttering a sound and watch my body crumple up from afar.

After pain: Start with the preparation for the next exam befor my periods arrive.

Only after I left my parents’ home and ventured into university (where I shared a room with a friend), did the sanitary napkin ads on TV start making sense.

I would watch some of my friends suffer painful periods, but they’d still manage to attend classes, talk, eat, stand up. I always assumed that they hid their pain better. I was just weak. They were not. I was weak because I had always just pretended to be a woman, I was not really one. My soul knew that, my body didn’t.

I was an adult now, and now, I could choose not to go to the doctors anymore. I did not need to hear how overweight, grotesque, crybaby, or “normal” I was. I was done. My body and I went separate ways now. If bad things happened to my body, I would only be a bystander that had nothing to do with it. I only needed a few essentials:

1. A room all to myself so no one commented on me writhing in pain.

2. A trusty pink bucket that would catch my constant puke (which was bile). –a half-melted meftal in too

3. A bottle of water with ORS.

4. A forgotten packet of Meftal, which was useless as a painkiller.

5. And an image of life after “the pain”, which I would visualise through gritted teeth with a tiny smooth and cool amethyst tightly held in my palm.

It has been seven years since. I’m nearing my thirties, and now, I have to plan my life around “the pain”, more so than ever. No, being of “marriageable age” hasn’t solved the problem. Nor has marijuana, Zumba, running, dieting, losing weight, having sex, getting a nose piercing, buying crystals that help with pain, or learning how to belly dance. I now believe “the pain”, I don’t deny it. But I still don’t know if it is “real enough” to deserve a “loss of pay” leave. My friends who have seen me in pain urge me to see doctors, worry over me, promise that there are good doctors who would try to understand and take me seriously. I don’t know how it matters when I’m really outside my body during periods, floating, barely existing, not existing as a woman, nor a man, nor a child.

But my manager at work asks for a medical certificate to get one to two days of leave a month. By now, I have googled the term “endometriosis” to know that it could possibly be something I have. But then the detection process is very intrusive, and I’d rather not go get it checked. Because if it’s real, I don’t want it. I heard Marilyn Monroe had it. Sounds too glamourous for me.

But through the process of writing this down, I have come a long way in years. I now spend more time in my body, eat magnesium-rich foods before my periods, read up more about other people who suffer like I do, and paint happy uteruses on my sketch books. I have also managed to find a doctor that might try to understand. I now want to be able to express to the doctor without shame or fear. I now want to be able to visualise a life after “the pain”.



Friday, 18 November 2016

The Dying Dragonfly

The dying dragonfly
Didn't have a memory
Or it would see
The lovely old days
That it spent away
Cozily, on velvety petals
Chatting in a lilting buzz
Laughing and drinking
The sweet nectar
That the flowery friends
Offered in their palms
The dying dragonfly
Now flew inside
To the artificial light.
White and bright,
A cheap imitation
Of the almighty.
Buzzing frantically
Breathing the rainy air
For the last time.
And suddenly weightless,
It falls down.

Finding Solace

I want some solace.
I find it a lot nowadays.
And then it escapes.
Sneaky solace slides away.
I found solace in a picture today.
A whale peacefully swimming under the moon.
Probably making the soft sound of living.
Not hating. Not hurting. Just living.

A Poem

A poem is stuck somewhere inside me.
I try coughing it out.
But it has its own plans.
It'll sit there, brewing in feelings.
Till I have a boiled hot mess.
Only if I had let it out.
Note to self: a poem is nature's call.
Just shit it out.

Wednesday, 16 November 2016

Winter and My Skin

Winter mornings are special
The winters are soft here
I feel it on my skin,
As soft as the winter
They like each other,
My skin and winter.
They are made of the
Same material, of doubt
And of beauty that is
Hard to find.
I wrap a shawl to keep
My skin away from
Winter, what if I learn
The freedom of winter?
Silent and cool and calm
In her own element,
In some places, dangerous
In others, a grace.

Tuesday, 18 October 2016

The Wild

Through the wispy golden grass,
Stealthy green eyes watched.
A silent purr,
A muffled growl.
The golden paws pressed
Over the golden grass,
Swift but not hasty.

The vision was clear,
There was nothing else,
Only the graceful fawn,
Leaping in the sunshine,
Bright eyed and young.
Unaware and naive.

But instinct flows freely
In the wild blood,
In young and the old'
The prey and the predator.

The sinewy golden body
Darted across the grassland.
Focussed eyes, focussed energy,
Towards the naive meal.

Ha! Naivety doesn't exist
In the wild grasslands.
Young or old, prey or predator'
It is all about survival.

The joyful leaping,
Now a run for life.
The clever fawn zigzags
Over the golden land.
The chase, the thrill
Pumping blood and adrenaline.
Bared teeth and agile bodies.
A race for life or death.

Swift, but not swift enough.
Naive but inherently clever.
The lion will wait for
Another naive one.
It's just not the fawn's
Last day of life.

Monday, 17 October 2016

Words that Mock Me

I look around for the words,
Desperately grasping for them
But they escape me
And shamelessly gather around
The burning thought
Like clueless people
Around a fresh roadkill
Who crowd and watch

I blindly reach for them,
They slip from my fingers,
And laugh mockingly
At my desperation.

One by one they gather
Around my helpless mind
Laughing and mocking till
It is loud and suffocating,

Then all I can do is
Swat at them like flies
So, they retreat back
Into the crevices of my brain.
Carefully watching for
My next helpless thought,
To come and laugh
And mock and hurt
To render me a mess
Again and again.