Quotes

Friday, January 17, 2014

Bol by Pooja Batura Pathak



In India, a woman is sexually assaulted every three minutes and raped every 20 minutes. However, many Indian women are afraid to speak up, fearing retribution from the very same monsters who abused them, and harsh judgement from an insensitive society.





A recent short film by Pooja Batura that’s making waves around the internet is telling them to do exactly the opposite. The film is simply titled “Bol” and captures the different kinds of sexual abuse an Indian woman suffers from during her lifetime, from child abuse to work place harassment to marital rape. The message is clear and simple, “The more you talk, the less it will happen.”

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Taleyard: HumanMind: The Phaomnneil Pweor of the Hmuan Mnid

Taleyard: HumanMind: The Phaomnneil Pweor of the Hmuan Mnid:  The PhaomnneilPweor of the HmuanMnid  Aoccdring to arscheearch at CmabridgeUinervisty. It deosn’tmaettr in what order the ltteers...

Friday, August 23, 2013

What goes around comes around


One day a man saw an old lady, stranded on the side of the road, but even in the dim light of day, he could see she needed help. So he pulled up in front of her Mercedes and got out. His Pontiac was still sputtering when he approached her.
Even with the smile on his face, she was worried. No one had stopped to help for the last hour or so. Was he going to hurt her? He didn’t look safe; he looked poor and hungry. He could see that she was frightened, standing out there in the cold. He knew how she felt. It was those chills which only fear can put in you. He said, “I’m here to help you, ma’am. Why don’t you wait in the car where it’s warm? By the way, my name is Bryan Anderson.”
Well, all she had was a flat tire, but for an old lady, that was bad enough. Bryan crawled under the car looking for a place to put the jack, skinning his knuckles a time or two. Soon he was able to change the tire. But he had to get dirty and his hands hurt.
As he was tightening up the lug nuts, she rolled down the window and began to talk to him. She told him that she was from St. Louis and was only just passing through. She couldn’t thank him enough for coming to her aid.
Bryan just smiled as he closed her trunk. The lady asked how much she owed him. Any amount would have been all right with her. She already imagined all the awful things that could have happened had he not stopped. Bryan never thought twice about being paid. This was not a job to him. This was helping someone in need, and God knows there were plenty, who had given him a hand in the past. He had lived his whole life that way, and it never occurred to him to act any other way.
He told her that if she really wanted to pay him back, the next time she saw someone who needed help, she could give that person the assistance they needed, and Bryan added, “And think of me.”
He waited until she started her car and drove off. It had been a cold and depressing day, but he felt good as he headed for home, disappearing into the twilight.
A few miles down the road the lady saw a small cafe. She went in to grab a bite to eat, and take the chill off before she made the last leg of her trip home. It was a dingy looking restaurant. Outside were two old gas pumps. The whole scene was unfamiliar to her. The waitress came over and brought a clean towel to wipe her wet hair. She had a sweet smile, one that even being on her feet for the whole day couldn’t erase. The lady noticed the waitress was nearly eight months pregnant, but she never let the strain and aches change her attitude. The old lady wondered how someone who had so little could be so giving to a stranger. Then she remembered Bryan.
After the lady finished her meal, she paid with a hundred dollar bill. The waitress quickly went to get change for her hundred dollar bill, but the old lady had slipped right out the door. She was gone by the time the waitress came back. The waitress wondered where the lady could be. Then she noticed something written on the napkin.
There were tears in her eyes when she read what the lady wrote: “You don’t owe me anything. I have been there too. Somebody once helped me out, the way I’m helping you. If you really want to pay me back, here is what you do, do not let this chain of love end with you.” Under the napkin were four more $100 bills.
Well, there were tables to clear, sugar bowls to fill, and people to serve, but the waitress made it through another day. That night when she got home from work and climbed into bed, she was thinking about the money and what the lady had written. How could the lady have known how much she and her husband needed it? With the baby due next month, it was going to be hard… She knew how worried her husband was, and as he lay sleeping next to her, she gave him a soft kiss and whispered soft and low, “Everything’s going to be all right. I love you, Bryan Anderson.”
There is an old saying “What goes around comes around.”

The power of determination (true story)

A true story about athlete Glenn Cunningham who was horribly burned in a schoolhouse fire at the age of 8. Doctors predicted he would never walk again. Determined to walk, Glenn would throw himself off his wheelchair and pull his body across the yard and along a fence. Twenty-two months later, he took his first steps and through sheer determination, learned to run despite the pain…



The little country schoolhouse was heated by an old-fashioned, pot-bellied coal stove. A little boy had the job of coming to school early each day to start the fire and warm the room before his teacher and his classmates arrived.
One morning they arrived to find the schoolhouse engulfed in flames. They dragged the unconscious little boy out of the flaming building more dead than alive. He had major burns over the lower half of his body and was taken to a nearby county hospital.
From his bed the dreadfully burned, semi-conscious little boy faintly heard the doctor talking to his mother. The doctor told his mother that her son would surely die – which was for the best, really – for the terrible fire had devastated the lower half of his body.
But the brave boy didn’t want to die. He made up his mind that he would survive. Somehow, to the amazement of the physician, he did survive. When the mortal danger was past, he again heard the doctor and his mother speaking quietly. The mother was told that since the fire had destroyed so much flesh in the lower part of his body, it would almost be better if he had died, since he was doomed to be a lifetime cripple with no use at all of his lower limbs.
Once more the brave boy made up his mind. He would not be a cripple. He would walk. But unfortunately from the waist down, he had no motor ability. His thin legs just dangled there, all but lifeless.
Ultimately he was released from the hospital. Every day his mother would massage his little legs, but there was no feeling, no control, nothing. Yet his determination that he would walk was as strong as ever.
When he wasn’t in bed, he was confined to a wheelchair. One sunny day his mother wheeled him out into the yard to get some fresh air. This day, instead of sitting there, he threw himself from the chair. He pulled himself across the grass, dragging his legs behind him.
He worked his way to the white picket fence bordering their lot. With great effort, he raised himself up on the fence. Then, stake by stake, he began dragging himself along the fence, resolved that he would walk. He started to do this every day until he wore a smooth path all around the yard beside the fence. There was nothing he wanted more than to develop life in those legs.
Ultimately through his daily massages, his iron persistence and his resolute determination, he did develop the ability to stand up, then to walk haltingly, then to walk by himself – and then – to run.
He began to walk to school, then to run to school, to run for the sheer joy of running. Later in college he made the track team.
Still later in Madison Square Garden this young man who was not expected to survive, who would surely never walk, who could never hope to run – this determined young man, Dr. Glenn Cunningham, ran the world’s fastest mile**!
**On June 16, 1934, Glenn Cunningham ran the mile in 4:06.8 minutes, breaking the world’s record. His effort portrays that whatever you want to create in your life is yours for the making. As long as you desire it enough and allow your will to guide you, you can have and be whatever your heart desires. The only one that can put limits on our personal will is ourselves. Develop and encourage your will to create and all the forces of nature within and without will help you bring your desire to pass.

Love in action



One night a man came to our house and told me, “There is a family with eight children. They have not eaten for days,” I took some food and I went. When I finally came to the family, I saw the faces of those little children disfigured by hunger. There was no sorrow or sadness in their faces, just the deep pain of hunger. I gave the rice to the mother. She divided it in two, and went out, carrying half the rice with her. When she came back, I asked her, “Where did you go?” She gave me this simple answer, “To my neighbors-they are hungry also.”
I was not surprised that she gave–because poor people are generous. But I was surprised that she knew they were hungry. As a rule, when we are suffering, we are so focused on ourselves we have no time for others.
–Mother Teresa

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Keep your dream



I have a friend named Monty Roberts who owns a horse ranch in San Ysidro. He has let me use his house to put on fund-raising events to raise money for youth at risk programs.
The last time I was there he introduced me by saying, “I want to tell you why I let Jack use my horse. It all goes back to a story about a young man who was the son of an itinerant horse trainer who would go from stable to stable, race track to race track, farm to farm and ranch to ranch, training horses. As a result, the boy’s high school career was continually interrupted. When he was a senior, he was asked to write a paper about what he wanted to be and do when he grew up.
“That night he wrote a seven-page paper describing his goal of someday owning a horse ranch. He wrote about his dream in great detail and he even drew a diagram of a 200-acre ranch, showing the location of all the buildings, the stables and the track. Then he drew a detailed floor plan for a 4,000-square-foot house that would sit on a 200-acre dream ranch.
“He put a great deal of his heart into the project and the next day he handed it in to his teacher. Two days later he received his paper back. On the front page was a large red F with a note that read, `See me after class.’
“The boy with the dream went to see the teacher after class and asked, `Why did I receive an F?’
“The teacher said, `This is an unrealistic dream for a young boy like you. You have no money. You come from an itinerant family. You have no resources. Owning a horse ranch requires a lot of money. You have to buy the land. You have to pay for the original breeding stock and later you’ll have to pay large stud fees. There’s no way you could ever do it.’ Then the teacher added, `If you will rewrite this paper with a more realistic goal, I will reconsider your grade.’
“The boy went home and thought about it long and hard. He asked his father what he should do. His father said, `Look, son, you have to make up your own mind on this. However, I think it is a very important decision for you.’ “Finally, after sitting with it for a week, the boy turned in the same paper, making no changes at all.
He stated, “You can keep the F and I’ll keep my dream.”
Monty then turned to the assembled group and said, “I tell you this story because you are sitting in my 4,000-square-foot house in the middle of my 200-acre horse ranch. I still have that school paper framed over the fireplace.” He added, “The best part of the story is that two summers ago that same schoolteacher brought 30 kids to camp out on my ranch for a week.” When the teacher was leaving, he said, “Look, Monty, I can tell you this now. When I was your teacher, I was something of a dream stealer. During those years I stole a lot of kids’ dreams. Fortunately you had enough gumption not to give up on yours.”
“Don’t let anyone steal your dreams. Follow your heart, no matter what.”

The story of a blind girl


There was a blind girl who hated herself just because she was blind. She hated everyone, except her loving boyfriend. He was always there for her. She said that if she could only see the world, she would marry her boyfriend.
One day, someone donated a pair of eyes to her and then she could see everything, including her boyfriend. Her boyfriend asked her, “now that you can see the world, will you marry me?”
The girl was shocked when she saw that her boyfriend was blind too, and refused to marry him. Her boyfriend walked away in tears, and later wrote a letter to her saying:
“Just take care of my eyes dear.”

This is how human brain changes when the status changed. Only few remember what life was before, and who’s always been there even in the most painful situations.
Life Is A Gift
Today before you think of saying an unkind word–
think of someone who can’t speak.
Before you complain about the taste of your food–
think of someone who has nothing to eat.
Before you complain about your husband or wife–
think of someone who is crying out to God for a companion.
Today before you complain about life–
think of someone who went too early to heaven.
Before you complain about your children–
think of someone who desires children but they’re barren.
Before you argue about your dirty house, someone didn’t clean or sweep–
think of the people who are living in the streets.
Before whining about the distance you drive–
think of someone who walks the same distance with their feet.
And when you are tired and complain about your job–
think of the unemployed, the disabled and those who wished they had your job.
But before you think of pointing the finger or condemning another–
remember that not one of us are without sin and we all answer to one maker.
And when depressing thoughts seem to get you down–
put a smile on your face and thank God you’re alive and still around.
Life is a gift – Live it, Enjoy it, Celebrate it, and Fulfill it.

Monday, August 19, 2013

"Giving When It Counts"


Many years ago, when I worked as a volunteer at a hospital, I got to know a little girl named Liz who was suffering from a rare and serious disease. Her only chance of recovery appeared to be a blood transfusion from her 5-year-old brother, who had miraculously survived the same disease and had developed the antibodies needed to combat the illness. The doctor explained the situation to her little brother, and asked the little boy if he would be willing to give his blood to his sister. I saw him hesitate for only a moment before taking a deep breath and saying, "Yes, I'll do it if it will save her."

As the transfusion progressed, he lay in bed next to his sister and smiled, as we all did, seeing the color returning to her cheeks. Then his face grew pale and his smile faded. He looked up at the doctor and asked with a trembling voice, "Will I start to die right away?".

Being young, the little boy had misunderstood the doctor; he thought he was going to have to give his sister all of his blood in order to save her.

"The Obstacles In Our Path"



In ancient times, a King had a boulder placed on a roadway. Then he hid himself and watched to see if anyone would remove the huge rock. Some of the king's wealthiest merchants and courtiers came by and simply walked around it. Many loudly blamed the King for not keeping the roads clear, but none did anything about getting the stone out of the way.

Then a peasant came along carrying a load of vegetables. Upon approaching the boulder, the peasant laid down his burden and tried to move the stone to the side of the road. After much pushing and straining, he finally succeeded. After the peasant picked up his load of vegetables, he noticed a purse lying in the road where the boulder had been. The purse contained many gold coins and a note from the King indicating that the gold was for the person who removed the boulder from the roadway. The peasant learned what many of us never understand - "Every obstacle presents an opportunity to improve our condition."

"Remember Those Who Serve"

In the days when an ice cream sundae cost much less, a 10 year-old boy entered a hotel coffee shop and sat at a table. A waitress put a glass of water in front of him. "How much is an ice cream sundae?" he asked. "50¢," replied the waitress.

The little boy pulled his hand out of his pocket and studied the coins in it.

"Well, how much is a plain dish of ice cream?" he inquired. By now more people were waiting for a table and the waitress was growing impatient. "35¢!" she brusquely replied.

The little boy again counted his coins. "I'll have the plain ice cream," he said. The waitress brought the ice cream, put the bill on the table and walked away. The boy finished the ice cream, paid the cashier and left.

When the waitress came back, she began to cry as she wiped down the table. There, placed neatly beside the empty dish, were two nickels and five pennies. You see, he couldn't have the sundae, because he had to have enough left to leave her a tip.

"Pickup In The Rain"

One night, at 11:30 p.m., an older African American woman was standing on the side of an Alabama highway trying to endure a lashing rainstorm. Her car had broken down and she desperately needed a ride. Soaking wet, she decided to flag down the next car.

A young white man stopped to help her, generally unheard of in those conflict-filled 1960s. The man took her to safety, helped her get assistance and put her into a taxicab.

She seemed to be in a big hurry, but wrote down his address and thanked him. Seven days went by and a knock came on the man's door. To his surprise, a giant console color TV was delivered to his home.

A special note was attached. It read: "Thank you so much for assisting me on the highway the other night. The rain drenched not only my clothes, but also my spirits. Then you came along. Because of you, I was able to make it to my dying husband's bedside just before he passed away. God bless you for helping me and unselfishly serving others."

Sincerely, Mrs. Nat King Cole.

First Important Lesson - "Know The Cleaning Lady"

During my second month of college, our professor gave

 us a pop quiz. I was a conscientious student and had breezed

through the questions, until I read the last one: "What is the 

first 

name of the woman who cleans the school?"

Surely this was some kind of joke. I had seen the cleaning


 woman several times. She was tall, dark-haired and in her

 50s, but how would I know her name? I handed in my paper

leaving the last question blank. Just before class ended, one 

student asked if the last question would count toward our quiz

 grade.

"Absolutely," said the professor. "In your careers, you will meet 


many people. All are significant. They deserve your attention 

and care, even if all you do is smile and say "hello."

I've never forgotten that lesson. I also learned her name was


Dorothy.

45 Life Lessons, written by a 90 year old

1. Life isn’t fair, but it’s still good.
2. When in doubt, just take the next small step.
3. Life is too short not to enjoy it.
4. Your job won’t take care of you when you are sick. Your friends and family will.
5. Don’t buy stuff you don’t need.
6. You don’t have to win every argument. Stay true to yourself.
7. Cry with someone. It’s more healing than crying alone.
8. It’s OK to get angry with God. He can take it.
9. Save for things that matter.
10. When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.
11. Make peace with your past so it won’t screw up the present.
12. It’s OK to let your children see you cry.
13. Don’t compare your life to others. You have no idea what their journey is all about.
14. If a relationship has to be a secret, you shouldn’t be in it.
15. Everything can change in the blink of an eye… But don’t worry; God never blinks.
16. Take a deep breath. It calms the mind.
17. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful.  Clutter weighs you down in many ways.
18. Whatever doesn’t kill you really does make you stronger.
19. It’s never too late to be happy.  But it’s all up to you and no one else.
20. When it comes to going after what you love in life, don’t take no for an answer.
21. Burn the candles, use the nice sheets, wear the fancy lingerie. Don’t save it for a special occasion. Today is special.
22. Overprepare, then go with the flow.
23. Be eccentric now. Don’t wait for old age to wear purple.
24. The most important sex organ is the brain.
25. No one is in charge of your happiness but you.
26. Frame every so-called disaster with these words, ‘In five years, will this matter?’
27. Always choose Life.
28. Forgive but don’t forget.
29. What other people think of you is none of your business.
30. Time heals almost everything. Give Time time.
31. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.
32. Don’t take yourself so seriously. No one else does.
33. Believe in miracles.
34. God loves you because of who God is, not because of anything you did or didn’t do.
35. Don’t audit life. Show up and make the most of it now.
36. Growing old beats the alternative — dying young.
37. Your children get only one childhood.
38. All that truly matters in the end is that you loved.
39. Get outside every day. Miracles are waiting everywhere.
40. If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else’s, we’d
grab ours back.
41. Envy is a waste of time. Accept what you already have, not what you think you need.
42. The best is yet to come…
43. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.
44. Yield.
45. Life isn’t tied with a bow, but it’s still a gift.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

300



In 1987, a 74-year old rickshaw puller by the name of Bai Fangli came back to his 

hometown

 planning to retire from his backbreaking job. There, he saw childrenworking in the

 fields, 

because they were too poor to afford school fees.

Bai returned to Tianjin and went back to work as a rickshaw puller, taking a modest 


accommodation next to the railway station. He waited for clients 24 hours a day, ate 

simple 

food and wore discarded second-hand clothes he found. He gave all of his hard-
earned 

earnings to support children who could not afford education.

In 2001, he drove his rickshaw to Tianjin YaoHua Middle School, to deliver his last 


installment of 
money. Nearly 90 years old, he told the students that he couldn't work any more. All of

 the 

students and teachers were moved to tears.

In total, Bai had donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students 


continue 

with their studies. In 2005, Bai passed away leaving behind an inspiring legacy.

If a rickshaw-puller who wore used clothes and had no education can support 300 children to


 go to school, imagine what you and I can do with the resources we have to bring about 

positive 

change in our world!

If you are going to LIKE and SHARE one post today, let it be this one!

Friday, August 16, 2013

Living Among the Dead

The story of five orphans forced to stay in a graveyard after 
their parents died of AIDS

JAMUA, UTTAR PRADESH ~ On Eid, just before the children went to the Idgah a few kilometres away, Ishratunissa counted her money carefully and handed the coins to her grandson Adil. They totalled Rs 5. It wasn’t much, but he might be able to buy himself some sweets.
He had been crying that morning. Ishratunissa sat with him, wiping his tears. But when the other children arrived to take him to the mosque, he was cheerful again. He wore the new set of clothes a charitable man from a nearby village had sent over. A green check shirt and a skullcap.
Adil doesn’t live in the village anymore.
The district administration sent him to school in Narayanpur with his brother Iqhlaq—again, an act of charity. The grandmother has tears of her own to wipe. She can’t see properly, she says. A thin film of cataract covers her pupils, making them look like glass.
She casts a glance in the direction of her granddaughter Nishath Bano, and says, “Poor girl.”

Jamua, the family’s village in Uttar Pradesh that is home to about 35 families, is surrounded by fields and a thick grove of trees. They also once had a house here to stay in. But after their father died of AIDS, the five children—Irfan, Nishath, Iqhlaq, Adil and Moonis—and their mother Aashiya Bano found life unbearable in that house.
They had to move out.
Aashiya, just 35 years old at the time, had contracted the virus too and was already afflicted by the disease. The old house was too dark and mouldy for her anyway, says Irfan. She liked sunlight and fresh air. A few months before she died, Aashiya had asked Irfan to build a little hut adjoining the house. He did, but it collapsed in May this year.
The kids wanted to return to their old house, but their uncles refused to let them back in. “We were afraid in that house,” says Irfan, the eldest, “Everyone said, ‘Go away.’ Where could we go? They said ‘Go live in the graveyard’.” They made a makeshift tent there under which all of them huddled. When Aashiya died, it was just the five of them left: the boys, aged 18, 13, 11 and nine, and the girl, 16. Only their grandmother would ever come near them. Now, they have been rehabilitated in their old house by district officials after a local reporter highlighted their plight. Taking note of a National Human Rights Commission report, the administration asked one of their uncles to unlock the old house and allow the children to stay there until it found a plot in the village to build them a new house under a government scheme, the Lohia Awas Yojana.

Before she died, her son Iqhlaq recalls, Aashiya had walked hand-in-hand with him towards the road. She was almost limping. “Walking looked like such an effort for her,” he says. They took a bus to the nearby tehsil Mandhata, and she bought him a length of checkered cloth that they took to a tailor to have stitched. Weak and frail, this was her last gift to her third-born. Iqhlaq wears it on Eid, a white-and-blue shirt. His mother liked those colours.
Last Eid, Aashiya had handed him Rs 20 to go buy himself some sweets. When she was alive, she would call for the children, ask after their health. Now they have to fend for themselves. There is a mobile handset the district administration has given them in case they need help. If, say, someone tries to force them out of the village.
For almost a month, they lived next to their mother’s grave. To them, she was extraordinary, even if fragile in her dying days. In the graveyard, it would be pitch dark once night fell, and the shadows cast by the moon made strange patterns on everything around. It was eerie. Nishath could not sleep. “It felt someone was calling out to me,” she says.
Salahuddin and Niyauddin, the two uncles, are now reconciled to the children.
For months, Niyauddin, who lives in Bombay, kept the house in Jamua locked. Finally, after pressure mounted, he let the children live in his quarters.

For years after he dropped out of school to take care of his ill father, Irfan worked odd jobs and earned around Rs 100 per day. He doesn’t know how his father, Awazhuddin, who drove trucks in Bombay, got the killer disease. It doesn’t matter anymore.
It was on a Friday that their thatch hut crumbled. The villagers, including some of their own relatives, refused to come anywhere near them. Even while addressing them, they would usually keep a distance of about 150 feet. It was best, they felt, that the children moved to the graveyard. But a few thought even that was too much. They wanted them out of the village.
Their rehabilitation is incomplete. The land the government first allotted turned out to be disputed property. A second allotment happens to be land next to the school ground, a little away from the cluster of mud-and-brick houses that make up this village.
Under the Lohia Awas Yojana, the children have been sanctioned Rs 1.5 lakh and 1.5 biswa land. The state government has also approved Rs 5 lakh for the five children. They are yet to get the money, though.


The children have spent many a night huddled in the local graveyard. Under a torn blue tarpaulin sheet, they had placed two cots and their meagre belongings— a few utensils and a plastic can for water. Three bricks that served as a stove are still lying next to that tree alongside burnt pieces of coal. That was how they lived before an anganwadi worker told her son, a reporter, about them. He alerted the media and then the administration.
The children have tested negative for HIV-AIDS, according to Pratapgarh’s Chief Medical Officer Vinod Kumar Pandey and another doctor of the Public Health Centre in Mandhata, reportedly.
Shunned for so long, that has come as a relief for the children. Earlier, parents in the village would not let their kids play or go near them. Now there is some form of repentance in almost everyone. Salahuddin, the uncle, says he didn’t know better and that they aren’t evil people.
A poor farmer who sells his hens’ eggs and works on other farms (though jobless right now) for a living, he has three children of his own to worry about. His wife says they didn’t have a choice in ostracising the family. “We were just afraid,” Salahuddin says. “We used to keep at least 100-200 metres away. We still don’t understand this strange illness. We didn’t want to die.”
The children are still in penury. Their mother’s old BPL card comes in handy. They get 10 kg of wheat, 20 kg of rice, 2 kg of sugar, and three litres of kerosene from a PDS outlet in Mandhata. That is not sufficient, but it helps them get by. The district administration has also promised the eldest son an MNREGA card and a new BPL card.
This Eid, their mother’s elder sister came to celebrate the occasion with them. She brought them a box of sweets. “What strength these children have, to go through so much and not utter a single world of complaint,” she says, “I didn’t even know they had made them live in a graveyard.”
Nishath says her mother had wanted them to study. But she dropped out of school long ago, once her mother took ill. She had to cook, clean and take care of her ailing mother, apart from minding the younger boys. Iqhlaq and Adil are now in a residential school in Narayanpur, but Moonis—still young—lives with her.
“When we build our new house, I would like to have three rooms,” says Nishath, “We have been in our uncle’s house for the last 20 days. It would be better to have our own place. Then we can look for a girl for my brother, and she will take care of them. I will get married then and go to my own house.”
+++
Till 2003, they used to live in Mumbai. Then tragedy struck. Their father fell ill and they couldn’t pay the rent anymore. Their mother Aashiya made them all board the Mahanagari Express, and they returned to Jamua for refuge. Irfan had studied till Class 5 in Mumbai.
On their return to Uttar Pradesh, they consulted doctors at a government hospital in Allahabad and found that their father had AIDS. “My father never used to cry,” says Irfan, “He knew he was going to die soon, but held on.”
In Jamua, the grandmother let them stay with her. Awazhuddin would lie on a cot in a corner of the house, which was one long room, with his wife in attendance.
He never spoke much.
Moonis, the youngest, was born in the village.
It was three years after their return from Mumbai that the father died. They buried him in the graveyard, and once every six months, Irfan would light a candle at his grave and read out an aayat of the Quran. The mother fell ill a year after their father’s death. The symptoms were similar. Unrelenting fever. The same pattern of ill health, more or less. They went to doctors, who confirmed AIDS. She did not have long to live, they said. Irfan had to work. He assisted some truck drivers but never went too far, staying within the district on his travels. His mother, he knew, was so ill that he may need to rush home at short notice. Sometimes, the drivers would be kind enough to let him call one of the villagers to ask after his mother. Once every three days, he would manage to make this call. On Eid, he would return home and buy his siblings new clothes. One morning, she was gone.
At 2:30 am at night, Irfan remembers, he had given her water. When Nishath got up, she nudged her mother.
Aashiya didn’t respond, so she called out to her brothers.
They buried her near their father.

Swamp Monsters Make Bad Housewives

by Tyler Rinne


I woke up with one of her scales stuck to my cheek

 the other day. I noticed it after I’d put one contact

 in. Squinting closed my contact-less eye, I peeled it

 off and laid it on our faux-marble sink. I used to 

think they looked like slices of opal, as if a gem had

been shaved by a pastrami slicer to arrange a

beautiful jigsaw puzzle on her skin. I used to think

they were beautiful. And now? Now they look like

 rotten toenails. Rotten toenails that I pick off the 

carpet, off the sofa, off the bed.

We used to lie in that bed tucked like sardines in 

love. The sheets would get a wetness to them - 

morning dew that misted from her body. “This gives

a whole new meaning to water-bed,” I’d whisper 

She’d giggle and I’d kiss her on the small dorsal fin

that jutted out from the nape of her neck. We’d just lie there.
These days, though, her dew is more of a drizzle.

 I have to change the sheets every morning or our

comforter starts sprouting little copper-topped 

toadstools that make me sneeze. “This gives a whole

new meaning to bed-wetter,” I mumble to myself as I 

cram another soggy sheet into the washer.

She lounges in the bath.

That’s another thing! I know she needs water to stay

alive. I know that. But must she whet her gills at the

 dinner table?

There was a time I thought it was cute when I’d be taking a shower and she’d sneak into the bathroom and pull back the rubber ducky print curtain and step in. “Just need a drink,” she’d coo. I’d let her stand between me and the showerhead and put my hands on her hips while the water ran down her face and neck and gills. Then she’d turn around, kiss me on the chin, say thanks and go back to whatever she was doing before her spiracles dried up, and I’d shampoo my hair.

Now, she’s just come back from getting groceries and is unloading them onto the table when she says, “I was thinking we could go to The Lake tonight?”

I shift in my recliner, squeaking. A guy doesn’t realize how fidgety he is until he covers all his furniture with plastic. I run my bare toes over the living room tile. Tile, tile, everywhere. We can’t put down rugs, of course, just bathmats.
“Okay,” I say and get my shoes and keys and coat.

Up at The Lake Bar & Grille, the bartender says, “Excuse me, but your wife is making a mess.”
My beer pauses halfway on its journey to my mouth and I raise my eyebrows at him. He’s wearing a feathered gray and black sweater that makes him look like a goose. I drop my eyes to the the pool of water beneath my wife’s barstool, and as I watch it, another large drop slides over her big toe and sandal, into her growing pond on the hardwood floor.
“You can clean it up or you can get out,” says the goose.
“It’s just water,” I say, setting down my beer.
“Yeah, and that’s all she’s drinking, too. Not my loss if you hit the road.”
“Listen, pal,” I start to say, but stop when I feel a clammy hand on my forearm.
“It’s okay, honey,” says my wife. “Let’s just go.”
I take my wife by the arm and give the goose a parting glare, feeling his beedy eyes on our backs as we walk out into the night.
“I’m sorry,” I say, winding my arm around her waist and tucking her into my side. We walk across the parking lot like that. She slides her cheek up against mine and leaves it there.
“Don’t be,” she says. “It’s not your fault. Besides, our movie’s on tonight.”
I open the passenger door for her. The Creature from the Black Lagoon. ”I’ve never understood why you’re not offended.” I crawl onto the driver’s seat, and the car sinks a little with my weight.
“I know,” she says. “I think it’s funny.”
I buckle up and stick the keys into the ignition.

“Oh,” says my wife, giggling. She reaches out and picks something off my cheek. “Sorry,” she says, holding up one of her scales. and with the fluorescent parking lot lights shining through the windshield, it almost looks like a little slice of opal.