Skip to main content

A Warm Winter Day

 Guest Post 

Susan Stephen is a former student of mine who found a mention in my previous post without her name. She's studying Developmental Social Work in Canada. She sent me a short story of hers this morning and I think it deserves a wider readership. It's the story of a young Indian student in Canada, like the author herself. The pain of homesickness, occasional instances of racism, and the usual hardships of an overseas student are all poignantly portrayed in the story without ever losing touch with the essential tenderness of human relationships. There's touch of professionalism in the story. May Susan mature into a prominent writer of good literature. 

Susan Stephen

A Warm Winter Day

It was a warm January morning, the warmest, she thought. January mornings back home in India were warmer than this, yet she found today a nice day. She took a hot bath and had a sandwich for breakfast.  While getting ready for college, she thought maybe she should pack something for lunch as she was going straight to work after college. But her laziness took over; she didn’t pack anything for lunch; in fact, she worked empty stomach that day. Most days, she couldn’t find time to cook after college and work, so working on an empty stomach wasn’t anything new to her. She works as a cashier at a local convenience store. She loved working there; the usual customers were nice and friendly to her, and she often enjoyed having a conversation with them. There were a few who were rude and some racist, but she was good at dealing with them.

She took the bus to the college, and on the way, she FaceTimed her mother; for her, her mother is nothing short of a best friend. They always shared everything, but she always made sure that she never told her mom that she missed her cooking; after all, she used to make fun of them. She always thought of her mom’s cooking and how delicious it really was; even today, she thought of her mom’s appam and stew which were her favourite breakfast. It has only been a few months since she left India for higher studies in Canada, and homesickness is challenging to take over as her BFF. But she stood strong. Whenever she got time, she cooked; she adores cooking, but she sucks at time management, and she never fails to point to the Canadian bus timing as the culprit for her lacking. As much as she enjoyed talking to her mom, she hated it that much; it reminded her of the good times she spent as a teenager at home, the nutmeg trees, her pets, her friends, everything. How easy her life was, not worrying about money, work, and taxes, being a true teenager. After coming to Canada, she had to say bye to all of it at the age of 18. The bus reached the last stop, the college; she said bye to her mom and got off the bus.

While walking to her class, she thought, “Does every international student struggle the same?”

“Probably yes. “

“Why do we pay 4 to 5 times that of a domestic student for the same services? Okay, I get it; I am an international student, but isn't four times a little too much?”

With all these questions, she walked to her class, where the other international and domestic students were waiting for the professors to read from the PPT.

Today, she had only one class, and after that, she took the bus to work; she always made sure she was at least 15 minutes early so she could take her sweet time changing her clothes and boots to work clothes. It's only been two months since she started working there, so work friends were too far from her dreams. After changing into her work clothes, she walked to the cash to punch in. The shift was going all good, but something started to feel off; she wondered why. Today is not that bad, so why? Homesick? She ignored her feelings and continued to smile at every customer who came to her cash and asked how their day was; some complained, and some were enthusiastic to share their good day. She always appreciated those who took their time to talk to her; she had learned many things and facts about Canada from her customers. They probably liked talking to her too; she was a noncomplainer, always liked to listen to their stories, and was expressive. But she has always noticed that no one was interested in knowing her story; they ask her how her day was out of courtesy, and she always replies with ‘good.’

She always worked 4 hours, well that’s the hours the manager always gave her. The first two hours of the shift felt longer than usual. Her co-worker came to take her off for her fifteen-minute break. She gladly gave her cash to her co-worker and walked towards the punch clock. Today, she was the closing cashier.

So, she decided to buy some chicken during her break because there wouldn't be anyone to cash her out at the end of her shift. The chicken the store sold was of good quality; she often bought meat from the store. Moreover, she had ten percent employee discounts, too. “Maybe I'll cook chicken curry like grandma’s and her ghee rice; my roommates do like ghee rice, a little treat for them,” she thought. She lived in a shared home with four other girls from India, China, Nigeria, and the Philippines respectively. They were the sweetest, kindest girls out there. They looked after each other and cared like siblings, excluding the physical fights. Their favourite time in the house is when they cook together; mostly, they cook for themselves, but once every month, one of the girls cooks for everyone, a little tradition of theirs, and it was her turn this month.

She switched on her mobile data while walking toward the meat aisle; she kept it off at work because it was a waste of data and a distraction. As soon as she switched on her data, she received a voice call from her sister, “Hmm... Chechi, calling at this hour?” She picked up the call, “What do you want? I’m working. Actually, you called at the right time; I'm on my break.” She heard nothing from the other side of her phone.

“Hello?”

“Achu,” her sister called.

“Yeah”

“Ammamma is no more.”

Her eyes filled with tears. She stood there for a second, and she looked around. There were customers everywhere. She took a long breath and said, “Ah, when was it?”

“A few moments back.”

“What about the funeral?”

“Haven’t decided.”

“Ah, did you call Kichu chechi?”

“No, are you okay?”

“Yeah, I’m okay, I’m at work, there’s only five more minutes left for my break, call everyone and inform, text me the details, tell Appa I won't be able to make it, of course, he knows that but still tell him.”

“Yeah.”

“Okay, bye.”

She looked around; there was no one that she knew—someone to tell that her grandma passed away.

For her, grandma was someone special, someone who always supported her crazy dreams, someone who was always there even in the absence of her BFF mom. She looked at the chicken, “Aaah, ammamma’s chicken curry.” She thought. She missed home more than ever. She felt lonely, lonelier than before. She wanted to cry, but she couldn’t. She felt like it would be a waste to cry. Waste of what? If you were to ask, she didn't know, time? Tears? Good mascara? Maybe she wasn’t processing the news. What is there to process? She knew she was seeing her grandma for the last time when she was saying bye to her before the ride to the airport. She knew it was the last warm hug and wet kiss on the cheeks, but deep inside, she wished for it not to be the last, and as always, her wish didn’t come true; her grandmother was gone.  She walked past the aisle thinking about all the good times she had with her grandma, like when they mocked her mom’s cooking, when they hid from Appa after stealing his phone, and when they walked home from church, when she told her bedtime stories. When she fell, her grandma would put some ointment and say magic spells, and they would laugh together. All memories were coming back. Her throat started drying; she took a sip from her bottle and punched back in. She went and took off her co-worker.

Now her cash was empty for some reason; she looked around; the store was empty now. Where is everyone? Every other cashier started cleaning their cash, and one already punched out.  She saw a customer walk towards her cash, and she smiled. As soon as she started to ask how his day was, he said, “Fucking Indian, I need someone else to put me through; you guys are everywhere; I chose this store because it's all white; you guys have got into this store too.”

It was true that the store only had Canadian people working for them; surprisingly, she was the only one who was foreign or someone who was not Canadian. She always wondered why. After some convincing, he did come through her cash, but he was rude. She didn't utter any word throughout the order; she didn’t even wish him good night. She always wished good night even to the rudest customer. But she smiled all through the order.

A few more customers came through her cash after he left. She smiled and talked to them. Later at night, she closed her cash, cleaned it, and punched out. “A slow night,” she murmured to herself. She walked to the locker room and changed back into normal clothes. She looked at the mirror, smiled, made a funny face, and laughed at herself. She lived right across the street, only a 15-minute walk to her apartment. It was very dark, but it didn’t scare her; she put on her headset and played her favourite songs. The night was warm for a January night in Canada, “the warmest,” she thought. She started walking to her apartment. Halfway through, her eyes started to get filled with tears, she cried. She cried till the tip of her beautiful brown nose turned red on the warm January night.

Comments

  1. Rama kashyap- Susan’s story touched my heart . A true depiction of the life of students in a foreign country

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hari OM
    Thank you for sharing Susan's writing with us... poignant and impressive. YAM xx

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

Insecurity and Exclusivism

“ Hindu khatare mein hai.” This was one of the first slogans that accompanied the emergence of Narendra Modi on the national scene. It means Hindus are in Danger . It reveals a deep-rooted feeling of insecurity. Hindus constitute an overwhelming majority in India – 80%. All the high positions in governance, judiciary, academics, any significant place, are occupied by Hindus. Yet the slogan was born. Strange? It will be facile to argue that Modi used this slogan and its concomitant hatred of Muslims and Christians as a political weapon for winning votes. True, he was successful in that; he rose to the highest political post in the country using minority-bashing. But the hatred did not end with that achievement; rather it spread outward and became more exclusive. Muslim and European rulers of India were booted out from the country’s history books and wherever else possible like the names of roads and institutions. With vengeance. Now there is a concerted effort going on to place In...

The Real Enemies of India

People in general are inclined to pass the blame on to others whatever the fault.  For example, we Indians love to blame the British for their alleged ‘divide-and-rule’ policy.  Did the British really divide India into Hindus and Muslims or did the Indians do it themselves?  Was there any unified entity called India in the first place before the British unified it? Having raised those questions, I’m going to commit a further sacrilege of quoting a British journalist-cum-historian.  In his magnum opus, India: a History , John Keay says that the “stock accusations of a wider Machiavellian intent to ‘divide and rule’ and to ‘stir up Hindu-Muslim animosity’” levelled against the British Raj made little sense when the freedom struggle was going on in India because there really was no unified India until the British unified it politically.  Communal divisions existed in India despite the political unification.  In fact, they existed even before the Briti...

You Don’t Know the Sky

I asked the bird to lend me wings. I longed to fly like her. Gracefully. She tilted her head and said, “Wings won’t be of any use to you because you don’t know the sky.” And she flew away. Into the sky. For a moment, I was offended. What arrogance! Does she think she owns the sky? As I watched the bird soar effortlessly into the blue vastness, I began to see what she meant. I wanted wings, not the flight. Like wanting freedom without the responsibility that comes with it. The bird had earned her wings. Through storms, through hunger, through braving the odds. She manoeuvred her way among the missiles that flew between invisible borders erected by us humans. She witnessed the macabre dance of death that brought down cities, laid waste a whole country. Wings are about more than flights. How often have you perched on the stump of a massive tree brought down by a falling warhead and wept looking at the debris of civilisations? The language of the sky is different from tha...

Nazneen’s Fate

N azneen is the protagonist of Monica Ali’s debut novel Brick Lane (2003). Born in Bangla Desh, Nazneen is married at the age of 18 to 40-year-old Chanu Ahmed who lives in London. Fate plays a big role in Nazneen’s life. Rather, she allows fate to play a big role. What is the role of fate in our life? Let us examine the question with Nazneen as our example. Nazneen was born two months before time. Later on she will tell her daughters that she was “stillborn.” Her mother refused to seek medical help though the infant’s condition was critical. “We must not stand in the way of Fate,” the mother said. “Whatever happens, I accept it. And my child must not waste any energy fighting against Fate.” The child does survive as if Fate had a plan for her. And she becomes as much a fatalist as her mother. She too leaves everything to Fate which is not quite different from God if you’re a believer like Nazneen and her mother. When a man from another continent, who is more than double her age,...