‘Cause while you wait inside, the days go by

one.
I made a fruit smoothie (out of peach yoghurt, cherries, orange juice, and crushed ice; it was a’ight) and stood at the kitchen sink, drinking the excess straight out of the blender, and I felt like such a boy. It was fun.

two.
I stopped by the drugstore a couple days ago to drop off a disposable camera for photo processing. I don’t even remember what’s on there, but it’s been sitting on top of my bed’s headboard for the past two months or so. Super charismatically mysterious. But this is not the point. The point is that while I was filling out my photo envelope at the counter, the guy adjacent to me was loudly jabbering away on his cell phone. Actually, he had one of those hands-free headsets that I always laugh at because it makes people appear as if they’re talking to themselves. Which this guy may have been, for all I know. With his conveniently freed hands, he was sifting through a pile of photographs, some of them black and white. He was tall and blonde and looked normal enough, wearing slacks and a button-down shirt and shoes. His phone conversation sort of went as follows:

“Daniel, I told you, I’m at Longs, picking up pictures. I’m looking right at them right now. Daniel, I’m looking right at them. Here’s one of you in front of your great-grandfather’s house. Here’s one of an iguana and a giraffe sitting on a chair that’s at least two hundred years old. [Laughing.] Daniel, you have to see the iguana and the giraffe! What do you think of that! And here’s one of… [Mumbling indistinctly.] I’m looking right at the pictures, Daniel, what do you think of that! What do you think, huh? [Pauses, fiddles with his phone.] Sorry, Daniel, I was really focused on these pictures; I guess I cut you off. Okay, anyway. And here’s another picture of your great-grandfather’s house again. So this is what I need you to do, Daniel: I need you to bring a shovel and help me dig. There’s gold buried at your great-grandfather’s house in South Africa, Daniel, and you need to help me dig. Daniel, are you listening to me? Daniel, Daniel, Daniel… There’s gold there! What do you think of that! Oh, look, here’s the iguana and the giraffe again. [Laughing.] I’m looking right at them. You see that? [Holds the photos up so the photo center employee can see. She smiles.] Okay, so make sure you bring your shovel, Daniel.”

three.
I was discussing my career plans (or lack thereof) with my father the other night. “Make sure you get a happy job,” he advised me. Lately, he has been of the mindset that a “happy job” would involve a post-law school career. I’m pretty sure I disagree. More on this later. Happy jobs though, that’s something to keep in mind.

four.
I have spent the last two days trying to get ahold of my mother’s various medical records in preparation for an upcoming appointment she’s scheduled for, and people are driving me crazy. Today’s drama trauma: The doctor’s office assures me they will have the records available at the front desk for me to pick up, then they go and courier them somewhere else, they don’t know where, and I have to spend 45 minutes tracking them down. We need more rockstar (some soon-to-be) medical doctors like Chai, karrvakarela, Sri, Maria, and, hands down of course, Somayya AND THE BEAN! Everyone else is a stupid moron. Or maybe, in all fairness, the doctors are fine and it’s just the people who work for them who are morons. I don’t know, I’m just annoyed.

five.
I went out to lunch with a group of friends. A friend replied, “Yes, please,” when the server asked her, “Would you like a super salad with that?” and I started laughing because what the server had really asked was, “Would you like a soup or salad with that?” and at least one of my friends always gets it wrong whenever we eat at this place. And then I had to repeat it about seven times, mainly because that was such a Yasmine kind of misunderstanding, and so I take some sort of perverse pleasure in other people making the same mistake. Ah, me.

Don’t wait up, we’ll be fine, somehow we might get it right

Evidence #49247 on the list of Reasons Why Yasmine is an Incompetent Fool involves me accidentally formatting the memory card on my digital camera and thereby deleting the 200-300 or so photos I took yesterday evening during a wedding mehndi ceremony my sister and I attended. Within two minutes of leaving the bride’s home, no less. I wouldn’t feel so bad if it weren’t for the fact that the wedding party’s unprofessional photographer had double-booked and then canceled on them last-minute, and they had asked if my sister and I could cover the photos for the mehndi at least.

Right smack in the middle of Bean and I having our post-event “I had a lot of fun!” “Me too!” exchange while hitting the road to head home, it all went zzzaaaaaaaapppppp. The most comprehensive set of photos from the entire evening, all gone in a split second. All I was trying to do was check how much space I had left on my memory card; one slip of the finger had me pressing “OK” for the “format memory card” option on the same screen. Ouch. With a 1GB card, there was absolutely no reason why I needed to verify space anyway. This obsessive-compulsiveness has got to go, and now.

Result: Lots of cursing; a few frustrated, angry tears; and the singularly awesome Bean consoling me that it was okay, because she had gotten about four rolls of photos, too. So yeah, that was one grand f*ck up, and I can’t stop wincing every time I think about it, and I’ll probably continue grinding my teeth for another week or so. I can’t remember the last time I felt so stupid and useless, and I’m pretty stupid and useless by nature, so that’s saying a lot. Freakin’ hell.

In much, much happier news: A psychopathically crackheadedly crazily huge congratulations to my lovely Somayya, who got accepted to her top-choice post-baccalaureate premedical program like the smart child that she is. I’m not sure if I’m allowed to say where, but rest assured it’s in the SF Bay Area, because s’all about the Bay, baby! Come join us on the dark side! Now all I need is a job in the Bay, and we’re good to go.

Don’t mess with the marigold queen

In my family, the word we use for the massive gatherings in which we lend a helping hand is hashr. I’m not sure if it’s a Hindku or Urdu or Arabic or Pukhtu word. “Hashr karna” [to do a hashr] is one of those phrases we use naturally without analyzing the etymological background, just as we call the little hillside of land behind our house tibuki. I’ve always equated a hashr to traditions such as when neighbors gathered together to help harvest one another’s annual crops or built homes as a community. My father translates it as a “house party”: “You invite a whole bunch of people over, and work together to accomplish something, and provide meals throughout the day.”

Through the course of conversation one day, my sister and I decided the reason we’d been feeling so irritable and impatient during the last several weekends was because much of that time had been spent in the company of our relatives. There was the weekend we were in Sacramento when one of our uncles was re-configuring his sprinkler system and laying sod for his front lawn. There were the two weekends when everyone came over to our home in the Bay Area to help erect the new back fence. There was the other weekend when another uncle needed helping hands for painting. Mix in a couple visits for various family anniversaries and baby births, and you’ve got way too much time spent in close proximity with dozens of relatives who, while arguably loveable (in moderate doses), know just which buttons to push to make you feel defensive and drive you slowly insane.

One of the last heated discussions we had, for example, concerned my aunts’ argument that Taha, the new baby of a family friend, was named after a famous PTV film star and not the Quranic chapter entitled “Ta-Ha”. The disagreement was momentarily interrupted only when another one of my aunts absently turned away from the television set and exhorted everyone to “Be quiet and pay attention to this drama that just came on!” [And, yes, I just had to share that conversation with 2Scoops, who, if I remember correctly, was a mixture of amused and insulted, and rightfully so.]

The hashrs at our house were enough to drive me up the wall. Not only did I spend an inordinate amount of time staring wide-eyed at the amount of food my male relatives consumed, I also had to entertain (and pick up after) my nieces and make sure my bedroom was in a presentable state because the women always love walking right in unasked and sitting down to converse with one another. It also involved lots of yelling at the boys, who kept walking in and out of the house without removing their shoes, consequently leaving dirt-tracks on the expensive Persian rugs. And other things I don’t remember but which gave me a headache, and I get headaches on an extremely rare basis.

The good part was, I didn’t have to do all this on my own, because that’s what the other women were there for, to help out. The downside of that was, I hate it when people underestimate what I can do. All day long, I had to stop myself from reminding everyone that during the time our mother spent seven years in Pakistan [this was from 8th grade up until the second year of college for me] and we saw her for a mere three months out of the year, we three kids became adept at running the entire household on our own. Yes, I do know how to cook, and well. Yes, I know which platters and dishes and pans accompany each type of food. Yes, I’m pretty sure I know just how many seconds are required to warm up the baby’s milk, and while I understand your concern that I might give her boiling milk or something, telling me once is good enough, thanks, so stop hovering over me already unless you want to do it yourself. Yes, I already know which mixture of spices go in each dish. Also, I know the dining room rug needs vacuuming, but you’ve got to be kidding me if you seriously think I will even consider cleaning it until after your little granddaughters are finished with their meals. Oh, and one more thing: Leave my damn chicken alone! Thank you.

So perhaps you could understand my annoyance when we wandered outdoors in the evening and my aunt plucked a dried marigold flower – or saathbargay, as we call them in our Hindku dialect – and handed it to me. “See, it’s so dry that if you twist it just a little, it falls apart. Hold it like this and twist it around in your hand, see?” I bit my tongue in an effort to refrain from shouting, “I’ve already taken it apart, see? I don’t need your stupid directions for such a simple task. You’re killing me!” She continued, “And you can take the seeds and throw them wherever you want and the flowers will grow there. You should throw them over here, in that row. Go on, throw the seeds.”

In a petty gesture of rebellion, I spitefully scattered the marigold seeds not in the garden terraces my aunt had advised, but within the brick circle bordering the crepe myrtle tree, all the while thinking resentfully, I grew up with these flowers! Who is she to explain them to me! Yes, I am quite childish, I admit it.

A few days later, while walking in the yard with my father, I laughingly recounted this story to him: “So yeah, boboji wanted me to scatter the saathbargay seeds over there, but I threw them over here instead.”

He was amused. “You just wanted to be difficult, didn’t you?”

“Well, yeah! She kept talking to me like I didn’t know anything about those flowers! Remember when I was really little, you used to put me down on the tree stump by the saathbargay and Khalida [our cat, who actually turned out to be a Khalid, but sshhhh] used to sit by me, and you’d take pictures of us? And that one time when I was, like, eight, you and I scattered saathbargay seeds over on tibuki, and when we checked it out a long while later, there were iceplants all over the place, and so I thought that saathbargay seeds turn into iceplants!”

“Yes,” said my father. “But it would have been nice if you scattered the seeds over where boboji wanted you to, because that’s where all the other marigolds are, see?”

“I know, but she was being so patronizing and it annoyed me.”

He laughed a little, shaking his head at the same time. “Well, there’s no need to be defensive all the time, you know. Everybody loves you, you know, but for some reason you’re still so obnoxious. You still persist in this…this hoodlum-ness of yours.”

“Hoodlum-ness?” I repeated, shaking with laughter. “Is that a real word now?”

“Yes,” he said darkly. “That’s what you are.”

“You know you love it!”

“Well, of course I do. Even though you’re so difficult all the time.”

“And obnoxious?”

“And obnoxious. I mean, just look at how you messed up the symmetry here. There aren’t supposed to be any saathbargay growing under the crepe myrtle.” He clicked his tongue, shaking his head in regret.

“Sorry.”

“No, you’re not.”

The end is nigh

This one goes out to blogger extraordinaire Yaser and to my cousin Somayya [aka SuperDuperWoman aka PrincessPrettyPants (PPP)] and to the at least half-a-dozen other friends of mine who will be taking the MCAT tomorrow. You’re almost done, peoples! Rock it up tomorrow, and then you won’t have to review physics ever again. Because physics is stinky. Also, make sure you take your three forms of ID with you, and get fingerprinted all nicely to ensure that it’s really you yourself who are taking your exam, because we all know that, as M remarked sarcastically this morning, “Yeah, that’s what I like to do, take MCATs for other people in my spare time.”

Much love and good vibes and blue raspberry slurpees for celebration. Meanwhile, go score the hell out of that stupid test!

Leave your things behind/’cause it’s all going off without you

While sitting in class a few mornings ago, I took one of the ultra-fine-point Sharpies I love using for writing out of my bag and scribbled BALANCE on the back of my hand. Later in the afternoon, I penned just below it the names of four people whose phone calls I needed to return, but those were soon inadvertently washed away with soap and water and I was left wondering who exactly I had been meaning to get in touch with. This speculation and uncertainty were compounded by the fact that I couldn’t remember what the hell the BALANCE was supposed to be about either.

I am so not with the program these days. Over the course of yesterday, a total of five different people said to me, puzzled: “You have a final exam on Friday? I thought all finals were on Thursday,” which ultimately freaked me out enough that I emailed my professor to verify the date. Yes, it’s on Friday, just as I thought, but I really shouldn’t have had to second-guess myself.

The whole thing reminds me of the second round of midterms during spring quarter: I showed up to one class armed with scantrons, expecting a multiple-choice exam, only to find a paralyzing sea of essay-exam blue books awaiting me in the lecture hall. The thoughts racing through my head as I raced across campus to the student store to buy a blue book are not fit to be published here. And, then, there was another class in which I took my sweet time and wasn’t overly worried about the fact that I kept dozing off during the course of the exam, only to realize during the last half-hour that what I had mistakenly recalled as a two-hour class was in reality only one hour long and I didn’t know most of the material we were being tested on. Yeah, it was grand.

Anyway, I’ve just compiled two lists: one of people whom I need to call, and another with names of people I need to email, and soon. What is the world coming to? I’m turning into my father.

BALANCE, you will be pleased to know I remembered later, turned out to be a reminder that I needed to check my bank account and ensure I had enough money for gas before I stopped to fill up the tank on my way home. But because I wrote it with a permanent marker that withstood all attempts at soaping and scrubbing, the word stayed on my hand for the next three days and served as a reminder of everything I need to currently do with my life; namely, browse other peoples’ weblogs less and update my own more often, spend less time on AIM and more time writing cover letters for potential employment opportunities, reply to emails and make phone calls, stop reading three books at once and turn my attention to studying for my neurobiology final exam instead…

Speaking of cars, another thing I need to work on balancing is trying to figure out how to survive ever since my car broke down on Monday afternoon and was towed off to Sacramento for repairs, after which it will most likely be sold, good riddance. Yes, you read that correctly. Yasmine, without a car?! This is anathema to my entire existence as Commuter Child Extraordinaire. But what I am most annoyed at my car about – even more than its lack of cooperation in choosing to die on me – is the fact that I had indeed checked my account balances that day and just filled up the car with a nearly-full tank of gas. Thirty dollars! Think of how much food I could have bought with all that money! [I’m sure that 2Scoops, self-appointed Nutritionist Extraordinaire, would be proud of this line of reasoning.]

Taking over the daddy-o’s SUV yesterday was a grand experience, though, I admit it. Today, since I was off from school, the daddy-o dropped me off at a local coffee shop so I could study all day. When he returned in the evening to pick me up, the first thing he noticed when he stepped inside the coffee shop was the sight of my feet carelessly propped up on the seat of the chair across from mine at the tiny round table I had been sitting at for the greater part of the day. He crossed the room, frowning disapprovingly. “You should learn some manners,” he scolded me sotto voce. I scrunched up my face unrepentantly and retorted, “You know I always have to sit with my feet up.”

So tomorrow is my NPB final. The end is looming near, which is mighty exciting, considering that I’m passing all these “multiple guess” [as my father calls them] exams by a nice margin, even though I still don’t understand parts of it. Stupid fetal blood circulation and your complicated-ness, I hate you. Who told you to bypass the lungs anyway, dammit? I mean, this diagram has roman numerals and plenty of arrows, and I still don’t get it. How hard could it be?

But I’m going to pass the ass out of this class if it’s the last academic thing I ever do, so help me God.

Silly fetuses, thinking you could thwart my plans.

What did you think?

Since I’m trying to study for my neurobiology final and most of my real-life conversations for the past few weeks have been irritable outbursts about how much I hate science classes, I thought I’d share a poem I wrote a few years back. It’s a bit different from the last one. This one is something I wrote one night when I was annoyed about being constantly stared at whenever I’m in public, compounded by the misery of studying terrifying academic subjects I didn’t even understand. Oh, and I didn’t feel like working on a comparative literature paper. Yes, procrastination has been my lifelong hobby, what can I say. Anyway, by the time I finished the poem, I was too amused to be bitter anymore, and I remember printing out a stack of copies and gleefully handing it out to all my friends and acquaintances. It still makes me laugh, rereading it. It may have been three years, but this poem’s still very much me, except for the fact that I’m neither pre-med nor an NPB (Neurobiology, Physiology, & Behavior) major anymore. And I’m no longer so sure about that pediatric audiology deal either.

Apologies for all the scrolling. It looks a lot less overwhelming when it’s printed as two columns front-and-back on a Word document.

The poem itself was inspired by a passage from Chang-rae Lee’s novel, A Gesture Life, a brilliantly-composed segment that reminded me of my own insecurities:

What used to concern me greatly about leaving was the awkward impression you can sometimes have, say when you find yourself on an everyday street, or in a store, or in what would otherwise be a shimmering, verdant park, and you think not about the surroundings but about yourself, and how people will stop and think (most times, unnoticeably) about who you may be, how you fit into the picture, what this may say, and so on and so forth. I’ve never really liked this kind of thinking, either theirs or mine, and have always wished to be in a situation like the one I have steadily fashioned for myself in this town, where, if I don’t have many intimates or close friends, I’m at least a quantity known, somebody long ago counted.

What Did You Think?

I’ve seen them all:
The puzzled looks,
The furtive gazes,
The passing end
Of a sweeping glance.
You didn’t think I noticed, did you?
My own face remained
Serene and composed,
Until you had passed.
Want to know a secret?
It’s a mask.
And whenever you pass by me,
As I sit cross-legged on a park bench
Or stroll through the mall
Or let my eyes fall back on
The textbook lying open before me,
My head remains held high with pride,
But inwardly my thoughts are whirling,
Mirroring the myriad questions
Racing through your own head,
Because I know what you were wondering
During the second it took for your eyes
To sweep over me:
Who is that girl?
Where does she come from?
What is she doing here?
How does she fit into this picture?

Striding past me,
You leave in your wake
An unvoiced thought,
The most insulting dismissal of all—
(Did you really think
You kept your own face so very blank
After all?)—
“Why, I bet she doesn’t even speak
A word of English!”

My lips curve in a smile.
Laughter bubbles up in my throat.
I cover my mouth with both hands
In an effort to silence
An outburst of hilarity.

It isn’t your fault, I suppose.
You couldn’t know
That I probably speak
Better English than you do,
That my grammar is more precise,
My sentences (sometimes) more concise,
My sarcasm more biting,
My articulated anger more hurtful
Than you could ever imagine.

It isn’t your fault, I suppose.
You couldn’t know
That I’ve squandered away
Precious minutes spent
Racing against the clock
In an effort to correct the grammatical errors
That my chemistry professor managed to
Pepper his midterm exams with,
Instead of calculating rates of reactions
And industriously bubbling in
Correct answers on my scantron.
(Is the answer really always “C”?)
No wonder I’ve had so much trouble
Trying to remember
What a spectator ion is,
And what a buffer solution does.
And, by the way,
Why exactly do they call it
The “plum pudding theory”
Anyway?

It isn’t your fault, I suppose.
You couldn’t know
That I frantically wave my hand
In biology lecture
To correct the professor as he
Endeavors to scrawl tongue-twisting terms
Across the blackboard.
But please don’t ask me to define
What platyhelminthes are,
Or to explain what good
Comes from possessing
A hollow dorsal nerve cord.

Will it truly surprise you to learn that
Commas are my friends,
And my favorite color is red?
Am I in the wrong major?
Perhaps.
No one seems to understand
What exactly “NPB”
Stands for anyway,
Least of all myself.
Yet I’ve mastered the art
Of rattling it off my tongue with ease,
And learned to accept
The questioning glances that follow,
As a matter of course.

But did you really think
That you skillfully hid
Your complete surprise
At hearing me pronounce
Such words as “neurobiology”
And “otolaryngology”
With remarkable enunciation?
Oh, I’m sorry—
I left my accent at home today.
Is that so very disappointing
For you to hear?
“What? You want to be
A pediatric audiologist
When you grow up?”

It’s sad that I decided on
My career goal when I was eight,
While many of you
Are yet scratching your heads,
Trying to decipher
What the prefix “audio-”
Means.

Is my inherent sarcasm
Starting to shine through?
Let me tell you:
Words, when used wisely,
Can sting far more effectively
Than any concentration of
Hydrochloric acid you spill on yourself
While carrying out
Titration experiments in chemistry lab.

And I may be deaf,
But I can clearly hear
The unsaid thoughts
That flit across your face.
So next time you pass by me
And wonder how I fit
Into the grand scheme of things,
Don’t insult me by labeling
My English skills
As nonexistent.
Call me,
The wannabe English major.
Call me a rebel child.
Call me the girl with the funky,
Original style.
Call me a speed-demon,
Or a bookworm.
Call me by name.
(But whatever you do,
Don’t ever call me “Jasmin”!)
Lean over
And ask me for the time,
Or for my personal thoughts on
The meaning of life
If you wish to hear
My articulate, unaccented
Speech patterns.

If you squirmed with embarrassment
At recognizing yourself here—
Don’t worry,
I don’t hold grudges for very long.
But next time,
Whatever you decide to do,
Don’t walk past me and
Silently dismiss me with,
“Why, I bet she doesn’t even speak
A word of English!”

Because if you were to suddenly turn back,
You would see me shaking
With gleeful, barely suppressed laughter.
It isn’t your fault, I suppose.
You couldn’t know.

– April 2002

hamsafar

After picking my mother up from our relatives’ in Sacramento last week, she and I settled into my car for the hour-long drive home. After the usual impatient verbal tussles (“Why is the seatbelt always messed up in your passenger seat?” “It’s because you always twist it the wrong way whenever you use it, Ummy.” “I don’t twist it. I just pull it in the direction I need to fasten it.” “Ummy, you’re pulling it too much.”), I glanced out the window and noticed the moon, hanging unusually low in the sky like a large orange-red globe.

“Look at the moon, Ummy!” We both ducked our heads and peered at the moon through the side windows.

Long after I had pulled away from the curb in front of my relatives’ house and we continued home along the freeways, I would periodically glance at the moon out of the corner of my eye and exclaim, “Look at the moon, Ummy!”

“Very pretty,” she would agree with a smile. “It looks like it’s traveling right along with us.”

If my father were there, he would have predictably followed my mother’s comment with a reference to “hamsafar,” an Urdu word meaning “fellow traveler” or “traveling companion.” I was reminded of the PIA (Pakistan Internation Airlines) inflight magazine entitled Humsafar, which I had first noticed on our trip to Pakistan when I was eight and which had resulted in my father’s etymological explanations.

Appropriately enough, my mother and I spent the drive home listening to songs by a woman named Mahjabeen (literally: moon-face moon-forehead, beautiful forehead; basically: having a face as beautiful as the moon), a name that strikes a deeply personal, emotional chord with this family. The songs were performed in what seemed to be a mixture of both Pukhtu and Hindku, helpfully translated line-by-line by my mother, who would repeat each line after the singer, then turn to me and translate. My initial exasperation soon gave way to amusement at hearing my mother continually translate the Hindku lines into…Hindku, the dialect I speak fluently and use to communicate with her.

In a gorgeously fitting end to the day, I received, just a few minutes after arriving home, a text message from a friend exhorting me to “Look at da moon tonight it looks hella beautiful.”

vindication. On the phone with my father, two wee…

vindication.

On the phone with my father, two weeks ago:

Me: So, guess what, Daddy khana! It turns out I got an A- on my NPB midterm!
Daddy-o: Really! Wow!
Me: Yup. I can’t remember the last time I even passed any sort of bio exam. But now I have to keep studying so I don’t get all arrogant and mess up on the next midterm.
Daddy-o: Well, that’s impressive.
Me: Yeah, I guess I’m not a lost cause after all.
Daddy-o: Is this class with the same professor you had during spring quarter?
Me: No, different guy; he’s with the School of Medicine.
Daddy-o: Oh. Well, you know what you should do? You should take this midterm scantron of yours over to the old professor and wave it in his face.
Me, laughing: Revenge!
Daddy-o: Yeah, like revenge. That would be the true Pukhtun thing to do.