But I digress.
My family consists of my mother and two little brothers (17 and soon-to-be 12), and my mother is always working. She saves up her sick days, so that she can take them off during this month. The work will not stop for her however, and I wish I weren’t away so that I could make it easier. Ramadan will be quiet for me, which is well-suited for the month–but so will Eid. I’ll be lucky if I run into friends who would share in the celebrations. If I have children in the future I think I’ll make them an advent calendar.
Hope may be the essence of this Ramadan. For many Muslims, I think, it couldn’t arrive at a more appropriate time. The past couple of days for me in my personal life have been sort of… turbulent. In the larger, global picture it’s been a rough year for everyone, to speak in understatements. And of course, as always, empathy will be revived with community at the center. I’m planning to get through a whole stack of books, as my workload by August will have become lighter in conjunction with my red lipstick and cussing.
The former, because it’s too close to my mouth (technical) and the latter because… well, foul language. I actually don’t cuss at all in real life, not nearly as much as I do here, and this didn’t start until I began hanging around in the comment sections of the feminist blogosphere. Feminists cuss like sailors. =)
Renewal is welcome.
There is something about Ramadan that is soft and ethereal, a thin vaporous unworldliness of dim lights and muffled sounds. There is sleepy rising before the sun to prepare for the day’s fasting, going about the day as usual, and breaking the fast after sunset. (Case you didn’t know: in Islam, days are counted as beginning in the evening of the solar day before, not in the morning.) In harmony with the harsh reality of hunger and work, the spiritual is somehow exemplified, an aerial dreamlike peacefulness and reconciliation. I’ll be checking the night sky a lot, more than usual, and crying over the stars, which I will imagine to be severely and distantly pure, only to conclude at last that I’d rather feel love than cold perfection.
I really like this piece.I'm glad I'm not the only one who uses USian rather than "American". The latter always seemed arrogant to me, as if Brazilians (f'rex) aren't American.May Ramadan bring you joy and blessings.
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Thank you, Galla! <3
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will you still be posting, right?
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Of course. This is hardly a vacation.
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Do Brazilians even WANT to be called Americans? I've never met a Canadian or Mexican who did.This makes me think of what kind of story would be set in Ramadan 2011.
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I was in a rush this morning so I barely got to skim the post. I'll teach you some new swear words, Nahida! Abstinence is that much sweeter in the face of temptation!
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Cruel. ;)
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Ramadan Mubarak :) I hope you have a great and blessed month :)
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Ramadan Mubarak, Becky. =) I hope you have the same, insha'Allah.
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Ramadaan Mubarik to all my fellow Muslims.
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