AKIF ABDULAMIR I was going through an old box that had been gathering dust since many years, somewhere in the darkest corner of my house. I tipped it over for the contents to fall on the floor so I could sort out what I wanted to keep. Photos, scrap of papers, files, negatives and even my old college notes tumbled out. My nose was filled with the dust but that was the least of my problem. Everything on the floor was valuable to me. Each had a different story to tell. Some of the items brought a twinge of pain, a few raised questions of my past and the rest brought confusion. Memories flashed back spanning three decades. Yet, with all the emotional turmoil that box held, I could not bear to lose any of the contents. Memories do not necessary remind you of just good things. If the content of the box were supposed to be the reflection of my past life, then I see my present completely different from what I had envisaged then. Then it was youthful exuberance and unbounded confidence I had. The word 'pessimism' did not exist in my vocabulary. I picked up my picture that was taken by a friend just minutes after my graduation. There was a big smile on my face that stretched from one end of the face to another. I remember now, saying to my fellow graduates then, that the shackles of 'student slavery' were forever gone. I put the future of my life on top of the world. I left the college that evening with a spring in my step, brimming with abundance of energy. I left everything behind that would remind me of my studies, or so I thought. I did not know that I could not banish from my mind what I saw and felt there. The friends I made, the roads I crossed and the shops I walked into. I took them with me and as I looked at the clutter on the floor, I knew, right there and then, I never managed to place my future on top of the world, simply because, there isn't such a place. The excitement lasted just a month. If studentship was 'slavery' then becoming an 'employee' did not exactly elevate me to the 'master' status. Responsibility came very quickly. The reality hit me on my face with the realisation that I had to fend for myself. I dusted off the photo and put it aside, it would serve as a reminder of my youthful smugness. I picked up the college magazine and read my own poem. The line: "I would walk into the darkness on the footpath of despair and ride out in the light on the horse of joy", made me pause. I am not sure why I wrote the line then. Perhaps it was a youthful fighting spirit that saw a good ending in any situation. I still retain that quality and it has made me endure so many depressive situations until the wave passed. It took me half an hour to look into everything. Everything was important and I did not want to part with any of them. It was my junk and I would treasure it. I put the items in the same box and it went back to the same dark corner for another decade of slumber. However, the poem and the picture would need to stay elsewhere. I feel the two will now serve as a rudder of my ship whenever it sails the turbulence water. On reflection, the past is not a bad thing if you look at the right place. - Khaleej Times