In my free time, I carry a camera and
pretend to be a photographer. I hold the camera close to my face and see the
world through my viewfinder. Moments, people, emotions, and answerless questions
are all reduced to a fraction of a second trapped in a single frame.
Once, in a park, I disturbed the peace of
an old man with my shutter noise. You see, old men have very little time to
waste on tolerating young people’s nonsense, so he hushed my camera with a
question “what’re you doing?”
“I'm a photographer. I'm capturing life
as particles of light.” I smugly say.
“light?... I have never seen it.” he murmurs.
As an idiot, I hadn’t noticed until then he was blind. He turns to me again and
says “light you say? Colours? Can you explain colours to a blind man?”
Full of myself, I jump to answer “Well,
our lives are painted with only a few basic colours; blue, red, green, and
yellow. Blue is the colour of a carefree summer day where your worries melt
away, and it’s the colour of freedom you feel when you swim in the ocean. Blue
is the colour of the here and now.”
“What about red?” He asks. I say “Red is
the colour of rage and desire. Red is the fire of a beautiful woman’s perfume burning
within your chest. Red is the colour of
time when you get to the bus stop 10 seconds too late to see your bus leaving
you behind. Red is your colour when you feel like punching the universe.”
“And green?”
I answer, “Green is the colour of peace.
The peace you feel when you forgive someone. Forgiveness is green because
nothing forgives like nature. Years from now, when humanity is no more, trees,
grass, and moss will spread over our dead cities the way a mother covers her sleeping
naughty child as she whispers ‘I forgive you.’”
“What can you tell me of yellow?” He asks
and I answer.
“Yellow
is the colour of surprise; a bee sting, the sourness of lemon in your mouth, or
a Pikachu-yellow electric shock shacking every muscle in your body. Yellow is
also the colour of the invisible chain holding a lover’s eyes onto his beloved;
sunflowers forever tethered to the sun. Yes, Yellow is the colour of wanting.”
“hmm” he says to himself and slowly asks “I
hear a lot of people mention black. What is it?” I answer, “Black is the colour
of the people who are no longer here. The colour of the void they left in our
hearts. It is the colour of companionless night teasing us with questions that refuse
to go to sleep. Black is the colour of beauty in sadness, and the sadness in
beauty.”
Slightly bored, and not so impressed with
what I said, he prepares to leave and says “Thank you son.” But then he stops
and says “ah wait, what about white?”
I
say “white? Whii… white... white is..... you see, white is...” Among all the
colours, white seems the simplest, yet, I couldn't speak as if I’d never seen
it before. I say “White is the colour of... white dresses that perfectly flatter
women's figures on their wedding day.” Then, I couldn’t find anything else to
say because white is the colour of marriage and relationships; a question mark
I once tried to escape, and now can’t talk about without hiding behind
metaphors and figures of speech. Having never been in love, meanings,
questions, desire, and the desire to escape all become twisted together like
barbwire around my soul. What does this say about me as a man?
White is the colour of the milk my mother
breastfed me when I was a baby, and it is the colour of the tissues she wipes
her tears with when she calls me a thousand kilometres away. She cries as I
listen emotionless. Now, what does this say about me as a son?
White is one of the colours on the flag
of a country I no longer belong to. White is the colour of my school-book pages
that taught me Arabic; a language I can no longer hear my voice in, nor can I
wash it off my accent. It is just stuck in my throat (عوسج), the
Arabic consonants are stuck in my throat like fish daring to breathe air. What
does this say about me as a person?
I don't know. I have no answers, I
couldn’t say anything because my thoughts became white noise in my head.
After my long silence, the old man starts
to walk away. I want to shout, to stop him, and to say “please! Help me find answers
to my questions! Please, help me understand... help me see the things I can't”
But I don’t. I just stand there -a lifeless statue- as I listen to the taps of
his walking stick moving away from me. tap, tap, tap… I hold my camera to my eye and snap a photo
of him. I call him the white man. At night, he haunts my photo gallery and
taunts me whenever I take a photo.
Yes, I'm a photographer, but no, I don’t
understand the simplest colour; white, and I can’t see further than my
viewfinder. Now, what does this say about me?