The Past

Saturday with Titi

Amidst all the craziness of adulthood, I found hidden, unexpected haven at my grandmother's house where everything seems to grow smaller as I grow older.

Since my grand father's passing, the family promised to take turn in accompanying my grandmother to comfort her in feeling less alone. Of course, it is decided by her children. Not that she ever asked, with her small figures she still likes to think of herself as a strong and independent lady. But it may also be another way for the children to cope with the sense of loss together. All of us. But either way it seems like a good idea. 

The older grand children get to sleep over every Saturday. There are three of us; We'd watch HBO before bed while Titi sits attentively. Sometimes, she'd make comments such as having never watched Harry Potter, she would throw away questions, "Why he doesn't have nose? It must be dark magic!" referring to Lord Voldemort, or "Why is she screaming at her mother?" to one of the Girls episodes. Later, we would all sleep together on the same king-sized bed like we were 7.

But my favourite part is during dinner when we all sat on the wooden round table, without phone, just us and the home-cooked meals. She would only eat with her now faded pink set of cutlery and her diabetic pills and blue plastic glass with flower-like bottom ready in front of her.

The conversation would begin organically, anything that hold relevance to everything around us. Like, my older cousin's wedding in a couple of months, the weather, the garden, newly upgraded fish tank, the parrot, and how she turns the emptiness by making herself busy at all times, even if it takes her to sleep at 3 o'clock in the morning, then stretches into far into something that we'd forget how we ended up there.

I admire how her eyes gleam, reciting the old tale she still remembers as if it happened two days ago. She sure does forget a lot of things, recent things like where she puts one of her keys that she lost for the third time as you sure cannot defy age. But the things she remembers about the past is impressive.

When the children lay around on the bed, scrolling our lives away on social media feeds, with her tiny crescent-shaped glasses, she sits next to her small corner with a tiny table and tiny green chair that she bought for the grand children back when we were five. The yellow paste reading light sheds just about the amount of lighting she needs to read one of her recipe books from 1992. The pages have gone yellow.

Follows, her routine before bed. After closing the recipe book, and only then, she'd check her smart phone, a gift from one of her sons, and learn slowly how to type Whatsapp message. Touch screen baffles her, she said. Most of the times she would accidentally send broken, unfinished message to the group chat we all try to figure out.

It is that little things in her habit that sometimes tells a story larger than what she seems. The littlest detail that I missed when I was away that must have gotten lost in the stories. How her faith in my grand father surpasses the space and time continuum.





A piece by : Fiya Muiz
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Celebrating Humanity






I read an article on Medium once about storytelling. She said, her grandmother taught her that "storytelling is... how we relate, how we remember, how we teach, how we celebrate our humanity." 

And this is how I celebrate. 


The new wardrobe just got in a couple days ago. I needed to rearrange old dusty boxes, and throw the unused little things. In those tiny little boxes I found notes, mostly from high school, new year resolutions and dying love letters. But then, I thought of this blog– this, too, has been offering its comfort for nearly eight years. The first post on 25th November 2008.

These writings confessed how I have grown, gone through my teenage days in bad grammar and incoherent paragraphs. But however confusing and boring the posts were, it speaks innocence and honesty. Of how blinded first love was, and faux love towards band members and vampire films.

Rejoicing the good eleven years of this blog, I narrow down my top five of personal favourite entries:



Things We Forget: Class of 2015 July 2015
I think you can tell which one comes close to my heart. My mother reposted this on her Facebook. It means the world – "...the more I would like to make sure that none of us is going to spend another second of our times doing what we don't like or being pressured into doing what others deem to be right. If you are not sure yet of what you like, I suggest you to keep looking." 
I'm Sorry April 2014 
"I am sorry that I chose not to love you  although I would like to love you; hell, maybe I should, but I'm afraid I couldn't."  These are the things I'd like to say to the boy I deeply cherished but too shy to say up front when I was in England. I wrote this in less than ten minutes. This kind of writing is my personal favourite because there's this sense of raw honesty that flows in one go, without major editing in words and structure.

Hold Me Close, I've Never Been This Far From Home August 2012 
Everything is clear; even with your eyes shut." 2012 was the year I discovered how to write using with flamboyant, grande metaphors where at the end of the day, it kinda fell pretty.

Malam Itu September 2013 
The first post I wrote properly in Indonesian and I kinda am proud of how it turned out. This felt like a milestone and the inspiration for this story was very personal, too – "Tapi aku terhenti. Bayangan itu hilang seraya aku menolehkan kepalaku menjauh darinya dengan elusan akal sehat. Sekarang aku dapat merasakan nafasnya berhembus pada leherku. Hangat."

Find Me July 2013 
I remember the night I showed this to my father and asked him what did he think, "Good." and I added in joy, "It's great how I wrote this without anybody specific in mind. I wrote it for myself." He said with his eyes fixated on the TV screen, "You sure? It's kinda obvious who you are writing this for..." I re-read it again and again days after days, then I realised what he meant – "Find me in between the announcement of departing flight or at the arrival gate. Better yet, find me at the airport  because I can't stay. You can't stay. We can't stay. We are not here to stay. But still, find me, look for me."

Maybe you'd care to tell me yours?
A piece by : Fiya Muiz
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