That's it. I am going to have to put my diaries under lock and key now.
Mama's reaction after reading my latest diary entry: Tears. "You feel like you can't trust me with your feelings?" Tear, tear. Tissue. Tear. Nose wipe.
Papa's reaction: Utter confusion. "Why is your mother crying? But why is she crying? She won't stop crying!"
Inaya, in full little-sister style: "I always knew Leena was too good to be true. There had to be something underneath that perfect exterior." (I aim a playful punch in her direction.) "See? She's getting violent! Somebody stop her before I get hurt!"
Jasir says nothing (for a change), but he hangs on to Mama, arms around her while she sobs and sniffs.
Seriously. So much drama. Over a diary entry! I can't even express my feelings around here.
Papa sits me down for a "talk".
"Let me understand this," he says. "You feel frustrated by your mother?"
"Papa..." I begin.
"It's OK to feel like that sometimes," he says. "But you shouldn't write notes to your mother saying that."
"Papa..." I say.
"You see, she is a woman." He stops and considers how to continue. "She has a lot of feelings. Because she is a woman. So she has feelings. She doesn't need more feelings. Don't tell her your feelings."
"Papa," I say, more insistently.
"Sometimes, you need to face your feelings." He keeps talking as if he hasn't heard a word I said. "You can..." The briefest of pauses betrays his own uncertainty regarding what he is saying. "You can share your feelings with me."
"OK, Papa," I say, giving up on getting any other word out of my mouth.
"So," he leans forward, making a concerned expression. "What are your feelings, Leena?"
I look at him. He is the picture of middle-aged fatherly concern, brushed over with the tiredness of a working day. Internally, I marvel at his style of being detached yet involved, keeping up his role in our daily disagreements from a distance. Then I realize that he is actually waiting for me to reply.
"Ahhh," I say.
"Yes." He nods encouragingly.
"OK, Papa," I say.
"Yes," he replies.
"Um, how about, you know, I need to...?"
"Yes," he says. I realize he is on autopilot. Maybe he is more uncomfortable in this situation than I am. I attempt to make a graceful exit, popping up and declaring, "The pressure cooker!"
"Is off," he says.
"Yes, but I think I hear it." I stick to my excuse. He grabs me by the arm and pulls me back down. I can see where Jasir gets his little-brother grabbiness from.
"You are going to fix this because your mother has been crying all day and I don't know how to make her stop," he says in one breath.
"OK, Papa! I'm going to talk to Mama straightaway," I say.
"Go, and don't come back until you succeed," he says, reclining back in his seat with a sigh.
I make a speedy exit and bump into Inaya, who was apparently trying to listen to our conversation.
"Eavesdroppers, spies and curious cats, oh my!" I say, brushing past her towards Mama's approximate location in the house.
"Oh, shush," she says in a bored tone. "Mama is all fine now."
"Really?" Her statement makes me stop in my tracks.
"Yes. I dug out all the feel-good stuff I could find. The cards we've given her over the years. Our merit certificates. School projects. Now she's crying over a picture of you when you were in kindergarten. I think that's her way of handling that her eldest picture-perfect daughter secretly hates her."
"Inaya." I sigh. "Stop saying that."
"No, really, it's as exciting as a family drama can get. Daughter hates mother. Daughter runs away from mother. Daughter leaves younger sister with a laptop and a room all to herself. The Moin family lives a life of happiness. The end."
"You can use the laptop." I point in the general direction of the laptop. "Let me go see Mama."
Walking towards Mama, I sigh internally. This has got to stop.
Have you ever experienced a big family dispute over something so silly it's not worth mentioning? What did you do about it?
YOU ARE READING
Pens of Fate
Teen FictionFollow Leena Moin as she records her family's misadventures in her diary during her gap year between high school and college. Her family eventually finds their way into her diary (literally), so Leena has to make a way to escape (figuratively) throu...