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Posts Tagged ‘short-story’

After reading the opening pages of Gabor Maté’s When the Body Says No, I could not help but translate his metaphor into the living pathology of Afghanistan itself. The nation, once nourished by its own diversity of spirit, now suffers from a profound autoimmune disorder, its body turning violently against its own cells. Saadi Shirazi, with his timeless clairvoyance, once wrote:

“Human beings are limbs of one body,

Created from the same essence.

If one limb is afflicted with pain,

The others cannot remain at ease.”

But centuries later, that wisdom has become a diagnosis rather than a proverb. The men in power, swollen with self-righteous inflammation, have mistaken the women of their land for foreign invaders. They strike with decrees instead of antibodies, targeting classrooms, dreams, and the very idea of thought. What they call governance resembles nothing more than the immune system gone rogue, attacking its own tissue until paralysis sets in.

Education, once the lifeblood of progress, has become the site of infection. Half the nation’s brain, its women, has been chemically suppressed, sedated by superstition and sanctified oppression. The body politic convulses, mistaking disease for discipline, decay for devotion. They do not see that by disabling the feminine intelligence, they are amputating their own future, starving the organ that once nurtured them.

This is not piety; it is pathology. A fever disguised as faith. The Afghan male authority has become the immune system of ignorance, hyperactive, hypersensitive, attacking its own flesh with divine conviction. And yet, like every autoimmune illness, this self-destruction masquerades as protection. They believe they are defending purity, when in truth they are disfiguring the very body that sustains them.

Eventually, the disease consumes even its host. The hand that silences the girl also trembles when it tries to write. The mouth that forbids her speech forgets how to pray. The nation, caught in a state of spiritual sepsis, will not heal until it learns the simplest truth Saadi left behind: that no limb survives by devouring its own.

Until then, Afghanistan remains a tragic anatomy, half alive, half in denial, its soul gnawing on itself in the name of God….

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The sun hung high in the sky, relentless and unforgiving, baking the earth beneath its scorching midday glare. It cast sharp shadows across the yard, but Aunt Ameno didn’t notice them. Her mind was elsewhere, tangled in a storm of nerves and frustration.

Back in the kitchen, the heat was just as oppressive, the air thick and unmoving. Aunt Ameno’s hands shook as she picked up a cup to pour water, the liquid sloshing over the rim and pooling onto the counter. Her heart pounded loudly in her chest, each beat like a hammer striking stone.

She muttered under her breath, her words a jumble of frustration and dread. “Always me. Always Ameno. Running, fetching, fixing… as if I’m not a person, just a pair of hands to solve their messes.” Her voice wavered, quiet but sharp, as though she were arguing with herself—or perhaps with the unseen forces of fate that seemed determined to test her at every turn.

Her knuckles turned white as she gripped the edge of the counter, her gaze fixed on the cracked wall in front of her. The memory of her sister’s anguished cries echoed in her ears, a sound that rattled her nerves and churned her stomach. Six… it would be the sixth girl if nothing changes, she thought bitterly.

The weight of it all pressed on her, making her breath come in shallow, uneven gasps. She reached up to smooth the front of her scarf, a gesture meant to steady herself, but even her fingers betrayed her, trembling as if they had their own rebellion to stage.

She looked out the small kitchen window, her eyes narrowing at the sight of the unyielding sun. It seemed to mock her—its blazing heat a reminder of the harshness of life, its blinding light exposing everything she wished to hide.

“What difference does it make?” she muttered again, her voice breaking slightly. “Girl or boy, nothing changes. Nothing ever changes.”

She paused, her hands now gripping the rim of the water jug as if to keep herself grounded. Her heart ached—not just for her sister but for the unborn child and the life that awaited it, filled with expectations and disappointments it had no power to escape.

The door creaked open behind her, and she stiffened, swallowing hard to regain her composure. She wasn’t one to let others see her shaken, even if her heart was pounding like a drum and her thoughts were a maelstrom of anger and despair.

“Bring the water,” a voice called from the other room, breaking her moment of solitude.

Aunt Ameno exhaled sharply, grabbed the jug with trembling hands, and turned toward the door. “I’m coming!” she snapped, her voice laced with anger—but not at the person who called. No, her anger was at the world itself, a world that seemed determined to bend her but never entirely break her.

She squared her shoulders, set her jaw, and stepped back into the fray, her presence as commanding and unyielding as the sun overhead. God forbid anyone dared to venture too close to Auntie Ameno when she was in one of those moods. She was a volcano in human form—an emotional tempest wrapped in an apron, a lioness protecting her pride, only her pride wasn’t so much the cubs as the swirling frustration inside her chest. When she was upset, it wasn’t just a storm—it was the storm. The kind of storm that sent the girls scattering like roaches in the presence of light. They knew the signs. Her sharp breath, the tightness in her jaw, the low muttering that reverberated through the walls.

And the moment she promised herself—again—that if this child turned out to be another girl, she was packing up and heading straight back to her mother’s house, you could practically hear the collective sighs from the backyard as the girls ran for cover. “Back to my mother’s house I go,” she’d mutter, her words more like a curse than a promise, laced with years of unfulfilled hopes. “Enough is enough!” The mantra came out with the same force as a prayer of desperation, as if somehow this time—this very time—the universe would take pity and grant her the son she’d been dreaming of.

But Auntie Ameno’s words were more like vows to a deity she no longer believed in. The universe had long since abandoned her wishful thinking.

Her sister’s five daughters knew better than to stick around when Auntie Ameno was in one of her moods. They had mastered the fine art of emotional survival. The second they heard that growl, the second the room grew too heavy with the tension of a thousand unspoken complaints, they bolted. They didn’t care about playing in the garden; they cared about surviving the garden. The backyard, with its peace and flowers, was as far from the lioness as they could get. It wasn’t about being good little girls; it was about self-preservation.

Because Auntie Ameno wasn’t just angry—she was volcanic. And her fists? Well, her fists were the lightning that followed the thunder. Back and chest, she’d strike with no hesitation, and the girls knew better than to make eye contact when that storm broke. It wasn’t just physical pain they feared—it was the sheer absurdity of it. The sense that they hadn’t done anything to deserve this anger, yet here they were, running for their lives like it was some sort of bizarre, painful game.

But Auntie Ameno wasn’t blind to their tactics. She knew the second they fled, the second they all retreated to their makeshift sanctuary in the garden. And yet, despite the rage seething inside her, there was an odd, deep sense of loneliness. After all, wasn’t she the one who was supposed to be helping them? She, the woman who’d raised them alongside her own suffering, now was reduced to the source of their terror.

And then there was Baba—the father of the girls, the husband of Auntie Ameno’s sister, who lived in his own little world of “patience.” Baba had mastered the art of watching Auntie Ameno go off, giving her enough space to rage but never intervening, until the moment came when his quiet endurance cracked. He was the silent authority in this family drama, the only one who could restore any kind of order. When his patience finally wore thin, Baba would come out of his room—slowly, carefully, like a man walking through a minefield—and give Auntie Ameno that look. The look that said, “Enough.”

That was the signal. No more screaming, no more fists. The storm would quiet, at least for a while. And Auntie Ameno, for all her promises of departure, would retreat, her rage still simmering beneath the surface, but for the moment, contained. Her sister, exhausted and silent in the background, would take a deep breath, already mentally preparing herself for the cycle to begin again.

As for the girls? They’d creep back into the house slowly, their bruises well hidden under layers of summer clothes, their minds already bracing for the next storm. They were experts in the art of emotional camouflage, the art of surviving Aunt Ameno’s moods. And all the while, Aunt Ameno would sit, muttering to herself in the quiet, still holding onto those promises. Maybe next time, she thought. Maybe next time…To be continued

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Chapter One: The Intake

The phone rang at the emergency shelter just after 3 p.m., its shrill tone slicing through the quiet hum of the office. The worker picked up, the motion familiar, almost automatic by now. On the other end, a woman’s voice, soft and unsure, broke the silence.

“Hello… do you have space for me?”

The worker straightened in her chair. “What’s your name?” she asked, pen hovering over the intake form.

“Casey.”

“And your last name?”

“Davidson.”

There was a pause — not from hesitation, but something else. A pause that didn’t ask for permission, didn’t explain anything, didn’t feel the need to. It was the kind of pause that felt like a habit.

The questions continued, a routine dance of necessity — date of birth, reason for seeking shelter, any known restrictions. Unlike many calls, Casey answered each question without resistance, without emotion. As though she was reciting a script that had been written a long time ago and rehearsed silently in the spaces between exhaustion and surrender.

The worker ran her name through the system. No red flags. Clean. She gave Casey the usual instruction: there was one bed available. If she could make it within two hours, the space would be held. Shelter policy.

“I’ll be there in half an hour,” Casey replied quickly — too quickly. No questions, no hesitation. Just that same unnerving ease, like she’d done this before.

The worker added, almost as an afterthought, “Please don’t bring more than two medium-sized suitcases. We don’t have much storage space.”

Thirty-five minutes later, Casey arrived. A single suitcase in one hand, and in the other — oddly — a few worn baby toys. Their colors faded, the plastic edges dulled with time and touch. She clutched them with a strange casualness, like someone holding onto something they no longer recognized but couldn’t quite release.

She was small, thin, with eyes that darted around but never settled. Her face, pale and stripped of expression, seemed to carry both youth and weariness. She looked too young to be this tired.

The intake began. Forms were passed across the desk. Casey signed each one without reading them, without blinking. Her hand moved mechanically, as though her body remembered what to do even when her mind was somewhere else entirely.

The worker asked, gently, “Do you have any children?”

Casey didn’t flinch. She didn’t smile either. “Yeah,” she said plainly. “Five.”

The worker’s pen stopped. “Five?” she repeated, her voice betraying a hint of disbelief.

“Yeah,” Casey confirmed. “Ten, seven, five, two… and the baby’s six months.”

There was no pride in her voice. No sorrow either. Just… emptiness.

The worker hesitated, unsure how far to go. She had learned, over time, to read silences — when to step in, when to hold back. She asked, cautiously, “Do you see them?”

Casey smiled. Not a warm smile — not a sad one either. It was more of a reflex, a twitch of the lips that didn’t reach her eyes. “Not since December.”

That was four months ago.

The worker tried to keep her tone neutral. “Why not?”

“Alcohol,” Casey said simply.

No explanation. No shame. Just a single word, delivered like a line she’d said too many times to feel it anymore.

“And… how are you coping?” the worker asked.

“Got diagnosed,” Casey replied. “Back in December.”

The word hung in the air. Diagnosed with what? She didn’t say. She didn’t have to. The worker could piece it together — bits of mental fog, addiction, isolation.

“Who’s taking care of the kids?”

Casey’s expression shifted, just slightly. “They’ve got three different dads,” she said with a laugh, the kind that came from a place far from joy. “So it’s not that hard. They’re with them.”

The worker said nothing. She didn’t want to push. Casey looked fragile — not in the way of someone who might shatter, but more like someone already broken into too many pieces to notice another crack.

Casey noticed the pause. She tilted her head, almost amused by the silence.

“I signed up for a recovery program,” she offered, like it was a casual update, not a turning point. “Drug and alcohol. It’s about three hours from here.”

That, at least, stirred something in the worker — a flicker of hope. “That’s good,” she said warmly. “That’s really good. You have five reasons to finish that program.”

Casey nodded, though her eyes remained distant. Like she was watching a version of herself from far away, someone else’s life playing out on a stage she didn’t belong to anymore.

The worker hesitated, then asked, “Do you have a sponsor?”

Casey shrugged. “Not yet.”

The worker didn’t know much about sponsors, only that those who had them often had a better shot. But she wasn’t sure if Casey believed in “shots” anymore.

Still, she smiled, steady and kind. “Maybe you’ll find one. Someone who can walk with you through it.”

Casey didn’t answer. Her silence wasn’t resistance — it was deeper than that. A kind of numbness that wrapped around her like armor, keeping the world out, keeping herself in.

The intake ended. The forms were filed. Casey was shown to her room — a small, quiet space with a single bed and a worn blanket.

And the baby toys? She set them on the shelf, carefully, without looking at them again.
To be continued…

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