Sketches of Life - Lakaran Hidup
Sketches of Life
I have kept sketchbooks for most of my life.
At first I thought I was drawing places and people. It took me many years to realize that I had been sketching a life—my own.
Some sketches were made with graphite, some with ink, some with words, and others with silence.
None of them were ever really finished.
Neither, perhaps, am I.
It began the moment I was old enough to hold a pencil and was fortunate enough to find a blank page. In those days, paper was precious. My twin brother and I would tear the unused pages from the backs of last year's exercise books—mathematics, English, whatever had been left behind—and lie on our stomachs on the floor, filling them with cowboys and Indians. Bullets flew from one page, arrows from another. We were at war long before we knew anything about the real world.
As I grew older, drawing became more than play. At Francis Light Primary School, I was often asked to stay behind after classes to paint large murals and decorations for Parents' Day and other school events. A teacher would patiently remain with me until my uncle arrived to take me home, sometimes long after darkness had settled over the school.
I can still picture myself climbing the main staircase to the second floor, pausing to look back at a freshly completed painting hanging where everyone would see it the next morning. Across the road stood the old Chinese temple at the junction of Perak Road and Anson Road, its coils of incense filling the evening air with a fragrance that has never quite left my memory.
In those years, I walked three or four miles to school each day from River Road. My school bag hung heavily across my back while sweat trickled through hair generously coated with coconut oil, as was the custom then. Yet there were mornings that transformed the journey into something magical.
When the Angsana trees blossomed, Perak Road became another world. Their deep golden flowers carpeted both sides of the street, especially after a night of rain. Walking beneath them felt like stepping onto the Yellow Brick Road from a childhood fairy tale. Even now, decades later, I can still see those petals glistening against the wet pavement.
Looking back, I have come to believe that art did far more than give me something to do.
It kept me alive.
Perhaps it even kept me sane.
Whenever the world became too heavy, I sketched. Whenever words failed, I painted.
Until one evening, while I was still a teenager, my mother switched off the light and slammed the door shut as I sat drawing.
In that instant, art disappeared from my life.
For almost ten years, the sketchbooks fell silent.
The reasons belong to another chapter.
As the saying goes, the devil is in the details.
If you wish to become better acquainted with that devil, you are welcome to wander through my blog. The story is there, waiting among the sketches.
"Life did not ask me to understand it. It merely placed a pencil in my hand and invited me to pay attention." - from the Unseen.
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