The First of May
The First of May has always carried a weight for me.
While much of the world observes it as Labor Day or International Workers’ Day, I remember it differently.
On the First of May, 1981, I had just returned to Malaysia after several years in the United States. That evening, while having dinner at my aunt’s home, a stranger came to the door with news: my uncle had collapsed by the roadside on his way home.
I rode with him on his motorcycle to the scene.
My uncle was already dead.
His body lay in the back of the van he had been driving. Passersby had placed him there after he collapsed. With some difficulty—and a mind not fully present—I drove the van back to his house. I had not driven in Malaysia for years, and the adjustment alone required focus. But there was no room for hesitation. There was only the task at hand.
I carried his body into the house.
Together with his wife, I cleaned him. He had soiled himself during the heart attack. These are things one does not forget—not because they are dramatic, but because they are real.
I remember functioning without emotion. Not numb exactly, but distant. As if I had stepped into a space where feeling would only interfere with what needed to be done. The responsibility fell to me. I was the eldest present, even if only an adopted son.
The funeral arrangements followed.
What remained, however, did not end there.
Each year, when the First of May returned, so did the memory—uninvited, unresolved. Not only of that night, but of everything surrounding it. The man who had raised me for twelve years… and the truths I came to learn later, which were not easy to reconcile.
There are things in life that do not fit neatly into right or wrong, gratitude or resentment. They exist in between, carrying both weight and contradiction.
I have spent years, perhaps decades, living with that.
But this year was different.
The First of May came and went without the familiar heaviness. The memory remains, but something in it has loosened. Not erased. Not denied. Simply no longer holding the same edge.
There is little use in reopening every detail. Some things, once understood, do not need to be relived.
What has passed has already done its work.
And perhaps this is what remains now—not the burden of the past, but the quiet space that follows when it is finally allowed to rest.
“And guess who will cry, come First of May…” — Bee Gees
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