My childhood has been interesting. Everyone who
knew me as a boy has unforgettable stories to share. From the outside, they must have found it adventurous. But I have been trying to
forget everything because there weren’t many beautiful moments I could cherish.
I don’t want to be hateful. I want to be different.
My childhood was kind of a dirty street where
only a few kind people had walked by and I mean the real kind ones whose kindnesses
were compassionate and unconditional. Since I had only a few such people in my
life I am going to begin writing about them, one by one.
1997, Paro: I was in junior high school fighting
for attention. I would be in trouble every other day. I wasn’t scared of any
form of punishment. It seemed like I enjoyed being punished. I was avoided like an infected dog. As
a dirty village troublemaker, it was easy for people to hate me.
1996, Paro |
But there was one girl who looked at me
differently. She was quiet and gentle. She was perhaps a little older than me or a little more matured.
She'd told people that I was her adopted bother. I went numb when I heard that
as if I had waited all my life to hear that. It was a culture in the '90s to adopt brothers and sisters but like I said you had to be special to be chosen. People were shocked that a gentle girl
had accepted the most mischievous boy in the school as her brother. I was
equally shocked.
From that day I began to hide from her, and
whenever I was going to do anything undesirable I would scan the whole place to
make sure she wasn't around. Soon people knew about this spell that worked on
me and started using her name as key to controlling me.
Perhaps she must be the first girl to whom I
spoke softly; I called her Aue Nima. Her name was Nima Chunda. When she called me to seat with her and share her lunch, I would be the
quietest boy with all the decency that I didn’t know I had. People passing by
would stop to confirm if it was really me.
That summer, I didn’t have money to go home and
she had heard that. She took me to her family and gave me three best days of my
childhood until she got enough money to buy me tickets home. I had good food,
slept in a soft bed, visited her relatives and watched endless movies. She would
take me to videocassette shops and make me choose movies. Imagine the joy of
getting to watch movies of your choice in the ’90s.
She would often send me her lunchbox so that I could taste better home-cooked food. She would call me by the riverside during the
weekends and help me do my laundry. She would send me gifts and goodies. I was new to all these acts of kindness; I only saw those happen to other boys in the hostel. She made me feel like anyone in the hostel; wanted and normal. I suddenly began to see the world
differently.
To this day I wonder how a small girl of her
age had such a compassionate heart to care for me, who didn’t even have a cute
smile to return. She was the best thing to happen to me in my junior school.
My mother would often ask, “Where is your Aue Nima now, what’s she doing?” and the
last time she asked me I told her, “Aue Nima has become a nurse. She is in
Thimphu Hospital. We are in touch.” My wife and daughter heard Aue Nima's story
from me more than once and we met several times.
Today, when I could help a random person somewhere I
remember Aue Nima, because I know the DNA was passed down from my adopted
sister.