Thoughts: to sniff a whiff
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by Susan Abraham
Have you walked through the ancient wholesalers' near the Central Market? On those busy roads, the pungent smell of dried ikan billis (anchovies) could hit you like a mysterious hammer.
As the violent smell hurricaned its way through old Kuala Lumpur faster than the furious hooting traffic, you may have drowned in a series of unsuspecting aromas with a quicker imagined fatality than a furious ravine.
It was of course, a strange kind of immersion.
And not at all like a spa bath.
The smell either attempted to lure you into deeper cuisine territory or it would simply holler you away from every coffeshop in the tourist-infested Petaling Street.
But long after you reached home, you still remembered its faint brush that quivered and rested on your shoulders as stubbornly as a shadow. You had tried to catch fading wafts once more hoping it would lullaby memories like a rainy monsoon night in November when you were just five.
You closed your eyes and remembered that arrowed sharpness playacting a shooting star while zooming in to greet you, and you cautiously watched out for potholes with the diligent slowness of a Terengganu turtle.
But by then, the smell had graduated into a tall, dark and interesting stranger.
Like an old friend stepping out from a past for a final glimpse; it masqueraded as a mesmerising tang. Eyes met and hands touched.
And you knew with a teardrop, that you were unlikely to bump into such an intriguing whiff once your feet whisked you away from this soil.
In other words perhaps, a reminder of how impossible it would be to saunter back into a familiar past. And yet like me, did you think you could?
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