Songs for the Dead

By : Cent
Views : 645

I awoke one morning in the village to the plaintive wails of odes for the dead. The village had become an odeum. A strange and beautiful, yet sad, music filled the air.

I wondered what was going on. The music was loud, but its mournful sound had a peaceful effect on my soul. The strains floating about my home were of a type I'd never heard before. It was Thai, or Lao, I've not the education yet to tell the differences, usually. I struggled to remain in bed, but my curiosity got the better of me and I had to finally drag my ass from under the covers to see what exactly was happening to the small slice of the planet where I was presently residing, my slice, the Isaan village. Another day of Asian edification for my unlearned little bit of gray matter was dawning. It was bound to be interesting at least.


I snorted and grumbled myself awake, mumbling obscenities, for no real reason except that I like to mumble obscenities, and stumbled from the bedroom for the hong nam (bathroom) and a yen ab nam, or is it ab nam yen, a cold shower in the bathroom to be exact. The freaking water from the Isaan village water well feels like it comes from a direct pipe-line under some frozen ice-cap up beneath Santa Claus' home! (This was before a good friend's power-shower hot-water heater wedding present was finally installed. For which I wish to thank him profusely for once again. It's being put to good use daily now during the cold season in Isaan. Look sow (daughter) and my wife love it, brother. Thanks again. My nuts thank you too.)

After a quick rinse off of the sleep dirt of the previous evening (the quicker the better, the water's so cold it makes my nuts hurt) I cautiously bumbled my way outside the house to the back kitchen area where my wife was wont to be. Upon seeing my grizzled and battered, freshly frozen, yet scrubbed clean and shaven at least, mug my wife broke into a lovely smile that warmed me to the bone.

'Wife, what the hell is going on with that music?' I asked her, after she had asked me what I wanted to eat to break my fast this morning and I had placed my order.

'Old lady. She dead last night,' she replied smiling, still.

'Huh? What old lady?' I mumbled back perplexed, as I lit my first smoke of the day.

I hadn't heard of any old ladies on death's door recently, and usually it would have been brought to my attention in passing conversation during the gossip sessions I attend over beers at Sis Mun's shop next door. Ostensibly I go for a drink or two, but really because, even though I despise gossip, I'm prone to listen and be curious as to what they are all talking about. Hey, I'm human, I think; although some have questioned the fact. At least I would have been asked to throw in a few baht (Thai money) for a collection for her care, or medicine, special foods, or some such anyway. The old dears are always starting some social service collection for the needy of the village, which I am not adverse to kicking in a few baht towards. I watch and see what the old bats are kicking in themselves, and act accordingly.

'Old lady she, live house there,' my wife explained, pointing to the house almost directly behind us.

My addled brain, not yet truly awake, but beginning to function slightly just from the smell of coffee and the thought of a forthcoming breakfast, seemed to dimly remember my being awakened some hours earlier, like 3 a.m. or so, by some hollering and screeching that must have, now that I had this knowledge, been brought on by the grief of the relatives of the deceased woman once she had died. I had woke up, mumbled something like 'What the hell? Shaddup for chrissakes you idiots!', thinking it was another late night Lao Khao (rice whiskey) fuelled argument of some sort or another, and promptly rolled over and hugged my pillow on the cool side, returning forthwith to slumber. I'd probably been wakened by the relatives wails of anguish that their loved one had passed on. A shiver touched me at the thought I had witnessed, however sleepily, their immediate and raw grief, and had been such a grumpy bastard about it.

I ate my breakfast, scrambled eggs and fried ham, with toast perfectly done the way I've taught her to cook it, and mentioned to my wife that the music playing so loudly over a speaker system was actually quite nice. I asked her about it and she said, 'Old music. Old lady like too mutt.' I laughed, and told her, 'Well, this old falang (foreigner) like too mutt too. It's very beautiful.'

'You like?' she asked me.

'Very much,' I said in reply.

She smiled oddly at me, with a slight tilt to her head, a passing lovely expression, and a look came into her eyes that I liked. It was a look that most men like to receive from their woman, one of appreciation. A shining, dark, deep look that says you've just said something that pleases her greatly, and that she thinks just maybe she might have latched herself onto someone she can love forever. My offhand words of praise and appreciation for this funeral music had touched her heart in some way, for some reason. Don't ask me why; she's a woman, and mostly a mystery to me. It is a look I would do most anything to receive often from the woman I love. If you've seen this look before you'll know exactly what I'm talking about. If not, hopefully one day you will know what I'm talking of. It has heat that warms your heart, even the coldest of hearts in the coldest of men.

The days passed, the funeral was planned, the music was played twenty-four hours a day for three days, and those songs haunt me still right now. I've never heard anything quite so calming, soothing, and mellow as those songs. I asked my wife what it was, and if we could buy some CD's of it. She said she would try to find some for me. They are old Thai classics from the forties, fifties and sixties I guess from what she told me. Wonderful stuff. Love songs. Ballads. They helped set a distinct mood around the village. It was like the old ways were being reinforced in everyone's minds. People grew even more mellow and polite within the songs radius of decibel influence. Even the water buffalo seemed to enjoy the songs, and it looked like they were swaying in time with the music.

I know I did; swayed and enjoyed that is.

I'll never forget those few days, those days of songs for the village dead. Quite a few old village folk died during this past trip over for some reason. That one old lady gave me some music that moved me, that made the days seem more pleasant than usual. Her death seemed to bring the village back in time for a while, back to her time, her younger days. I wish I could have been there then, to have seen this village when it was untouched by the western influences of the present. I wish I could have met the young Thai lady whose love for those songs had touched my heart in the year 2002, the year of her death.

I fell in love a little with her, the girl she was that loved this music, and I fell in love with the songs of the dead.

Cent
(The Central Scrutinizer)

Copyright © 2003. All rights reserved by the author.

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Rating

Teen



Comments / Feedback

Akulka
July 26, 2008, 14:59

Interesting you are classifying this one as "humor". Anyway, fantastic story, one of my favorites from "the village" actually. Very contemplative and moving...
Cent
July 29, 2008, 14:33

Akulka, actually at the time I first posted that story there were fewer categories to place it in. Humor was more appropriate I thought than just 'nonfiction' cat at the time, as I thought it was fairly humorous in parts. I am glad you liked that one. It is one of my own favorites as well.

I am editing all my stories lately with the thought of having a book published of the best of them, and more village stories I want to write to sort of join them together a bit more. Some I am bringing back up in the queue here, as I used many of these at the beginning of starting this site two and a half years ago to stimulate the site and to have some content to start off with, along with other friends stories I liked, and many of these older stories I feel could handle another viewing after the edits. There are lots of new readers now that may not have read them yet. I do this on the days I see there are no stories set to view. Not just my own, I will do this with others as well over the next year or two on slower periods so they all get another viewing. But not all the time, just when there are lags in submissions.
Bill Bobby
July 30, 2008, 03:20

Put me down for a signed copy of your book Cent.

I can’t help but feel a deep kinship towards your all your work. Although I’m no profession writer (unlike many that submit to this site) you were the one that initially inspired me many moons ago to get a few of my own stories down on paper. You always manage to capture those wonderful moments of Thai life so brilliantly, reminding me of the times I myself have experienced or at least times I’d liked to have experienced. Thanks for sharing them Cent.
Cent
July 31, 2008, 11:26

BillBobby,

"Put me down for a signed copy of your book Cent."

You're on the list, sir. :-)

"I can’t help but feel a deep kinship towards your all your work. Although I’m no profession writer (unlike many that submit to this site) you were the one that initially inspired me many moons ago to get a few of my own stories down on paper."

I'm happy to hear that. I wish more would write down and share their experiences. I think my stories are just the stories 'everyman' would/could write having the same experiences many do in the villages, or interacting with Thais and the experience of visiting or living here. I just add my own personal brand of humor (which for sure isn't for everyone and many consider a bit demented, if not downright juvenile) and my individual, unique (we are, after all, all unique in some small way in our experience of life) insights, which again some find they can relate to, and some don't. We all have some certain commonalities as human beings. It's the influences of our childhood, where we lived, how we lived, how we were raised, etc. that give us our differences and our commonalities. The way I see and experience things are not always the way others would (of course), due to the influences I have been exposed to during my years on this planet. This shows in my stories I feel, sometimes to their benefit, and at times to their detriment possibly. I really do enjoy reading the experiences of others.

"You always manage to capture those wonderful moments of Thai life so brilliantly, reminding me of the times I myself have experienced or at least times I’d liked to have experienced."

Just writing down what I have experienced really, in my own way. I'm glad you can relate to them and enjoy them for what they are. I just seem to have a need to record the experiences I've had and relate them to others for some reason that I can't really figure out myself or explain for the most part. I find it a good form of interaction I guess. I've met many great people from writing these stories actually.

"Thanks for sharing them Cent."

Thank you for reading them and commenting on them. I do appreciate it.

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