Sunday, 12 January 2025

Jan 12 Sat. 2025


 East York. It’s not the same as I remember, but I suppose that’s the nature of things: always shifting, always slipping away from you when you least expect it. The air, now heavy with languages that I don’t understand, stirs something in me—not quite confusion, but a sense of isolation, a quiet realization that I no longer belong. I sit, observing the life around me, but it's as if I'm watching from behind a glass. People pass by, absorbed in their own noise, their own lives, and I am nothing but a silent observer of the absurdity of it all.

A family nearby, their voices rising and falling in some foreign tongue, notices me, and in their discomfort, they shift away. At first, I don't mind. In fact, I expect it. But there’s something in the way they do it, so deliberate, so quick. It’s as if I’ve become a threat to their world, an unwanted disturbance. As I stand to leave, I hear one of the mothers speak, her voice oddly light: “He’s leaving!” There’s a strange joy in her tone, as if my absence has restored some fragile balance. They return to their place, their space now theirs again, and I wonder: What is it that makes one person’s presence so unbearable?

The men near me, dressed in their peculiar clothes, speak a language I cannot place, and I am struck by the indifference in their eyes. I greet them, a simple attempt at connection, but it’s ignored. I ask for the time, and they don’t even acknowledge me. I could have been a shadow, an illusion in their world. But there’s no bitterness in their refusal, no anger. Just an empty space where human connection should be.

I turn to the chess players—older men, their movements slow and deliberate. They look at me, and for the briefest moment, I feel seen. Not judged, not rejected. Just seen. Their respect, unspoken yet palpable, is a fleeting moment of humanity in a world that seems increasingly devoid of it. And that, too, passes quickly, leaving me with the same emptiness I’ve always known.

Around me, I see others—foreign faces like mine, disconnected from the flow of this place. We don’t speak, not out of malice but out of a shared understanding that words are meaningless here. We are all strangers in a place that no longer cares about belonging. Chinese Canadians, yes, but more than that, we are all people lost in the same absurdity. The streets hum with a restless energy, but it’s all noise—vibrancy without meaning.

East York has changed. It’s become something else, something that no longer fits into my memory of it. New stores, new signs, new faces. I try to find the familiar, but it slips away from me, as if the world itself is denying me the comfort of the known. The noise is overwhelming, suffocating. The laughter, the chatter—so alive, and yet so hollow. People crowd together, but they do not truly connect. It’s as if the world is spinning, and I’m caught in the middle of it, watching it all pass by without ever being part of it.

The day ends abruptly, as though the city had grown tired of itself. Security arrives, ushering everyone out with cold efficiency. People leave reluctantly, but they leave. The streets empty, and once again, the city breathes its quiet sigh of relief. Tomorrow, the cycle will repeat. Tomorrow, I’ll return. But it will be the same. It will always be the same. The absurdity of it, the meaninglessness of it all, is inescapable. But I will keep coming back. Because, in the end, what else is there to do?

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