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This Year…

by in Soul on 25th December, 2017


This year I saw in the New Year under the covers. I was tired and didn’t fancy staying up 10 more minutes just because it’s the thing to do.


This year, I marvelled at the lessons my baby niece is learning in how to share, how to jump and how to not give up, forcing her to continue to colour in despite her lack of self-belief, ‘I can’t do it Khalti’. These lessons in self-confidence are like muscle memory and they need to start from now. I also discovered that leg cuddles from little human’s arms are the best kind of cuddles.


This year, I saw a shooting star, or a dying star or a whole load of stardust enter the earth’s atmosphere with such sparkle, only to disappear, far too abruptly. Beauty gone in an instant, but it didn’t take away that such glorious magic existed, to begin with. I had the big dipper pointed out to me as I was standing by a lighthouse on the edge of the North Atlantic Ocean. I gazed up at the sky, at the light shining from the moon and the stars, and knew, the reality is more than this; than the joys and the struggles, the mundane and the temporary distractions.


This year.


This year, I finally got a compliment of encouragement from my ballet teacher on good posture (and many a comment on more work to do on my arms!). This year I danced with heels on, and heels off, with ballet shoes and swollen toes. I began to see dance for how I always saw it as a child, as not only a form of creativity and an art, but an expression of voice. My voice.


This year, I woke up to the news of a fire that incinerated homes and souls and that there was nothing anyone could do to get them back. I kept replaying clips and reading news that only made me slump into a state of despair. I found that for some people, news feeds force them to act, but for others, only to freeze. This year I went to sleep cosy, warm and satiated, knowing full well that many a one didn’t, and yet, still I slept.

This year, I realised the extent of my hypocrisy in that I can care about a cause, only to forget about it later.

This year, I realised the extent of my privilege in that I can make choices in how I respond to global calamities and troubles.

This year, I forgave myself in that I can only do so much, but I also held myself to account that I should at least try and when I falter, to try again.


This year, I walked around the souks of the medina and found a young man who sells okra out of a bucket for 40p a kilo. He refused to accept a contribution given by some benefactors as he said he has enough and pointed us in the direction of people who didn’t. This year, I learnt about honesty and sincerity, about the excellence of character and gratitude, about contentment and trust. I learnt this all from a minute with a young unassuming man selling vegetables out of a bucket. A poor man in our twisted sense of reality, but a rich man in Truth. This same trip another elderly man was just around the corner. He accepted the donation and exclaimed that only God knew how much he needed this gift. I too learnt then about reliance in God for provision (rizq), for our eyes to remain open to who is in need and for our hearts to remain open too when we are the ones in need.


This year.

This year I learnt to value the silence over the noise. To shut out the unnecessary. That sometimes things are actually better off unsaid. To remember to balance maintaining self-worth without the overpowering of ego. To seek knowledge from learned people and to be comfortable in saying ‘I do not know’. I found that worry and prayer cannot exist at the same time.

This year I decided I would no longer care what people thought of me. This year, I realised I still do care about what people think of me.

This year I met women who carried such grace in their forgiveness of others that I knew I still have far to go in both receiving and giving of it.

This year, I met people who have enriched my life.

This year I found that I learnt something, then forgot it, then re-learnt it and forgot it again.

This year I went paragliding over mountains and forests. I looked down, took in the view and then completely freaked out about being held up by a gust of wind. My heart forced my mind to stop rationalising things, to trust beyond my own abilities and to just enjoy the journey; this journey in the sky, the one down below and the transition in-between.


Last year and the one before that, I thought I lost hope, this year I found it.

Soraya Zahid

Soraya Zahid

Soraya is a lover of dance, animals and people. Trying to seek out meaning in this journey of life and cultivate a sense of joy is her aim. That and resolving to end her constant grazing of snacks.