What is Fear?

What is Fear?

Whenever I plan to write, the white empty paper scares me.

This year, I turn 31. What did I achieve in these years and days of my life? How do I define myself?

My passport says that I am Egyptian, even if I spent more than half my life outside the country. Should I start telling my story from 1993? I was born in Khor Fakkan in Shariah, United Arab Emirates, the youngest of seven children. My parents named me Khadija.

I graduated from high school and returned to Egypt. I participated in a revolution which didn’t achieve its goals. I got married after a great and epic love story…or that’s what I thought, until I got divorced.

I gave birth to two amazing kids. I graduated from Sharjah University with a degree in English literature and translation.

I spent my twenties with my son Qassem. Life was beautiful until I gave birth to my daughter Layla and fell into a hole of postpartum depression. Alice in Wonderland was running after the rabbit, but I was running after myself.

What lessons have I learned from my life? What is the moral of my own story?

I can bake apple Bundt cake, lemon cake and chocolate banana bread. I cannot work under pressure. I used to hide my problems. I love life and in the same way loathe it. I love to prepare my meals with passion  and eat them slowly. I love to spend time with my friends.

I know the sound of typing pleases me. I love writing and literature. I believe that there is a special connection between me and literature and I discover that day after day.

I am fond of language. I lose and I win. I am ambitious. I dream of becoming a great translator. I dream of winning the best mom ever prize (if there is such a thing)!

Why do I hate the Egyptian revolution? The revolution fell from paradise to the earth like Adam’s apple. I wonder, did Adam hate the apple? Did he swear at her?

I was living such a simple life in Dubai in 2011, when the flame of revolution ignited in the Middle East. I was a high school student. The revolution seemed like the greener grass on the other side. I dreamed of being part of what was happening. But since that time, I have been enduring a series of personal and public defeats. Can life lead to better outcomes? Can the course of life change?

(Image courtesy of Melanie Wasser via Unsplash)

Once you have been broken and tasted fear, fear becomes a habit. Do you know who I am?

I am the girl who at the age of 19 almost got caught by the central security forces at a protest. As I felt them pull my arms and grab me, I screamed “I want my mom!” Since then fear knows my address and acts like that friend who, no matter how many times you avoid her, keeps ringing your doorbell… 

Covered Mirrors and the Souls of the Dead (November 2)

It may be strange, but my grandfather died between the 1st and 2nd of November 2000. He, who had always been full of life and joy, had been confined to his bed for two months, weakened by a very aggressive cancer. Not even two intensive surgeries had been able to remove it completely. The doctors had always told us not to lose hope, and I had deluded myself into thinking that his recovery was truly possible.

I was sixteen years old and I didn’t know the true meaning of death. Death had seemed like a distant or fantastical concept, something to be read about in a mystery novel or seen in a movie, but reality is different from fantasy. Especially when it comes to the people we love.

That night, death took my grandfather in his sleep and, although we had been expecting it for a while, knowing never stops the pain. When he stopped breathing, the only people in the room were my grandmother and her sister, Caterina, who had volunteered to take shifts with my parents and my maternal uncle and to relieve my grandmother of some of her daily responsibilities. It was she who noticed that my grandfather was finally free from pain.

When I heard the landline phone at home ring, I immediately understood from my mother’s voice that the inevitable had happened. We quickly got dressed and went to my grandparents’ house, which was in a seven-story condominium not far from ours.

I didn’t cry on the way. There was still something unreal about the event. But when my grandmother greeted us in tears and led us into the bedroom, where I saw my grandfather’s waxen and motionless face with my own eyes, I was undeniably confronted with the reality of death.

As my mother sobbed, I felt almost paralyzed. Suddenly, Aunt Caterina put her arm around my shoulders and whispered softly, “You’ll see, your grandfather will be at peace now. But you have to help me do something.”

I looked at her, perplexed. What was there to be done?

“We have to cover all the mirrors in the house.”

I thought she had gone mad as she took me by the arm and slowly led me into the hallway. Dazed and with my heart pounding, I followed her into a small storage room. She grabbed some large dark blue dish towels and a sheet.

There were three mirrors in my house. One mirror in my grandparents’ bedroom, one in the corridor, and a rather large and antique one in the dining room that had been passed down through three generations.

(Image courtesy of Viviana De Cecco – November 2000)

When we entered the bedroom, Aunt Caterina asked me to help her tuck the edges of the cloth into the upper corners of the frame so that it was completely covered. 

It was this way that I discovered one of the funeral customs that are still deeply rooted in Sardinia, in all of southern Italy and in various cultures around the world. There are traditions so old that no one knows exactly when and where they originated. Covering the mirrors when a person dies is a custom that has its roots in the mists of time. 

Aunt Caterina explained to me that covering the mirror with a cloth prevents the soul of a deceased person from being frightened by seeing its own reflection. In addition, to prevent the departing soul from getting lost, it is appropriate to close all the windows, draw the curtains, leave some lights on and leave the door open to facilitate its journey to the afterlife.

The mirror is often seen as a portal between our earthly world and another dimension, and the wandering soul of the deceased, drawn by the glow of its reflective surface, may become trapped there forever. Instead of leaving its mortal remains, it could potentially drag the souls of all the living people reflected in the same mirror and haunt the house of the deceased for all eternity.

I remembered all the times when, as a child, my grandfather would sit me on his lap before a family celebration and make funny faces in the dining room mirror to make me laugh. He was always ready with a joke, and the thought of not seeing his smile again tore at my heart. Seeing those mirrors covered with those big dark cloths, the typical color of mourning, felt like a sign of the end. They reminded me of those abandoned houses where life had faded and happiness has been lost forever.

These dark beliefs are much more prevalent in the inland rural areas than in the cities. That’s why my aunt’s words, coming from a rural village where certain superstitions about the dead are never underestimated, touched me deeply. Even though those ideas may seem quite incredible and ludicrous, there was something both frightening and reassuring about that belief. It was comforting to think that my grandfather’s death wouldn’t be the end, and that we had helped usher in the beginning of his journey to perhaps a better place.

(Image courtesy of Viviana De Cecco – November 2000)

Even today, I feel torn between rational skepticism and doubt that there may be some truth in these ancient beliefs. Perhaps our ancestors were much wiser than us modern people. 

The Greeks and Romans were among the first to seek glimpses of the future in reflective surfaces. Who hasn’t broken a mirror and heard: “Now you’ll have seven years of bad luck”? The Romans believed that a person’s life was divided into seven-year cycles. Breaking a mirror would bring bad luck simply because it represented the souls of the living. Likewise, for the Egyptians, mirrors weren’t just for cosmetic purposes among the wealthier classes, but they also had funerary significance. It was believed that their radiance was linked to the sun god Ra and was a symbol of vital regeneration, which is why they were often depicted in the reliefs of the tombs of high dignitaries.

While doing some research on the internet, I discovered that this belief is also widespread in the Jewish religion. In the sacred text called the Talmud, there’s a phrase that several writers have quoted in their novels that refers to the human relationship with mirrors: “We do not see things as they are, we see them as we are.” This phrase makes me think that a mirror shows us our physical reflection on one side, but also reveals the nuances of our gaze, where all the feelings that lie beneath our exterior are hidden.

When we look at ourselves, we often say that we have a lively gaze. Where does this vitality come from? What can we call it? Is it the soul that we see? What is hidden within us that the mirror cannot really show us?

When a mirror reflects a dead person, there is no gaze to interpret and no movements to reproduce. Think of the vampire, who has no reflection in the mirror precisely because he is dead. Or consider exorcism practices, which sometimes use mirrors to chase demons out of the possessed.

So how do we know what is beyond the reflection of a lifeless body? I believe that superstitions are created to find the answer people have been seeking for centuries in their search for the meaning of life and, above all, its end.

Now it seems to me that this ritual is a demonstration of the living’s love for their loved ones, a testament to their desire to protect them. No one can know for sure what really happens the moment they depart this world, just as no one can know if there is emptiness or light.

What is certain is that, on that night when I returned home with my parents, I looked in the mirror in my room and wondered if my beloved grandfather, who had always been a guiding presence in my childhood, had found peace.

When my Aunt Caterina died three years later, there was no need to cover the mirrors. She died of pneumonia in the hospital, in that sterile environment where death seems even sadder. Everything happened slower with her. I had time to say goodbye to her and to hear that she had no regrets. She had been happy and was going in peace.

At that moment, standing at her bedside with my relatives, I began to believe in the soul. I believed it could be found in the looks of those who are with us, in their words and in all those gestures through which every human being communicates with his fellow human beings.

No Room For Veal

I was only six months in, working as an apprentice chef at Rocco’s, a family-run catering outfit based in the suburbs of Greater London; Esher Common to be exact. The Esher site was a multi-story production and storage outpost and the place where most of the culinary magic happened.

Mid-July; daytime

The sun was high, and the winds were still over the stony shoreline of Brighton Beach. I smelled the air and listened to the crashing waves in front of me. Peaceful, I thought, took one last drag, and stubbed out my cigarette in the overflowing ashtray.

Our staff had gathered at the client’s site, The Lock, a boxy event space in the arches under the promenade, for a planning meeting ahead of a couple of events they had on the horizon. The first was a birthday celebration in a few days, and the other was the annual Bank Holiday Ball.

Claire was already there, perched on a stool, nursing an Americano. She looked after the business side of things and was perhaps one of the best things to ever happen to Rocco’s. She had beauty and brains and was quite a likable character.

The Head Chef, Pierre, had just stepped in, an hour after the briefing was scheduled to start. His long-sleeved, crisp white dress shirt opened mid-chest and was adorned with a loose paisley print neckerchief. The cuffs were turned up, and the shirt tucked into his trousers.

“Okay, Fabien. Paolo. You have already the menu for the birthday party, yes?” Chef Pierre asked. His accent was thick as a pumpkin.

Ugh. It’s Fabian and Pablo. Nincompoop.

He waved his stubby fingers in the air, beckoning us to speak.

“Yes, Chef,” I said. “We were thinking of spinach and prosciutto stuffed veal rolls, with some greens. And a light garnish—maybe lemon—for the main?”

I said “we,” but the veal was more Pablo’s idea.

Since that Hannibal Lecter guy likened the exquisite delicacy of veal to the taste of human flesh, I was no longer a fan; period. But the prosciutto stuffed veal rolls required an inherent degree of talent, with equal portions of patience. And in that case, Pablo was your guy. He was the one with the most talent. I was just his humble sidekick. Nearly half the kitchen wished they had his skills, Chef Pierre included. But shhh; he’d never admit it.

Pablo was only twenty-four and had swapped the Brazilian sun for the rain and the chills of Britain. To better his talent, he would say. He landed at Rocco’s a month before I arrived and was considered senior to me and Ella Wolfeschlegelsteinhausenbergerdorff, the entitled one. Together, Chef Pierre dubbed us, his three Apprentis de Chefs. Fancy title, right?

“Nuh! We will not be doing that!” Chef Pierre interjected.

His face was set like the rain that was about to be kicked from the sky.

“—but Chef; the couple is from Nice and often travel to Italy with the family, for the cuisine. They haven’t been able to travel much since the pandemic. I thought it would be good to surprise them with something special,’ said Pablo.

That’s it, Pablo, sock it to him. I gave him a reassuring glance. A nod of approval soon followed.

“And for dessert — we will make sweetcorn panna cotta with fresh blueberry compote. I’ve already spoken to Claire, and there’s enough Chianti Classico in the store,” Pablo continued.

“Exactly,” Chef Pierre said. “They’re French. And we will not be making butchered young cows stuffed with anything.”

Chef Pierre raised his eyebrows. His wonky left eye glared at us with such degeneracy. He could have easily sliced us into thin strips of prosciutto if he blinked.

“But Chef—” I pleaded.

“Shut it, Fabien. Paolo, I expected better.”

Hmm, better?

“Chef!”

“Nuh. Instead, we will be making chicken cordon bleu. The other stuff is okay.”

Chef Pierre then turned to Ella what’s-her-face and thanked her for the cordon bleu suggestion. He gave her a cheeky grin and waved the rest of us off.

Of all the dishes imaginable, Chef Pierre chose chicken fucking cordon bleu? I wasn’t okay with that. No matter how you dressed it up, it was just chicken and melty cheese. Not even French. But I guess if Chef was happy with stuffing skinned chicken with blocks of cheddar and ham, then I was happy.

Truth be told, Chef Pierre lost his mojo a couple of years before that. Rumor has it that his wife left his philandering ways for her nail technician — a Thai woman, tall and fair with skin made of silk, I was told. Since then, he’s been searching for happiness at the bottom of the next bottle of Glann Ar Mor. Okay, that is French. In the end, Chief Pierre became a slothful soul and lost his powers of invention. 

I walked over to Pablo and bumped shoulders.

“Hey, don’t worry, Mon,” I said. “I’m sure you’re gonna fix it up nice.”

“I have to. I can’t afford to mess this up, not now.”

Thursday, event day

My night was fitful. I managed to pry my eyes open when the alarm sounded but stayed in bed until I was late, another one of my unshakable toxic traits.

I quickly got dressed, grabbed my kit, and boarded the Thameslink service to Brighton. Thankfully, I caught the last train for the hour. I would have made it to work in time for the briefing had my travel not been limited by the complications of modern-day commuting and earthly physics.

Chef Pierre was already in, busy chatting away with Ella, ignoring everyone else who had gathered in the center of the kitchen, awaiting his edicts, that is, directions.

“Bon. So, this is the menu,” Chef Pierre said, tossing out the stack of menu cards.

I gave the menu a quick whiz. As suspected, nothing had changed.

Chef Pierre instructed the wait staff to take their lead from Claire. The sous chefs and our group of apprentices fell directly under his supreme thumb.

“Boys. I want the mains plated and ready for me before they go out, okay?”

Boys. That was Pablo and me, if ever you were wondering.

“Yes, Chef,” Pablo replied.

We chopped, skinned, peeled, prodded, and poked for the more significant part of the day. 

It was now an hour to service, and my anxiety was ballooning. I needed a quick break, a minute or two to reset my nerves. I gave Pablo a shoulder tap.

“Hey. I’m stepping out back for a bit. Cool?”

“I got this, Man, but be quick,” Pablo said, unwrapping the stack of plates needed for the main course.

I smiled, snuck out the back, and shared a quick spliff with the dish guy. My eyes rolled back on the first pull as I meditated on my misgivings. I said a little prayer, threw some thanks to the heavens, and begged the universe to bring a swift end to the day before I gave in to the sleep that was beckoning.

Bzzt.

A timely distraction sounded from my mobile and my most trusted timepiece and companion for those dire hours in the trenches with Chef Pierre.

“Great news from the bank!” the text said, and then in another line “Let’s catch up ASAP!” I made a mental note to reply later and was about to pop the phone back into my pocket when I heard him. 

Getting high on haute cuisine — vaulted plates

“C’est quoi ça?!” Chef Pierre demanded.

His voice filled the kitchen with a thunderous roar.

“You imbecile!” Chef continued.

I ditched my share of the contraband in the bushes and hurried back to the kitchen, tripping over the door jamb that almost took out both my bony knees as I came crashing on the floor. By God’s grace, I was able to stand, but my ego was still on the floor. As soon as I recovered, I watched in awe as Chef hurled a single-plated main dish across his station.

Splat!

The plate and the dressing hit the wall first. The piping hot cordon bleu followed suit.

A few inches more to the left and the chicken would have connected with Pablo’s forehead — dished and served with all its accompaniments.

Pablo stood motionless and pale-faced.

I could tell Pablo’s heart sank as he watched his hard work reduced to a hot mess on the floor beside him. He never had to say anything; I knew precisely what was coursing through his mind.

“Oie!” I shouted as my neck veins stiffened and my face twisted into a hot mess, too.

The bass in my voice ripped through the kitchen like an unsuspected undercurrent and carried with it months of cultivating rage.

“What the rass yuh do that for? Like, what the actual fuck Pierre?!”

At this point, something colder than ice surged through my veins.

“Vous,”’ he replied. “Vous.”

“Vous what, Pierre?!”

I polished my utter defiance with a bit of Franglais and now, I had his complete attention.

“Yuh so fucking ungrateful!” I continued my rant. “Imagine, we here working on your chicken cordon-fucking-BLUE, all day. And the best you can do is fling the fucking plate at the man’s head? Pierre. Yuh never here. Late all the time. Teach us shit, yet you expect pumpkin pie?”

My fury gave voice to Pablo’s will as I stood up to Chef. For us both.

Ella covered her mouth with both hands as she tried to stifle a scream. Chef Pierre’s behavior was shocking, even by her standards. I imagined, to her, mine must have been simply appalling. But if the truth was ever like a loaded gun, this was the trigger.

I reigned in my Jamaican sass, just in time to see Claire’s face pop from behind the swing door; her mouth open like a bass.

“Get out! Get out now!” Pierre shouted. “Leave my fucking kitchen….”

“Cheups.” I pulled air through my gritted teeth, making the longest hiss imaginable.

My apron and hat were already off, on the floor, somewhere. I didn’t care where.

I almost lost the entire surface of my pupils as I rolled my eyes returning his salty looks.

The rest of the kitchen staff froze. The only noticeable sounds were the splashes of water from the overflowing sink and the few pots next to Pablo that had now started grumbling.

“You’re done, Fabien. You’re done!” His breadfruit fingers pointed to the door.

“Idiot. And it’s FABIAN.”

I was two words short of telling him to stick his job up his arse, as they say in Britain. Instead, I maintained my indignant stare and marched to where Claire stood.

The next day

Chef turned up to work shitfaced and back into his dusty old corduroys. So much for the crisp whites and that tadpole printed neck thing.

I saw that his pot belly was about to burst, so I kicked him a waste bucket. His upper body folded at the waist as he struggled to stand. He puked until the balls of his eyes exploded into pure redness, intoxicating the kitchen with the most putrid scent imaginable, spilling drips of puke onto his oversized coat that hung loosely across his back.

If you ask anyone, they will tell you it’s not uncommon for chefs to go berserk on the odd occasion when the service time was missed or  the vegetables were  not still al dente as commissioned. But no one deserved the utter disdain that Pablo endured. 

Well, there you have it — altered plates

I later learned that Pablo had altered Pierre’s plating arrangements. Knowing Pablo, he probably felt the dish looked flat and unimaginative. And as I suspected, Pablo injected a little life into the dish; some colors, height and texture to the lone chicken and the sprig of green against a dollop of that god-awful mush Pierre swore was the best thing since sweet potato chips.

The truth was that Pierre’s incompetence had become taxing, and it was no longer a secret. Why he lasted there so long, no one knew. But “everything does not have to make sense,” I heard someone say. And often, when you get that feeling, it just might be time to move on.

Pierre hauled himself to the prep table, dead in the center of the kitchen, where we all gathered again for the end-of-day briefing that should have taken place yesterday.

I stood next to my boy Pablo; my head was down, eyes fixated on the shiny surface of the table in front of me. I listened as Pierre cleared his throat and cringed at the thought of the smack that was about to escape his unbathed tongue.

“So, yesterday was okay,” Pierre said. “The couple was happy with the meal and the service. And send their regards.”

Pierre’s eyes were everywhere except where they were meant to be.

“I’ll await suggestions on the ball from vous by later today. That is all.”

He turned and then left the kitchen.

Was it shame? Guilt? Total indifference? I was confused.

It was 8 PM, and the night sky had placed a cloak of darkness over Esher Common. While the rest of the town slept, Pablo and I were busy organizing the ingredients for the upcoming ball.

“Bro. This packing thing is too much,” Pablo whined.

“I know. Plus, it’s just us two,’ I replied. “But we can do it, Mon. Let’s hurry.”

“We should be at the Notting Hill Carnival this weekend… YESSS,” Pablo remarked.

I watched in utter shame as Pablo broke into something like a dance. His body moved like an awkward robot that had lost a couple of screws in the knees and waist.

“Pablo, ah, beg! Leave the gyrating to us Caribbean folks,’ I said. “Dancing is not your thing.” We exchanged a couple of laughs and then got on with the packing.

Throughout the evening, we worked as hard as possible to prep and package the food for the Bank Holiday Ball set for Monday back in Brighton.

It was now 11:15 pm; my phone reminded me with a familiar buzz.

“Your train will be here soon,’ I told Pablo. ‘Go ahead, Man, and I’ll finish up.”

It was a trek back into the city, and the last train for the night was fast approaching.

“You sure, bro?” Pablo asked. “I already fucked up once. I can’t afford to lose this job, Man.”

“Come on, Pablo. You either leave now or catch the night bus to North London.”

The journey back to London by bus would have been long and unsavory, especially on a holiday weekend like this.

Pablo tore off his apron and stuffed it and the other bits in his bag, and he was through the door in seconds.

Moments later, BANG!

A loud thud just outside the door stole my attention. I called for Pablo, but there was no answer, so I walked over and eased the door open.

“Pablo! Pablo! Just go, Mon!” I shouted.

But the cause of the racket wasn’t Pablo; it was Pierre.

Fuck! My thoughts mouthed to form a silent shout.

What was he doing here? “His shift ended eons ago,” I thought, closing the door behind me after squeezing myself through.

Looking at his unbalanced steps, I could tell Pierre was drunk.

Pierre was wearing a gray tracksuit and a dark pair of trainers. His ears were plugged, and the hood of his shirt was up.

I watched as Pierre slid through the unlatched door and downstairs into the staff break room.

I gave a stealthy pursuit, still clutching a roll of cling film; my confused brain neglected to instruct my hand to get rid of it.

My silly hands must have pressed too hard against the swing door, and it plopped open, flooding the room with light from the passageway.

“What are you doing here?!” Pierre barked.

He yanked the earphones from his ears and gave me a cold-eye stare.

“Your shift ended 8 hours ago,” I replied with an equal measure of contempt.

Bzzt. Bzzt. Bzzt.

The ramble from my phone interrupted our stare down.

“Yea, Mon,” I said. “We’re just wrapping up now.”

It was the frozen storage guys; they were running late. I now had plenty more time.

I ran back upstairs, quickly labeled the foodstuff for the ball, and the extra meat, cleaned the counters and meat saw, and gave the floor a quick mop with a bit of vinegar.

The remaining trash, I double bagged and dumped in the food waste skip out back.

“Mate. Can you give me a lift to the station? At this hour, Uber doesn’t come to this side,” I asked the frozen storage guy as he loaded the last crate onto the truck. I figured a minicab from the train station at Esher Common to Croydon wouldn’t be too expensive.

“Sure. No worries, Man,” he replied.

I swung my backpack across my shoulders and hopped into the cabin.

Saturday and the freezer is full

It was now Saturday, and way too early to be awake.

I found myself back at The Locke, with the gang putting things in place for the ball, our client’s last hurrah for the summer. I made a cup of coffee and drowned it with some sweetened condensed milk. I took a good whiff and allowed the scent of imported instant to permeate my nostril.

I sifted through a mountain of paper Pierre had neglected to file and shook my head. Maybe this would be my new normal — I could get used to this.

Bzzt. Bzzt.

“Hello?”

“Is this Fabien?”

“NO. Fabian,” I corrected her, distancing myself from whatever French connection I had left.

“Oh, apologies, my dear. This is Ronda, calling from Brixton Bank. About your recent application?”

Yikes.

“Yes, oh, hi Ronda”

I smirked.

“Fabian. We would like to make you an offer.”

“Fantastic.”

“Can you come in next Tuesday?”

“Absolutely.”

“Great. I’ll see you at nine?”

Now, if only I could get Pierre’s big head out of the way. 

‘Fabian.’

A soft voice called out to me. It was Ella. “Claire wants to know If you guys have decided on the main for the ball?”

Shit. Did I?

“Yes,” I replied. “Veal Piccata. The veal is in the frozen storage containers in Esher. They were shipped just before the fire.” 

Spoiler Alert
Now, if only I could get Pierre’s big head out of the way — of the Piccata. His carved remains were ziplocked and tucked away in the freezer right here, yet only 80 percent frozen. If I don’t relocate it in the freezer soon, it will be rock-hard by Tuesday, too late for reaching the veal.

The weekend

Pablo was right; it was the Bank Holiday weekend. I might go to the Notting Hill Carnival after all.

9 AM Discovery

Open the album to see

your roots. Hover your petite fingers across
the beige page with the woman’s
face you inherited.

From full skirt
of exaggerated hips in black
and white, to shorts
with ultra-bright pink, red, purple

spiral. An itch for her
aura strengthens. Once,
you saw her softest smile. How

eerie is it to miss a stranger?