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Archive for the Short Story Category

Carry me in your Arms……

When I got home that night as my wife served dinner, I held her hand and said, I’ve got something to tell you. She sat down and ate quietly. Again I observed the hurt in her eyes.
Suddenly I didn’t know how to say it. But I had to let her know what I was thinking. I want a divorce. I raised the topic calmly. She didn’t seem to be annoyed by my words, instead she asked me softly, why? I avoided her question. This made her angry. She shouted at me, ” you are not a man!”
That night, we didn’t talk to each other. She was weeping. I knew she wanted to find out what had happened to our marriage. But I could hardly give her a satisfactory answer; I had lost my heart to a lovely girl called Dew. I didn’t love her anymore. I just pitied her!
With a deep sense of guilt, I drafted a divorce agreement which stated that she could own our house, 30% shares of my company and the car. She glanced at it and then tore it to pieces. The woman who had spent ten years of her life with me had become a stranger. I felt sorry for her wasted time, resources and energy but I could not take back what I had said, for I loved Dew so dearly.
Finally she cried loudly in front of me, which was what I had expected to see. To me, her cry was actually a kind of release. The idea of divorce which had obsessed me for several weeks seemed to be firmer and clearer now.
The next day, I came back home very late and found her writing something at the table. I didn’t have supper but went straight to sleep and fell fast asleep because I was tired after an eventful day with Dew. When I woke up, she was still there at the table writing. I just did’nt care so I turned over and was asleep again.
In the morning she presented her divorce conditions: she didn’t want anything from me, but needed a month’s notice before the divorce. She requested that in that one month, we both struggle to live as normal a life as possible. Her reasons were simple: our son had his exams in a month’s time and she didn’t want to disrupt him with our broken marriage.
This was agreeable to me. But she had something more, she asked me to recall how I had carried her into out bridal room on our wedding day. She requested that everyday for the month’s duration I carry her out of our bedroom to the front door ever morning. I thought she was going crazy.
Just to make our last days together bearable I accepted her odd request. I told Dew about my wife’s divorce conditions. She laughed loudly and thought it was absurd. No matter what tricks she has, she has to face the divorce, she said scornfully. My wife and I hadn’t had any body contact since my divorce intention was explicitly expressed. So when I carried her out on the first day, we both appeared clumsy. Our son clapped behind us, daddy is holding mummy in his arms. His words brought me a sense of pain. From the bedroom to the sitting room, then to the door, I walked over ten meters with her in my arms. She closed her eyes and said softly, don’t tell our son about the divorce. I nodded, feeling somewhat upset. I put her down outside the door. She went to wait for the bus to work. I drove alone to the office.
On the second day, both of us acted much more easily. She leaned on my chest.. I could smell the fragrance of her blouse. I realized that I hadn’t looked at this woman carefully for a long time. I realized she was not young any more. There were fine wrinkles on her face, her hair was graying! Our marriage had taken its toll on her. For a minute I wondered what I had done to her.
On the fourth day, when I lifted her up, I felt a sense of intimacy returning. This was the woman who had given ten years of her life to me. On the fifth and sixth day, I realized that our sense of intimacy was growing again. I didn’t tell Dew about this. It became easier to carry her as the month slipped by. Perhaps the everyday workout made me stronger.
She was choosing what to wear one morning. She tried on quite a few dresses but could not find a suitable one. Then she sighed, all my dresses have grown bigger. I suddenly realized that she had grown so thin, that was the reason why I could carry her more easily. Suddenly it hit me, .. she had buried so much pain and bitterness in her heart.
Subconsciously I reached out and touched her head. Our son came in at the moment and said, Dad, it’s time to carry mum out. To him, seeing his father carrying his mother out had become an essential part of his life. My wife gestured to our son to come close and hugged him tightly. I turned my face away because I was afraid I might change my mind at this last minute. I then held her in my arms, walking from the bedroom, through the sitting room, to the hallway. Her hand surrounded my neck softly and naturally. I held her body tightly; it was just like our wedding day.
But her much lighter weight made me sad. On the last day, when I held her in my arms I could hardly move a step. Our son had gone to school. I held her tightly and said, I hadn’t noticed that our life lacked intimacy. I drove to office… jumped out of the car swiftly without locking the door. I was afraid any delay would make me change my mind… I walked upstairs. Dew opened the door and I said to her, Sorry, Dew, I do not want the divorce anymore.
She looked at me, astonished. Then touched my forehead. Do you have a fever? She said. I moved her hand off my head. Sorry, Dew, I said, I won’t divorce. My marriage life was boring probably because she and I didn’t value the details of our lives, not because we didn’t love each other any more. Now I realized that since I carried her into my home on our wedding day I am supposed to hold her until one of us departs this world.
Dew seemed to suddenly wake up. She gave me a loud slap and then slammed the door and burst into tears. I walked downstairs and drove away. At the floral shop on the way, I ordered a bouquet of flowers for my wife. The sales girl asked me what to write on the card. I smiled and wrote: I ll carry you out every morning until we are old.
The small details of our lives are what really matter in a relationship. It is not the mansion, the car, the property, the bank balance that matters. These create an environment conducive for happiness but cannot give happiness in themselves. So find time to be your spouse’s friend and do those little things for each other that build a relationship.

Story #1
The governor of Egypt once summoned Ibn Al-Furat to come to him. When the two men were face to face, the governor said, “I always had evil intentions regarding you. So much hatred do I harbour in my heart against you that I am always making schemes to capture you & banish you from these lands. But do you know what prevents me from doing so? For many nights now, I am seeing you in my dreams; you are always preventing me from reaching you, using a loaf of bread to keep me back. When I order my guards to kill you, you fend of their various blows with a loaf of bread that is in your hand, so that neither blow nor arrow reaches you. Now tell me the story behind this loaf of bread.”
Ibn Al-Furat said, “O governor, ever since I was very young, my mother would come to me every night & place a loaf of bread underneath my pillow. Then in the morning she would give it away in charity on my behalf, & she never stopped doing so until she died. Then I continued to do the same myself, every night placing a loaf of bread underneath my pillow, & then in the morning giving it away in charity.” The governor was greatly affected by what he heard; he said, “By Allaah, I will never even think about harming you after this day. I now think well of you & love you very much.”
Story #2
A long time ago, a woman’s son went missing. He was gone for so long that she finally lost all hope of ever seeing him again. One day, she sat down to eat. Breaking off a piece of bread from a nearby loaf, she was about to it into her mouth, when all of a sudden a beggar appeared at her door & asked her to feed him. Not only did she give him the remaining part of the loaf of bread, but she also gave him the morsel that she was about to put into her mouth. Putting the loaf back together as best as she could, she handed it over to the beggar, & since she herself was relatively poor, she remained hungry for the rest of the day. After a few days passed, her son returned & they both rejoiced at their meeting. They sat down together, & he began to give an account of many hardships he endured since the time he had gone missing.
He said, “Perhaps the worst thing that happened to me occurred when I was walking in the valleys of such & such place, only a few days ago. A lion approached, & instead of trying to attack my donkey that I was riding upon, it leapt straight at me, throwing me off my mount. As far as it could, the donkey raced off, & I was left as easy prey for the lion. It began to tear away my clothes with its ferocious claws. I was so afraid that I almost fainted. The lion then leaned over me, getting ready for a lethal strike, but a huge man, whose face & garments were both white, suddenly appeared & drew the lion’s attention away from me. He came, & without the use of any weapons, he pulled the lion from me & wrestled it to the ground. Then looking at the lion with a menacing expression, he said, ‘Stand, O dog, a morsel for a morsel!’ the lion immediately got up & raced away. After seeing the lion speed away, I returned my gaze to the man, but he was no longer there, & I couldn’t find him afterwards. I stayed where I was for a number of hours, until my strength returned to me. Realising that the lion had done no harm to my body, I got up & walked away, until I joined up with a travelling party. I told my story to them, but there was one part of it that I was,& still am, extremely confused about: what did the man mean when he said, ‘A morsel for a morsel’?” at this point during the narrative, his mother stared ahead of her with an incredulous expression, realising that the man came to save her son at the same time she had given up her morsel of bread to the beggar.

A man once found a cocoon of a butterfly.

One day a small opening appeared. He sat an watched the butterfly for several hours as it struggled to force its body through that little hole. It got to a ponit where it had stopped making any progress. It seemed as if it had gotten as far as it could an now couldn’t go any further.

So the man,out of humanity decided to help the butterfly. He took a pair of scissors an snipped off the remaining bit of the cocoon.

The butterfly then emerged easily. But it had a swollen body an small,shrivelled wings.

The man continued to watch the butterfly because he expected that, at any moment, the wings would enlarge an expand to be able to support the body, which would contract in time.

Neither happened! In fact, the butterfly spent the rest of its life crawling around with a swollen body and shriveled wings. It was never able to fly.

What the man in his kindness and haste did not understand is was that the restricting cocoon and struggle was required for the butterfly to get through the tiny opening were Allaah’s ways of forcing fluid from the the body of the butterfly into it’s wings so that it would be ready for flight once its achieved its freedom from the cocoon.

Sometimes struggles are exactly what we need in our lives. If Allaah allowed us to go through our lives without any obstacles, it would cripple us.

We would not be as strong as what we could have been. We could never “fly”!

I asked Allaah for strength……..

an Allaah gave me difficulties to make me strong!

I asked for wisdom………

an Allah gave me problems to solve!

I asked for prosperity………

an Allaah gave me brain & brawn to work!

I asked for courage………….

an Allaah gave me danger to overcome!

I asked for love…………….

an Allaah gave me troubled people to help!

I asked for favours…………..

an Allaah gave me opportunities!

I received nothing i wanted…………

but everything i needed!!!

“Fatabaarakallaahu ahsanal khaaliqeen!”

“So blessed be Allaah, the best of creators!”

(surah 2,verse 14)