For Giebs
I’ve lived and worked abroad for much of my adult life. As an expat teacher in Brunei, I’ve learned to adapt to different customs, languages, time zones, and climates. I’ve made peace with missing weddings, funerals, and Sunday lunch with the family. Or at least I thought I had.
But nothing
prepares you for this kind of phone call.
Forty-eight
hours ago, I got the news that my brother-in-law 65 years old, still working in
Riyadh as an executive after twenty-five years there, had suffered a stroke. The
prognosis is encouraging, and we are hopeful. He's under medical observation. We are waiting.
Watching. Praying. Thousands of kilometres apart.
And in that
moment, the distance wasn’t just physical. It was a punch to the chest. A
reminder of the cost that no expat contract ever mentions.
People
think the hardest part of this life is culture shock, or the loneliness, or
raising kids far from home. But the real fear, the one that wakes you up in the
middle of the night, is that you won’t make it back in time. That something
devastating will happen, and you’ll still be on the other side of the world,
checking WhatsApp for updates, living on a six-hour time delay while life and health
scares unfold without you.
That’s
where I am now. Stuck in the in-between. And it hurts in a way that’s difficult
to explain.
I always
imagined retirement as a kind of homecoming. I held tight to this picture in my
mind: us, finally together again. Sitting on the stoep under a wide verandah,
rocking gently in old chairs. Grandbabies tumbling around at our feet while the
smell of a slow-cooked feast drifts from the kitchen. The girls and boys
indoors, arguing lovingly over spices and stories.
We’d gather
at a long wooden table, elbows touching, Mikhail telling his tall tales as
though the years hadn’t added any weight to his voice. Mashie twirling like a ballerina,
the Greenies jiving to the old-school tracks ... Laughter so full and guttural
it would shake the walls. Zainab and I slapping each other on the back in pure
delight. Giebs lost in another one of his wild theories. Shahied hovering,
making sure I was okay, fussing in that quiet, constant way he does.
Later, the
girls would get us dolled up, put lipstick on our tired lips, fluff our greying
hair, pluck the chin hairs and make us beautiful again. And we’d all laugh at
the years that had passed, the continents that once kept us apart, and we’d celebrate the fact that somehow, we had found our way back home.
That’s the
dream I carry.
It lives in
my chest like a small, flickering lamp. And most days, it's enough to keep me
going. But today, with my brother lying in a hospital bed in Riyadh, fragile in
ways I cannot touch or soothe, that dream feels unbearably far away.
I don’t
know what the next few days will bring. I only know that love, real love,
stretches across oceans. That the bond between siblings doesn't weaken with
silence or space, that it just waits, patient and enduring.
And even if
I’m not there to hold his hand right now, I’m holding him in every thought, in
every prayer, in every beat of this broken, hopeful heart.
Because the
truth is, we expats live with one constant ache: that we might miss our chance.
That the goodbye might come too soon, or without warning.
But we also
live with deep intention. With love that makes no excuses and carries no expiry
date. With a vision of home so vivid, it becomes sacred.
And maybe, just maybe that's what will carry us all the way back to each other.
Salaam N… this hurts to read… especially since you’re oceans apart😭… but it’s good that there is hope for his recovery.❤️🩹 May Allah heal him as smoothly as possible, Aamiin 🤲🏻.
ReplyDeleteAmeen ameen...shukran for the prayers and support♡
DeleteDearest Imagi Nari. This is such a heart wrenching reflection. I make dua that Nagib recovers completely inshallah. Love from Naeema
DeleteShukran so much, We appreciate all the duas, love and support xx
DeleteI read this and the tears flowed, the hurt and pain like a dull knife stabbing my insides. Much love and duah for his speedy recovery. ❤️
ReplyDeleteWe are in the same boat:(
DeleteSorry that was me Sodiqa not anonymous
ReplyDeleteThank you, cuz...much love
DeleteAs salaamu alaykum. Family. Shifaa kamilan to all who aree sick. Please keep us in Cape town in your sincere duah
ReplyDeleteWassalaam, shukran for duas, keeping all sick in our duas, May they be granted complete shifaa IA
DeleteHopeful that all of this can still happen inshallah, now the vision is clearer, not just a thought but written down, beautiful Nari.
ReplyDeleteShukran for the support and the beautiful dua
DeleteAsalamualykoem w yarabbaraghmatulahie wabarakatoe.ever since i heard the news of nagieb im sa and hopeful i was in touch with nagieb and zainab daily.i pray to almighty allah to grant afieyay complete recovery ameen
ReplyDeleteAmeen ameen, shukran for the duas and support.
Delete