Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Short Note from The Road- Silver

 

Bulan Puasa

Ada satu hari pada minggu kedua Ramadhan yang sangat panas. Panas rimas hingga aku terasa nak potong rambut. Jadi aku gunapakai pemotong rambut bagi tujuan itu. Lega. Bila mengemas rerambut yang bersepahan itu baru aku perasan banyak rambut yang bukan lagi hitam. Jadi aku membuat rumusan yang putih itu bukan rambut aku, rambut jiran kut, tak pun bulu kucing (aku selalunya potong di luar rumah pasal senang nak sapu dan memang akan ada kucing-kucing kejiranan yang lalu lalang). Rambut aku kekal hitam, kerana hitam itu bergaya.

Kemudian, bila bermulanya bulan Ramadhan satu perkara yang tak pernah berlaku telah berlaku. Lesu itu pasti dan selalu. Tapi Micro Sleep, itu tak pernah berlaku. Micro sleep yang berlaku di mana-mana dan tak kira bila walaupun cukup tidur dan lengkap bersahur segala. Hampir setiap hari, Hinggakan nak kemana-mana di siang hari aku memandu perlahan dan dengan tingkap diturunkan. Mungkin kerana tak dapat kopi kut, aku sedapkan hati.

Entahkan kenapa kali ini Ramadan penuh cabaran. Hati kecil mengejek perlahan: kau dah mula tua kot. Jiwa ego pulak membentak: diamlah! Aku masih lagi muda remaja. Kalau nak panjat gunung pun boleh sangat (padahal tangan dok mengurut lembut lutut yang berdenyut)

 

Raya

Bukanlah lama sangat rasanya tak balik ke kampung tapi kali ni rasa sedikit hiba. Ada sahaja lalu-lalang bila mengembara dek kerja. Mungkin Hari Raya itu ada membawa realitinya sendiri. A pocket dimension for you to contemplate on things. Banyak sangat perubahan yang dah berlaku. Traffic jam, outlet-outlet di bandar besar dah ada di pekan, malas nak tapau dari kedai kopi? Grabkan sahaja; Penyakit bandar dah menular ke pekan-pekan kecil. Small town charm wearing thin. Rumah-rumah kampung tinggal dipanjat tumbuhan menjalar, bersih cuma kalau masih ada yang ingat jalan pulang. Yang tinggal cuma hantu-hantu, tikus dan serangga dan ingatan terpahat dikayu dan batuan rumah.

Bonda depan rumah ditukar menjadi longkang. Selalu kering katanya, walhal dulu penuh ikan dan udang air tawar. Pepohon manggis dan rambutan rimbun habis ditebang. Iyalah, bila ada  yang buat harta bersama macam harta sendiri punya, apa lagi nak dikata.

Makcik yang dulu gagah sekarang letih bertongkat. Pakcik yang gemar buat dad joke masih lagi berbuat yang sama dicelah-celah ceritanya yang berulang-ulang dan berulang-ulang, mungkin petanda awal nyanyuk menyelinap. Makin lama makin kurang yang pulang ke kampung. Sudah dijemput pulang ke Alam Abadi atau sudah menjadi GrandMaster atau Pater Familias klan sendiri, punya kampung sendiri.  

Yang pasti rambut mereka tiada yang hitam, kelabu jauh sekali. Putih semata semuanya. Masa dan takdir mengejar sentiasa. Everyone is so old now. 

Melawan masa dan takdir itu cerita paling tua dalam dunia. Tak kira zaman akan ada iteration atau medium nya. Epik Gilgamesh. Maharaja Qin Shi Huang Di yang galak menelan pil-pil raksa kerana nak hidup selamanya atas nasihat tabib (barangkali antara kes terawal medical negligence). Filem-filem Hollywood yang mana hero-hero aksi old skool yang sudah secara berjemaah bikin filem untuk kekal relevan di zaman CGI kaw-kaw (Francais Expendables), penulisan Sir Terry Pratchett: The Last Hero tentang Ghenghiz Cohen si hero tua ganyut dengan Silver Hordenya yang mau melawan dewa-dewa kerana enggan menua. 

Bukan semua boleh menerima usia, bukan semua dapat berkawan dengan takdir.

 

Tadi

Hampir seharian aku dengan kawan di atas jalan. Jauhnya tidaklah jugak tapi penatnya bukan main lagi, walaupun bukan aku yang memandu. Semuanya demi mengejar lead berpotensi bagi satu kes general litigation di luar bandar. Cerita awalnya macam boleh ke Mahkamah Tinggi, pasang caveat dan berbagai lagi moves dan counter moves yang mungkin boleh digunapakai bagi kes berebut tanah.

Sesampainya di sana, bercerita tentang kes hanya setengah jam. Selebihnya dok mendengar si polan bercerita pasal dirinya. Biasalah, bila umur menjangkau 60-an (bukan aku, aku muda lagi) ada saja nasihat ingin diberi, ada saja cerita nak disampai. Hinggakan terdetik dalam hati; mereka laki bini ini sunyi.

Rumahnya besar, biliknya banyak tapi sepi. Tinggal hanya berdua suami isteri. Anak-anak sudah besar panjang. Tiada pula yang pulang menjenguk. Betul jangkaan aku: lagaknya seolah-olah tak mahu kami pulang. Habis secawan teh disuruh bertambah berkali. Habis sekeping kek disuanya lagi. Memang kedatangan kami beriya-iya dirai. Hinggakan bila benar-benar kami perlu pulang demi mengelak jalan masuk ke Kuala Lumpur sesak (tambahan lagi dengan Si Xi Jinping datang bertandang), diulang beberapa kali: nanti datang lagi, bawa anak dan isteri. Like I said, sunyi. Harapnya jangan jadi pada aku dan isteri nanti saat mata pun naik kelabu dan bila rambut hitam menjadi putih.


 


Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Short Note from the Road 2- Book-It

 

Yesterday I bought a law textbook and I am happy to report, the book is as thick as a brick. Owing to the steep price tag usually attached to law books (because they are as thick as a brick most of the time), I tend to hover around law libraries most of the time in search for law books on specialized topics and to read and browse law books and law journals to my heart’s content. (Long live libraries!)

As such, the purchase of a brick-thick law book is often an epochal event for me as they often mark the crossing of a threshold for me, another hill conquered, another river crossed. Something like that. 

The first law book I bought was when I decided to jump in head first into trial related briefs. This new one I bought yesterday reaffirmed my commitment to the art and science of conducting trials. Now I am comfortable enough to proclaim myself to be a journeyman in conducting trials.

The book I bought yesterday was written sometime before the fall of Berlin Wall, at around the time shoulder pads were making a comeback in women's fashion. It is because of that and the yellowing tone of the tome and not because of my haggling skills, I got a nice discount for it.

The book however was on the list of books a trial practitioner should have according to a senior practitioner. In fact, most of the books on the list are just that. Old and yellowing, seemingly decades out of date but nevertheless evergreen in its content.

There are more recent editions, sure but one thing I am coming realize about the Law so far is that though judicial opinions differs from time to time and over myriad of issues, at the heart of it the Law is about achieving fair and just outcome for the parties involved deriving from our own inane sense of right and wrong but in legalese; the "why" part of the Law. Because of that, the fundamentals of the Law rarely changes.

It is the "how" part, the part where we apply the Law that tends to differ from time to time as it is a matter of interpretation by the court. Judicial opinion, a judge's say so: a judgment. What was a good interpretation of the law 10 years ago could be overruled in tomorrow hence the many editions of a same book.

But even then, once in a while in comes a judgment so profound in its truth, so elegantly wrought that both judges and lawyers alike could not help but to agree with the said judgment thereby setting a long list of application throughout the years, just like that snail in a bottle case. Damned if I can remember the name right now. I am after all typing is up at some ungodly hour of the night. 

In legal research references to online legal database maybe the end stage but the start off point is always to hit the books no matter how old and yellowing it may be. Besides, where enlightment is the goal the fun is in the hunt for the relevant case, the joy is in the research. Cracking open and consulting an old yellowing tome always gave me that magical, wizardly feel. You can't get the same rush from staring at a screen and there is something about reading, underlining and highlighting an actual book that help things to stick better and longer in my mind. Some psycho-somatic thingy perhaps. But that is me, I might be the weirdo who enjoy all these digging and communing with the dead (and not so dead, aka the act of reading).

In any event, a law book is a lawyer's stave, our parang, our multitool without which we would be severely ill-equipped to perform our duties to our utmost abilities in service of the Law. Besides, if all else fails the heft of one is good enough in defence of our person (chuck it, swing it with both hands and let the full weight of the Law prevailover your assailant) Perhaps some DPP with very liberal interpretation of offensive weapon might classify it as one under Act 356 but the same can be said for a small jar of Sambal Berapi Nyet (hurt to your..exit that is) but in the end of course the Court interpretation will hold sway.

Anyway,

This long age will roll on, governments change, the Sea level may rise, humanity might sprout another set of limbs but books are here to stay like it has for thousand of years. Physical books that is. Them duo thingy don't work so well with me.