Love the Dark Days by Ira Mathur
Source: the author Paperback, 232 pgs. I am an Amazon Affiliate
Love the Dark Days by Ira Mathur is a surreal memoir that weaves between a distant past in post-colonial India and ancestral stories and a married woman looking for guidance on writing her own memoir. The narrative digs deep into the past of her ancestry pulling the thread of pain forward into her present. Mathur says in more than one place that she doesn't feel like she belongs. She's looking throughout the memoir for her place in the world.
This sense of drift carries readers through the memoir, which reads like a nightmare in places. Her grandmother Burrimummy has fits of anger and sadness, and her rages seem like a woman battling mental illness, though that isn't outwardly articulated. Shifting from India to Trinidad and other places, Mathur is weaving place with family history, much of it violent and abusive. Whether subject to emotional abuse and dejection or the physical abuse her mother felt as a child at the hands of her own mother, these instances reverberate throughout the female line in the family. These women are damaged and traumatized, but it is unclear if these women ever sought help or tried to break the cycle.
"When she is angry like this, I don't know what to feel. I hate it when she thrashes me but am sadder when she doesn't notice me at all."
"The servants, sensing my lower status, are careless with me."
"I'm too dark, too rebellious." Mathur's view of herself is skewed from an early age, and she carries that doubt with her as she matures. She is never good enough. She even says, "Twenty-four years, and in some ways, nothing had changed for me." But later as she's seeking to understand this generational violence and neglect, she absolves everyone of responsibility.
"They are like Russian dolls. I understand now. Mummy blames Burrimummy for being unkind. Burrimummy blames Mumma for ill-treating her, and Mumma blames Sadrunissa for thrashing her. They all took out whatever anger they felt over their own lives on their daughters. no one is responsible."
The sections when Mathur is interacting with poet Sir Derek Walcott are overly long and fawning of a poet whom she admits was accused of harassing women. Her admiration of his poetry is clear, and she does recognize his faults, but if these scenes were meant to tie in with her family's saga, they did not fit seamlessly into the narrative. They often pulled me out of her story and made me wonder when she would get back to her family. When she does get back to her family, there are still questions that linger about her husband's behavior, his family's acceptance/rejection of her, and her relationship with her own children that remain unanswered. Perhaps that's a future memoir?
In many ways, this memoir is about a woman still coming to terms with her trauma. Intimate, harrowing, and sad, Mathur's memoir reminds us that "when brutality is normalized, it is passed on, like a legacy, like DNA." Love the Dark Days by Ira Mathur is most engaging when she speaks about her family and its legacy and its impact on her as a woman and successful journalist.
RATING: Tercet
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About the Author:
Ira Mathur is an Indian born Caribbean freelance journalist/writer working in radio, television and print in Trinidad, West Indies. She also is currently a Sunday Guardian columnist and feature writer. Follow her on Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn.