Broken Record

A crowd of fearful, anxious bodies collect

In front of the security guarding the elevators

Border control on the ground floor of Fortis Hospital, New Delhi, India

“Visitor hours are only from 9 – 11”

“Only two at a time”

“You have to have a pass”

Stern faces in uniform

Do they have hearts under those badges?

Surely, there is a way to tell a mother

Desperate to see her child

That isn’t so cold, so robotic

I slip by with sympathy and guilt

A recycled visitor  pass stickered on my chest

To see my great-aunt, admitted for the third time

in the last three months for shortness of breath

On the second floor, we exit the elevator

Pass through white walls to enter a tiny rectangle of a room

A frail body in good spirits lies on the bed

Two translucent tubes – lifelines – enter each nostril

I wonder what it feels like to not be able to breathe on your own

I recall the last fourteen days of my winter break

Landing in Delhi Airport

Waking up Kolkata

Driving through Chandigarh

Breathing feeling more like a task

Than a passive yet life-giving process

A record rolling in the background

Going round and round on its own

Filling the room with music

Subtle and soothing at once

I recall the unmistakable film of soot with each inhale

Walking around with scarves as makeshift masks

The misconvenience of not being able to enjoy a nice brisk walk

Let alone the runs that had become my rituals over the last few years

Waiting til we got up north enough

To escape the state of air that has enveloped most states of India

Finding its way inside my great aunts lungs and the lungs of so many

who did not win the lottery to see a doctor

Insidiously working its way through her tissue

Seeping through her skin

Over the years

Her past medical history reads;

“interstitial lung disease of 11 years”

No history of smoking.

At the “top hospital in India” which provides “world class health care services”

No mention of Delhi’s consecutive title as the “World’s Most Polluted Capital”

No record of the particulate matter that found home in her lungs

A city referenced by Delhi’s Prime Minister as a “gas chamber”

Would you check the air quality index if every day was “hazardous”?

On the flight home to California

I look forward to going on a run to the Marina

To being able to open my eyes without dust scratching my cornea

To walk with scarves wrapped around my neck instead of duct taped around my mouth

I think of how breathing will feel like a record again, playing softly in the background

~

For the first time, in Delhi, the sky is blue instead of gray

For the time, we can see the twinkles of stars at night

Reminding us that there is more to existence than ourselves

In 7 days, Delhi’s PM2.5 count dropped by seventy-one per cent

For the first time, the AQIs that before read “hazardous”,

Are now coming out “good” in more and more cities

For the first time those who haven’t yet taken their first breath

Have a chance to grow in a womb free of particulates

For the first time, generations who have only ever known the city in crisis

Are able to see, not just imagine and debate and speculate,

but actually see that something else is possible

Something else has always been possible

Something else is possible

Something else continues to be possible

We didn’t need to hear it from Corona

But I do hope we listen this time

About Anshu Gaur: Anshu means “rays of the sun”. She is a writer, poet, and spoken word artist, a runner, a fighter, and a healer. Anshu is currently in the Joint Medical Program at UCSF-UC Berkeley, a 5 year MD/MS program. Her Master’s project explores the journey of womxn of color artists and the capacity of the arts to heal. Anshu comes to life when she is in the outdoors, attending and performing at open mic nights, practicing at the dojo, dancing of any kind, especially Salsa & Bachata, making food from love, and in the presence of the people she loves.