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The Week Eases Towards the Door »
8:43PM

Weekend, and the Small Logistics of It

Please click the photo above to play the daily videoThe weekend arrived, though it didn't begin with a lie-in — those are a luxury reserved for a different kind of Saturday. Irfan had driving school, which meant the morning opened with a bit of domestic logistics: dropping him off on my way in to work, the two of us in the car at an hour that felt faintly unfair to both of us. There's something quietly pleasing, all the same, about these small handovers — the parent-as-chauffeur routine that I know has a shelf life, and that I'll probably miss more than I'd care to admit once he's driving himself everywhere.

Work, even on a Saturday, was waiting. But the clinic ran smoothly, which on a weekend morning is exactly what one hopes for. A stem cell infusion was done and went as it should — the sort of thing that demands full attention while it's happening and then, gratifyingly, recedes into the category of "completed." By the time lunch came round, the morning's work was behind me, and I could step out of it cleanly. A morning that knows when to end is a gift in itself.

Lunch was with Anita, which made the day feel properly like a weekend rather than a slightly truncated working one. There's a particular ease to a midday meal with no clock pressing on it, the conversation unhurried, the food allowed to be the point rather than fuel grabbed between commitments. After the week behind us, sitting down together felt less like an event and more like a quiet restoration.

Afterwards I found a little time to catch up with Star City before the day's next logistical obligation came due — namely, collecting Irfan again from driving school. The chauffeur, recalled to duty. He emerged, presumably marginally more roadworthy than he'd gone in, and we made our way onward.

And onward meant the pasar malam, because some weekend rituals don't require deliberation. There's no real planning involved — you simply go, and let the place do what it does. The crowd, the steam, the smell of things grilling, the small negotiations over what to take home and what to eat on the spot. It's the kind of unstructured pleasure that resists being filmed properly and is all the better for it. You just move through it, basket filling, appetite rising, the evening settling into something warm and slightly chaotic in the best way.

By the time we got home, the day had quietly used itself up, and what remained was a restful night — the proper kind, with nowhere further to be and nothing more to sort. After a hectic week and a Saturday that, for all its smoothness, still asked something of me, an evening of simply being at home felt like the correct ending.

Not a grand weekend opening, then. Driving school, a clinic, a good lunch, a night market, and a quiet house at the end of it. But the small logistics of an ordinary good day, strung together, add up to something I wouldn't trade.

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