The Birthday That's Waiting
Sunday, May 24, 2026 at 8:13PM
Please click the photo above to play the daily videoIt's Idlan's birthday today, though you wouldn't know it from the celebrations — or rather, the deliberate absence of them. He's decided to hold off until next week when Irfan is back from London, which is either admirably patient or a shrewd negotiation for two rounds of attention. Either way, there's something rather lovely about a birthday that insists on being complete before it begins. The cake can wait. The brother cannot.
I started rounds early, the kind of Saturday morning where you're in and moving before the hospital has fully woken up. There's a stillness to weekend wards that weekdays never quite manage — fewer footsteps, fewer phones, the corridors carrying a different quality of quiet. Everything done and dusted in good time, which left me free for a nine o'clock meeting at the Amari Hotel.
The meeting room had a view that included, somewhat surreally, our apartment. There's a peculiar feeling in looking out of a conference window and being able to identify your own balcony. You're simultaneously at work and, in some visual sense, at home. The meeting itself ran through until lunch — one of those extended sessions that covers enough ground to justify the hours but still leaves you feeling like you've run a gentle marathon. By the time it wrapped, the tiredness I'd been outrunning all week finally caught up.
A nap. Unapologetic and necessary. I gave myself over to it completely, the kind of early afternoon sleep that feels almost medicinal. And then, as if the city had been waiting for me to close my eyes, the rain came. Properly, emphatically, in that way KL does when it decides to remind you that this is still the tropics. Heavy sheets of it against the windows, the sound both dramatic and oddly soothing. You don't fight rain like that. You just let it have its say.
Once it eased, we drove out to Melawati for the pasar malam. Saturday evening markets have their own particular magic — the smoke from the grills, the clusters of people moving slowly between stalls, the impossible variety of things you didn't know you wanted until they were right in front of you. We browsed, we bought, we did what you do at a pasar malam, which is essentially eat your way from one end to the other with varying degrees of restraint.
Then the phone rang. An admission, because the day wasn't quite finished with me yet. Back in I went, the evening rearranging itself around the call. These things happen, and you learn not to resent them — or at least to keep the resentment brief and productive.
Dinner was late but the mood was chilled. The house quiet, the rain a memory, the weekend still with one full day remaining. Idlan's uncelebrated birthday hovering gently in the background, a promise deferred. Next week, when the family is whole again, we'll do it properly.

