Rafian At The Edge 50 -

He started writing more. Not memoir exactly—he disliked the neatness of closure memoir demands—but fragments, little prose pieces where an edge was a setting rather than a moral. One piece described a boy on a pier watching tins of paint slide on the water’s surface; another pictured a woman returning a book to a library that smelled of lemon-scented cleaner and old glue. He wrote to make the edge visible on the page, to draw the line so it could be crossed with intent rather than drifted across.

At fifty, Rafian kept a small notebook. It wasn’t a planner, exactly; planners had goals and deadlines and a mechanic’s faith in progress. His notebook was a ledger of edges. Each page had a strip of margin inked darker than the rest, and in that margin he wrote the names of things he could feel slipping toward or away from him. He called them the Fifty. Not because there were fifty items—some pages remained blank for months—but because fifty had become the number he noticed when he looked at a clock or a calendar: a middle where past and future met and negotiated terms. rafian at the edge 50

There were moments when edges bled into grief. A close friend, Nora, died abruptly, leaving little time for goodbyes. Her funeral was full of people who spoke in precise tones about a life lived with intention. Rafian felt the edge of mortality press in; it did not come with a single shape but a chorus of small realizations: the urgency to make art, the desire to say what must be said, the temptation to make more lists. He showed up to Nora’s memorial with a paragraph of memory—an afternoon they had shared on a train where they had traded secrets and song lyrics. After the ceremony, he walked until the city blurred; the physical edges of streets and buildings dissolved into rain. He started writing more

Yet not all edges yielded to optimism. His brother, Malik, had chosen exile in another country years ago, and his visits had grown sparse—time, distance, pride. One afternoon Malik called. He was in the airport, having missed a connecting flight, and had five hours before the next one. He begged Rafian to meet him for coffee. The brothers sat under a flickering heater and spoke about mundane things—traffic, a cousin's wedding—but then, when the conversation thinned, they touched the old wound: the family argument that had driven them apart. It had been years of silence, pronouncements hardened into facts. They did not resolve everything in two hours; they barely scraped the varnish. But they agreed, finally, to try. Edges here were not romantic; they were stubborn labor. He wrote to make the edge visible on

At fifty, death is no longer a distant rumor; it sits politely at the second chair in every conversation. Not a threat so much as an inevitability with which one must negotiate practicalities and emotional reckoning. Rafian visited his mother in the suburbs more often than he had in recent years. She was eighty-two, still quick with a recipe or a quip, but slower to get up from chairs. They ate stew and shelled peas on summer evenings, and she told stories of how she had left her family’s small farm to be a nurse. In those stories, Rafian recognized the contours of choices he’d thought were uniquely his—the small braveries that became compasses.

Rafian had always measured life in margins. Not the neat white margins of a ruled notebook—he’d outgrown neatness years ago—but the thin, uncertain borders where one thing bled into another: work into home, certainty into doubt, the present into some tentative future. At fifty, those edges were sharper. They gleamed with the rawness of choices made and the soft ache of things left undone.

At fifty, Rafian learned that living at the edge is less about dramatic leaps and more about luminous tending. The radical thing was not to tear everything down but to make careful repairs—to sand the roughness, to oil the hinges, to plant clover in the broken patch of yard. It required both courage and ordinary, repetitive care. It required saying no sometimes, and saying yes at other times.