A Puff of Smoke, a World of Memory
A Puff of Smoke, a World of Memory Boys learn the important lessons not in classrooms, but on borrowed bicycles, dusty excursions, and quiet bridges where only crows are watching. Denzil Jayasinghe 7 min read · 1 day ago I was fifteen when I first smoked a cigarette, and I have been mildly embarrassed about it ever since. Not because smoking is a terrible thing – there are far worse habits a boy can acquire in the hills – but because I was so very bad at it. My friend Ajit could blow smoke rings with the ease of a conjurer, each one drifting up into the pine-scented air like a small, surprised halo. I stood beside him, coughing heroically, and tried to look as though I had done this before. The pines were not impressed. They have seen generations of boys make fools of themselves, and they keep their counsel. My real initiation came later, away from the hills, in the flat and ordinary heat of home. One quiet afternoon I borrowed my father’s bicycle – borrowed being the polite word...