What's new

My Saith: Thoughts Of A Prostitute With A Married, Pakistani Man As Her Client

Well.wisher

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Oct 19, 2016
Messages
2,977
Reaction score
1
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
This is Part 2 of a previous narration, “My Yasmin: Thoughts Of A Married Pakistani Man Visiting A Prostitute. You can read Part 1 here.

*********************

There are 37 cracks in the ceiling.
34, if I discount the ones that merge into each other, even if from a distance. I stare at the ceiling fan as it achingly airs the room – its motion forced, as if it’s ready to give up. Countless thoughts run through my mind as my eyes scan the room. I’ve memorized every inch of this room in which I reside. The fan, the cracks, the termite-infested wooden door – they’re all constants. That, and the smell of smoke.

My eyes wander over to the small outdated clock by my bedside. The hour’s almost up. My saith, heaving above me, seems all clocked out too.
I find myself hoping against hope that he’s the last of the day. That I can somehow convince Noor – or Begum Noorani, as everyone else calls her, owing to her stature within the Haveli – to let me go for just one weekend. But if hope was ever something I could rely on, I wouldn’t be in the Haveli, to begin with, would I?

An abrupt knock sounds on the door, indicating the end of the session. I’m snapped out of my thoughts. I realize that my saith is already dressed and I follow suit. I locate my purple shalwar kurta, put it on – too lazy to tie the dori at the back – and grab my Gold leaf. The lack of ventilation leaves the room filled with smoke. Saithcoughs. I smirk. He shuffles about awkwardly and leaves.

It’s all mechanical at this point.

Silhouette-of-woman-standing-by-window-looking-out.jpg

Source: mirror.co.uk
I overhear the chatter of the other girls as I take a drag of my cigarette.
Most of the workers in the Haveli like to get together for chai every now and then. They suck up to Noor to try to get perks out of her. But I know how Noor works. Noor doesn’t have a heart. She takes, but she’s unable to give. I learned that in my early days.

See, I used to beg Noor to let me go see my children.
They live with my ex-husband, despite the fact that he beats them day and night. Much like he used to beat me. The owner of the Haveli is actually his close friend. Since he himself preferred to be nothing more than an alcoholic by profession, he sold me to his friend. The transaction was never outwardly made. First, I was a visitor at the Haveli. A few nights here and there, a few saiths who paid handsomely. Soon, the visits turned into longer stays.

My ex-husband said I should get my body’s worth while I was young. That I’d wither soon enough and we needed the money. He also said I didn’t have a choice. Because if he wasn’t around to keep me here, his friend did the honors of beating me till I couldn’t move.

Domestic-Violence-The-Trent-45.jpg

Source: thetrentonline.com
So I stayed. And he did show up, my ex-husband. Only to divorce me.
The thing with society is, they’ll take an abusive alcoholic’s word before a prostitute’s. Because that’s all I was at that point. A prostitute. The bruises on my body didn’t matter. My children’s broken arms and teeth didn’t matter. What mattered was that they couldn’t be with their mother because she sold her body.

People who remained silent while my ex-husband would drag me out on the streets by my hair had suddenly rediscovered their moral compasses.
I didn’t give up. I still haven’t. Every weekend, I ask Noor to let me go. She declines, promising she’ll let me go the next week. If I silently walk away, she’s satisfied. If I argue, cuss her out or try to leave own my own, the owner pays a visit.

I’m getting old. I bruise easily. So I don’t argue as much anymore.

240_F_103399578_1hDQ7k9LB9TnlEJIx8paXtzvLe7c0JAs.jpg

Source: fotolia.com
Somewhere in the distance, the call to prayer and muffled footsteps break my chain of thought. I glance at the clock. It’s almost time for my next saith to come, I figure.
I put out the cigarette and place the ashtray under the bed. I go over to the little dresser, examining myself in the mirror. I hear a knock on the door and turn around, waiting expectantly. They always seem to like that. He walks in, examining me from head to toe. I do the same. It’s him.

My saith, for whom I’m Yasmin.

His Yasmin.

Saith thinks he’s unique. That he’s the first man to walk in here, using different names.
He thinks everyone doesn’t know about his family. But most men who step foot within the Haveli are married with children. They either let slip the fact themselves whilst rambling -like he did – or we take a swift look at their wallets. One way or another, word gets around.

We always laugh about how their guilt convinces them that a picture of their child or wife somehow makes up for the infidelity.

It doesn’t.

happy-family-father-mother-and-footage-011511652_iconl.jpeg

Source: pond5.com
Shutting the door behind him, he initiates our routine.
He’s always silent for the first ten or twenty minutes. However, once he’s done, he holds me and starts talking about his life. It came as a surprise to me first. For most men, it’s a pissing contest – one they’re having with themselves. Each visit, they try to outdo the story they’ve told the last time. But my saith always talks about his personal life.

Through his conversations, I’m transported within the confines of his home, visiting his son Yahya. I’m able to awkwardly pay my respect to his ailing wife, even though her illness may not be too evident to him. I travel alongside to his office, laughing at people he ridicules and in awe of people he admires.

Mostly, however, through his conversations, I convince myself that he wants to know about me too. He never asks anything himself. No – not when I have fresh bruises. Or when I whimper in pain if he’s not careful.

Sometimes, though, if I do talk, he’ll listen with apparent keen interest. He listens when I ridicule Noor or talk about an argument within the Haveli.
However, every time I try to bring up something that truly affects me, he gets angry. He shoves me with lesser brutality than I’m used to, but brutality nonetheless. He mumbles a few curses. Then, he says how I’m not getting any more money than the amount he’s already paid to Noor. He also yells, saying how we’re all scammers, making up false stories to garner sympathy.

1.jpg

Source: shutterstock.com
Yet, here he is – under a false name, visiting a brothel, calling a prostitute he bought for an hour his own, despite his child and wife waiting for him at home.
I don’t say that, of course. So he proceeds to be silent for the remainder of his time. In that moment, he becomes the saith who’s getting his money’s worth. And I chide myself for ever believing he could be anything else.

I go back to counting the cracks in the ceiling.
My eyes continue to memorize each inch of this forsaken room. And when the knock on the door indicates that his time is up, I light my cigarette and wait for the next man to walk in and become my saith.
 
This is Part 2 of a previous narration, “My Yasmin: Thoughts Of A Married Pakistani Man Visiting A Prostitute. You can read Part 1 here.

*********************

There are 37 cracks in the ceiling.
34, if I discount the ones that merge into each other, even if from a distance. I stare at the ceiling fan as it achingly airs the room – its motion forced, as if it’s ready to give up. Countless thoughts run through my mind as my eyes scan the room. I’ve memorized every inch of this room in which I reside. The fan, the cracks, the termite-infested wooden door – they’re all constants. That, and the smell of smoke.

My eyes wander over to the small outdated clock by my bedside. The hour’s almost up. My saith, heaving above me, seems all clocked out too.
I find myself hoping against hope that he’s the last of the day. That I can somehow convince Noor – or Begum Noorani, as everyone else calls her, owing to her stature within the Haveli – to let me go for just one weekend. But if hope was ever something I could rely on, I wouldn’t be in the Haveli, to begin with, would I?

An abrupt knock sounds on the door, indicating the end of the session. I’m snapped out of my thoughts. I realize that my saith is already dressed and I follow suit. I locate my purple shalwar kurta, put it on – too lazy to tie the dori at the back – and grab my Gold leaf. The lack of ventilation leaves the room filled with smoke. Saithcoughs. I smirk. He shuffles about awkwardly and leaves.

It’s all mechanical at this point.

Silhouette-of-woman-standing-by-window-looking-out.jpg

Source: mirror.co.uk
I overhear the chatter of the other girls as I take a drag of my cigarette.
Most of the workers in the Haveli like to get together for chai every now and then. They suck up to Noor to try to get perks out of her. But I know how Noor works. Noor doesn’t have a heart. She takes, but she’s unable to give. I learned that in my early days.

See, I used to beg Noor to let me go see my children.
They live with my ex-husband, despite the fact that he beats them day and night. Much like he used to beat me. The owner of the Haveli is actually his close friend. Since he himself preferred to be nothing more than an alcoholic by profession, he sold me to his friend. The transaction was never outwardly made. First, I was a visitor at the Haveli. A few nights here and there, a few saiths who paid handsomely. Soon, the visits turned into longer stays.

My ex-husband said I should get my body’s worth while I was young. That I’d wither soon enough and we needed the money. He also said I didn’t have a choice. Because if he wasn’t around to keep me here, his friend did the honors of beating me till I couldn’t move.

Domestic-Violence-The-Trent-45.jpg

Source: thetrentonline.com
So I stayed. And he did show up, my ex-husband. Only to divorce me.
The thing with society is, they’ll take an abusive alcoholic’s word before a prostitute’s. Because that’s all I was at that point. A prostitute. The bruises on my body didn’t matter. My children’s broken arms and teeth didn’t matter. What mattered was that they couldn’t be with their mother because she sold her body.

People who remained silent while my ex-husband would drag me out on the streets by my hair had suddenly rediscovered their moral compasses.
I didn’t give up. I still haven’t. Every weekend, I ask Noor to let me go. She declines, promising she’ll let me go the next week. If I silently walk away, she’s satisfied. If I argue, cuss her out or try to leave own my own, the owner pays a visit.

I’m getting old. I bruise easily. So I don’t argue as much anymore.

240_F_103399578_1hDQ7k9LB9TnlEJIx8paXtzvLe7c0JAs.jpg

Source: fotolia.com
Somewhere in the distance, the call to prayer and muffled footsteps break my chain of thought. I glance at the clock. It’s almost time for my next saith to come, I figure.
I put out the cigarette and place the ashtray under the bed. I go over to the little dresser, examining myself in the mirror. I hear a knock on the door and turn around, waiting expectantly. They always seem to like that. He walks in, examining me from head to toe. I do the same. It’s him.

My saith, for whom I’m Yasmin.

His Yasmin.

Saith thinks he’s unique. That he’s the first man to walk in here, using different names.
He thinks everyone doesn’t know about his family. But most men who step foot within the Haveli are married with children. They either let slip the fact themselves whilst rambling -like he did – or we take a swift look at their wallets. One way or another, word gets around.

We always laugh about how their guilt convinces them that a picture of their child or wife somehow makes up for the infidelity.

It doesn’t.

happy-family-father-mother-and-footage-011511652_iconl.jpeg

Source: pond5.com
Shutting the door behind him, he initiates our routine.
He’s always silent for the first ten or twenty minutes. However, once he’s done, he holds me and starts talking about his life. It came as a surprise to me first. For most men, it’s a pissing contest – one they’re having with themselves. Each visit, they try to outdo the story they’ve told the last time. But my saith always talks about his personal life.

Through his conversations, I’m transported within the confines of his home, visiting his son Yahya. I’m able to awkwardly pay my respect to his ailing wife, even though her illness may not be too evident to him. I travel alongside to his office, laughing at people he ridicules and in awe of people he admires.

Mostly, however, through his conversations, I convince myself that he wants to know about me too. He never asks anything himself. No – not when I have fresh bruises. Or when I whimper in pain if he’s not careful.

Sometimes, though, if I do talk, he’ll listen with apparent keen interest. He listens when I ridicule Noor or talk about an argument within the Haveli.
However, every time I try to bring up something that truly affects me, he gets angry. He shoves me with lesser brutality than I’m used to, but brutality nonetheless. He mumbles a few curses. Then, he says how I’m not getting any more money than the amount he’s already paid to Noor. He also yells, saying how we’re all scammers, making up false stories to garner sympathy.

1.jpg

Source: shutterstock.com
Yet, here he is – under a false name, visiting a brothel, calling a prostitute he bought for an hour his own, despite his child and wife waiting for him at home.
I don’t say that, of course. So he proceeds to be silent for the remainder of his time. In that moment, he becomes the saith who’s getting his money’s worth. And I chide myself for ever believing he could be anything else.

I go back to counting the cracks in the ceiling.
My eyes continue to memorize each inch of this forsaken room. And when the knock on the door indicates that his time is up, I light my cigarette and wait for the next man to walk in and become my saith.
Though I'm not a feminist, but still I see prostitution as abuse of man's money and power over a women. When there are options, why go to places where females are held as slaves. How do we easily forget our sisters, mothers, daughters while taking advantage of other women???
A very sad reality of this world!!
 
Though I'm not a feminist, but still I see prostitution as abuse of man's money and power over a women. When there are options, why go to places where females are held as slaves. How do we easily forget our sisters, mothers, daughters while taking advantage of other women???
A very sad reality of this world!!
Im against both men who visit such places n women who sell their bodies.

I can understand cases of forced prostitution, where a girl is kidnapped and sold into it.

I can also understand a woman selling her body once or twice due to some extreme case.... but why cant these women work, instead of becoming a piece of meat for such animals?
 
Most prostitutes working for low and middle class comes from broken families or jumped into the profession to escape poverty.With little education they cannot do any other work unfortunately and pimps and brothel mafia keep their eyes on such girls all the time because its easy to lure them into the profession.
Though there are escorts or high class showbiz models who does such work willingly for some serious money and of course sexual pleasure.
 
I don't support 3rd wave of feminist. However i do agree South Asia is far from gender Equality.

Another thing girls do like bad boys. And they suffer for it.
 
Most prostitutes working for low and middle class comes from broken families or jumped into the profession to escape poverty.With little education they cannot do any other work unfortunately and pimps and brothel mafia keep their eyes on such girls all the time because its easy to lure them into the profession.
Though there are escorts or high class showbiz models who does such work willingly for some serious money and of course sexual pleasure.
Bhai Jan, there are many other dignified options.. working as maids,cooks,sewing clothes .. or going to Darul Aman.

You don’t have to jump into prostitution to escape poverty..

Prostitution doesn’t pay much.. it’s slavery .. with the “madam” takin away 90% flat.
 
ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh,,,,,,,,,, the injustices that we humans (especially Muslims) do to our own selves....... For this reason Islam allowed more wives........... Why not those people who can afford and can manage and have some private desires etc, marry again have second wife................. Instead of going to prositi............
We just don't fallow some basic rules and complain later actually cry later........
 
Bhai Jan, there are many other dignified options.. working as maids,cooks,sewing clothes .. or going to Darul Aman.

You don’t have to jump into prostitution to escape poverty..

Prostitution doesn’t pay much.. it’s slavery .. with the “madam” takin away 90% flat.
Yea i agree these prostitutes at first look innocent and victims but the reality is some are forced into such circumstances and some choose willingly when they had the option to work as maids ,cooks etc.If you are born into such a family or a bastard girl in a brothel you have no other option or if you need money urgently when you are emergency you have to do such work being a maid or cook won,t help you.
Well one thing i am certain about is that does not matter how much percentage the madam is taking prostitution indeed pay much more than being a cook and maid and thats the reason i call not everyone victim or innocent because more money is a motivating factor.
 
This is Part 2 of a previous narration, “My Yasmin: Thoughts Of A Married Pakistani Man Visiting A Prostitute. You can read Part 1 here.

*********************

There are 37 cracks in the ceiling.
34, if I discount the ones that merge into each other, even if from a distance. I stare at the ceiling fan as it achingly airs the room – its motion forced, as if it’s ready to give up. Countless thoughts run through my mind as my eyes scan the room. I’ve memorized every inch of this room in which I reside. The fan, the cracks, the termite-infested wooden door – they’re all constants. That, and the smell of smoke.

My eyes wander over to the small outdated clock by my bedside. The hour’s almost up. My saith, heaving above me, seems all clocked out too.
I find myself hoping against hope that he’s the last of the day. That I can somehow convince Noor – or Begum Noorani, as everyone else calls her, owing to her stature within the Haveli – to let me go for just one weekend. But if hope was ever something I could rely on, I wouldn’t be in the Haveli, to begin with, would I?

An abrupt knock sounds on the door, indicating the end of the session. I’m snapped out of my thoughts. I realize that my saith is already dressed and I follow suit. I locate my purple shalwar kurta, put it on – too lazy to tie the dori at the back – and grab my Gold leaf. The lack of ventilation leaves the room filled with smoke. Saithcoughs. I smirk. He shuffles about awkwardly and leaves.

It’s all mechanical at this point.

Silhouette-of-woman-standing-by-window-looking-out.jpg

Source: mirror.co.uk
I overhear the chatter of the other girls as I take a drag of my cigarette.
Most of the workers in the Haveli like to get together for chai every now and then. They suck up to Noor to try to get perks out of her. But I know how Noor works. Noor doesn’t have a heart. She takes, but she’s unable to give. I learned that in my early days.

See, I used to beg Noor to let me go see my children.
They live with my ex-husband, despite the fact that he beats them day and night. Much like he used to beat me. The owner of the Haveli is actually his close friend. Since he himself preferred to be nothing more than an alcoholic by profession, he sold me to his friend. The transaction was never outwardly made. First, I was a visitor at the Haveli. A few nights here and there, a few saiths who paid handsomely. Soon, the visits turned into longer stays.

My ex-husband said I should get my body’s worth while I was young. That I’d wither soon enough and we needed the money. He also said I didn’t have a choice. Because if he wasn’t around to keep me here, his friend did the honors of beating me till I couldn’t move.

Domestic-Violence-The-Trent-45.jpg

Source: thetrentonline.com
So I stayed. And he did show up, my ex-husband. Only to divorce me.
The thing with society is, they’ll take an abusive alcoholic’s word before a prostitute’s. Because that’s all I was at that point. A prostitute. The bruises on my body didn’t matter. My children’s broken arms and teeth didn’t matter. What mattered was that they couldn’t be with their mother because she sold her body.

People who remained silent while my ex-husband would drag me out on the streets by my hair had suddenly rediscovered their moral compasses.
I didn’t give up. I still haven’t. Every weekend, I ask Noor to let me go. She declines, promising she’ll let me go the next week. If I silently walk away, she’s satisfied. If I argue, cuss her out or try to leave own my own, the owner pays a visit.

I’m getting old. I bruise easily. So I don’t argue as much anymore.

240_F_103399578_1hDQ7k9LB9TnlEJIx8paXtzvLe7c0JAs.jpg

Source: fotolia.com
Somewhere in the distance, the call to prayer and muffled footsteps break my chain of thought. I glance at the clock. It’s almost time for my next saith to come, I figure.
I put out the cigarette and place the ashtray under the bed. I go over to the little dresser, examining myself in the mirror. I hear a knock on the door and turn around, waiting expectantly. They always seem to like that. He walks in, examining me from head to toe. I do the same. It’s him.

My saith, for whom I’m Yasmin.

His Yasmin.

Saith thinks he’s unique. That he’s the first man to walk in here, using different names.
He thinks everyone doesn’t know about his family. But most men who step foot within the Haveli are married with children. They either let slip the fact themselves whilst rambling -like he did – or we take a swift look at their wallets. One way or another, word gets around.

We always laugh about how their guilt convinces them that a picture of their child or wife somehow makes up for the infidelity.

It doesn’t.

happy-family-father-mother-and-footage-011511652_iconl.jpeg

Source: pond5.com
Shutting the door behind him, he initiates our routine.
He’s always silent for the first ten or twenty minutes. However, once he’s done, he holds me and starts talking about his life. It came as a surprise to me first. For most men, it’s a pissing contest – one they’re having with themselves. Each visit, they try to outdo the story they’ve told the last time. But my saith always talks about his personal life.

Through his conversations, I’m transported within the confines of his home, visiting his son Yahya. I’m able to awkwardly pay my respect to his ailing wife, even though her illness may not be too evident to him. I travel alongside to his office, laughing at people he ridicules and in awe of people he admires.

Mostly, however, through his conversations, I convince myself that he wants to know about me too. He never asks anything himself. No – not when I have fresh bruises. Or when I whimper in pain if he’s not careful.

Sometimes, though, if I do talk, he’ll listen with apparent keen interest. He listens when I ridicule Noor or talk about an argument within the Haveli.
However, every time I try to bring up something that truly affects me, he gets angry. He shoves me with lesser brutality than I’m used to, but brutality nonetheless. He mumbles a few curses. Then, he says how I’m not getting any more money than the amount he’s already paid to Noor. He also yells, saying how we’re all scammers, making up false stories to garner sympathy.

1.jpg

Source: shutterstock.com
Yet, here he is – under a false name, visiting a brothel, calling a prostitute he bought for an hour his own, despite his child and wife waiting for him at home.
I don’t say that, of course. So he proceeds to be silent for the remainder of his time. In that moment, he becomes the saith who’s getting his money’s worth. And I chide myself for ever believing he could be anything else.

I go back to counting the cracks in the ceiling.
My eyes continue to memorize each inch of this forsaken room. And when the knock on the door indicates that his time is up, I light my cigarette and wait for the next man to walk in and become my saith.
disturbing insight .. God damn her husband and the kuti noor
 
More lies. More libturd. I have never saw any sign of prostitution in Pakistan. I never saw any alcohol in Pakistan. Muslims. Islam do not have these curses. Though PIA aircrew are known to have 'good time' at Peral Continental. Invite only for those who are connected. Having senior custom officers as contacts helps. As access to drinks and other contraband is available.
 
Prostitution is the oldest known or documented business. Pakistan should tax the practice as it is human instinct and cannot be completely taken care of.
 
Prostitution is the oldest known or documented business. Pakistan should tax the practice as it is human instinct and cannot be completely taken care of.

All nations have this kind of arrangement even it is illegal.
 
All nations have this kind of arrangement even it is illegal.

if it is illegal and still going on then trust me only a select few are reaping the rewards.
legalize it. tax it. the oppression will go and so will the charm as prices go up and up in due time.
 
I must admit it broke my heart to read this, there is so much pain in this world :(.
 
The only best way to end prostitution is to marry prostitiutes. Will the 50 plus divorcees on this forum ranting all over the forum and hitting on any poster who remotely sounds female will marry a prostitute and prove to the world what it is to be a liberal secular and what not?
 

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom