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Sunday, March 25, 2012

The Tourist

With the wind behind her back,
she rode with panache,
perched upon high.
A queen, they thought.

Stains of bravado
on her skirt, coruscated,
serving as reminders.
A warrior, they awed.

For hours, they watched,
but couldn't see.
Obscure then pellucid.
Agony and then Elysium.

But when she left with him,
A thief, they declared.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

I tripped over an imaginary line, only to find that it wasn't imaginary at all...

Half past six. Lengthy sunbeams let themselves through the blinds, illuminating every particle of dust in it's path. The birds were up and about, as if running on a schedule. They wait for none. Not even their own apparently. Ruthless punctuality. A trait even humans seldom match. Even humans. The night was long, very long. Stretching well beyond the norm. The night seamlessly merged into day. I saw the last seconds of night coalesce with the first few seconds of day to form a single tick-tock. Synchronous. Continuous. In harmony with each other.


Fifteen minutes to eight. I had just enough time to squeeze in a sixty minute quasi-nap. Decent, when you compare it with eight hours of futile effort to get some shut-eye.

***

Three forty three ante meridiem. I plowed through my mind in the hope of finding tranquility. To my lack of surprise, I found none. And then, to my surprise, I was listening to Sheikh Sudais cooing the words into my ears. That was it. I was no longer here. I was transported to a warm evening in Kuwait. Ramadan of 2008. Lengthy days. Faint images of my father and I watching the Taraweeh prayers in Makkah. Joyous nights that lasted well after suhoor. 

Good days. Peaceful. I will cling onto those memories like a photograph. I am certain I can't recreate such memories even if I wanted to. Mainly because, what was previously a negligible amount of sardonicism, has grown into a whole now. Taken over. One cell at a time. And I didn't even try to stop it. 

All this while, I was under the impression that the character I projected to the outside world was the same character I projected to myself. In the past few days, I realized that it wasn't not true at all. And realizations never strike you gradually; it's always a steep fall. 

***

Humanity is fickle. Disgusting. Vile. My faith in it has eroded almost to the point of no-recovery. I see all action done to preserve it as fruitless. The damage is too severe. At one of the spectrum you have people with good intentions, trying to put together the broken pieces. Desperate to salvage something from the ruins. At the other end, you have the obstruction to these intentions, questioning everything. But they both go home to the same thing: self-destruction. We have always been our own undoing. For centuries now. We might have evolved into a more intellect being, but little has changed. The human race has successfully managed to continue the ignoble lineage of self-destruction. 

***


The mother and her daughter are out on the Drillfield, enjoying the sun. The child is playing around. Falling down intentionally to seek attention. Observing. Plucking the grass out every now and then to view it in detail, to register this new smell. She wants to disobey her mother, but fear doesn't let her go further with that plan. Pure innocence in her every step. My mind wanted to go and break her bubble: To tell her that all is not as it seems; to warn her about growing up, that she only stands to lose more than she gains. 

But she'll learn it in the only way possible. Like all of us...




Friday, March 9, 2012

Present, past and the present.

8:30 AM. All Is Violent, All Is Bright. Today, God is an astronaut. A cluttered mind. Twists and turns for forty-five minutes resulted in nothing but physical pain. I took a peak outside, and it was calm. Ominous. Foreboding. Eerie even. At half past eight. The sun, in act of act of cowardice, decided to stay behind the clouds. A girl in her shorts was on her morning jog. Go home my dear, you don't want to be out there, my mind wanted to warn her.

***

She wore a white shirt, his white shirt. Pink shorts to match the color of the bed sheet. The bed was unkempt; ashtray was moved out of it's customary place and placed beside her, barely holding the ash in. The room was dully lit only by the light emanated from the T.V. She was on her 7th cigarette and third glass of Whisky since she got home, nearly forty minutes ago. Browsing through the T.V channels, she found nothing that could distract her. It was too much. How could he? How could this happen?

"Julie! Julie", he called out as he entered the apartment, drenched in rain, and carrying the strong redolence of a perfume. Of a woman. He entered the room, and to his surprise, saw the room a complete mess. His eyes met with red scribblings on the wall, that were half-struck out; and blood stained broken mirror pieces on the floor. "What's going on?", he asked, heart beating fast, unable to comprehend what he had just seen. She choked, no words came out. Tears did, though. Streams of tears slid down her face and mixed with the blood stains on her face, slowly washing it away. Still no words.

He went closer to her, held her arms, tried to calm her. "I'm sorry", he said, and they both exchanged smiles. And that is the last act either of them did...

***

4 AM, and the only company I have is the tune of thudding raindrops on my roof accompanied by the cacophony of occasional thunder. You see, that's the beauty of life, Jenny.You don't have to pay for anything. An Education. I finally got around to watching it, recommended to me by a friend. I don't know why I wait to watch her recommendations.

 
My eyes are heavy. Words are struggling to escape my mouth as my mind wanders through today, tomorrow and this. Normal service then.





Monday, March 5, 2012

Death of a smile

The sky was an unusual shade of orange, a shade that's witnessed only in abstract paintings. I stood by the window soaking in this rare mixture of blue and red. Imbued with a renewed sense of serenity, I readied myself for History class. I collected my bag, and my thoughts, and left for class. The air outside was dense; it was cold. Breathing didn't come with the usual freedom, every breath was a mini struggle against the powerful gusts of wind. Just because I am losing doesn't mean I am lost. You tell them, Chris.

History was interesting. As usual. Men waging war against each other. Annexing the weak, allying with the strong. Powerful men with good intentions, good men with bad intentions; war spares none. When their blood flows in rivers, it flows as one. And then there are the victors, living in a false sense of grandeur. Little do they realize that, in war, only the degree of suffrage varies. A lose-lose. No light at the end of this tunnel.

***
After my classes for the day, I was waiting to take the bus home. Then I heard it: the staccato siren of an ambulance. The noise grew louder as the ambulance came closer. I looked around. A girl wearing a white shirt came into focus; she wasn't perturbed or put off. She continued to chew her gum, eyes fixed on her iPhone. The ambulance was now in view. All other vehicles made way for the ambulance, increasing the chance of survival of the person fighting for his/her soul. Then the siren was no longer within earshot. The girl didn't raise her head to give a glance at the passing ambulance. Except she had a smile on...

***
Here was life's darker side, misery, spreading out it's pernicious tentacles, and consuming a person's happiness. Disrupting their norm by infusing doubt and uncertainty. These tentacles have no pattern. There is no tutorial to prepare us, no guide to lead us. A spectator today could become the protagonist tomorrow. Except, in life, fairy tale endings are a myth and limited only to fiction. 

We come from nothingness; we return to nothingness.