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Monday, 1 September 2014

Momentary Musings

Our 
hands held
each other in the dark to serve
an assurance
that it was never a wholehearted intention when
the time 
would come to leave and move on

.

Broken promises mended like
Broken bones
Plastered with apologies and reassurances

The memories remained much like
Scars
Never hampering future play

.

Summer left me greasy
with sticking hair.
Tanned.
Only to be rescued by winter.

Embracing securely were my layers of clothes
that I forgot how it felt to be naked.
Confined
Only to be rescued by...

Friday, 16 May 2014

Truth

Don’t search for the answer
Let it have its value
Let it remain a question
Let it bother you every time
Let it sway you from the present
Let it make you ponder

Digging beneath the core
When it was lying at the crust

Let it remain a question
Let it bother you…

Don't worry, I still love you

Are you a virgin birth as well?
Your skin has always been smooth

Or your hypocrisy has rendered your mind
Oblivion of the obvious

Or you think people are too foolish
To realise anything

Or your past hysteria has been too overwhelming
Expecting from a person to forcefully express

Drilling something so hard
It feels evil to even think of it

I’m rolling in the game as well
I’ll keep pretending I know nothing

That’s what you've always dreamt of, no?
Don’t worry, I still love you



Monday, 31 March 2014

Falling Prey

At a time when Gus died in The Fault in our stars, “It was unbearable. The whole thing. Every second worse than the last one.”  It seemed that my obsession with this book had manifested into reality, as subscribed in The Secret when I suddenly saw my father crying, sitting on the bed next to mine. As if the Universe had made us travel six hours so that we could sit in this beautiful hotel room with a balcony facing the hills and the houses it arrested, for this to happen. I mean seriously, Universe? He was soon joined by my mother. I, hovering between the two situations and asking myself which one to concentrate on: Gus, who actually died of cancer at the age of seventeen, or my parents whose cancerous thoughts when put into words led to upsetting both of them. It was awkward. Decisiveness is not what I know myself for. If I should ditch John Green and his book and heed to Paulo Coelho’s advise, my favourite author until then,  “Any crime was not only the sole responsibility of the murderer, but of all those who created conditions in which the crime could occur.” I sat, torn between these two options on the sofa-cum-bed which was in a position where it was neither a sofa and nor a bed, owing to the intricacies involved in its folding, with a nonchalant expression just staring at the sofa, them and my book periodically; making their conversation more awkward? Yes. Humiliating? Maybe, in this stony silence that had engulfed after their session of crying and howling. I didn’t make any move. Just a little, by turning towards them to make them feel I was paying attention to them, but I had been put on mute mode while my thoughts raced with each other. One convincing me that this is the right thing to speak, while the other said, no, speak me. I ended up adhering to none and rather asking myself, should I be crying as well? “No, why should you?” “Of course you should, your parents marriage is at stake.” I sat there with no swollen eyes but plain indifference, which surprisingly was new to me.
Absolute desolation is a truth we choose not to believe till we have the sanity to lie to ourselves stuck with me the moment I had read it and it gave me the courage not to fake my concern to people. People. Yes, all people, transcending the chains of self proclaimed or even ‘natural’ relations. Each passing day seemed to confirm Osho’s predicament that marriage is the worst thing humanity has imposed on itself to go through the cycle of love, betrayal, sorrow and redemption, if you’re lucky. “Marriage is a legal trap meant to reduce two people to one-and-a-half”, Gloria Steinem’s statement I happened to stumble across in a magazine interview that evening whilst the Internet refused to hasten up.
After all monogamy is a myth that has been rammed down peoples throat for too long. It isn’t just a matter of excess hormones or vanity, but, as all the research indicates, a genetic configuration found in almost all animals.
I knew that, for sure, I didn’t have to be its prey. That my life was destined by the stars, I didn’t recognise myself. But, “Without pain, we couldn’t know joy”, the great quote in Gus’s house. One, that I apart from Gus and Hazel found very comforting.