The howling wind and the blinking clock keeps us company tonight. Dick. Dock. Dick. Dock.
The dog on the floor refuses to move. It’s a storm outside. Coconut trees and thatches scream. The wind is warm but freezes you with its water percentage. Salt. Salt. The salt in your eyes as you twist and turn in this soggy bed crumbling under our collective weight. I have lived many such nights. 3 hours post dinner your stomach is empty again. Smoke smoke every now and then keeps it numb from understanding. I have lived many such nights. When a familiar figure next to you writhes while you watch in abandoned curiosity. These are the give take moments. You don’t know if you’re giving or taking. These nights. Also when 3 hours post dinner you are still drinking. You can’t take it you know. You just belch. But you keep taking in the alcohol in controlled sips. The sleep is all over your body. It manifests itself in the form of a shallow irritation in your eyes. That’s where you fight back from. One longish wink and you’re dead. The body has already surrendered.
Of allusions, illusions and delusions
Monday, January 17, 2011
Thursday, May 6, 2010
This is a tiny letter
This is a tiny letter. Reminding arched stances. Your fingers tracing the surface of your earring. Of sleep as it gradually cascades. Of voices and amazement.
Nobody responds to unnamed letters. Not even a nod of the head. Not even a wink. Not even a snap of their fingers. She spoke to me about her. While others hid behind the haze of smoke. I didn’t hear her in the din of sculpted conversations. She could’ve told me anything that day. And it wouldn’t have mattered. I wouldn’t have heard. I responded in nods. Whenever she paused to sip from her cup. No we weren’t drinking coffee. She’d gate-crashed. And the glasses were over. Two of them crushed beneath drunken feet. Someone called for a change of music. No one responded.
Are you standing there? By the railing. Or there? Watching a half-moon window shade. The brook by the parking lot couldn’t have dried so soon. Would it wait for us? While we spiral down the winding elevator, wheezing the weightlessness of a fall. While we stumble through the phantoms of 1977 Ford Cortinas. I follow. You drawn towards the shallow gurgle of the pebbles strewn. Shifting balance. From one toe to the other. Your fingers tracing the surface of your earrings. Your eyes narrow. Will you find a place for us to sit?
Nobody responds to unnamed letters. Not even a nod of the head. Not even a wink. Not even a snap of their fingers. She spoke to me about her. While others hid behind the haze of smoke. I didn’t hear her in the din of sculpted conversations. She could’ve told me anything that day. And it wouldn’t have mattered. I wouldn’t have heard. I responded in nods. Whenever she paused to sip from her cup. No we weren’t drinking coffee. She’d gate-crashed. And the glasses were over. Two of them crushed beneath drunken feet. Someone called for a change of music. No one responded.
Are you standing there? By the railing. Or there? Watching a half-moon window shade. The brook by the parking lot couldn’t have dried so soon. Would it wait for us? While we spiral down the winding elevator, wheezing the weightlessness of a fall. While we stumble through the phantoms of 1977 Ford Cortinas. I follow. You drawn towards the shallow gurgle of the pebbles strewn. Shifting balance. From one toe to the other. Your fingers tracing the surface of your earrings. Your eyes narrow. Will you find a place for us to sit?
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
A Dream Nears the Dawn
We are back. To the ‘Spill Your Beans CafĂ©’. It’s the next morning and you still look so blown. Eyelids heavy, half close, half open…the shoplifters have all gone away.
Nutcase plays bongo on the coffee table. You stretch forever on the bean bag, leaning on your left, drawing crop circles with the index finger of your right hand on the sand.
“How many years that we’ve known each other?” You murmured.
“We know each other forever.” Nutcase gurgled.
The music in your eyes played on. The music on your fingertips.
“Can you pass me that?”
“I can.” So I did. You plugged in the earphones in the empty sockets of your brain box. Electricity flew. Your fingers stopped drawing. Your eyes shut.
“I think she can do better,” Nutcase looked at you and spoke to me.
“Isn’t she?” I looked at you and asked her.
Nutcase nodded a no. “She has been agreeing to everything lately.”
“And why is that so?”
“Reluctance my friend, reluctance.” There was a sweet regret in her voice.
“I sincerely think there is peace in there. I mean in reluctance.”
“Only on the outside. I think inside you boil.”
“What’s boiling?” You lazily slurred. The song is over I guessed. We just smiled at her.
“Here, I want you to hear this.” You stretched out to me and passed me the earphones. I plugged them in. You pushed play. Electricity flew. I froze. In the sunshine heat. And while the music played, I looked at the two of them through the half-open shutters of my eyes. Their lips animated. A TV on mute. I don’t know what they spoke about. Still. The song was soon over. I heard, ‘him’.
I opened my eyes and asked, “Who?”
They smiled.
I don’t want to make sense out of anything they said. I don’t want to.
Nutcase leaned towards me and slowly swept away the earphones from my open palms.
“Can you play that for me?” Nutcase made her request.
“Nutcase and her nostalgia trips.” You grinned. I played our song for her.
“Are you planning to sell it?” I looked at you and asked.
“I don’t know. It has to be all of us on the board.”
“I’ll be happy with whatever you two decide.”
“Why? Why don’t you decide?”
“I don’t want to.”
We both looked away. In opposite directions, looking at each other only through the corners of our humid eyes.
“I just wish we didn’t have to make decisions at all. I don’t like to decide.” Your eyes looked sad when you spoke. I wondered if I’d ever see them smiling again. And immediately I know I will. This is the only thing I ever possessed. Once it is gone, I’m free. Forever. Even you will be. Free. The only reason we are sticking together is this. This that we’ll sell. Along with it our 3 years old partnership. A dream nearing its dawn.
“My turn, my turn.” I sometimes wonder where you get your sudden bouts of energy from. Nutcase handed you the earphones. You left us alone for the next few minutes. I and our picture perfect Nutcase.
“So what does she say?”
“Nothing.”
“Does she want to sell it? Do you want to sell it? Someone has to come up with an answer. And I just wish that you two come up with one. It’s more important for you two, more than anybody else.” Nutcase was visibly agitated. She cares. That’s why she is agitated.
“I don’t want to sell it. Don’t want to let it go. Don’t want to let her go. She wants to sell it. Only because of me.”
“Listen. Listen. Listen.” Nutcase scolds me sometimes. “Stop jumping into conclusions for fucksake. You think she wants to sell it because she wants to get away? She can do it right now. Anytime. Without even bothering about selling it or buying it or whatever. She can leave right now.”
“Awwwwwwww. You are still stuck at the same point. Selling. Buying. Selling. Buy. Sell. Fucking hell.” While you blasted, the unplugged phones hung lifelessly from your long fingers.
“Just, just do whatever. If this stays here and I’m left without you two, I’ll bleed the same amount as I would without it. It’s nothing without you two. Just decide. Just decide for me. Just excuse me this fire. Can I have a smoke please? Can I have those transmitting machines? I’d better retreat. And let you two decide. Help me for once this time. Save me the trouble. Please.” I lit the cigarette and sat at a distance. Under the tree where we’d nailed the board. The board on which strangers scribbled their secrets. For they had no one to share it with. In the maddening cushion of a comfortable noise, I looked at the two of you. My arms rested on my knees. In the quivering silence of the outside, I watched you decide my fate.
Nutcase plays bongo on the coffee table. You stretch forever on the bean bag, leaning on your left, drawing crop circles with the index finger of your right hand on the sand.
“How many years that we’ve known each other?” You murmured.
“We know each other forever.” Nutcase gurgled.
The music in your eyes played on. The music on your fingertips.
“Can you pass me that?”
“I can.” So I did. You plugged in the earphones in the empty sockets of your brain box. Electricity flew. Your fingers stopped drawing. Your eyes shut.
“I think she can do better,” Nutcase looked at you and spoke to me.
“Isn’t she?” I looked at you and asked her.
Nutcase nodded a no. “She has been agreeing to everything lately.”
“And why is that so?”
“Reluctance my friend, reluctance.” There was a sweet regret in her voice.
“I sincerely think there is peace in there. I mean in reluctance.”
“Only on the outside. I think inside you boil.”
“What’s boiling?” You lazily slurred. The song is over I guessed. We just smiled at her.
“Here, I want you to hear this.” You stretched out to me and passed me the earphones. I plugged them in. You pushed play. Electricity flew. I froze. In the sunshine heat. And while the music played, I looked at the two of them through the half-open shutters of my eyes. Their lips animated. A TV on mute. I don’t know what they spoke about. Still. The song was soon over. I heard, ‘him’.
I opened my eyes and asked, “Who?”
They smiled.
I don’t want to make sense out of anything they said. I don’t want to.
Nutcase leaned towards me and slowly swept away the earphones from my open palms.
“Can you play that for me?” Nutcase made her request.
“Nutcase and her nostalgia trips.” You grinned. I played our song for her.
“Are you planning to sell it?” I looked at you and asked.
“I don’t know. It has to be all of us on the board.”
“I’ll be happy with whatever you two decide.”
“Why? Why don’t you decide?”
“I don’t want to.”
We both looked away. In opposite directions, looking at each other only through the corners of our humid eyes.
“I just wish we didn’t have to make decisions at all. I don’t like to decide.” Your eyes looked sad when you spoke. I wondered if I’d ever see them smiling again. And immediately I know I will. This is the only thing I ever possessed. Once it is gone, I’m free. Forever. Even you will be. Free. The only reason we are sticking together is this. This that we’ll sell. Along with it our 3 years old partnership. A dream nearing its dawn.
“My turn, my turn.” I sometimes wonder where you get your sudden bouts of energy from. Nutcase handed you the earphones. You left us alone for the next few minutes. I and our picture perfect Nutcase.
“So what does she say?”
“Nothing.”
“Does she want to sell it? Do you want to sell it? Someone has to come up with an answer. And I just wish that you two come up with one. It’s more important for you two, more than anybody else.” Nutcase was visibly agitated. She cares. That’s why she is agitated.
“I don’t want to sell it. Don’t want to let it go. Don’t want to let her go. She wants to sell it. Only because of me.”
“Listen. Listen. Listen.” Nutcase scolds me sometimes. “Stop jumping into conclusions for fucksake. You think she wants to sell it because she wants to get away? She can do it right now. Anytime. Without even bothering about selling it or buying it or whatever. She can leave right now.”
“Awwwwwwww. You are still stuck at the same point. Selling. Buying. Selling. Buy. Sell. Fucking hell.” While you blasted, the unplugged phones hung lifelessly from your long fingers.
“Just, just do whatever. If this stays here and I’m left without you two, I’ll bleed the same amount as I would without it. It’s nothing without you two. Just decide. Just decide for me. Just excuse me this fire. Can I have a smoke please? Can I have those transmitting machines? I’d better retreat. And let you two decide. Help me for once this time. Save me the trouble. Please.” I lit the cigarette and sat at a distance. Under the tree where we’d nailed the board. The board on which strangers scribbled their secrets. For they had no one to share it with. In the maddening cushion of a comfortable noise, I looked at the two of you. My arms rested on my knees. In the quivering silence of the outside, I watched you decide my fate.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Rotating Light Box
“Can I read your mind?”
“How will you?”
“I’ll get on your nerves.” I smiled. “I’ll get on your nerves and I’ll intercept your neuron impulses.”
“Haha. You sound sweet. When you talk like it is possible.”
“It is.” I shuffled a little, crammed closer. So that I could almost breathe what you exhaled…so close.
Poof!
“Ho. Ho. Ho. Where are you Mister? Vanished like a puff of smoke. Where are you? Where the fuck are you?” How you screamed.
I have become the size of a bug. I have entered you. I crawl beneath your skin. I am on my way to read your mind. And I shall. Intercept the neuron impulses, the information packets which are scooting right in front of me now. There are so many of them. Helter skelter they go. Have to catch one of them. Phaattaakk. I slapped my palms together. But impulses aren’t any mosquitoes.
“No this can’t be.” I am amused when you sound scared.
I clung on to the inner walls of your desires and treaded on. Presently, I stood facing the towering spiral of your soul. I had to cross it and access the password to your brain box.
Some mountains are never too impossible to scale.
Just expressions, not words escaped me when I did.
The neuron impulses, they converse, they clash, they cultivate. Your brain box shimmers like the commercial breaks.
A massive disco light for a brain hung loose transmitting scattered impulses in each direction. The light balls, they travelled faster than light. Multi-coloured dreams zipped past in hurry, too hurried even to exchange a few words.
“Aaaaaaaaaaaaa.” You kicked your legs mid-air. “There’s something in my ears. There is something in thereeee.”…. “Taaaaakkkke it out,” you frantically repeated your orders twice.
My reverie broke.
For the first time in my life, I put my fingers inside your ears and dragged the intruder out.
Some intruders are happy intruding.
Perverse. Is it?
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Cheap Thrills
When a Rs. 5/- substance can alter reality, there’s not much of it anyway.
“My heart is broke
But I have some glue”....Cobain.
“Huh! Cheap.” She sneered openly. The other two looked away. Visibly disgusted.
“Cheap thrills. That’s not just a hobby. It’s someone’s fucking livelihood. I buy an ounce of life every time I give away my soul.” My monologue surely was a part of the bigger dialogue.
“It is actually crazy to think about the number of household items which can get you seriously high.” You remarked.
“It’s cheap doing all that. Really dangerous. Bloody bad. And how can you, I mean how can you swallow that cream smelling like fucking turpentine? I don’t even put it on my sprained ankle. My clothes stink of it for months.” She sneered openly again.
A drugged laugh escaped my hollow throat. I couldn’t help it. Just like I couldn’t help anything else either.
“And those kids. Those rag-pickers at the railway station. They do some real crazy things.” You remarked again. You sure didn’t want to conclude the conversation. You left empty spaces. She was quick to fill in.
“Pity. Pity. Tch. Tch. Tch. I feel real bad. They die real soon.”
“One of them once came right in front of my bike. I braked hard. He looked at me. Drugged eyes. Took three puffs from his plastic bag. He then raised his arms like an eagles wings. And he started to wave them. Up and down. Rhythmic motion. This time he was smiling. The kid wasn’t even 7 I’m sure. His head was the same level as my headlight. He was watching his distorted self in the crystal mirrors.” I told them the tale.
“So did you help him? What did you do?” You asked.
“I stopped at the next hardware shop with ready cash of 7 bucks in my palms. Cheap thrills I told ya.”
“My heart is broke
But I have some glue”....Cobain.
“Huh! Cheap.” She sneered openly. The other two looked away. Visibly disgusted.
“Cheap thrills. That’s not just a hobby. It’s someone’s fucking livelihood. I buy an ounce of life every time I give away my soul.” My monologue surely was a part of the bigger dialogue.
“It is actually crazy to think about the number of household items which can get you seriously high.” You remarked.
“It’s cheap doing all that. Really dangerous. Bloody bad. And how can you, I mean how can you swallow that cream smelling like fucking turpentine? I don’t even put it on my sprained ankle. My clothes stink of it for months.” She sneered openly again.
A drugged laugh escaped my hollow throat. I couldn’t help it. Just like I couldn’t help anything else either.
“And those kids. Those rag-pickers at the railway station. They do some real crazy things.” You remarked again. You sure didn’t want to conclude the conversation. You left empty spaces. She was quick to fill in.
“Pity. Pity. Tch. Tch. Tch. I feel real bad. They die real soon.”
“One of them once came right in front of my bike. I braked hard. He looked at me. Drugged eyes. Took three puffs from his plastic bag. He then raised his arms like an eagles wings. And he started to wave them. Up and down. Rhythmic motion. This time he was smiling. The kid wasn’t even 7 I’m sure. His head was the same level as my headlight. He was watching his distorted self in the crystal mirrors.” I told them the tale.
“So did you help him? What did you do?” You asked.
“I stopped at the next hardware shop with ready cash of 7 bucks in my palms. Cheap thrills I told ya.”
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Cotton
Sex is more exciting on the screen and between the pages than between the sheets.
Andy Warhol
And in dreams.
Crank calls galore. I gave you away this morning. To an unknown voice.
"Why are you so quiet?"
Silence
"Won't you say something?"
Silence
"Am I bothering you?"
Silence
"I am slipping away."
Silence. Ultrasonic Boom. Reverberations. Bat on a witch hunt. Dog whistles. I hear more than you say.
Andy Warhol
And in dreams.
Crank calls galore. I gave you away this morning. To an unknown voice.
"Why are you so quiet?"
Silence
"Won't you say something?"
Silence
"Am I bothering you?"
Silence
"I am slipping away."
Silence. Ultrasonic Boom. Reverberations. Bat on a witch hunt. Dog whistles. I hear more than you say.
Trial Jittery Shutterbugs
Look ahead. Danger lurks. Shadows scream. Lonesome, abandoned: the civilization prays for extinction. The vultures swoop down. Snatch the last flesh of human pride, still clinging on to the bones of history. Genocide never looked any better. Mass graves unmarked. Skeletons abhor. Waiting for an autopsy. Post millennia.
All allusive. Boundaries blurred. Waiting for the words. Homicidal tendencies for friends. Left all alone. Fear. Of forgetting yourself. Silence. Not golden.
Nuremberg, 1945. Terror simply exchanged hands.
Jonestown, 1978. 900 cyanide angels. Hysteria. Suicide cry. Injections sans needle. Babies breast fed poison.
Sleep satisfied. Everything in control. The world is in motion. Everything is alive. Flowers bloom faster than babies. Sleep satisfied. Find yourself. Cheap self-help books. Strength of soul. Power of mind. Compete. Watch your step. Calculate. Cold. Die.
All allusive. Boundaries blurred. Waiting for the words. Homicidal tendencies for friends. Left all alone. Fear. Of forgetting yourself. Silence. Not golden.
Nuremberg, 1945. Terror simply exchanged hands.
Jonestown, 1978. 900 cyanide angels. Hysteria. Suicide cry. Injections sans needle. Babies breast fed poison.
Sleep satisfied. Everything in control. The world is in motion. Everything is alive. Flowers bloom faster than babies. Sleep satisfied. Find yourself. Cheap self-help books. Strength of soul. Power of mind. Compete. Watch your step. Calculate. Cold. Die.
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