Writing comes from trying evenings and wistful times spend hiding under a sheet. It comes from bitter arguments and stony silences.
The dark patches in the blanket that you weave and the frayed edges that unravel leave you feeling like a bus ran over you, but you atleast you have something to write about.
I don’t do too well with happy writing. I can’t write about victory or triumph or candy pink love. I can’t get myself to put together a story that ends perfectly where people meet, their careers are on track, they’ve been in long, beautiful relationships that culminate into marriage and babies and houses with lawns.
My writing a while ago came from the fact that you are somewhere, in a labyrinth if you shall, looking for answers and similar things all while maintaining a distance with a beanpole. The space where you have pitched a tent, where you’re hiding is so far that from here it’s a speck. We tried calling out to you from atop a tree but our hoarse voices were just reminders of how far you are and how stranded we felt.
We tried waving flags at you but they were red and torn and probably not befitting your tastes anyway.
Writing comes from the lack of hope. It is often the belief that scribbling about things will do something towards dispelling the helpless feeling at the bottom of your churning stomach.
The dark patches in the blanket that you weave and the frayed edges that unravel leave you feeling like a bus ran over you, but you atleast you have something to write about.
I don’t do too well with happy writing. I can’t write about victory or triumph or candy pink love. I can’t get myself to put together a story that ends perfectly where people meet, their careers are on track, they’ve been in long, beautiful relationships that culminate into marriage and babies and houses with lawns.
My writing a while ago came from the fact that you are somewhere, in a labyrinth if you shall, looking for answers and similar things all while maintaining a distance with a beanpole. The space where you have pitched a tent, where you’re hiding is so far that from here it’s a speck. We tried calling out to you from atop a tree but our hoarse voices were just reminders of how far you are and how stranded we felt.
We tried waving flags at you but they were red and torn and probably not befitting your tastes anyway.
Writing comes from the lack of hope. It is often the belief that scribbling about things will do something towards dispelling the helpless feeling at the bottom of your churning stomach.