Wednesday 24 August 2016

The Post-Terrestrial Third Space

Augustus Waters died eight days after his prefuneral, at Memorial, in the ICU, when the cancer, which was made of him, finally stopped his heart, which was also made of him. 

He was with his mom and dad and sisters. His mom called me at three thirty in the morning. I’d known, of course, that he was going. I’d
talked to his dad before going to bed, and he told me, “It could be tonight,” but still, when I grabbed the phone from the bedside table and

saw Gus’s Mom on the caller ID, everything inside of me collapsed. She was just crying on the other end of the line, and she told me she was
sorry, and I said I was sorry, too, and she told me that he was unconscious for a couple hours before he died.

My parents came in then, looking expectant, and I just nodded and they fell into each other, feeling, I’m sure, the harmonic terror that
would in time come for them directly.

I called Isaac, who cursed life and the universe and God Himself and who said where are the goddamned trophies to break when you
need them, and then I realized there was no one else to call, which was the saddest thing.

The only person I really wanted to talk to about
Augustus Waters’s death was Augustus Waters.

My parents stayed in my room forever until it was morning and finally Dad said, “Do you want to be alone?” and I nodded and Mom said,
 “We’ll be right outside the door,” me thinking, I don’t doubt it. 

It was unbearable. The whole thing. Every second worse than the last. I just kept thinking about calling him, wondering what would happen,
if anyone would answer. In the last weeks, we’d been reduced to spending our time together in recollection, but that was not nothing: The
pleasure of remembering had been taken from me, because there was no longer anyone to remember with. It felt like losing your co-
rememberer meant losing the memory itself, as if the things we’d done were less real and important than they had been hours before.

* * *

When you go into the ER, one of the first things they ask you to do is to rate your pain on a scale of one to ten, and from there they decide
which drugs to use and how quickly to use them. I’d been asked this question hundreds of times over the years, and I remember once early
on when I couldn’t get my breath and it felt like my chest was on fire, flames licking the inside of my ribs fighting for a way to burn out of my
body, my parents took me to the ER. A nurse asked me about the pain, and I couldn’t even speak, so I held up nine fingers.

Later, after they’d given me something, the nurse came in and she was kind of stroking my hand while she took my blood pressure and
she said, “You know how I know you’re a fighter? You called a ten a nine.”

But that wasn’t quite right. I called it a nine because I was saving my ten.

And here it was, the great and terrible ten, slamming me again
and again as I lay still and alone in my bed staring at the ceiling, the waves tossing me against the rocks then pulling me back out to sea so they could launch me again into the jagged face of the cliff, leaving me floating faceup on the water, undrowned. 

Finally I did call him. His phone rang five times and then went to voice mail. “You’ve reached the voice mail of Augustus Waters,” he said,
the clarion voice I’d fallen for. “Leave a message.” It beeped. The dead air on the line was so eerie.

 

I just wanted to go back to that secret
post-terrestrial third space with him that we visited when we talked on the phone. I waited for that feeling, but it never came.

 

The dead air on
the line was no comfort, and finally I hung up.

'The Fault In Our Stars'

-John Green

Excerpts #4 

Digital Art Done By: Austin Simon

Monday 22 August 2016

Love Runs Out

I'll be your light, your match, your burning sun,
I'll be the bright, and black, that's making you run.
And I feel alright, and we'll feel alright,
'Cause we'll work it out, yeah we'll work it out.
I'll be doin' this, if you ever doubt,

'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.

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I'll be your ghost, your game, your stadium.
I'll be your fifty thousand clapping like one
And I feel alright, and I feel alright,
'Cause I worked it out, yeah I worked it out.
I'll be doin' this, if you ever doubt,

'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.

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I got my mind made up and I can't let go.

I'm killing every second 'til it sees my soul.
I'll be running, I'll be running,
'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.
And we'll start a fire, and we'll shut it down,

'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.

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There's a maniac out in front of me.
Got an angel on my shoulder, and Mephistopheles.
My momma raised me good, momma raised me right.
Momma said "do what you want, say prayers at night",
And I'm saying them, cause I'm so devout.

'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out, yeah.

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I got my mind made up and I can't let go.
I'm killing every second 'til it sees my soul.
I'll be running, I'll be running,
'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.
And we'll start a fire, and we'll shut it down,

'Til the love runs out, 'til the love runs out.

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Ooh, we all want the same thing.
Ooh, we all run for something.
Oh for God, for fate,
For love, for hate,
For gold, and rust,

For diamonds, and dust.

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(I'll be your light.... Love runs out.) 

"Love Runs Out"

-One Republic

Album: Native

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Libretto #3
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Picture and Lyrics Source: Google

Void

Have you ever wished to just 'Not-Exist'?

You have. Haven't you?

You mess up each time something happens and pray that you get disintegrated. So that everyone would be happy and at peace.

Others euphoria at the cost of yours.

Yet nothing happened. 

And yet again you continue to yearn for it everytime you mess up, like how a dying man yearns for water.

You picked yourself up and flee to those infinite worlds you created inside your head. Worlds where people worshipped the sand your toes danced upon. Solace was what you sought for. And the temporarily relief you got there washed away all your evil thoughts. 

Again you were reduced to thinking about getting yourself disintergrated. 

Killing yourself now would be too late, because you knew that pain was like matter. Neither be destroyed. Nor be created. Passed from one form to another.

First them, who hurt you. Then You. Then again, them, the people who you hurt by killing yourself. 

That's why you wished for disintergration. You think that would make everyone around you happy.

Others euphoria at the cost of yours.

Maybe deep down you think that would indeed be a noble sacrifice.

You are thoroughly mistaken, My Friend.

Imagine you got your wish granted. You disintergrate. 

Every memory you created, every good thing wiped out of existence. Everything about you, Gone. Replaced.

That's what you wanted. That's what you get.

Others euphoria at the cost of yours. Noble sacrifice indeed.

What actually happens would be a different story, something you would not know, because you don't exist anymore.

You create a Void in the universe. And those people you ever meet or ever touched in any way would be sucked into this miserable black hole, not knowing what went wrong.

You are a theif, My Friend.

Your mother would rub her belly occasionally, involuntarily, a habit that set into place for the past few years. Her ten months. Stolen.

Your father rubs his head absent-mindedly, the exact spot where you would touched him when you existed. His massages. Stolen.

Your brother walks into your room for no reason, forgets why he was there and walks out. His pranks for you. Stolen.

Your wife bites her lip at times, because you used to. Her Love bites. Stolen.

Forget your children and grand-children. They don't exist, because you don't. An Infinite Lives. Stolen.

Theif. 

You disintegrate as a theif.

I don't know which one is worse. Suicide. Or disintegration.

An Article By

The Violet Woman 

Picture source: Google

Monday 15 August 2016

Ophidian


Tongue danced victorious on a velvet skin
Scales cut deep, revealing the flesh and bone.
A choking throat amidst His coils
One more heart danced to a tail's beat.
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The venom boasted it would cure
Ended up being toxic.
Drunk too much for my own good
Now wrath bubbled beneath a mourning chest.
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Cautioned by many to beware,
Cautioned. Yet too vain to care
Chose to get him under my skin
And now He danced from within.
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Bitten almost a thousand times
Still I didn't learn.
That serpants were never friendly
And serpants wanted you to burn.
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-The Violet Woman
Fragments #13
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Picture Source: Google
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Also on WordPress:
https://thevioletwoman.wordpress.com/2016/08/10/ophidian/
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Discover more on:
https://thevioletwoman.wordpress.com

Purgatory


The woman in the mirror was a stranger.
Yet I had seen her before.
The world was a better place then. I remember walking next to her underneath the cashew trees, facile talking. Her hands had been resplendent. I was in love with them. How just a mere touch of her fingertips altered almost anything irrevocably was deeply mesmerising to me on a spiritual level.
Her fingertips changed me too. Those tips had worked their magic on my shoulders when I came home after an exhausted day. They fed me occasionally when my own fingers were too lazy for the job. The inferno they flared up in my bones was too wild that being devoured by them was my only hope to revelation.
They never showed me Heaven. Nor the fiery Hell.
They took pride in showing off Purgatory.
But that woman was reduced to ashes. This one rose out of it.
And now she stood there, the skin of her hands adhered to the bone. Shrunken fingers that boasted no magic. No love. No warmth.
My soul recognised them though. They recognised the Purgatory that her fingers carried.
Pale, white ones with no life in them.
Now resting above my jugular.
Purgatory was a damn fine choice.
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-The Violet Woman
LiLLiPuT #8
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Picture Source: Google
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Also on WordPress:

https://thevioletwoman.wordpress.com/2016/08/15/purgatory/

Friday 5 August 2016

The White Tiger

For someone who remembers their role as a patriot out of the blue and gets hyped up on discussions that question some well misunderstood aspects of India, this book might be a big blow to your ego. 

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The White Tiger, published in 2008 and winning the Booker Price for the same year, potrays a bitter side of India, focusing on various major issues like poverty, communal tention, corruption in high places, etc, in a crude and offensive way that actually has some point to it, when given a radical approach. The White Tiger is writer Aravind Adiga's debut novel, and is the fourth Indian born author to win the price after Salman Rushdie, Arundhathi Roy and Kiran Desai. 

The book received mixed criticism, mainly because Aravind Adiga exaggerates social issues, and contains some silly representations, like those in colonial literature. Adiga defends himself by commenting, "At a time when India is going through great changes and, with China, is likely to inherit the world from the West, it is important that writers like me try to highlight the brutal injustices of society (Indian). That's what I'm trying to do – it is not an attack on the country, it's about the greater process of self-examination. The criticism by writers like Flaubert, Balzac and Dickens of the 19th century helped England and France become better societies".

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The book is written in the form of a letter by the lead character Munna alias Balram Halwai addressed to the Chinese Premier. Balram introduces himself as an entrepreneur, breaking the bonds of poverty and rising to be a successful businessman.

Balram's character make us second guess our support for the "poor" in India. When exposed to extreme corruption, Balram strove to become the very thing he "fought" against, highlighting his hypocritical nature. He belongs to the genre of people who finds comfort in the bitter darkness, surviving off of it. 

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What I liked about this book is that Adiga brings out sadistic traits of the human character. The protagonist Balram, takes pleasure from a murder scene by saying that he "knew the corpse" where as his parents (the corpse's) "knew the foetus". The book also points out the complex relationship between a servant and a master in the time when India struggles to be a modern Global economy. But the writer goes overboard in criticising India, and from his bio and his writing we can confirm that he belongs to the genre of Indians who is only an by birth and English by spirit, just like how our colonial rulers wanted an Indian to be. The book has a realistic story line, and while most of us might get disgusted on how the author looks down at the "poor" India, he basically made several strong points that provides a striking image against why India is still a developing country.

I could strongly say that this story has nothing relatable to the movie Slumdog Millionaire, apart from the general rags-to-riches theme. The story has rightly highlighted the Darkness and the Light with some inaccuracies. The White Tiger is a story that is not only possible, but probable and even likely whereas Slumdog Millionaire depends on a series of mind numbing coincidences, which is something totally out of Bollywood.

Like I said, for someone who blindly loves his country, this book may seem outrageous, while for someone who wants a different book to read in the midst of all the other genres, this could be for you, although I would recommend something better.

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My Rate: 6/10

Status: Not for the patriots, retards and boring people. Can be read once, twice or an infinite number of times if one genuinely wants to know the complexity of the story.

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Inspired From: Wikipedia, Goodreads.
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-The Violet Woman




Tuesday 2 August 2016

LIG: Untold Tales Of Pride And Prejudice

Part 2: The Blue Worm

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We had a red zero watt bulb put up in our bedroom because Dad thought I would be afraid of the dark. The red bulb creeped me out more with it's horror atmosphere than pitch black darkness. I used to have nightmares regarding Giant Ants coming and banging on the bedroom door asking me for the sugar I stole from the kitchen, complete with an eerie red aura around them.

It was around that time when my brother left Saudi Arabia to pursue his studies in India. I was too small to understand what migration was, and once I asked my mom where he went to. My mom, being a dramatic person, said, "He has gone to a happy place. He would be very happy there." She used to watch a lot of melodramatic television serials and I watched them too, along with her. So when she said this simple sentence, I took it in the metaphorical sense. I thought my brother died and my parents were covering it up so that I won't be sad.

I cried a few days after that. I missed his presence in the house; his last minute food hacks, for instance, he used to feed me rice and ketchup when I felt hungry; I missed him locking me up in a suitcase and giggling for hours after that. He wasn't sadistic, he was just a different level of awesome. 

Those days communication was restricted to just one call per week. My parents never gave me the phone even if they called him, so I never got to know his whereabouts. You can't blame me. I watched way too many serials for my age.

It was until I visited India two years later I realised he was alive. 

I was euphoric. 

He continued locking me up in suitcases for a good number of times though. 

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Primary Section wasn't as eventful. We had different buildings for lower classes those days. So the new building was like a breath of fresh air. 

I am not the fighter type. But I do get into some. And when I do, my parents would have a field day chasing me around the house and knocking some sense into my head. Usually with a belt. Or a cane. 

One such incident happened in first standard. There used to be this girl in my bus who always brought chicken nuggets to school and ate it early morning in the bus. I usually got out of the house with nothing except sick smelling milk in my tummy, and the sight of chicken nuggets in the morning used to drive my hunger pangs crazy. We were on good terms, the girl and I but,  we fought one day, pretty bad.

The next day she brought chicken nuggets filled with cheese that smelled like murder. She teased me about it too.

She knew how to take revenge.

So did I.

Three hours later, my class teacher rushed into my room asking for me and I sat there looking innocent. 

Field Day. 

My crime? Strangling a girl who an even tinier version of Pikachu, because she refused to give me those mouth watering chicken nuggets filled with cheese, over some stupid fight. Location, her classroom. Witness: Her class teacher. 

I can't believe I had the guts to do something like that.

She deserved it at the time though.

Six years later, I apologised for my irrational behaviour, because she ended up being my classmate, and I was always kind to my fellow classmates, unless of course, they refuse to give me chicken nuggets. 

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Once I got blamed for something I have no idea about and suffered greatly for it.

I fought with another girl and she ended up drawing in her Maths book, writing my name in it and blaming it on me.  The teacher believed her obviously, which was pretty illogical when I think about it now. Why would I draw on someone's book and write my name there? Being me, I would have tied her up, set her book on fire and make her watch it burn. I would have gladly taken the blame. 

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Thinking back about it, I always had issues with girls, whereas even though the boys I befriended  were absolutely idiots, but they taught me how to play pen-fight, thumb-wrestling and odd-or-even, which was productive in the long run, seriously. For instance, years later I babysitted a few boys they absolutely adored me because I odd-or-evened with them.

I fought with boys too. Rarely.

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Our school was pretty cool, when I actually sit down and think about it. Primary and Upper Primary students had lot of tiny competitions that brought their skills. Good ones too; we had a 'Mental-Maths'  and 'General Knowledge' test every month, and if we get above 15 on 20, we get good looking certificates, the thick kind proper ones, not paper. We used to have hand-writing competitions and I won once in first standard, my Mom used THAT to motivate me in twelfth grade, as if that was going to make my life easier. We had 'Talent Shows', the only thing the entire school looked forward to the entire year, because they showed us the auditions too, and it was pretty cool to see kids come and outshine the others and it was pretty awesome to see kids come and disgrace themselves. I had nothing to lose because belonged to the audience. My mom used to irritate me, asking me to go onstage and sing, or dance; SOMETHING.

"Look at Her! ( referring to the neighbour's daughter) She doesn't know how to dance, yet she tries. Why can't you?" 

I wasn't the shy type, but like I said, I don't like disgracing myself in front of people before my talents developed, and my talents were on Level Minus Seventeen then. But I have embarrassed myself pretty often, for someone who thinks things like this at that age. 

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I migrated at the end of second year. My parents thought migrating me India for a while was bound to teach me some discipline, which wasn't happening obviously in Saudi Arabia. 

And so I went to the Carmel Girls Higher Secondary School, in Trivandrum, Kerala. To solve my mom's issue with me not participating on on-stage events and staying strictly off-stage, I decided to go for a group song. They weren't there to see it though. I learnt a few good prayer songs, lyrics all messed up, which I used again back in Saudi, to gain popularity. I was a day-scholar, means I could come and go from my home; opposite of a 'hosteler'. I stayed with my dad's brother and wife. I used to go to school in an auto-rickshaw, along with a bunch of other kids.

I just stayed there for six months or something, because by then my parents missed me, and I was going nowhere with the discipline thing. 

And so I went back.

The rest of Third Grade.

In Saudi Arabia.

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Coming up next:

Part 3: Migrations

-The Violet Woman 










Life Of An Indian Gulfie: Untold Tales Of Pride And Prejudice

Part 1: The Red Worm

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A lot of people plead desperately to some unknown power in the universe to give them a change of atmosphere. Some sort of migration that takes place naturally  so that they don’t have to run away deliberately from the issues they face in life. 

I was one very lucky person in terms of migration.

By the end of the eighteenth year of my existence, I may have successfully migrated to three different countries. If the universe wills it.

I was two years old when it all began. The funny part is, I vaguely remember it. Hard to believe, I know. All I remember is, my Grandmother’s voice comforting me over the phone that everything will be alright. 

Good thing I didn’t know at the time that I was 3,465 kms away from her, in an absolutely foreign country. 

I remember my first day in school too. It’s awkward, seriously, when I think about how I can remember things that no one else can. No one sane enough. 

I could say that I grew up assuming I was insane because I thought over about things in an inexplicable weird way. Remembered things too. 

My initial years were pathetic. I was quite fat and tall for my age. Got bullied and alienated, some crazy fights over chicken nuggets, and people assumed I was evil. 

Sad. One of the rare cases where the bullied person gets to be the evil one.

And I wasn’t THAT irreproachable too. 

The only soothing experience I went through on a daily basis, was the way my mother dressed me up for school.

My uniform was a crisp white shirt underneath a blazing red pinafore. Accessories include a pair of tight white socks; jet black shoes that didn’t require any sort of polish, which shone like they were made of metal; a single coconut tree of hair located in the midst of my triangular shaped head, held together by one out of many colourful Love-In-Tokyo’s; two colourful clips that went along with the hair tie; an overweight Scooby Day bag and more depressing items like school books, a tiny tiffin box and a tiny carton of chocolate milk along with it; and an ID card pinned to my chest to show I was part of the Dammam D-3 Bus.
After dressing me up, my mother would pick up the circular container of Cremé 21 and apply that gently on my face and neck, run her hands around my face, fondling it in her palms and kiss me on my forehead. 

It was quite ritualistic.

She would still do that without blinking an eyelid if I ask her to do it now, or even thirty years later. 

And I still ask too.

Later she would proceed to force feed me a cup of sick smelling milk with nothing but sugar in it. I absolutely hated that stuff. It ruined the ritualistic caressing of my face every time.

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I made a total of TWO friends in Kindergarten. A girl named Keziah. And Fathima Enaas. I chose Keziah because 1) We spoke the same mother tongue 2) She got bullied too 3) She was as weird as me. I chose Enaas because 1) She was beautiful 2) She was damn fair 3) She never talked 4) I bit her finger on the first day of school, which caused her to run away from me, which made me guilty, and I ran behind her wearing a Ghost mask, screaming sorry.

She never spoke to me again.

Keziah and I roamed the grounds together; sat on swings and sang nursery rhymes together; poured a carton of chocolate milk in the bag of the tall boy who bullied us together; blamed each other when the teacher caught us together; ate Traffic Light lollipops and ice pops with the money Dad gave me for buying Proper Food, together. 

It was a companionship that happened because no one actually bothered to talk with us.

I swear, my childhood version would roll over and laugh if I told her about my friends now.

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Once a carton of chocolate juice fell on my uniform, and I was sent to the janitor for a dress change. Navy Blue Pinafore. Something the Seniors wore.

My Oh My. The transition from ‘The Class Punchbag’ to ‘The Popular Fat Kid’ was quick.

The popularity lasted for a total of 210 minutes.

I was ‘Punchbag’ and ‘Kid-Who-Peed-In-Her-Dress’ the next day. 

Demotion was a sick idiot, I tell you.

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The last day of school was ritualistic. Every year had one at the end of it. We prayed to the Water Gods and splashed bottles upon bottles of water on each other until the teacher came and swung us out of the class. 

And I anxiously waited outside my Kindergarten classroom for the next year.

Primary School.

Another building.

Blue Pinafore.

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Next Up: 

Part 2: The Blue Worm

-The Violet Woman

#TrueStory

Monday 25 July 2016

“Perspective- Body Shaming and People”

You ever look at that one guy in your classroom and think, “Damn, Why is He so fat?”
Or maybe at the girl across the street, “Ughh.. Look at Her..”
Yup. Look at Her. And Look at Him.
No seriously. Just do.
And tell me what you see.
Let’s just start by saying that He or She is a very lucky person.
They are lucky, because they don’t have YOU in their life.
Yes, YOU. Because YOU are just another pile of misery that they feed on every day. And thank the Great Heavens that they don’t have to go through your rude comments on how awkward She looks in that cute little dress she brought at the store the other day or about how the good looking zero sized girl that they crush on would never set her eyes on Him.
So what if He or She is fat? I mean, just Look at Her. And Him.
I could give you a billion reasons to how they are an infinite times better than you are right now.
Okay, where do I start? Let’s just assume, that His life is filled with obnoxious, self absorbed, above average looking people like YOU. They alienated Him, left Him on his own and went to the extent of bullying him. Soul scarred for life, but why do YOU care, you just like seeing a fat little piggy squeal, don’t you?
He might either enjoy His alienation and Evolve.
Or He might find The Best, The Most Genuine And Honest people in life, who might even stay throughout till death, no backstabbing and with occasional fights and Pain-In-The-Rear-End moments. People He would gladly show off with the evergreen title of, “My Best Friend”.
Whereas you, My Beauty Queen (or King, for that matter), would meet people who fall for your beauty and charm, lack of self respect and respect towards people who are slightly larger than you are, but would they stay forever? Would they kill for you?
I bet you a billion bucks, they won’t.
Because they are after your looks, Girl. Or Boy. Why do I care? I care about The Boy or Girl YOU Body-Shamed at least once in your life.
Now let’s enlighten You on how the Guy (Or Girl. Urghh... ) who weren't so lucky and got alienated. Both versions. Good and Bad.
This Beautiful Creature, cried Himself to night every day of his existence. He read books and listened to songs and could tell you all about what he found the other day. You may find that he has the most compassionate heart, the purest of souls and trust me when I tell you to trust his judgement on people and life, Because He knows Perspectives, something which You possibly don’t know. He knows perspectives, because He has been There.
Bad Version? He just turned into a serial killer, or even worse, Your dental doctor.
Karma and Her ways to get back at you.
No one would blame you.
But I would.
I would blame you every day for the rest of your miserable life about what you did to that slightly overweight girl across the street.
I would remind you how it would all have been different in an alternate universe. You guys meet, you keep your prejudice at bay for a change, and you talk. You might be surprised how He might tell you things that no body had dared to tell you so far. He might make you a big deal in his Universe, and trust me, if we are talking about worthiness here, I would think that you would rather be a Superstar in a foreign country, in a foreign TV show, where you get some value for your exceptional acting skills than be a slave that everyone spits on at home.
If He makes You part of His Universe, trust me, it is way better than being a part of the fantasies those spineless pricks you hangout with think about you every night.
You swear that you would really want to be a unique person, be a gem among worthless stones, yet you still act like them.
Next time you see Her, talk to Her. She is an introvert, I tell you. She might withdraw to her own Cocoon of Happiness, created because of You. But don’t let that ruin the image I just build up for Her. She is just Fat. Fat Heart and Everything. The Package Deal.
Who knows? One day she might be the star bridesmaid at your wedding. He might be the reason you didn’t kill yourself for that idiot who dumped you the last week. She might be the reason why you laugh so much. He might be the reason why you are into Star Wars. She might be the one to teach you cook. He might teach you to fart. Who knows?
How will you know the truth about Him or Her unless you willingly seek it out yourself?
It’s all about Perspective, you know.
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-An Article By
The Violet Woman
Picture Source: Google
Written By TVW
All Rights Reserved ®
© Copyright Protected.
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Friday 22 July 2016

Infinity and Beyond



Today of all days, the lifts decided that Rebellion was the next best way to kill a man.

The first was obesity.

Trust me when I say by the time I reached my heavenly abode, located a good seventeen floors above Earth, I became the Bleeding God and I bled salt water.

Even Oxygen couldn't touch me for the next thirty seven minutes.

My Mother opened the door and reduced herself to a mass of salt water too. Mine bled through my pores, Hers through her soul.

Ask for water, and Life puts salt in it.

She whimpered clutching my hands, holding on to them as if they were her last grip on sanity. And handed me the Letter.

My sister's Letter.

Nope. She didn't elope.

My sister belonged to the category of women who enjoyed their own company so much that sacrificing it for the eternal company of another seemed like a deadly sin. A Narcissist by birth, she considers all men as scum, except the men in her family, so the whole idea of her eloping can be put out of the equation. Period.

But she did run away.

I read the letter, hoping she did not run away with my DSLR.

"Omi,

Remember the day we fled to the lighthouse by the sea after we fought with our parents?
We both spent hours staring at the sea spread out infinitely in front of us, discussing possibilities, our future, the places we would travel together, our mutual attraction to the Mountain Road... Remember?

That was the last day I set my eyes upon the sea.

I don't even remember what shade of Blue they were. Turquoise? Indigo? Aquamarine?

But I do remember the cracked walls of the hospital. Pale Yellow with age. I remember the Poison Green coloured sheets. The deep shade of Red with a tinge of Maroon in it. My Blood.

We both know that I am beyond saving. I don't want radiation and medicines and all those toxic substances they inject to make me feel better to be the last thing I remember when I die.
There are certain things left  to do in this world. Like a Bucket List. For Example, I want to fly on a bike with my hair open, singing out loud. I want to run up the spiral stairs of a hundred lighthouses and scream at the top of my lungs, and I want to run all the way down screaming like a madman. I want to visit those temples up in the mountains and know what is so incredibly special about them. I want to learn how to play the guitar. I want to read a thousand books. Just a thousand. Because I have so little time left in this world."

Involuntarily I shuddered just reading this particular line.

"And then I want to fall in love. Not with any other person, Omi. With myself. I want to live the rest of my life devoting to my happiness. I want to love my body for being just the way it is, the deep stretch marks, the scars from childhood fights, my unhealthy hair with split ends. Just like how John Legend sung for his wife, I want to love all my curves and edges. My perfect imperfections.
Because I lived to this day hating every single thing about me. I blamed myself for the fights our parents had. I blamed my body when my boyfriend broke up. I cut down my hair every time it grew because I thought it looked ridiculous, even though every time I let it grow you said I looked beautiful. Right now, I believe it is all the blaming and the hating that made my cells rebel against itself. I mean seriously I don't blame them now. How can I expect my body to love itself when I myself didn't love it in the first place?

But now that is going to change.

Please don't come after me, Omi. Just don't. I know we promised ourself a mountain ride. But the Best is kept for Last. Just let me go, Omi. Let me enjoy life for myself. Taste a piece of Infinity and Beyond.

Alone.

I want you to pacify our parents. Tell them nothing worse that THIS is gonna happen to me. I'm a dead person anyway.

More than that, I want you to be happy. I want you to be happy that your sister made her peace with death. I want you to be happy that I lived before I died. I want you to be happy that you raised me up in a spectacular way, and nothing would ever replace your lessons in any way whatsoever.

Be happy for me. Be happy for us. This is what I want right now. I would be eternally grateful to you if you do this one thing for me.

In return, I can only promise you one thing.

I promise you that I won't die while I'm gone.

I love you, Omi.
And Mom and Dad too.

To Infinity and Beyond.

Love,
Ishitha. "


I held her letter and smiled. It was drenched in emotions. Both Hers and Mine.

"What will we do, Omkar?" My mom wept in my hands.
"We let her taste infinity and beyond." I said, smiling.

There was one more letter stapled to this one.

"P.S-
I am borrowing your DSLR.
And your T-shirts.
And your Credit card.
I promise you that I would spend judiciously.
XOXO"

I let out a groan while my father laughed in the background.






-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #7
Written By TVW
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Picture Source: Google

Thursday 30 June 2016

Odyssey



Thushara opened her eyes to find a stranger staring at her from above.
Reflexively she reached towards her phone and dialled for Visal. Voicemail.
She panicked seeing the face above. A reflection on her ceiling fan.
With a jolt she realised, the reflection belonged to her.
Exhaustion and insomnia had begun to take a toll on her since months ago. She didn’t bother going to the parlour, keeping herself fit and doing the usual things that a woman do to make a man look at her.
Because she didn’t have one. Not anymore.
Her reflex betrayed her every morning. It was more ritualistic now. Dialing Visal’s number. Panicking. The slight wait until her brain registers reality. Curling up into a ball and whimpering to herself. Praying mostly.
She knew her heart would give up one day.
She prayed it be sooner.
Her days were normal and ritualistic too. It was easy to fool an outsider. Sometimes it was too easy to fool her family and friends too. Because they didn’t know who Visal was. No one did.
Only Visal knew Thushara. Only Thushara knew Visal.
They were best friends. In love.
Neither one revealed it to the other though.
At times she wish she did.
At times she wished it wasn’t a secret.
The thing about secretive relationships is, neither one would know when the other drops dead.
She didn’t either. She knew about his demise three whole months after it happened.
He promised he would call her after his examinations were done. And she did too.
A month passed. She called. Voicemail.
A month and day passed. Voicemail.
A month and a week.
Two months.
Voicemail. Voicemail. Voicemail.
If distance wasn’t an issue, she would have run to his house. But they were in different countries. Pursuing their individual dreams.
It was when she reactivated her Facebook she knew about his death.
Social media kept its promise to remind her of the important days in life.
She used to love her vacations. Visal took her to places in his bike. Random places. At the beach, they both would be happy just seeing the sun and waves and eating corn. Counting the number of fishes the men managed to catch. Playing with the waves. At the theatre, they would howl like mad men when their favourite stars came on screen. He taught her to drive. To swim. To cook. She told him her dreams, expecting him to forget. What surprised her was that he remembered every detail. She didn’t.
Not until he left a void in her universe.
And then she remembered details. The way his eyes lit up when he spoke about bikes. His masterpiece smug expressions. His never ending collection of sarcastic jokes that would make her stomach roll in laughter. The crease that forms on his left cheek when he smiles.
Time wasn’t a healer. Time made details look like HD movies.
She never cried for him. Because she believed depression would prevent her from carrying out her duties.
As a daughter. As a sister. As a Doctor.
Two years later, when her school mates called up a reunion, and they were all sitting around and joking about something they did years back, laughing and holding their stomachs, she stopped in mid-laugh and stared at the people around.
As if her laughter was sucked out of her and absorbed into a void left in her universe.
It was then she knew that she was depressed.
The realisation tore her apart.
Later it took a bottle of Smirnoff to drown her depression, before it drowned her.
.
A long tiring day later, just before she left the hospital to go back home, an emergency case came in and she was asked to operate on the patient.
A Biker. Who referred to himself as Duke. Someone who drove at 210 kmph every day since he got his licence, yet landed in the hospital because he drove at 30 kmph for the first time in his life and a tree fell on him.
Mother Nature and her Sarcasm.
He talked and flirted his way out of trouble. Told her more and more about bikes, about the different places he visited, the canals he dived into, the trees he climbed for honey, all with a familiar glitter in his eyes. He challenged her to find his real name without checking the medical records.
She realised she was falling for him.
And he did too. He made no show of making it a private affair though.
“I wish my mother was here to meet her” He told one day to the nurse next to him.
“Your mother will beg you to marry her then.” The nurse said, chuckling.
“That’s the whole point.” He said, laughing, flaunting his perfect white teeth.
Thushara blushed. A first one in a series of a long range of blushes yet to come.
.
“That’s a nice ring.” The nurse said.
“I know.” She said smiling.
“So, has ‘Duke’ told you his real name?”
She paused.
“Vishal.” She looked above and smiled at Someone. “Vishal Vishwanath.”
.
-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #6
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Sunday 19 June 2016

Metamorphosis

“So, all set?” I asked my brother, as he ran around his extremely messy room. Panicking, no doubt.
“I can’t find my Rubik’s cube.” He said, breathless.
“Why do you need a Rubik’s cube when you are off to study?” I mused.
He paused.
“To get a grip on sanity.” He replied meekly.
My brother was leaving today to pursue his dream. Crash course so that he could get a seat next year. Medicine.
Well, our family was grim at first, no doubt. Our bubbly little prankster, off to take up something huge. At first we thought he was out of his mind when he said that he wanted to be a doctor, before his results were out. We didn’t expect much from his results either.
But our bubbly little prankster managed to shock the living lights out of our family, not to mention, our entire neighbourhood.
Damn it, he would stun the entire nation if we gave him a chance.
After his results, he declared it again. This time, we believed in his choice.
Felt more like a horror story come true, by the way.
My mother acted funny the entire week. She made his favourite food, joked around and dressed him up in my clothes telling him that he was a pretty little girl.
Dad chose to torture him with his inexplicable cooking skills.
And what did his big sister do?
I called up my cousin, asking him to accompany me to the mall so that I could buy my prankster something that would keep his sanity.
In the car, I broke down. Wept. And my cousin watched in silence.
“Why?” He asked.
“I can’t accept the fact that he’s a big guy now.” I said in between sobs. “I miss those times when I used to protect him from mom and dad for the things he did. Now he is the one who protects me when we go out in public.”
Silence.
“It’s like…” I said, “It’s like… I’m deliberately allowing him to go through some sick sort of evolution. I feel like, once I leave him there in that nasty hell filled with books and weird looking Sirs and over the top nerds, he would change for good. And I don’t want good. I want him to be my prankster. I want him to happy.”
More silence.
“The stress is going to kill him. He could have chosen a lot of careers which would preserve his innocence. A doctor. My brother? What does a doctor do now? Other than be kicked upon by the public for not providing treatment on time. Blood and rot. More blood and rot. I don’t want him to be a doctor. Wait, I want him to be a doctor. I just can’t watch him change.”
My cousin took a deep breath.
“Ever heard what Metamorphosis is?” He asked.
“Ask my brother. He’s the bio-geek.”
He laughed. “It is a process. Transformation from an immature form to an adult form in two or more distinct stages. Everyone goes through it.”
I sighed.
“The transition from one stage to another is mind-numbingly painful. We think that we could ease their pain by helping them. What we do in reality, is make things worse.”
Silence.
“Every individual has to go through certain degrees of pain to get where they want to be. And they should do it alone. No help from another individual is going to ease their pain. Everyone has their own brand of painkillers at hand. The only way that you can help him, is by letting him grow. Watch him make mistakes, and encourage him to learn for it. Everyone serves a purpose on Earth. Maybe that was why you were born earlier than he did.”
I smiled and reached over to hug him.
I watched my brother bid farewell to our parents. A long tiring train ride, a lot of jokes and junk food later, we reached the hostel where he would stay for the rest of the year.
As we were about to leave, he hugged me tight. And I gave him his gift.
He gaped in surprise. “A Rubik’s Revenge Cube?” He asked, grinning.
“I thought slamming sanity at your face would be a good farewell gift.” I replied.
He grew grim.
I asked why.
“Don’t you think, everything is going to change right now? For good?”
I smiled. I put my hand around his shoulders and took him for a walk.
“Ever heard what Metamorphosis is?” I asked.
.
-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #5
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Utopia


And She walked towards Him
Face held down.
Modesty held high.
Powerful were her visions.
Phenomenal was her soul.
Her eyes reflected His transient anxiety.
His eyes held delight
Spectres of the past bid adieu.
Together they walked.
Towards Hope. Love.
And Matrimony.
.
-The Violet Woman
Fragments #12
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Picture Source: TVW
Model: Madhavi Chandran 

Written By TVW
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Evana


Details so vivid. Details so bright.
Complimented the day she came on Earth.
Someone so fragile, made of me.
Someone so soft, made of Him.
Rays broke through, longing to touch
This divine mass of love.
Lit her tiny fingertips
And warmth spread around.
Her eyes still shyed away from the world
Another day left to open them.
I’ve never even seen them yet
But they’re beautiful, I know.
Hearts so fonder await your growth.
Mine. And your Superhero’s.
Our precious little bundle of joy
The perfect Grace of God, no doubt.
.
.-The Violet Woman
Fragments #11
.
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Techie


“This is a Samsung Galaxy Note 3, okay? This is going to be the Ambassador Car of your first drive into technology.”
He just sat there munching peanuts. 
I sighed. “Chill, dad. It’s just a touchphone. I’m going to teach you how to use this. Okay?”
More pronounced munching.
An hour of desperate teaching later, finally satisfied that I did a good job of teaching him how to use a phone, I smiled.
“You understood everything I taught?”
He nodded.
“Do you have doubts?”
He shook his head.
“Do you have anything to say?”
At that he got up, went over to the TV stand, grabbed the remote, put on some hideous news channel that discussed a politician’s views on Feminism and why it should be “Menism” instead, sat back on the couch, raised the plate that held peanuts to my face and asked,
“Would you like some peanuts?”
I rolled my eyes.
.
A week later, I tried again. This time, with the laptop.
“So, my father, THIS”, I said dramatically showing off the new laptop he got for my mother, “is a Laptop.”
“I’m not retarded. I brought it for your mother. I know what it is.”
So much for a dramatic start.
He just got up and switched the TV on. News Channel. Politician going bonkers over another politician’s personal affairs.
I took a deep breath to steady myself. “Daddy?” I called out smiling.
“I’m listening to you. Continue.”
And again after an hour of desperate teaching, finally satisfied that I did a good job of teaching him how to use a laptop, I prayed and managed to smile.
“You understood everything I taught?”
He nodded.
“Do you have doubts?”
He shook his head.
“Do you have anything to say?”
He had a grave expression on his face. With the seriousness of a military Colonel, my father asked,
“Did your mother throw out the peanuts I brought last week?”
That’s when I learnt that teaching kids was not an intelligent career option for me.
.
A year later, when I came home for vacations, I found my father sitting on the couch in front of the TV, busily typing on his phone.
He called me over.
“Yeah, Dad?”
“Why haven’t you added me on Facebook?”
I stood still for a while.
When I came back to my senses, I went to the kitchen, grabbed a bunch of peanuts, chomped on them arrogantly, and asked him to repeat what he said.
And I just stood there munching peanuts the entire time.
.
-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #4
.
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Tuesday 31 May 2016

Charcoal

Barbaric actions do gravely wound
Sometimes the body. Sometimes the soul.
Scars to the carcass, gagged and bound
Is often one more story told.
Why carcass? You may ask
Look at her, her gashes screamed.
The Relic of a lost battle
Smothered. Dragged. Decayed.
Followed behind, one left alive
His marionette. A Repercussion.
Imagined euthanasia. Or an uproot.
A Phoenix rose instead.
He never knew what Charcoal was
Not even close.
But now he knows asphyxiation
And now he knows Burns.
Humanity faulted Her heinous act
Media ripped her grace.
She reduced herself to ashes
                                                                          To rise again another day.
.
                                                                          -The Violet Woman
                                                                           Fragments #10
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Sunday 29 May 2016

Chef

A bit more salt.
And a dash of pepper.
Perfect.
I smiled in satisfaction. Mother reached up from behind me, and kissed me lightly on the cheeks. Father tasted my ‘kurma’ and looked at me in mock contempt.
“Cooking, my son, is for females.”
Do I look like I care? Nope.
“No field should be restricted to just one gender alone.” I said, smirking.
“He is cooking for someone special today.”, my mother said, playfully ruffling my hair.
“Really? A girl? I thought you might go for ‘sanyas’.”, he added, smiling.
“A woman. And no, I am not interested in penance.”
Hearing that, dad whispered lewd things in my ear which set us both guffawing on the floor.
Damayanthi. The one I was cooking for, was no ordinary woman. When Hamsam managed to pacify my bereft heart, intriguing me of her beauty and grace, I was interested.
But I never expected much. After all, how beautiful can a damsel be, so beautiful that she manages to capture a man’s heart at first sight?
I was in for a surprise. One look at her, and my body went stark crazy. My heart ran a race, sweat dripped down my forehead and I was concerned about my looks.
She was no ordinary woman. She was... What were those women called at Devalok?
Apsara’.
And then and there, I was taken.
So you can’t blame me if I try and cook something delicious for her, right?
.
.
.
Lost.
Everything was lost.
My looks. My kingdom. My wife.
I abandoned her in the forest.
What type of a man does that make me? My virtue. The one that was appreciated even in Devalok. Where had it gone now?
I thought she would be safe if I left her alone.
I prayed to the God’s to keep her safe. Please don’t make her suffer. Please give her strength.
Please deliver me from my sins.
Oh God, How will I ever get her back?
I have changed beyond recognition.
Even Mother doesn’t recognize me now.
Bahukan. That’s who I am now.
May the Gods be merciful.
.
.
.
A bit more salt.
And a dash of pepper.
Perfect.
I smiled in satisfaction. My actions were muddled, all thanks to Kali, living inside me now. Our conversations were minimal. He tries his best to agitate me, and I agitate him with my silence.
Today’s cooking was for her. My love. My wife.
Cooked by an ugly dwarf. Prepared in love.
My curse never affected my love towards her. Thank heavens.
I still intend to strangle Kali though.
I hope she likes it.
.
.
.
I served the ‘kurma’ and took a deep breath. Waited.
With utmost grace, she began to dip the ‘naan’ into my dish.
Tear. Dip. Eat. Tear. Dip. Eat.
And then she froze.
Her eyes filled up.
I panicked.
Salt? Check.
Spice? She loves it.
Consistency? I thought it was perfect.
Then what the hell went wrong?
She slowly raised her grief stricken visage to face me. Got up.
Walked towards me.
And just like how a mother would hold a new born baby, she cradled my face, looked deep into my eyes, as if searching for answers to my soul’s dilemma, and asked:
“Nala? Is it you?”
I died a thousand deaths then.
And death was good.

.
-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #3
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Saturday 28 May 2016

Drifter

She was a drifter.
Blending was what she did.
Her laughter gave hope to the miserable crowd.

Solitude defined her.
Attachments were complicated.
Freedom was what she sought.
Love was what she desired.
Yes, She was a drifter.
.
- The Violet Woman
Fragments #9
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Goddess

Pretty flowers don't show me weak.
I could be the strongest of winds, and fiercest of tides.
Mistake me not for a casual being.
For I knew how to devastate.
Power and impotence have flowed through my hands.
I could be a flower
Or a wild thorn.
But never underestimate my true worth.
For you are yet to know me.
And when I come, you would know
She was no ordinary flower.
She was a Goddess.
.
-The Violet Woman
Fragments #8
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The Violet Woman

Why cage words in the labyrinth of your mind
When an infinity is spread out, for them to drift free?
Why hold on to raw emotions 
When a plethora of them were left to be discovered?
Why fake purity when you know for sure you are stained permanently?
After all, one life, one You.
So Why restrict poetry and writings when they erupt out in desperation?
Your words are a part of your soul, waiting to be discovered.
So Why won't You let them be?
.
-The Violet Woman 
(About Me)
Fragments #7
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Transcendence

Tranquility comes in conditioned terms
Only to those who believe.
Religions had misinterpreted norms
Whereas Earth learnt to grieve.
Generations taught generations Faith
As selfishness doused love.
None saw through all the Hate
Ignorant minds rule now.
I raise hands to a Patient Being
Beautiful. Wise. Omnipotent.
Purity determined a Greater Calling
That willingly chose to lie latent.
Silence slashed deeper than words
Actions saved brutal scarrings
Serenity played well with my chords
Transcendental were my unintended musings.
.
-The Violet Woman
Fragments #6
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Alistonia

The damp terrace felt extremely good on our sunburnt tan backs.
My new found best friend raised herself up on her elbows and inquired the time.
1:42 am. Flaunted my digital watch.
We were supposed to be sleeping in our dorm rooms an hour back.
But when the forty degree atmosphere was rapidly drenched by rains and petrichor made itself known, who would sleep, inspite the time being this late.
We didn’t. Studies had taken a toll on our sanity and we planned to enjoy this “moon-bathing” quite well.
“Do you smell that?”, she asked. Noora was her name.
“What?”
She inhaled deep. Smiled. Waited.
I sniffed the air like a dog.
“Inhale, lady. Deep.”
So I did.
Some tree had blossomed in the middle of the night. And the fragrance was divine.
“Jasmine?”, she asked.
“Alla, Palapoo”, I replied in my mother tongue. Blank stare.
“Alistonia Scholaris. In Malayalam, it’s called 'Ezhilam Pala'. English, Indian Devil Tree. It’s fragrance is known for spooking the heck out of people.”, I explained.
“And why is that?”
“It ruled our 'Yakshi' stories. My mother used to scare me up pretty good when I was a kid. About how the fragrance lured lost men into the hands of extremely good looking female ghosts.” I said grinning.
She sat up straight. To add effects to my convincing story, nature sent a slow spine-chilling wind.
“They were vampires too.” I said, noticing how the goosebumps stood on her hand.
“I officially hate you now.” She said. And I laughed.
I laughed till suddenly I realized an eerie silence had engulfed the place.
She noticed my expression. Panicked.
And then the crickets started chirping again.
Both Noora and I sighed in relief.
“It’s funny how sometimes the crickets sound like 'chelanga'.” I continued, clearly enjoying her discomfort.
“Chela-what?”
“Anklets, in your language.”
“Maybe we should go sleep.”, she said rising.
I stretched and noticed that the sounds of my assumed 'chelanga' increased and then stopped suddenly.
Noora’s eyes drifted to my face. I stretched again suppressing a smile. I looked up at the stars and started counting them so as to not buckle in laughter.
Trouble started when she called my name in a trembling voice.
I turned to look and followed her shaking fingers pointing to something in the distance.
There, next to the Devil Tree, stood a figure draped in flowy white, hair so lusciously curly like serpent coils, staring at me.
I froze as fear crawled menacingly up my feet.
“Run Noora.”
I turned around to look for her. She stood at the end of the terrace. Draped in flowy white, hair so lusciously curly like serpent coils, staring at me.
It was she who smiled now.
.
-The Violet Woman
Lilliput #2
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