Sunday, September 29, 2013
Saturday, September 21, 2013
i lost my creativity
We have been looking through the dusty glass. We devoured our every sight,
from the mundane duty of streetlamps (which only increased the street’s
obscurity) to dog walking (we thought such activity only suit individuals who could
not bear their idleness). As the sky grew darker, lights abandoned the daytime,
and the shadows ran riot in our imaginations. It was as if they fused with the
lonely force to confirm our insignificance in life and smother our deserved
sensations. The drooping trees provided couples an intimate aura, yet the leaflessness
of the tree revealed their actual alarmed movements. We absorbed the shadows of
night and the vibrations from insects. They were merely sound, coming from
every direction, maybe above our roof, or hiding in the bushes. We had no idea
what they looked like, and their existence was so unreal because of their mechanical
buzzing. We listened in stillness. Crepuscular yellow car lights diminished and
reappeared. We made a larger gap between the window and the outside world. A
breeze arose. In the blackness, the leaves of trees began to flutter, filling
the air outside and inside our lungs with an unfamiliar scent (not
materialistic or contrived we found in department stores). Our sights blurred
all of a sudden but without further allowance of time, we dried the tears. Sometimes
the darkness would let out a vulture cry, or ripples would spread across the
water’s surface as though something had just swum by. We felt for the dark
masses of leaves that helplessly exposed their vulnerability, as they chased after
the wind. Everyday the branches showed growing patches of sky, or the houses
which receded behind the mist of defeated youth. The leaves shed themselves, came
floating down and circling, like the world shedding itself in an endless profusion.
We saw another dead pigeon squashed by a car, voicelessly screaming its dissatisfaction
with the stubbornness of life. The natural death lingered after us, with the
window thrown open, and then we saw a streak of yellow and orange dissecting
the sky into two, making the world more beautiful then ever.
If we half closed our eyes and covered our ears, we could trick ourselves
into thinking what was still going on, through the stained glass panes and
decaying brick walls.