Thursday, April 24, 2014

Writing Therapy


To pick up a pen, to feel that smooth sleek texture beneath your fingertips. To grip between your fingers the almost non-existent weight, to slide the cylindrical body in your hands till it rests comfortably upon the grooves and calluses formed so long ago. To bring down the pen with the slightest of pressure, to aim it with long-practiced precision.

And put it on paper. 

The first stroke; the friction against the paper generating a slight scratch, the satisfaction of feeling the paper push back against you,  and black bleeds unto white like a papercut : thin, precise, clean, yet marked and dirtied forever, pure white stained by heartless black. 

And you start to write. 

Minute swishes, vicious slashes, controlled looping motions. Dot your 'i's, cross your 't's, loop the 'y's, stab the periods. A pattern slowly forms, random lines joined together to tell a story that may have never existed except in your imagination. 

And your soul bleeds unto the paper as you watch in satisfaction; finally, something tangible to represent all you feel inside. 



I used to write all the time : before I could hold a pen properly, before I could speak properly, before I could mumble jumbled-up sagas; before computers and smartphones hijacked the world. I used to hate writing -- my thoughts ran like the river, never slowing down for my hands to catch up, never running out till my hands tire and burn out. My fingers weren't agile enough to keep up with those flying thoughts, and frequently, these thoughts slip through my fingers and disappear into the land of forgotten moments. 

And then came computers. Keyboards. I learnt to type, to read and use QWERTY, to love the keys, to enjoy the satisfying clacking as the keys come bouncing back after you depress them with all your strength. Typing allowed my thoughts to be immortalised in words before they slip away like the annoying mosquito you always can't hit; my thoughts never had to slow down -- this time, my fingers could keep up. 

I became more competent at typing, and in turn, loved it more. And the more I love it, the better I became. Soon, my pens and papers were deserted in the darkest corner of my room, forgotten and unwanted, like the toys I'd abandoned while asserting my independence. 



And then typing became more of an essential life skill rather than just a mode of expression. You type assignments, you type notes, you type whatever you hear without having a chance to process it because the lecturer might say something important and you do NOT want to leave that out. Computers and laptops became enemies of your state of mind -- yes, they do still bring joy, but now that joy is tainted by the guilt of not having finished your assignments. 

Typing became a stranger. Typing became impersonal. Typing became that friend you used to hold close to heart, who slowly changed over time without you noticing until one day you take a close look at him and realise you don't know him anymore. It wasn't therapeutic anymore, typing. I could sit myself in front of a computer and my mind shuts down, unwilling to reveal anything to this stranger that I used to love. 

There are rare times when we could still get along though; sometimes I can overlook the detached look in your eyes and spew my heart out through you, to you. Sometimes I am so distressed I don't even notice that indifference; I just wanted--needed--an output who could keep up with me, with my mind. And writing was definitely out of the question. So I typed. And typed. And typed. 

And today, out of nowhere, a dark wave of clouds just rolled by and settled upon me. And without noticing it, I'd picked up a pen and started to write. While what I was writing were simply quotes, copying words out of others' minds, the repetitive strokes, the continued motions, the slight scratches as each stroke was made, the satisfaction of watching each letter bleed out, none of them in anyway similar to the other, I calmed down. 

In the midst of the chaos (my penmanship is terrible) I found calm. In the repetitive motions and clean cut lines I found a sense of belonging. And slowly, the dark clouds dissipate as I wrote and read what I was writing, and found the beauty in the language, in the individual words, at the unrestrained alphabets. 

In writing I found a sense of calm. In writing my thoughts unscrambled. In writing my courage is reborn and I can face the world again with a lighter heart. In writing, everything makes sense again; everything is worth something again. 

And in writing, I can always find myself again; as tangled, as broken, as jumbled-up, as teary, or weary, or chewed and regurgitated and spitted out, or screwed over and over again, writing builds me back up again, bit by bit, piece by piece, until the 'ME' (or a semblance of it anyway) is back in the game. 

To write, is to live. 

And what is the use of living, if you don't write it down?

Write your story. :)

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Bad Day

As if being so completely out of sync with lectures wasn't bad enough.

I used to tell myself, everything happens for a reason. I believe it sometimes; sometimes though, I just can't find a good side, a good reason that explains stuff that happen. Shit happens, and without reason sometimes.

I'd looked forward to this weekend. I'd finally have a chance to catch up with lectures right before the quiz, I'd be alone, I'd go buy sweet crunchy apples and carrots, I'd play ball; I'd have the time of my life. It was going to be legendary.

It was supposed to be. Legend....waitforit...dary. I guess I was stuck in the wait-for-it part. 

I set my alarm for eight. To rise bright and early, with a fresh mind and a cup of fragrant coffee to start the day.

And that was the first thing that went wrong.

For some reason, my phone shut down and the alarm didn't go off. And me being me, I'd slept until the sun was in my face -- SUN! SUN IN DUBLIN is a miracle! If you haven't already experience it ( you lucky little thing) being shocked out of bed is NOT a good feeling, especially when you promptly fall out of bed because the sheets were all tangled together.

I pushed on. Being late doesn't deter me from the much-awaited shopping trip. Grocery shopping gives me such joy. All those fresh vegetables labelled with phenomenal prices. Meat, bread, milk. Fruits. Walked for thirty minutes to get there. Found out that apples were twice the normal price. Grapes were small and brownish. Leafy vegetables were leafless.  Carrots were broken into pieces.

My heart was broken into more pieces.

I'd imagined much more pieces than that. 

But I pushed on still. I bought what I could salvage, which turned out to be quite a lot. I ended up with more weight on my back than I'd expected, so naturally that led me to the decision to take a bus back home instead of just dumping everything at school. I wasn't about to walk 30 minutes back at night with the added weight of a laptop! And since I was taking the bus, why not go to Tesco as well to finish the shopping list I had instead of waiting for another day?

Naturally, the minute I decided to take the bus, my phone shut down again (what is wrong with the stupid thing?!) so I had to rely on my memory for the bus route. Of course, my memory being what it is, I walked for fifteen minutes before giving up and started searching for the bus that would bring me home instead of Tesco.

Tthe second I decided that, I stumbled on the appropriate bus to Tesco and promptly missed it. And so I waited for another 15 minutes, all the while wondering how I thought I would get any studying done.

Oh. Did I mention it started to rain somewhere along the way?

It was sunny two minutes ago. :(


Lugging two bags full of groceries back home was torture. Especially when you're tired, and frustrated, and so near to tears that you want to just sit down in a corner and bawl until someone offers you a ride home.

Got home at half twelve, and told myself that there was enough time for a quick lunch before the much-anticipated badminton session. I knew I had to move out before half-one to meet my VERY-KIND-HEARTED-FRIEND-who-offered-to-show-me-the-way-to-the-court-because-I-was-terrible-at-directions.

I totally should have expected that stomachache at exactly 1.30pm.

Halfway through the badminton sesh (that free pizza was the highlight of my day though. PIZZA RULES! ) someone mentioned it was the 5th today.

Yup. Mom's birthday.

I'd lost track of the date amidst today's adventure that I'd forgotten Mom's birthday!  I could definitely be nominated for the daughter of the year. Rushed to my phone to call or text or whatever and got a message telling me : hey dude you're out of credit.



I wanted to throw my phone (or basically anything) on the floor and smush it to pieces then and there.

Got to library after that and started studying-- a semblance of it, anyway. Expected library to close at 1am, I was so getting in the mood, the drive of understanding stuff when the girl came in and rang the bell. Library's closing (because the 1am thingy only starts on the 8th of April) and just when I was getting the drive to study!

And so I ended up here, 'cause I can't focus anymore. Too many things happened today that all I want now is to rant. To yell and scream and bawl my eyes out at my own stupidity, at the unfairness of it all. I wanted to pull all my hair out and curl into a ball and just fade out of existence.

And now I just want to escape into my sheets and get all tangled up inside.



I had a bad day.

And I hate it.

I hate that I did nothing productive today, except for all the food I brought back -- which isn't really a good idea.

I hate that I had to pretend to be oblivious to it all when all it does is hurt -- it pokes you constantly in the side, in the arse, in the heart;everywhere.

I hate that stuff makes me feel this way but I still throw myself into it like a foolish moth attracted to fire, all the while helping to build the fire, digging my own grave.

I hate that I could never master self-control, and that my heart does whatever it wants despite what the brain tells it to.

I hate that life sometimes throws lemons at you and they get so crushed and mushed up that you can't make any lemonade from it. And there's no sugar.

I'm still trying to find a reason today happened. Maybe it's just here to remind me there are good days I should cherish. Maybe it's just here to tell me, hey, life ain't a bed of roses; you need to deal with the thorns as well.

Who am I fooling? Today was just bad luck. Period.

Let's just go back to the safe haven.