Monday, May 21, 2012

Blade

I have no will. I have no curiosity.
Of its own, a finger is passing with barely a touch along the blade until suddenly, catching on a spot, it halts. Rust, perhaps. I raise my hand over to the light, careful not to tighten my hold over the thing. A cold shine can be seen in intervals, shooting up and down between my fingers along the metallic handle. I can sense the edge.
I can see my wrist, a vein twisting through it with a hard pulse. I can see the delicate lines guessing their way across the skin. How frail is life. Better close your eyes. Close your eyes, I say. Do it.
I close my eyes and with a light, effortless relief, my thoughts are lifted from the moment. They are lifted, turning over the edge, cutting up and away. I have no will. I have no curiosity. I have no blood. I am no longer here.


The segment above, which I wrote at a time in my life that was extremely difficult, was something I thought too personal to share. So was the large oil painting I painted around the same time.
However, a few years later I reread it. This time I could sense the pain--but this time, to my surprise, it was separate from me: as if I had put it in a glass jar, closed the lid and examined it from outside. Quite a strange sensation... So when my protagonist Ben fell on hard times at a certain point in my novel, I let him borrow these words. He whispered them as he stood there, watching his father's cut-throat blade in the small bathroom of the place where he had grown up.


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10 comments:

  1. wonderful..really......:)

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  2. Painful... the edge of the blade strikes right along my heart.... and I feel the pain!

    Great Lines :)

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    1. Thank you Rahul. Means a lot coming from a poet

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  3. I'm glad I thought to come to the blog during the reading of your book, so that I can read this and view the painting. Just recently read those words from Ben
    I like this interactive book reading! ;)

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  4. Very neat. I've had a similar experience where I've given my words to my character after I've moved on from them.

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    1. And then, it becomes a shared experience between you and your character...

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