Friday 30 December 2011

Reflection


I used to be so sure
Of everything;
Of my world and all its contents.
I used to wake up from refreshing sleep
And smile with self-satisfaction at the mirror.
I used to look deep into the eyes of my reflection,
Through a camera lens crystal clear
And see a world, so beautiful, so perfect.
I used to walk along a path, delicately paved,
Each stepping stone aligned just right,
The way I liked it.
That land was a wonderland,
A dreamscape, if you will.
But dreams don’t last forever,
As I’m sure you are aware.
And now, as I peel my eyelids apart
After restless nights,
The turmoil of my sleep
Having seemed to knock the lenses out of focus.
The angles are all wrong now.
The smooth roads crack relentlessly,
And I trip at every turn.
The soft lullabies of weeping willow branches
Turn into screams.
The light spring rains
Evolve into thunderstorms of tears.
The gently rolling clouds
Suddenly turn into clusters of smoke,
Black and gray and sickly yellow.
My world is filled with smoke and mirrors,
Screams and tears.
Where did this haze come from?
I have no idea.
But it chokes me.
And it chokes my reflection,
Suffocating its clarity and perfection.
I lost the one thing I thought I would never lose.
I lost sight of myself.
Now, I stare desperately at my reflection,
But my eyes are only as deep as the glass.

Rain

It's been a while since I've heard rain tumble from the sky in the darkness outside my window.

I didn't realize how much I had missed it.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

Of Frost and Frozen Tears


Anna spent hours getting ready for that night, standing in front of her little dresser mirror and poring over her shabby selection of powders and lipsticks. It wasn’t much, but it was all she had, so it would have to do. She carefully extracted a simple black hair pin from the top left drawer of her dresser. It had suffered a little throughout her younger adolescent days, but she was proud that she had kept it somewhat intact for the four years since it was placed in her hands on her twelfth birthday. Delicately, she pulled back a lock of her wavy brown hair and secured it just above her ear, revealing a sparkling teardrop earring that she had ‘borrowed’ from her mother. The little frozen tear twinkled happily in the light, but a pang of guilt tugged at her heart. She shook it away. I will return them to Mama’s room as soon as I come home, She reassured herself, Mama will never know. Turning back to her tabletop, Anna selected a subtle brown powder for her eyelids and some nice red lipstick. She looked at her little mirror and at the girl smiling back at her. The girl looked older than Anna, and more mature. She wore those crystal earrings comfortably, casually even, as if they were part of her everyday outfit, just one of the hundreds of pairs she owned. She was the kind of girl that Dmitri would take out to dinner.
Quietly, Anna slipped out of her room, down the narrow hallway, and out the front door. She locked it behind her and slipped the key deep into her jacket pocket. The night was chilly. Although there was no dusting of frost on the grass that morning, the icy air that swirled around in the late evening carried the grave warning of winter’s first merciless frost. Anna’s footsteps fell softly on the cold sidewalk. She loved the Sunday shoes she was wearing, loved the faithful and humble way they made her walk in God’s presence. They were, in theory, supposed to be reserved for church, but she simply couldn’t resist wearing them on her special night. Despite her momentary happiness, Anna shivered. Her jacket didn’t offer much protection from the cold anymore, but she knew her family couldn’t afford to replace it until next winter. Reaching into her pockets, she realized she had forgotten her gloves. Her fingertips began to ache, but she didn’t have time to go back. She was already running late, and Dmitri would not be happy if she kept him waiting.
Finally, Anna arrived at the cosy restaurant, “The French Kiss”, where she was supposed to meet Dmitri. She glanced around. He was nowhere to be seen. She cautiously pushed open the glass door, thinking he might be waiting inside. Instead of seeing his handsome face, she was greeted by a tall waiter, who looked at her expectedly.
“Um... hi,” she stammered, “I’m supposed to meet someone here at eight o’clock.” The large clock at the back of the restaurant glared at her with its minute hand pointing to a giant number one, as if mocking her lateness. The waiter nodded, then went to consult a fancy-looking book.
“Name?”
“Dmitri. Dmitri Stalinov.”
The waiter looked confused. “No one by that name has made any reservation here.”
“Are you sure?” The waiter nodded again. “Alright then... thank you,” murmured Anna. She turned around slowly, confused and a little hurt, made her out the door, stepping into the cold night once again. A chilly wind had picked up since she had last been outside, and it nipped viciously at her fingertips. She pulled her coat tighter around her thin torso, but shivered nonetheless.
She waited. Through the restaurant’s large front window, Anna could see the hands on that giant clock on the wall. It was ten minutes past eight. She stared at the clock until the minute hand glided down one notch: eleven past eight. There was a couple in the restaurant whom Anna hadn’t noticed earlier; they were talking over elegant champagne flutes, and the sparkling, bubbly liquid seemed to reflect their expressions as they looked into each other’s eyes. Anna couldn’t help but feel a twinge of jealousy. With a sigh, she peeled her gaze back to the lonely sidewalk. A mother walked by her on the street, holding hands with her two young children. Twenty past eight. A group of students, perhaps a little older than Anna, sauntered by, chatting and laughing merrily. Eight thirty. The young couple exited the restaurant with their arms linked, content after their romantic night. Quarter to nine. Anna couldn’t feel her toes anymore; no amount of shivering seemed enough to produce any more warmth in her body. Dmitri still had not come. She noticed a telephone booth across the street from where she stood. It looked almost as desolate as she did, but at least it would shield her from the wind.
As soon as Anna shut the door of the telephone booth, she felt better. The draft didn’t howl as loudly inside, nor did it bite so harshly. As she gazed forlornly at the telephone, she groped inside her threadbare pockets for some spare change. Of course, there was none. She reached half-heartedly into the coin disposal hole near the bottom of the phone box. To her surprise, she pulled out a coppery disc. She smiled, and fed the coin to the telephone. Her fingers, even in their numbness, still managed to punch in the number code she took such care to memorize. She waited as the dial tone sounded... once... twice... on the third ring, a gruff voice answered. “Stalinov house, how can I help you?” He must be the butler.
“Hi, my name is Anna. Is Dmitri there, please?”
“One moment.”
Anna heard the muffled sound of the receiver being set down, then footsteps walking away across a marble floor. There was silence for a moment, then whispers not far away. Anna could tell it was two men conversing by the depth of their voices, but she couldn’t make out the words. One of them sounded vaguely like Dmitri, but she couldn’t quite tell. The whispering stopped, and footsteps made their way back to the phone. Her heart skipped a little as she expected the sound of his voice to flow through the receiver. He would speak to her in the charming way that always made her heart melt; he would apologize to her and promise to make up for it. And she would forgive him, because she loved him. But instead of Dmitri’s voice that spoke to her, it was the butler’s again. “He is not here right now.”
Her heart plummeted. “Do you know where he is? Did he tell you where he was going tonight?” Her eyes began to fill with tears, “Whether he was going to dinner with a girl named Anna Novakovsky?”
“No, he gave me no information, and the name means nothing to me.”
And with that, the phone clicked off.  Before she could stop them, Anna’s tears spilled over her eyelashes, onto her powdered cheek. The butler’s words played over and over in her head. The name means nothing to me. Your name means nothing. Nothing. Her tears had unleashed a flood, and it rushed down her face in rivulets with every heartbroken sob. It smeared her lipstick into an unrecognizable splotch, but she didn’t care. Her heart felt the same way, after all. For the first time in her life, she felt truly and hopelessly alone.
Outside, frost began to settle on the small city. Tiny drops of moisture solidified and settled on the ground, on the sides of buildings, and on an insignificant telephone booth. There they glittered, like frozen tears glittered on the cheeks of a particular young girl; the first ice of winter and the first ice of human hurt.

Standby

You life is in fast-forward,
While I'm on standby.
I'm standing here, useless
While you struggle and try

It's like I'm trapped in a box
Made out of glass
Where I can only watch
As the days by you pass

I hold out my hands
By they can't reach
And you can't see my horror
As you fall to your knees

I have a million words to offer you
A million things to say
But I am held captive
And you slowly turn away

Yet I remain here, a friend to you
To remind you, if you forgot
That our friendship and support
For you betray you not

There is a light behind you
But you face the shadows cast
Please, won't you look to the light
And leave darkness to the past?

Dear friend, the time has come
For me to rest my pen
But I'll leave for you a blank sheet
Start your story new again

Saturday 24 December 2011

My Wish

1: You inspired me to write this, as you have inspired me for so many other things. It's hard to think that these years have pulled us so far away from where we started, but I still think of you as the same person I met way back in the day and I still hold your friendship as close to my heart as I did then. I wish you the best; I always have. My wish for you is that this life becomes all that you want it to.


2: I'm so glad I've gotten a chance to get to know you. I thought that we were unimaginably different, but I stand corrected. You are so genuine, and I love that. In a world where trust is hard to come by and harder to give away, I'm humbled that you placed your trust in my hands. You have certainly earned mine. Don't ever lose that poet inside you, and believe in yourself; you will get through this. You're not alone tonight, there's more than moonlight that surrounds you.  It will be alright, just believe.


3: I never thought I'd ever find a friend like you. We disagree, we're stubborn, and we fight, but in the end I know you'll always be there for me, no matter what. You know me better than anyone else. You've had your ups and downs, and you know how it feels to want to give up and throw it all away. But whatever you do, I will support you, because I know you have so much potential and so much spirit, and I hope you live that one to the fullest. One day when the sky is falling, I will be standing right next to you.

Thursday 22 December 2011

Waiting

I exhale.
The winter air robs me of my breath.
Like the smoke from someone's cigarette,
It floats upwards, clouding the atmosphere.

Wednesday 21 December 2011

Torn

I'm spending
my entire life suspending
in a violent tornado, blending
my love and hate, pretending
to get along. I'm torn, the tension is ascending;
I'm on my own, defending
both warring sides unbending,
still I'm apprehending
I try so hard, intending
to fix the trauma, lending
myself to the offending
sides, but my this is never ending
and my hope is fast descending
why can't these wounds be mending
instead of ever extending?
where is all this sending
me?

Saturday 17 December 2011

The Game


It was just an innocent game. Or so I thought. I swept my gaze around the table at the seven other pairs sitting around us. Each pair consisted of one girl and one boy. A pile of game pieces lay on the table in front of us. The girl to my right began. She extracted a piece and placed it on the pile. Safe. It was my turn. I could feel the fifteen pairs of eyes on me as I tried to concentraTe on the arrangement in front of me. The rules of the game played through my head once again. We go around the circle. One member from each pair had to take a piece and rearrange it. You must move the first piece you touch. The contraption must not fall. If it did, the boy from the pair must take a punisHment. It seemed fairly simple. Don’t let it fall, a girl’s voice echoed in my mind. I was sure she meant it as a friendly reminder, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that there was an edge to her voice... a sharp one. I inhaled, realizing I had been holding my brEath for at least a few minutes, and turned my attention to a single piece. My fingers moved forward, almost in slow motion. A chorus of ooh’s erupted from the crowd as I touched the piece. Luckily, it yielded easily to my grasp. I lowered the piece on top of the pile and sighed with relief as I slumped back into my seat. I was safe. The boY to my left nonchalantly flicked his piece out of the mess, as did the boy to his left. Each one showed off a unique and well-practiceD technique accompanied by the same self-assured smirk. Our turn came back around far too quickly. I looked to my partner. Unlike the male counterparts to all the other girls, he was more than my partner for this game. He was my partner for everything. PeriOd. End of conversation. He gave me a reassuring nod. Just as I had for my previous turn, I selected a piece. My fingers tugged on it, but this time, the piece was stubborN. I twisTed it this way and that, trying to free it from the other parts. The voices of the chorus rose in anticipation. It was deafening. The apparatus wobbled dangerously. There was nothing more I could do. With a final pull, the piece came free. Unfortunately, so did the entire building. It crashed onto the tabletop, much to the excitement of the other pairs. Although not vocalized, everyone Knew what was going to happen. They cheered; there was a menacing glint the boys’ eyes, and the girls leaned back in their chairs, evidently preparing for a good show; but nothing could have prepared us for what came next. Nothing could have described the horror I felt as I saw one of the lead boys pull out a whip from a small cabinet. I couldn't see him, but the look on his face must have mirrored mine, for everyone burst into laughter; the cold, heartless, threatening kiNd. They turned him around. All the boys stood behind him. I could see his jaw tightening as he braced himself for the blOw. Then, suddenly, a cracking sound pierced the air. He stumbled forward. I could feel his silent cringe. He didn’t cry out, which seemed to not satisfy the others. But I knew that his silence was worse than any cry. His shock and pain coursed through me, almost causing me to flinch as well. I dug my nails into the flesh of my palm. I could feel the long welt forming across my back. It was red, angry, and pulsing. He refused to look at me. Before I even got a chance to say anything, another crack tore through my thoughts. This welt was loWer, and slightly less painful. But once again his pain shot up my spine. I grit my teeth as hard as I could and waited for the third and final blow. It came. My muscles contracted so quickly that my nails tore through the skin of my hand, leaving eight bloody half-moons in my palms. But it was over. Finally, he raised his gaze to meet mine. I instantly wished he hadn’t, for the look in his eyes broke my heart into a thousand pieces. This was all my fault.

Saturday 26 November 2011

Never Let You Go

They were walking home, just the two of them, after a dazzling night. She was wearing a sapphire Gown that shimmered as she walked. He looked so charming in his neatly pressed shirt and brand new tie; she could hardly keep herself from blushing every time he looked at her. He smiled, took her hand, and for a moment squeezed it tight. She squeezed it back, taking a step closer towards him. I never want to let you go, she thoUght.

Suddenly, as they turned the corner, they were greeted by a pair of blinding headlights and the frantic screeching of car tires. She remembered screaming, panicking, tripping over her silver high heels and tumbling off the sidewalk onto a pAtch of grass. Everything went black. The next thing she knew, she was bent over his limp body, covered in his blood, sobbing her eyes out.

“Excuse me miss,” said a gentle voice. She snapped out of her trance and looked up to see a young nurse in front of her. “The gentleman in room 201 is ready to see you.” Numbly, she Rose to her feet. What time was it? How long had she been waiting in the hospital for? It didn't matter. He was ready to see her, which meant... he was alive. With a small breath of hope, she silently followed the nurse to his room. She took a breath, and gingerly opened the door. There he was, motionless with his eyes closed on the beD. His hair was still streaked with blood, and he had burn marks on hIs face, accentuated by the paleness of his skin and the whiteness of the sheets. He looked like a ghost. No. She turned towards the window, where the first streAks of dawn peeked over the horizon and into the room. His eyelashes fluttered and slowly opened. Her heart melted. He looked like an angel. New tears sprung to her eyes as she flew to his bedside, caressing his bruised face and kissing his swollen lips. Shakily, he brought his haNd to her cheek and held it there. For as long as I live, I will never let you go, he thought. She stayed with him for two days and two nights, then went home. She visited him every single day, and prayed that he would make it out of the hospital.

One day, on her usual trip up to his hospital room, she was stopped by one of his nurses. Quietly, the nurse gAve her a small box and an envelope, and told her to go home and rest. No, she thought, heart racing in terror, this can’t be possible. As soon as she got home she cried. She cried more than she’d ever cried in her entire life, eveN more than she cried when she was holding his weak, almost lifeless body on the street that night. Wiping away the last tear, she picked up the box and the envelope. The box was small, just small enough to fit inside the palm of her hand. She wrapped her fingers around it. The box was soft, velvety to the touch. Carefully, she lifted the lid. Inside the box was a silver ring, studded with a small blue gem. A sapphire, one whose shade matched perfectly the colour of the dress she wore that night. She opened the envelope. It contained only one small sLip of paper, with only one handwritten line on it.
I will never let you go.

Dark Angel

Tinted angel
With darkened wings
You catch my eye
Then leave

Why is it that
I’m always left
With only a thread
Of mystery

You’re like a shadow
Like the wind
Quiet whisper of
A song

As soon as I
Open my eyes
To catch a glimpse,
You’re gone

You’re magnetizing,
Poisonous,
Unlike anything
I’ve known

Fallen angel
Like a rose
But in darkness
You have grown

Dangerous, sweet,
Masked wanderer
Step slowly into
My dreams

By my side
Like a silhouette
But too far to touch,
It seems

Prince of night
Come nearer still
Hold me in
Your gaze

Let me look
In your deep eyes
Let me learn
Your ways

Hypnotise me,
Steal my mind
As you have done to
My heart

Fold your wings
Around me
Make sure we
Never part

The End of the Tunnel

By 11pm that night she was sobbing uncontrollably. She had carelessly dropped her heart, and it had shattered into a million pieces. In her misery and desPeration, she pushed away the only person who could have heLped her put it back together. He was the only one who knew exactly how the piEces fit into each other, maybe because often times he knew her even better than she knew herself. But nonetheless, she tried to shove him away like he didn’t matter. Maybe it was pArtially his fault after all, but who’s to judge that? She didn’t know exactly how hard She’d pushed him back, but she knew she could expect him to walk away without a backward glance. So, she clutched the pieces of her heart in her hand and turned away, running into a tunnel of darkness, where she sat and drowned herselF in her own bitter tears, not knOwing what to do or how to do it. When her sobs subsided, she staRed down at the broken, lonely shards in her hands. Sighing, she slowly turned her head to look back at the entrance of the tunnel she sprinted throuGh. It was bright, almost too bright to see anything, but she could tell. He wasn’t there. ‘Understandable,’ she thought, ‘he had a rIght to leave. After everything that’s happened, he had eVery right.’ Even with these seemingly confident thoughts in her mind, she felt new tears well up in her eyes. And just when it almost became too blurry to see, a shadow appeared in the entryway of the tunnEl. It was a shadow she had come to know very well. The shadow silently stepped to the centre of the light and stopped, as if waiting for something. Disbelief paralyzed her entire body. The shadow spoke, quietly, but just enough for the walls of the tunnel to carry his words to her ears. “I am here. Don’t you ever forget that.” Awestruck, she rose slowly to her feet. His shadow shifted, and he opened his arMs towards her. She didn’t know what to say. Feelings of love and pain flooded her mind, colliding into each other in yet another heated battlE. They both had left scars there before, but which one would prevail this time? She looked back at entrance. He was still there, arms outstretched, waiting patiently. Taking in a deep breath, she raised her head and took step towards him. 

Sestina- Frosted Glass

A floating figure cloaked in translucent brilliance
Glides over the land, crowned in glimmering silver.
She dances a graceful duet with her own shadow,
Then she descends over the land in practiced silence,
Her every step quieter than the whisper
Of a pin as it hits a floor made of glass.

She reaches out her fingers to a stained glass
Window, admiring its polished brilliance.
But to the glass she offers the slightest whisper,
Which clouds it, transforming it to icy silver.
She stares at the mirror in awe, barely noticing that silence
Had fallen with the night, leaving her in cold shadows

Realizing, she touches her crown, then turns to the shadow,
“Is this what I am crowned for?” She asks the looking glass.
But only her reflection in the ice stares back, silently.
Suddenly, her mind, once free and filled with brilliant
Thoughts, feels trapped underneath her wreath of silver,
Longing to once again chase the wind’s whisper.

She flees her thoughts, flying past branches whispering
Desperate warnings as she plunges into the shadowy
Night. She doesn’t know she leaves behind a silver
Streak of frost and coats bare branches with glass.
She doesn’t know, until she turns around to a brilliant
Snow globe scene, her doing, standing in frozen silence.

It dawns on her that her coronation is not a gift, but a silent
Curse, to steal the breath of even the most cautious whisperer
And from everything else around her, to turn nature into a brilliant
Picture, but only coloured in with white and shadows.
Beautiful as it is, it may as well be carved of glass,
Captured and drained of life, with only a dusting of silver.

As her cursed fingertips turn the entire world silver,
She can find no words to speak, despite her silencing
Everything around her. The rose-coloured glasses
She once wore have disappeared without a whisper,
Leaving her alone in a land darkened by her own shadows.
To think she could have been something brilliant.

With a sigh, her glassy eyes turn towards the land of silver;
Sparkling, brilliant, crystalline, icy, cold, motionless, silent.
“Winter has come”, she whispers, then vanishes into the shadows.

Sestina- Are We Memories Yet?


On the far side of the camera lenses, a furl of leaves
Catch the wind and tumble to the ground, like coins of gold
Catching their last glimpses of light as they are tossed into a treasure
Chest and sealed away to dusty attics filled with memories
And the quietest whispers of gossip and sworn-by secrets
Locked away in diaries, guarded by old wooden window frames

Under the cracked glass of delicate picture frames
Lies a collage of smiling faces still living beautiful memories
Of years past. If they were scattered outside into the golden
Sunlight, they would happily dance with the ensemble of leaves;
They would give away every single one of their secrets
To the wind, and share the joy that is their only treasure.

But they are immobile, sitting patiently on top of the old treasure
Chest. The last streaks of sunset glow through the withering window frames
Falling on a ring of intricately designed keys, their majestic silver and gold
Bodies no longer sparkling, dulled by a sprinkling of dust left
Behind by years and years of chaperoning secrets
Carefully bound with locks whose locations are now faded memories

A small ballerina in a corner of the room, as if remembering
The season, pushes away the antique hand-painted frame
Of her chamber and begins to spin. She was once a treasured
Heirloom, but that was long ago, and the only audience she has left
Now is a room full of objects of the past, nothing but lonely secrets.
Nonetheless, she dances, softly sighing deep in her heart of gold.

The sun’s rays flicker outside, and for a single golden
Moment, like feeling of anticipation before hearing a secret,
The room lights up, glowing like a coin in a treasure
Chest. But then it fades, the glimpse of hope so quickly turns to a memory,
Tucked away in the depths of the attic. And the cracked picture frame
Meets the settling dust, they way the ground meets falling leaves.

Once secrets have been whispered, their precious golden
Contents no longer contained, they become memories that are left
Behind to be treasured, (or not,) but seen only through lenses and frames.