Thursday, 30 April 2009
The Light of the New Day...
Thursday, 26 February 2009
The Spider Plant...
On the other side of the bay, a thirty-two year old man sits cross-legged in the natural darkness of an early Autumn Friday night, slowly lifting a glass of red wine to his lips. The smoke from his cigarette is drawn lazily through the open window by a warm and gentle breeze. Quiet music plays. Beat-driven but measured, gentle and thoughtful. A girl gets up from her place at the dining table and walks into the kitchen to refill her glass. The bottle rests beside him.
Two white, oval plates rest on the dining table. Three garden peas lay in a residual quantity of jus on his, and on hers a tender strip of fat from a rib-eye. Two candles flicker and their dancing flames are reflected in the glass tabletop, under which a teenage cat purrs as it sleeps.
Laughter from the neighbours and their guests drift into the room, lightly mixed with the scent of woodsmoke and flame-grilled meat. And as this sound, this smell, the taste of the wine on his lips, the flickering candles in the half light, the warmth of the room and the night air become his world in all the fullness of his experience, he rests the wine glass on his thigh, closes his eyes, smiles, and gently rests his head against the wall behind him.
The girl emerges from the kitchen, holding an unopened wine bottle. She approaches him in her own time, her eyes carefully scanning the room. Opening his eyes once more, he rolls his head to face her and watches as she moves toward him and finally comes to rest an inch from his knee. He takes the bottle of wine from her hand, rests it on the windowsill, and replaces it with is own hand, slipping his fingers through hers. He takes the open bottle from beside him and she accepts it with her left.
The spider plant sits with them, slowly sucking moisture from its little pot of earth, softly exhaling oxygen and quietly making sugar.
Monday, 23 February 2009
Giving...
The sign above the cafe behind them reads "Pastais de Belem".
They are both in their late twenties, he stands at a proud six foot and two inches tall, well set, sensibly muscular with iconically Italian-American features and a deep brown and passionate gaze. She is slender, unreasonably attractive, Dutch with impecable English. They are the perfect couple, madly in love and the whole world madly in love with them. Beneath their perfect skin, of course, they are made of messy and falable biological material: blood and bone and sweat and shit. Hungry minds feed their greedy bellies.
As they walk past the entrance to the Pastais de Balem, an elderly woman leaves, stopping in the doorway for a second as she fastens the clasp of her purse. The opening door draws an aromatic flood of pastel de nata onto the street. Her feet stop walking and he is suprised, caught off guard, his body forced around by momentum, the falcrum of their linked arms and certain amount of curiosity. He faces her. His attention quickly pulls her into focus, but she does not meet him. Her gaze is fixed on a place and a time that no longer exist. She breaths deeply.
Another man, beautiful in his own way, once brought her to this place. He was much more in love with her than she ever was with him, but his love and his radiance led her to deny this for a long time. The same things led him to ignore it. Back when she was a small bundle of nervous smiles and unpublished photographs, barely out of her teens, he had called in favours and established new ones, pulled hours out of nowhere to bring her success into his own. His belief in her, and his hard work, had created this world that she now lived in. This confident smile, this dream of a life, this perfect honeymoon.
And when his drunken one-night-stand with a collegue at a christmas party had finally given her the excuse to finally feel what she had always felt, she had cried herself to sleep on his chest for twenty-seven nights before packing her bags. He had remained more or less motionless, emotionless for the whole period, stroking her hair and staring at the ceiling.
The Dutch girl's neck does all of the work as it lifts her eyes to meet the intrigue of the Italian-American man. She tells him that she loves him, and as she leads them into walking on, she momentarilly glances at the pastel de nata in the window, before fixing her eyes firmly on the horizon that faces them now.
Sunday, 22 February 2009
Memory...
She catches his reflection in the mirror and she pushes a hard stare into his eyes for a fraction of a second before dropping her jeans on the floor and pulling her t-shirt over her head. She picks up the jeans and pulls them on, turning around to face him as she purposefully and mercilessly buttons the fly. She pushes the end of her belt through the buckle and pulls it tight. The muscles in her left forearm are taught as she pushes the prong into one of the fastening holes, and finally she pushes the loose end through the belt loop of her jeans, like she's securing the end of a good hitch. She fixes his gaze with shark-like eyes. That moment that he had tried to keep forever will leave here with her. It will walk out of the room and leave nothing but the empty haze of a memory. It will not keep him warm, it will not make him laugh and it will not want him or need him or love him or fuck him. And this is the last thing she will ever take from him.
Tuesday, 10 February 2009
Why am I here?
Friday, 7 November 2008
The Commet...
His face is sick and luminescent. Its contours traced by contrast. Black and white and motionless. Expressionless. Dead already. His eyes reflect the depth of space and the vast coldness of reality. The insentience of God. Only in some insignificant corner of his soul is it possible to glimpse the passion of a human Christ who lived and loved and cried and fucked. Some tiny flame in his eyes burns like our sun in a cold and infinite eternity. Our sun, which gave us life and in which he once glimpsed the perfect beauty of that life, bathing in its accidental warmth. So far and yet so near.
In the vastness of space, the commet slowly hurtles toward the earth. In the vastness of his soul, his fire slowly consumes everything. Maria, Mum, Dad, David, Hae Bin... They are everthing. They are bigger than everything. Life is bigger than the universe. Life is bigger than reality.
His eyes flicker.
A cutaway to the commet.
He is alone in the darkness.
Thursday, 31 July 2008
Mirror shades...
Friday, 18 July 2008
His mind and his blood burn hot...
It's Friday night. Around the corner there's a bar that is famed for it's atmosphere. Lively, friendly, fun. A good glass of whatever it is that you like. City traders, weekend ravers, office workers, construction workers - everyone drinks there, but social boundaries are only broken when sex is involved. A man breaks away from his friends to buy a £150 bottle of champagne for a woman who has been drinking Bacardi Breezers. She is impressed with his money and his dynamism, he is impressed at her looks and her openness. He will take her home, and then they will never speak again.
On La Ramblas, a mixed group of EasyJet revellers grate the peace of evening with innane chanting and obnoxious shouting. A young Spanish couple walks past them. The boy feels nervous, the girl feels disgust. Chanting and shouting, they trample Barcelona.
Four middle-class Guardian reading couples sit eating lobster in an expansive suburban home. Greg opens a 1990 Château Latour, the conversation turns from knife-crime to Dutch care-homes. Everyone has somthing to say. Some of them learn something, others refuse to be wrong. Greg comes on to Alun's wife in the kitchen. She refuses him and in the morning he laughs about it, privately. It was a good evening.
A twelve year old boy smokes a cigarette and waits outside an off-licence for some eighteen year old passer-by to come out carrying eight cans of Stella Artois.
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
Saturday afternoons are made out of pasta...
Thursday, 3 July 2008
Burning through the ocean of forever...
Deep, deep blue. The unfathomable ocean of a complex and troubled genius. A colour torn through and a fire bursting out to consume eternity with its brilliance. Fire-red consuming everything. Objects move as crackling embers; white-hot architecture aglow, bathed in flame.
The horizon is on fire. The sky is a revelation.
He leans back against the station wall, smoking and staring into the divine. Flash-point. God engulfs his very being, evaporating every tedious problem, laying waste to every minutae of pity and sorrow. There is only now; and now the inferno of life burns in his soul.
There are moments in life that lift the burden of truth. Human truth, so fanciful and full of itself. Human truth, so vainly narrating God's infinite complexity. Defiling experience with its story. Defiling life with its language. He feels as lost as a poet.
Clarity is found in the absence of clarity. The deep blue ocean of life is alight with the fire of existance.
And existance is his only certainty.
Sunday, 6 January 2008
The Dancer
He is a dancer and he dances to his own tune. He moves rhythmically, sometimes mournful and often aggressive, in expression of the beatings of his heart and the colours of his mood. And as he twirls and leaps, his limbs move the air and rouse great storms. His footsteps cause great earthquakes and his sweat falls as torrential downpour. And all this weather bears down and demolishes the landscape of a world that exists only in the heart of a young woman who doesn't know what to do.
Tuesday, 20 March 2007
Smoke, Dissipating...
Melancholy is a sadness that slowly embraces the beautiful indifference of the universe; that moves in dense swirls from its point of origin, then slowly rises and hangs in the air before dissipating into nothingness.
He cannot afford a wedding. He cannot afford a bride. He cannot afford to buy the dress that will breathe life into the dreams of a young girl before they dissipate into the disappointment of adulthood. He cannot afford to mend his broken shoes.
His fiance lays next to him, naked, surrendered, her head resting on his shoulder, lost in some dream...
Small Descriptions...
He wants to pour words on a page, he wants to bring the reader to his fire; the tree-stump seats, warmth and light peeking shallow into the darkness. Words on a page, hanging in the air.
He has a lot to learn. An amateur witch, he doesn't know his craft. He decides to begin by making small descriptions...