Showing posts with label Writing Prompt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Prompt. Show all posts

The Tree That Bloomed For Itself


Long, long ago there was a tree in the humble, barren adobe of an Indian. The tree had pale green leaves and a broad trunk, but no name. Initially, no one knew what to name it, as it was the first of its kind on the face of Mother Earth. The villagers saw it grow from a thin, short plant to a tall, strong tree. They crushed its bark and found them of no use. They smelt its leaves and found it no good for food. And so they decided it was not worth naming; except for one little boy who watered and patted her now and then.

The poor tree was conscious of all the humans’ deeds as she looked at the passersby with her kind eyes. But no one looked or observed her; rather they took her as a nothing. The tree felt very lonely, for she has no friends. She decided, “I will make them love me.”

The tree thought day and night for the next few days and one day came up with an idea. She turned all of her leaves to dark green, thinking that it will attract the attention of the locals. With hopeful eyes she waited the entire night. The moon shone over her lustrous leaves and she felt her beauty even in her veins. The next morning, everyone gathered around the tree, but only to look at her awfully. They commented that her end is near and disregarded her completely. Out of disappointment, the tree slowly shed tears along with her leaves. The grief was so intense that it turned the deep green leaves to pale lifeless yellow and sucked life out of them. And so, they shed one by one, disowning the tree itself. In that pile of withered leaves, the little boy and his friends jumped and played all day. The tree was happy; if not elders, at least the children loved her.

The little boy loved her more and more by the day. He talked to the tree and told her all sorts of stories that happen around the village. The tree and the boy soon became very good friends. But the tree still felt a dearth of acceptance among the villagers; she always wanted a family.

One day the tree explained her heartache to her friend. The boy after a lot of thought, brought up a new plan. He explained to the tree, how Prem, a villager liked his wife, Radhe’s new sari. He praised that its blue color highlighted against her fair skin. Taking a cue, the tree was as usual ready to experiment. After a few days, the tree started blooming with lovely velvet flowers. The little boy gathered everyone and showed them how beautiful they looked. She felt like a queen adorned with flowers on the top like a crown. Just as everyone turned to look at her flowers, a strong wind blew and all of them landed on the ground. The villagers sneered at her weakness and dismissed her altogether. The boy felt sorry for her.

Days and months passed, but the tree did not stop her pursuit. As her leaves grew thick and her branches big, she turned into a home for many birds and resting halt for humans. But the humans instead of thanking the tree for the shade, blamed her for the bird droppings. She soothed herself saying that at least the birds loved her.

One day she learnt from the little boy that food is a way to man’s heart. One fine day gave a produce of nice tasty berries. The tree felt, at last, she might be of some use to them. One by one the villagers ate all of them and said those berries couldn’t satiate their hunger. The tree was not disheartened. Instead of saving up her resources, she readily bore big, pulpy fruits for them. But unfortunately, one afternoon, while an old man jerked the tree to get a fruit, it accidently ended up on his head, injuring him. The tree took the blame for no mistake of hers. With this, she only believed her intentions of winning the love of the villagers is never going to happen.

Having lost all her hope, the tree even stopped trying. Then one day, just like all other days, she was observing the scene before her. Radhe was quarrelling with her mother-in-law over a trivial issue, they shouted at each other for a long time. And at the end of the day, it was clear that the chaos in the afternoon didn’t alter the love between Radhe and Prem. Prem empathized with her and soothed her mood. The tree thought of this for all day. And finally decided that no matter how perfect we are, others tend to dig out our flaws and how many ever such flaws they point out, we are still lovable to the others.

And having found herself perfect in every way, the tree started embracing the truth that once you stop worrying what the world will think of you, your life will become that much easier to live. Decidedly, she bared all her leaves for a few months, blossomed for another few months, carried juicy fruits later and changed the colors of her leaves now and then. And that’s how the seasons arrived and changed as per the tree’s wish.

In an early morning, as if it couldn’t get any better, the old tree saw small shoots all around it. 

The Book I Wrote


I write and write,
In a book that's not right.

The cover boasts and brags,
The content breaks and bores.

I sit and write of a far off kite,
That flies and flutters with all its might.

It climbs up and goes down.
It takes leaps and it takes turns.

In a cloud it forms storeys and storms,
With a flair it chisels the air.

Till it reaches the end of its merry fair,
Until it reaches the top of the sky.

"But why," cried the kite, 
"Should sky be the limit?"

I said, "As went ageless fables."
And thought, now is the time to change the tables.

Who can tell the kite,
After the flight, comes the halt,
After the rise, comes the fall.

Instead, I scribbled on my heart, 
"After the fall comes the rise"

As I wrote and wrote, 
In a book that's right.

Labyrinth of Life

She sat in the Starbucks cafe, sipping her coffee and staring out of the window. The blood stained knife lay next to her handbag, covered with her blue silk scarf - went the first line of his manuscript. Akash is a passionate writer who turned into an enthusiast after many positive feedbacks and a stubborn after being called just-another-chocolate-boy-writer. To prove them wrong and to portray himself as a matured writer, he dipped his pen this time not in chocolate, but in blood.
Akash grew up with a ‘sarcastic spoon’ in his mouth. In a silent classroom, between the power lectures and power naps, his one-liners were a break. While growing up, all he would do easily and untiringly alongside playing was being naughty, verbally. While kids of his age played pranks, he quoted adages. He was a normal geek, not a geeky geek. Too geeky to be normal and too funny to be a geek. Once at a colony meet, he mouthed this, “Jab se tum ne ami tomay bhalobashi, jab se mere aata majhi satakli”, which eventually everyone thought of as his father's dialogue. The hall filled with riots of laughter and he slipped out to learn the next new thing and use.

Colors always fascinated him. According to him, anything red is blood, white is vanilla ice cream and yellow is poop. The more he thought, the more he liked them - their consistency, color and presence in his everyday life. No poem, assignment or drawing would go without at least one of them. The vexed up teachers framed topics such that they won’t need, even in the slightest way the mention of his obsessive subjects. But, he brought out yellow clouds in an essay about Manhattan Buildings and how they touched, broke and rained on everyone. And, inviting vanilla into any assignment was not a big deal, after all vanilla ice cream was the staple dessert of his family. And, red blood had flown out even when a construction mishap occurred and the workers were all out on a strike. He proved in his own way, there’s no frame in a movie, no scene on earth and no page in a book without them. They were O-M-N-I-P-R-E-S-E-N-T.
It was now the time for the O-M-N-I-P-R-E-S-E-N-T to come to the present, after fifteen years. Blood, he thought aloud, would be a treat for his blood-thirsty critics-cum-friends. The years after fascinations were filled with fantasies. Teenage love, romance, flowers have replaced blood, vanilla ice cream and poop. Well, that changeover was not difficult and now, this shouldn’t be too, he underestimated. When he sat down for his image-changing story his pen hardly moved. Ideas were unlimited, but somehow proposals and breakups were inevitable in his lines now.
During his school days, when all other kids would butter up their teachers before exams, Akash would simply call them ass-kissers, in a way too advanced lingo for their age. In his journal he wrote that his exams sucked. And now for his stagnant story-writing skills he wrote, my story sucks. Then he did what he used to in the exam halls. Write the incidents happening in his and others’ lives as an answer to the questions.
So, Akash took a clichéd incident from his life and added the color which is the need of the hour, red.
She sat in the Starbucks cafe, sipping her coffee and staring out of the window. The blood stained knife lay next to her handbag, covered with her blue silk scarf...
While he was waiting for his friends at the Starbucks, he saw a pretty girl sipping coffee. He observed her, not with the intent of a writer but with the eyes of admirer. She was not tensed or sad and neither did she have a knife smeared with blood. She was simply tired and her eyes revealed a little more than just the lack of energy.
She held her coffee by both her hands, as if a moment lost with that cup would never return. The frills of her black-sequinned skirt agreed with her intentions of maintaining low-profile in the coffee shop. They didn't turn and twirl when she shifted sides on the chair. Her bangles didn't crackle, her kajal hid her feelings and her cheeks blank as if they ran out of expressions. Her airy, vibrant top was somehow a spoilsport.
A book lay beside her and a blue scarf was thrown carelessly on it. “LOOKING FOR ALASKA” read its spine in a congested, lanky font. The novel was his only calling card, thought Akash, the admirer.
The curtain panes in the café, flickered at the harsh breeze hitting from the open window. They were loosely hung, capable enough to hit and run like a live wire. Right near the window she was sitting facing the breeze. The panes fluttered again, this time carrying the force of the wind along with them. They reached just till the tip of her nose, but couldn't touch her. She neither moved back nor showed any disturbance in her behaviour.
“Hi! So, John Green it is!” he said approaching her table in an obvious tone.
Staring blankly at him she said, “No.”
“Okaay. I bet its, Pudge?” Seeing no expression he read out the list, “Chip?.. Lara? I guess not.” She smiled at this. At least, she has read it, he confirmed. “Alaska”, her smile answered.
She didn't seem like Alaska, neither unstable nor dramatic or not even a surprise mix of both. The bookmark was almost towards the end of the book. She hasn't finished the book.
Her head is always held high not as a necessity but as a sign of her attitude. She simply smiled, not to the panes but to herself. It is the story of her life, an eligible bachelorette and guys just like the window panes, always sought her attention. But she has always been the chooser. No one from that list has ever been conferred the fortune of being recognized the second time they meet. She was an absolute scanner, a perfectionist and a lie-detector.
“Oh! Interesting”, said Akash, actually worried. Thank god, she didn't finish the book, he thought. She would change her opinion soon. “I am Akash. I didn't see you before. Are you new around here?”  
She seemed to enjoy the café, the position of her table and the din of the people around. For her meeting, that corner and that noise were very important. It is not going to be a smooth one.
“Hi, I am Rima. I am not a regular, just waiting for a friend,” she said casually. Something about her was very relaxing, soothing and definitely friendly. She was the kind who can be approached to seek solace and love, but not to offer. She removed her bangles as if she’s getting ready for a duel and put them in her satchel. While reaching for the cake on the platter, she hit the book by mistake and it fell to the ground.
With storm like hands she pulled her scarf to tie her hair, forgetting about the knife. The curls wrangled with the scarf for freedom. The knife bundled in it, sprang to the floor and made thudding sound which took a few moments to die down. Her heart sank and so did her plan. Her fast hands spilled the hot coffee on floor covering the knife and the blood stains. She graciously apologized to the disturbed neighbours and before the cleaner cleaned it, she exchanged the knife with the cake server on her table.   
The writer in Akash suddenly remembered the deadline and started a conversation with her. “I often come here to read or write, you know it’s usually not this noisy.” Without Rima, there is no story.
Though she covered up the scene in the coffee shop, what would she say to Sawant, who had been waiting for this since his childhood? Her brow started to sweat profusely; he will be here any moment. It was a memento for his revenge and love. Why she among all, turned out to be the spoiler? It was her moment; it was supposed to be their moment. But she ruined it.    
Rima shared her experiences about Chandigarh, her hometown and how it was different from this city. And Akash listened intently to her, framing stories mentally between their dialogues.
Rima was waiting for Sawant, the leader of the students who have been suppressed, deprived of their rights and reservations. The members did all they can to get what that is rightfully theirs. But things only worsened. Her blood boiled with all these bitter memories. This time they fought the government itself, they staged a dharna or strike in the capital city for the government to listen to their pleas. Sawant’s brother Harshavardhan led this movement. Meanwhile, Sawant organized speeches and rallies to build up their strength with the support of neighboring universities too. In the chaos during the movement, Harshavardhan was killed. Before he breathed his last, he handed the ancestral dagger out of his pocket, crossed his right palm with it - a symbol of victory for him and a token of victory for his folks and gave it to Rima. They got the justice they were longing for, that day after the thousands accompanying him lost their cool after his death. Like all other rebel groups, the token of victory was as much valued as the victory itself. Rima was now ashamed of her carelessness. This was not just a moment of celebration, but of her love. She was planning to propose for their marriage while handing him his trophy. As Sawant approached her, she rose with a serious look.
As they were talking, a group of youngsters entered the café. Rima without any gesture simply walked past the talking Akash. There he was Pratap, in his shiny shades and flirty bangs. And there she was, nothing like what she was a minute before. She grabbed her satchel and went towards them. May be its her friends, he thought and the story lines were still forming in his mind, taking turns and twists.
Out she brought the dagger spilled with coffee and stabbed herself heart in one forceful stroke.
She took out a bottle from her bag and walked straight to Pratap. She pinned him to his seat with one hand and her leg was on his thighs, stopping him from rising. He was tall and hefty and she was unforgiving and revengeful. Akash was in complete chaos, there was a blur between reality and his fictional story.
Sawant ran to hold her and fixed his eyes on her. As if they asked for explanation, Rima said, “I couldn’t bring to you the smell of victory. Sorry, please forgive me.” Before he said anything, she continued, “We won. And my blood on this dagger is the proof. But before you say anything, I would like you to know that I love you. My sole question in life was ‘How will I ever get out of this labyrinth!’ I guess ‘straight and fast’ is the quick and peaceful way.” While the onlookers were shocked, Sawant was shattered. For a man’s word, this woman, the woman he loved left her life...
Pratap’s friends were too shocked to move, she was the only one who knows the plan. She was the director of the scene. With her storm like hands she emptied the liquid in the bottle on his face and body. It was acid. She never bid a goodbye to Akash. His story remained incomplete. The story in the making was devastated. He picked up book that fell down and left.
Days passed after the incident, he still thinks of reasons that made her do that. This story can have any ending, after all it is for him finish it. But having decided to do justice to it, he researched online, browsed newspapers and finally found Rima. She said that what she had done was justice. He opened the bookmarked page from the novel and found ‘straight and fast’ underlined.
That evening, Akash started his story. Love is not a bed of roses or a path of thorns. It is a journey of souls. Akash knew how his story is going to end.

The Colorful Tale of Ilaa

Close to the city of Paithan, in a small village called Sauviragram, which lay along the banks of the great river, Godavari lived a woman named Ilaa. Being cotton farmers, her family was well to do, but not among the richest in their area. It was the harvest season, and cotton had to be picked from the plants. The wholesalers and traders from Paithan would be arriving in just a few weeks, carrying gold and goods for barter. They would exchange what they carried for the cotton that farmers grew. The bales of cotton had to be ready in time! Work was at its peak!

But Ilaa was not to be found in the fields. She wasn’t working. Instead, she was sitting by the banks of the great river Godavari.

‘I am sick of this!’ she grunted loudly. The river, as if it heard Ilaa, nodded silently in unison. Her thoughts didn’t create ripples, but nurtured fierce waves, thought Aastha, her friend, turning her face to hide the emotions. Aastha was Ilaa’s neighbor, all-time acquaintance and a forever tag-along. But Ilaa never minded it.

They were similar yet different. Similar in age, but different in dreams. Similar in looks, different at heart. Similar in living life, but different in enjoying it. Similar in strength, different in power.
The tiny balls attached to her anklets took the wrath of her frustration. They flattened sideways with her tapping on the rock she is sitting.

She suddenly stopped, remembering that it was the gift from her friend, her late husband to be precise. And along came bitter truth that neither she nor her anklets were supposed to be there. Widowhood was as bad as a witch. The sound of her breath and the rhythm of her moving legs both entwined both alive, not by fate but by fight. A fair fight against the norms of society. Against all odds, her Father, Madhava strived to save his daughter and he did protect her, her mother in just another form. That was day when she was walked by womenfolk to her husband’s pyre, when she hardly knew who a husband was.  

Many hands were trying to choke life out of Madhava’s throat by clasping his jutting out nerves. Ramaji, to whom Madhava lent his cow for a few days to make living with her milk, was thrusting his strong muscles around his head. Naroba, who received generous discount for his yearly cotton needs from Madhava was now, pinning his arms to his back. So did, Neelesh, Girmaji, Sadashiv, Kailash, Pandurang, Narayan and others in Sauviragram.  

Out came the appeals, requests, cries, pleas, begging, hustling, struggling, fighting and finally rebellion. It didn’t come in the form of a blow or a punch but even more powerful weapon i.e. ‘word’.  Ilaa shushed the women around her and the monsters around her Father with a loud ‘Oyii’. With a jerk, she came back to reality which stung her bitter. With a sigh of frustration she again said, ‘Why is this world so unfair?’ It was like this same expression was imprinted on her face ever since the town crier announced the value of a single bale of cotton.  The worth of each bale was completely dependent on the seller. A Hindu would get a couple of sheep, while a Muslim would exchange three for one bale. The elderly farmers were taken for granted; all they would get was a bag of staples sufficient for a month. Young Pathans were the only ones who can set their own price. They would demand two gold coins per bale, but would settle for two coins – one gold and one silver. But ironically, the buyers accepted the deals of costliest vendors, for it’s a matter of respect and prestige. He who bought stuff for lower cost was laughed at.

Aastha, judging her frustration, meekly said, ‘It’s always been like this, you and I can’t change the world for what it is.’ Suddenly cursing her for a passive reply, she excused herself to get back to the task she was doing, washing clothes. To escape her mother-in-law’s pestering questions, she brought a pile of soiled clothing to wash. Young girls in the village meeting Ilaa was not encouraged or tolerated by anyone. Ilaa and her Father, they both were known to spoil the minds. Unfortunately, they were not banished, but punished.

Now, after five years, things were still the same. Ilaa went back to her mumbling. It included cuss words, solutions, plans and more plans. While Aastha laughed and chuckled for a few, she dismissed most of them and remained silent for some. Such was Ilaa, a rare mix of fun and strong, lovable and strict, understanding and hell-bent. Rare is often not the correct the word to use, if there existed something that’s just one of its kind.

The plans went on like this. First idea was to disguise like a man, second was to send her produce along with her Father’s, third was to sneak into neighbor’s tents and shout out the bargains their customers want, fourth was to sell it all to a local farmer, but who would buy it from a woman? The last was a prayer for rains.

A group of kids were cautiously and silently passing the river to reach the other side, the side she, Aastha and Rajan, her friend/husband had discovered – ‘The Magical Mystery’. She hasn’t been there since Rajan died. She waved the kids to come and they happily hopped their way towards her on the small stones on the shore. Ilaa was fondest kid among everyone in the village until the day she raised her voice against the kangaroo court and threw her purdah off her face to make her voice loud and clear. In the times, when no woman was seen outside her house or the fields uttering a word to a stranger, there she was shouting her lungs out, saying the things the elders didn’t know, heard or have the capacity to understand.

The kids chatted with her for a while and left for their picnic to the ‘The Magical Mystery’. She drooled and drowned in her thoughts, but couldn’t find one single solution. This was her second year as an independent farmer. She had learnt the techniques to nurture Mother Earth from her Father, but couldn’t flush out the rotting conservativeness that was seated hundreds of fathoms deep in everyone’s minds.  She was not like Chimabai, who saw her own daughter burn down to flames when her son-in-law, who lost his life in a gambling game, was cremated. She shrieked and cried, but never opposed. Ilaa was not the kind who thought that people can only understand the pain when they have endeavored one. She instead, gathered a bunch of forlorn women and motivated them to join in her engagement. Thus, Ilaa and her entourage aging between 15-25 years have emerged as a sole women only peasant group. Last year has been a disaster with scores of bales lying down unclaimed, unbought and thereby deemed unworthy. They have to later distribute it for free among the villagers, which most of them threw out even before the young women left the premises.

These memories made her even more sad and helpless. Fighting back her fears and tears, she decided to take a break. Without even saying a word to Aastha who was calmly observing her from a distance, Ilaa walked away. And, Aastha knew where she was going. Ilaa took to the thinnest part of the river and crossed it on her foot, she took a sharp right turn immediately when she could feel the Godavari water till her calves. There after ten minute walk, hop, bend and duck, she reached her dream valley. She and her friends named it ‘The Magical Mystery’, because no one knows of its existence, except the kids in the village. It was a small pond, surrounded by flowers of all colors and sizes. They smelled like heaven and it felt like home.  The entire area was about a few hundreds of meters, but it felt endless because of its greenery and hundreds of flowers. Being there itself gave her a new energy and relief as if the solution is there right in front of her. And yes, there was the solution. And yes, Ilaa found it.

She gathered her team, working in the fields and explained them why the cotton buds they collected have to left open in the air in the room rented in the corner of the field. This being the last day of collection, she asked them to come a little late tomorrow. As one after the other they came in, they realized what the hero of their lives is upto. A week later, when the market was open, Ilaa was there at a tent in the center of the market place. She was not in disguise, not there to overhear the customers or to accept defeat. This was her year and every coming year too. She opened the gunny bugs carrying her cotton and put them on display in the front. Every head there in the market turned to see, what appeared like a garden – full of flowers of all colors rolled into buns of various sizes. Ilaa created colored cotton, using the natural colors from the flowers of ‘The Magical Mystery’. She collected the flowers of different colors, dried and powdered few and grinded few more separately. The cotton was left to dry out completely and later the cotton was powdered, sprinkled and soaked in colors and dried using the one whole week for their advantage. Sensing the surprise package at the market, all the traders swept their feet towards Ilaa’s tent. Gender didn’t interrupt them, but uniqueness definitely attracted them. Thus, Ilaa like promised on the day of her husband’s death, ‘Woman is the Power you Worship, the Teacher you Pray, a Mother you Bow to. For once, practice what you preach. Because I do. As a human, I want to live and as a Woman, I want to live as much as a man wants to. I promise, this is not just my day but a day of every woman.’

When the rest of the country was still following the phrase ‘a loyal woman follows her man to the grave’, Sauviragram has welcomed a future. A future of ‘Us’, not just ‘We’. 

Mystery Cookie!


A bright Monday morning came along with its blues. Sticking an optimistic smile to my face, I got up from bed. Strolling through the rooms, I was doing things which were on my yesterday’s to-do list. As my gaze turned from the wall clock to the tasks at hand, I realized its time to quit the chores and try to reach my first goal of the day -  catch my daily bus. From strolling to running, I managed to step of house on time. Well, a good start!

Expecting the flavour of my daily surprise, I stepped towards my cabin. The smile that has kept me going for the past few months has suddenly left my face. From 2 months 19 days, to be exact, I have been surprised by a mysterious cookie packed beautifully with colored ribbons every morning at my office desk. It first came on the day I came rushed to attend a meeting and returned only late afternoon. I saw it almost in the evening and never thought it was for me, just like the compliments that came from my colleagues went to my neighbors but never to me. It was there on the next day when tears were almost out of my eyes after an argument with the boss, but stopped after a non-girly ribbony package peeked at me. It was my favorite oatmeal cookie. And then it was there on the day where I was feeling low and made me drive to a pampering spa. Yes, that made me feel good and this time, it was the blueberry flavour.

The cookies went on coming day after day and I went on guessing who was my secret admirer. Is that him, my first love? What crap! was my sane answer to that question. Or was it the second love my life? I dont think so. Or was it third? Oh wait, what was his name again. Why should the person be a guy, it can be my female colleague who was grateful for the gossip that kept flowing to her from me. May be, it is my mom, trying to set up a scene as if they were from a guy interested in my online matrimonial profile.
And now they have stopped. I felt  just like Holly after the letters from Jerry stopped. My guessing game has continued and this time the question was different, obviously. Late that evening, I received an anonymous letter with a package a little bigger than usual. After reading it, I realized it was not anonymous after all. It read like this:

“Monakka,

You were there for me on the days I had no one to play. You did all you can and gave me a cookie every day saying ‘Let those bullies not worry you’. You were with me during exams, on those hard days and low phases. On those cool summer mornings and rainy evenings. You were with me on the days there were no friends, which was always. To you, I may be just a kid among your lovable kid gang, but to me you were everything. A part of me today is the love you gave me on those days. I guess it’s now the time to repay.” 

The gift was a wooden table-piece with words ‘You’re Always Awesome’ crafted to form its shape. I could see a new recruitee staring at me from the gaps of tinted glass doors of my cabin. Gesturing him into my room, I thought this was indeed the best repayment I ever got, with interest, I guess.

Unblocking the block - The Writing Prompt Boot Camp


Every writer faces several kinds of problems during his/her career. Sometimes the creativity goes missing, other times there is not a single topic to write about. I, being at the very initial stage of my writing career and without even reaching the shallowest depth of its nitigrities, am already facing hindrances. The technical term for this is "Writers Block". 


My goal like everyone else's goal, just doesn't crave for and stop at the destination. It is not just succeeding as a writer or writing a novel. It is about the journey; the journey which teaches me, strengthens me, enhances my skills, shows me the beauty of learning and ultimately makes my goal worth reaching. I would like to explore the various genres of writing and switch from one another as comfortably as possible. My muse in writings remains to lie in the descriptions whether surroundings, situations or characters. I give descriptions more significance than the story. A story runs slow and a description runs long. Descriptions intensify the story. They all by themselves create a subconscious space in your minds to support the story. 


Aiming at all these dreams, I have joined certain 'Writing Communities'. As a part of the Boot Camp, I am supposed to write random articles on the topics or 'prompts' assigned to me. These communities whisper to my e-mail the prompts, just like how a friend whispered me an answer while I stammered in front of the whole class and just like how my father prompted me the reasons made up on the spur of the moment when I am caught red-handed.

These prompts intend to awake the fictional ideas lazing in the background of my head. All the articles written with the help of these 'writing prompts' are assigned under the label "Writing Prompt". 

P.S: I am trying to keep the fiction as natural as possible, avoiding the melodrama. Sometimes you may find the story not happening in India or rather not written from an Indian perspective, kindly concentrate only the content because it helps improve mine as well as yours. 

The One that got away - Part 2



Surfacing myself from the dreamy nightmare, stabilizing my stilettos on the checkered floor, I called for a cab. We din't say our goodbyes, not this time or anytime before. At that moment I knew how exactly did Holly from PS, I love you felt. I was counselling myself, take a deep breath, expand your lips, give thoughts a break, close your ears and importantly, take help if necessary. I asked the cab driver to switch on the radio, 'The one that got away' by Katy Perry started playing. Here I am, back to square one. 

I closed my eyes. Scenes from my life were appearing like screenshots of memories flashing one after the other, our days together, long drives, no time for anyone else, always on cloud nine, few sacrifices, some differences, flood of gifts, here and there arguments, slamming of doors, short-lived reconciliations, again gifts, troubling possessiveness, many misunderstandings, ignoring of calls, busy days, giving time a chance to occupy the distance between us, signing a BFF agreement, promising to wish on special occasions, and today the accidental meeting.  

The span of 3 years expressed in a single sentence is a dry gist of: all kinds of emotions, my reactions to these emotions, its' effects on others, their patience in helping me, the strength needed to cope up with it, the gradually approaching positive energy and a better Me. Yet another para of illustration and it is still a dry gist. Any number of pages can only diminish the options to explain, but can never express it in life-like manner. It is like a shallow river; everyone would judge it as easily reachable, but only few can make it to the other end. Same way, only few who'd visited the island of unloved understood this.

We din't technically break up. This is what we felt about our separation, 'This parting will help us make this relationship better than what it was. We will smile at each other. We promised we are going to be in contact forever. We let the world free to judge and assume. It is an answer to the elders, a question to the youngsters, a slap on the apparent sacrosanct climaxes of Indian movies. Our relationship is not like a flower to bloom and wither. Its like a season, long and lasting, often changing and yet never ending. We din't dump each other neither did the fate decide this; we chose this next step of our lives. Fate's plan was to entwine us together, but we changed it. We proved the world that two best friends can be lovers and lovers can take a step back to being friends too.' 

With a jerk of the cab, I came back to reality. I reached my home, forgetting the party I was supposed to join. I did all the stuff that young women in movies do when they think of 'the one that got away'. After 3 hours of self-depraving, my eyes fell on the newspaper. As I opened it, a small soft toy fell into my lap. My eyes widened as a smile crossed my face I read the message addressed to me, "Time to replace old memories. You deserve much than what you have now. Happy Valentine's Day. Go, check your bus ticket". Grabbing my bag, I emptied it completely to find the crumpled ticket in a corner. It said, "Concentrate on your passion. That's the love of your life. Happy Valentine's Day. Diva, check your office mail". My eyes fell on the non-red packages spread on the table. I opened each one of them, the first two turned out business-related. The third package was bulky than others, I sprang to my feet when I saw my favorite novel tucked in velvet lying in it. The next one contained a 'Admission Card' to a course I was planning to take. Another, had a letter. It ended with, "We are waiting!!" 

I was out on the road within no time!!

The One that got away - Part 1


Like all other days I woke up to my alarm, but instead of thanking God I was cursing my boss for yesterday's new project. As I crawled out of my bed, I realized my day has started off with the thought of the wrong person. I brushed my teeth still wondering why my boss had made me the supervisor of that project.

It was perfect, I smiled, looking in the mirror at the room behind me! Oh, it's such a relief to see everything properly assorted as per their need and size, transforming the modest apartment into a spacious room. And then I suddenly found it; a toy bunny hanging on the wall behind me. It was gifted by my ex-boyfriend. Period. 

I hurriedly rushed out of the house for my office and threw the newspaper at the doorstep, inside. It took me more effort than usual to throw it in, least bothered I moved on. It was on the way to office that I realized it was Valentine's Day. The enthusiastic din on the roads and red hues everywhere gave me the hint. I took out my cell phone to wish my girlfriends. Oops, messages and calls have already poured in. Replying to them, I got into my bus. The familiar bus conductor chuckled and gave me a ticket, I tucked it into my wallet. 

At office, everyone seemed as usual, expect for a few happy faces. The mailman approached me wishing and handed a few letters addressed to me. None were in red. Indifferently, I moved to my desk. I was invited for a party at a friend's place. It is a party for the happy people both single and committed, who either felt destined to be a couple or blessed to be single. But for us friends, Valentine’s Day was just another reason to meet. Or maybe my friends wanted to shower some love on me; especially today when love is everywhere else except around me.

I was almost the last member to leave the office, as everyone had their plans for the V-Day. I started directly for the party since I was dressed presentably, both for the office and also for the party. I was glad that I finally put to use the make-up kit that was lay in my bag for eons. My friend’s place was only a few streets across my office, so I decided to take a walk. It was a bright evening.

When I was just a street away from my destination, I came across a familiar face. It was of my ex-boyfriend. Ex would be the last person a girl would want to bump into on Valentine’s Day. Everything around me came to a stop;  for a moment I didn't understand what was going on. He was the first to see me, to gain his conscience and to greet. I knew he felt exactly what I've felt. The only difference is that he recovered, well at least, before me. We exchanged pleasantries, not like exes with compassion or friends in love or colleagues with grudge. There was nothing like it to describe or compare, so was our relationship.  

We talked. Well, he talked and all I did was simply nodding, faking smile, carelessly shrugging my shoulders and yet grasping every word even in that dizzy situation. While he was talking, my eyes were wide open trying to catch every hint or speck of a hint he was wanting me to know. After few minutes he realized there was nothing more to talk, which I gathered the second we broke up. It was not the lack of topics, but an acknowledgement that any further talk can take us and the time, back to when we were together. I was searching frantically for a reason to confront my heart and move along, but I ended up smiling as there was no need for a reason; either to smile or to walk away. I should have popped off that very moment before the volley of negative inklings hit me. Answering my uneasiness, a gold-plated silver ring on his ring finger said a hello and the next second my eyes zoomed in on the bunch of red roses in his hand. 

Turning away, I called for a cab.

Breaking up with the writer's block!


Dear Writer's Block,

I think we need to talk. Its not you, its me. I have to move on, I am stuck just as you are, Block. I decided to talk to you face to face about this, but as a writer I can express better in writing and also it helps me shoo you away. There have been days in my life when you not even existed, those short happy productive days. But with you, the days are long enough to make me sleepy, the nights only caused a migraine, the thoughts were shallow and the confidence nil. With you, it is like an end to my uninitiated writing career.   

I may not write all day every day, but I do write. Earlier, I was confident that I could write about anything, crisp or elaborate, fiction or non-fiction, well or worse, sane or Bollywood movie scripts, promote or criticize. But now, the best I could do is write a long Facebook status. I hardly remember the last post on my blog. Yes, I do have a blog, which you are not aware of or may be you are. You are that clingy sticky stain exactly the opposite of the Surf-Excel stain. 

I would be never feel lonely even when I am single, because my thoughts are always with me, because they understand me and I understand them. You were censoring my thoughts leaving nothing sensible to scribble on a paper. Yet with all the patience and peace, I would reach for a pen and paper only to scratch it across. Few days later, I stopped even attempts to write. 
And I can go on and on about the issues I have faced when you were around. The longer this post the better will be my break-up with you. So, here it is Good Bye, Mr.Block! 

For the Love of Writing, don't come back into my life again!!