Friday, September 28, 2012

The Birth of Hope


To whom it may concern,

I’m writing this letter with my computer
Because my handwriting is bad
I tried practicing once a week
But it hasn’t improved since
So I’m sorry

I have a plan I want to accomplish and this is my plan:
I’m taking a long train ride to my favorite town
Won’t you come with me?
Bring with you a shovel, make it two
Your enemies, if handy, could come too
And I’ll take with me
All the puzzling premonitions we’ve created,
The faltering echoes of our unintentional words,
The ambiguity we’ve painted on our faces,
The tragedy of our inevitable past,
The underlying cause of our animosities
Let’s bury them all
If we get tired of digging, there’s a river nearby
We can drown them all
Of course under different names
So if someone accidentally finds them,
They will never know it was us.

Everyone has secrets, and this is ours.

Sincerely,
Manganese

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Desolation


I woke up to the sound of my neighbor’s mower. I can hope to wake up at a different time as a different person but at the end (or start) of the day, I would still be me living the tomorrow that I was afraid to wake up to. I squinted as I reached for my phone to check the time. 7:00 am was actually an early time for me to be up on a Saturday. I tried to sleep again but her face kept popping in every time I closed my eyes. A very sharp memory, the most tragic flaw I have. Meanwhile, the heat wasn’t helping and neither was the lawn mower so I dragged myself out of bed, threw in a vinyl into my ten-year old turn table. It is funny how I feel like some songs were written especially for me. I sometimes feel like the artist took out an ounce of my emotions and turned it into something lovely that will later act as my pill. Kind of like a doctor performing a biopsy. After they take out a tissue sample from you, they examine it, figure out the abnormalities and, if available, prescribe a medicine. And that’s the thing I like about music; it fills in the gaps, the holes, and the emptiness in you allowing you to heal and, if not completely, allowing you to grow in one aspect or another. And if for you, it doesn’t, I do not know what on earth it is for.

I happen to like being immersed in the unknown so I decided to go for a drive. I stared blankly at myself on the mirror after doing what I had to do before stepping out.

“Breathe. Keep breathing. I can’t do this alone.” said the song that was currently playing.

I let out a hopeless sigh before finally drawing in my keys to the ignition when I saw a familiar movement in my peripheral vision. She was there standing. In the span of two years, she had changed. She had grown and dyed her hair. Her curves now more defined. I had always complimented her for her beautiful hazel eyes, which was probably the reason why she refrained from wearing eyeglasses. She had her eyesight aided with clear contact lenses back then but her eyes were now framed with red-rimmed glasses. It was not the first time I saw her with eyeglasses on. She had worn them from time to time until she broke them one day that she refused to replace. Nonetheless, her eyes were as gorgeous, just like when I had first met her.

I had first met Melissa ten years back.
"Hold that elevator!" she said.
The lady who was standing behind the door held it for her.
"Thanks!" she said with a big smile on her face.
After a big yawn, the lady asked her, "What floor?"
"Oh, fifth floor, please" she said.
Her short brown hair smelled like camellia and rose. The bridge of her nose was evidently high. She was one of those young girls who could actually pull off a women's suit without even trying. She was unutterably beautiful. I didn't mean to stare but when I snapped out of it, I realized that I, undeniably, was. In fact, I was staring at her the whole elevator ride, maybe because she was a stranger, a beautiful stranger. We both got off on the fifth floor.
"Hi. I'm Melissa. It's my first day today. Do you work here too?" she said extending her arm for a handshake.
Being the socially inept as I am, I didn't know how to respond. Besides answering her question, I didn't say a word.
"Great! See you around!" Despite scaring her away, she said it cheerily as she walked away to her desk.
She was young, perky and I could tell from her actions that she was fresh out of college, or maybe not. Fresh graduates are supposed to be shy and nervous on their first few weeks at work, or at least their first day. She was not. She was calm and confident. Her smile was cheerful, and it was contagious. I had this insuperable desire of taking her smile home, store it in a jar and pop it open whenever I feel the need to mute commotions.

The bells chimed 12 o’clock. It was finally time for a break. Everyone shut their computers and streamed out for lunch immediately. I have no idea why they always rush outside when they know it is going to be packed. I slid my swivel chair backwards and loosened my tie a bit. I took out my iPod and looked for a song that would fit my mood. I was listening to Sparklehorse for no particular reason when a familiar scent started inching towards me. As I looked up to confirm, I saw her lips moving so I took my headphones off.
“I’m sorry?”.
“I said I see you’re alone. Do you want to eat lunch with me?” she smiled.
Surprised, I froze for a moment. I didn’t want to say yes because I didn’t want to bore her with my insipidity. But apparently, I did.
She was excited. “Great! Let me get my purse.”
She likes me. I don’t know why but I just know she likes me, I thought to myself.
I started to like her too, and that’s irrefutable. I mean, she caught my attention from the very start. I got too comfortable with her that I started to ask her out more often, or I think it is safe to say that she was the one asking me out, if not every time, half the time. One night, in celebration of our first month together, we both had too much to drink so I invited her in to my pad. We made love until dawn.

“What do you usually eat for breakfast?” She asked as soon as she noticed I was already up.
The sliding doors that separated the bedroom from the kitchen were opened halfway. She was standing around my coffee table looking out through the window with a mug on one hand and a cigarette on the other. The curtains were dancing with the wind and she was carefully listening to the sound it produced.
“I didn’t know you smoke.” I asked with my eyes still half-opened.
“I don’t, but I am. You aren’t, but you do.” She said with a hint of scorn.
“Occasionally, I do. What about you?” I was now rolling off from the bed and walked to her direction.
“I just found it on your coffee table.” She stood and started searching my cupboard.
“I usually have bran flakes for breakfast.” I said to answer her question earlier.
“Bran flakes with soy milk. That’s very ironic.” She said after she found a carton of soy milk in my refrigerator.
I took a sip from the coffee she left on the coffee table. “I’m sorry I didn’t tell you. But really, I am telling the truth.”
She completely ignored my previous statement. “So do you want me to make pancakes for a change?”
“Good idea.”
She walked towards me and asked for a kiss that, she accused, I had owed her, probably for hiding something from her. I apologized once again and we ended up making love in the kitchen.

But it hadn’t always been that way. After we got married, all she started caring about was money. It even got worse when our then five-year old daughter, Melody, had to be taken in and out from the hospital for chemotherapy. It practically ate up all our savings but it didn’t matter to her. She neglected all her responsibilities as my wife, if there’s such thing, but never as a mother. She was always there for Melody.
“I don’t want to leave you, mom.” Our poor daughter had once said as if knowing that having the illness she had was like looking directly at the devil’s eyes; tainted and frightening.
After a year of fighting against Leukemia, death took away her agony.

There is no way to describe how painful it was. Growing up in an orphanage, I’ve already had my fair share of aloneness. I could feel parts of me dying a little, one by one. But I had to be strong both for myself and Melissa. Two people can’t be weak together, one has to stand strong, and everyone knows it couldn’t be her.

“You’re safe now. Sleep well, my beautiful daughter.” I wept for months and started to live again while Melissa started to smoke two packs a day and became a hopeless alcoholic. We were still living in the same house but it felt like she had gone away with Melody. I had to close down the coffee shop business she once had enjoyed managing. I had never had a decent conversation with her for so long that I forgot she was still my wife. I still tried to start small talks with her but she would just start overturning tables and start throwing things that are within her reach at me. She once hit me with our alarm clock straight to my groin and had left me limping for days. I had to call in sick to avoid humiliation which made my colleagues worry. I cannot count how many times I answered with ‘just fine’ every time someone asked me how I was doing. I cannot count how many times I felt like going mad and that I needed help but didn’t know how to ask for it.

She seemed to be in the mood one day so I took the opportunity to remind her of some of the supposedly million things she had to do. With her situation, accomplishing one or two would have been enough. She was putting on her contact lenses, which she wasn’t allowed to put on anymore, but I chose not to reprimand her to avoid conflict.
“Don’t miss your appointment with your ophthalmologist at 1:30pm and your therapist at 4:00pm today,” I said stressing subtly on ophthalmologist.
No reply, just an irritated look.
I hurried out before she morphs into a monster. It wasn’t that I was scared of getting more physical injuries. I just didn’t want to take pity on her. I didn’t want to save her nor ask her to live. Choosing life is not a decision you can dictate to someone. I could only wish to take her sorrows, her burdens away but she wouldn’t let me. And it was not fair. It was never fair.

I did not lose hope on her. I had sent her to mental institutions several times and she would kneel down before me and beg for me not to. They had to drag her out of the house and I had to endure the sight of delirium.
“I can’t stand the people here. Please, take me away from here. Anywhere but here, please.” She would plead hugging her knees while biting her nails.
I did not want her to feel abandoned so I took her home. Just days after, she had gone back with her old routine, in the living room watching horror films, drinking whiskey and smoking Virginia slims. It was not long after I decided to have her confined again. And the cycle went on for a while until I met another woman.

She was the exact opposite of Melissa. Veronica’s personality was strange. She was three years younger than Melissa but she acted like she was a decade older than me. While Melissa was getting help, Veronica and I went out more often. We had so much to talk about, from the bands we like to the books we’ve read. We both enjoy desolation so we’d isolate ourselves at a cottage she owns located at some ski resort. We’d camp, we’d made love with candles, and dance to the rustling sound of the leaves. For once, I felt young again, not because she was 14 years younger than me, but because it had been a while since I actually sat down to listen to Radiohead.

<3 Manganese

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Chapter Three


It had seemed like a century but it had still been eighteen years since I moved with Uncle Tim. And in that span of time all I had been thinking was about the lives that I might have had if that nightmare didn’t happen. I had become a slave of my imagination and that made me at least smile until my mind realizes that it is defying the truth, and I was back to being miserable again. The number of breaths I took, steps I made and obstacles I broke were decreasing, gradually decreasing.

When Uncle Tim’s wife was still working at a night club, her so-called friend would often come over.
“Do you know how lucky you were when you were rescued from that fire?” She would say.
I never said a word to her, not even once. I find it ridiculous to talk to people who pretend to know how I feel. Only the people who have lost everything have the right to say that. I didn’t like how she looked at me with sympathy I didn’t need. I didn’t like how she filled me with words of hope when she herself wasn’t living life one should. I didn’t like everyone who had the choice to be successful but chose to be miserable. Uncle Tim, my aunt and her friend and Jean; they were all capable of ruling the world but they chose not to.
“You are alive. Many people who have died in that earthquake would love to trade places with you.” She would add despite me ignoring her.

But it didn’t happen once or twice. Wherever I go, it happened all the time. Like when I was forced to go to high school. I had sworn not to have an interaction with other people ever again, not because I was mentally or emotionally incapable of interacting, but because of the opposite. They, my elementary classmates and schoolmates, though not all, weren’t capable of doing such and I expect high school to be worse than that. I was not scared. The part I didn’t like was when the countable kind people try too hard to keep me from drifting apart from the norm.

“We’re having a pajama party tomorrow night. If you can come, please do!” Aya said.

Aya, who was my classmate in elementary, was probably the kindest person I knew in school. She was the top student in our class and she had invited me to all her parties that her parents had thrown for her as a reward. She had offered to have her dad drive me to and from our house. But I have not been to any of her parties. Oftentimes though, she seemed to forget that I had declined her fifty previous invitations and just kept on inviting me. She wasn’t the only one. There was Kenji, who had invited me several times to see movies with his sisters. There were five more. And the rest just either stare at me probably wondering why I don’t have legs or dodge the pathetic, unattractive sight. The teachers though were all kind to me. But the problem with them, kind people, is that they just don’t know when to leave a person alone.

“You know what, you’re still lucky to have survived. Go out and play.” My English teacher once said.

Here we go again. I would say to myself. I could say I was so used to people saying I’m lucky I survived. I get them probably six times a week and I should have gotten better in dealing with them. But I didn’t. In fact, I personally think I got more senseless than I already was. Maybe because, it had never occurred to me that I am lucky. We all know I am not lucky. If they really meant what they said, they should have stopped comparing my life to the dead. I mean, why would they compare me to nothingness? If I was really lucky, they should have compared me to Aya. But no one did. That is because they all knew that I was the lowest form of being in that room, in that school, in the whole mankind. But that didn’t matter to me. All I wanted was for them to stop giving me special attention I never asked. I wanted to be normal or at least be treated normal but I myself didn’t know what being normal was. I guess living a normal life and being happy sometimes and being sad sometimes is normal. If having your own house, marrying the man of your dreams, going to work you really love is normal then I am light years away from it. Sometimes, late at night, I blame my disabilities. But sometimes, late at night, it just strikes me; if having four limbs doesn’t lead everyone to success, then what does? Sometimes I come up with silly answers like love, hope, trust, or faith but I contradict all of them if not always, most often, thus, leaving my questions create more sub-questions.

<3 Manganese

Monday, September 10, 2012

'Maybe it's not the ending. Maybe it's the story.'


I was driving myself back to my mom's house with all of my clothes squeezed in the backseat, my shoes in the trunk and my bags sitting at the passenger seat when I promised myself to never go back to that town, to our home we both created ever again. It was painful seeing myself leave and each time i passed by grocery stores we used to shop at, restaurants we both love and coffee shops we used to lounge in, it just kept on getting more painful. I wiped off my tears and held it back for a while whenever I stopped at a red light because I didn't want to leave other people wondering how sad I was because I don't think anybody would really know how much somebody else is hurting. But I was wrong, nobody looked my way, and if anybody did, he wouldn't see me from the dark anyway, and if anybody had, he just probably went on with his life when the light said go. And I had to keep moving too.

I reached home before daylight but I stayed at the parking lot until midday just wondering if I had made the right decision, chain-smoking and listening to songs that somehow calmed me down. By calmed me down, I meant cry all my sorrows. Some people stared but that didn't matter anymore. What mattered was that I was hurt and I can fucking cry when I need to regardless of anything.

I finally decided to go inside the house and my dad was there ready to welcome me again. I felt relieved somehow to see a very familiar face from the three-hour drive I had. He didn't ask me what happened. He already knew when he saw my eyes.

'Jaa, dokka ikou ka?' he said cheerfully.

I told him that I didn't want to go anywhere and that I just wanted to be alone in my room. And that was the worst decision I have ever made. As I entered my bedroom, half of the things that were there reminded me of him. The pictures on the wall, the 3D glasses we bought on our first movie date, the first bouquet of flowers he gave me that had already dried, the 500 coin bank that was already half full for our hawaii trip, the books he bought for me, the star projector he got me for our first monthsary... I couldn't stop crying not because I was sad I lost him to someone else but because he really made me happy. Even if he left me completely broken, I am forever in debt for the two years of happiness he gave me. And that's what makes it even more sad. I can't pay him back anymore because all this time I thought I had a lifetime to do it. My mom, though, said I've done enough.

'I'm sure you've made him happy too' she added.

I hope so. I really hope so. But I still can't stop asking why it happened and what went wrong. And for the most part, my questions are still left unanswered. If you want to keep your sanity, i guess it's better to leave your questions unanswered.

<3Manganese

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Chapter Two


It all started from a nightmare. I saw myself, as if watching an action star on TV, running around in the middle of a war. I dream in a third person point of view, making it easy for me to tell whether something is happening in my dream or in reality. Nevertheless, the shaking of the ground from the bombs dropped felt real. I struggled, only to wake up to something worse, probably the worst.
I heard my grandmother cried, “Luisa..”
My grandmother’s house was small; it had two bedrooms, separated by shoji doors. I immediately slid the doors open and rushed into her bedroom where I found her trembling at the corner of her bed. The earthquake had probably been going on for a while. I could smell fire. I grabbed her but she hesitated. I pulled her hand but she pulled it back. I rushed outside and the first thing that I saw was fire. I wish I saw myself in a third person point of view, but I didn't. I was the actor, except no one was watching. I could tell it was reality.
An antique cabinet fell on my feet, and that was the last day I considered living.

I woke up in a white room. I felt a stabbing sensation on both of my legs. I squinted as my eyes were adjusting to the light. I looked down to see what the excruciating pain was all about and saw that two of my limbs were missing.
“Please, God, wake me up from this nightmare”
No, I wasn’t going to wake up. That was the present I had to deal with. I tried to remember everything that happened. I tried to absorb everything. I suddenly remembered my grandmother. When a nurse came in to check on me, I tried to speak and asked her. I’m pretty sure I wasn’t speaking like a human.
“The rescue team could not save her.” She answered.
I admire her honesty but I wish she was at least cautious. She even followed it up with two more devastating news. My father who was relocated to Sendai was washed away along with several others to the shores of death. My mother who left me under my grandmothers’s care for a day to see my father that day never came back.
“Be strong.” She said while adjusting the height of the over bed tray table.
She said something else after that but I could not hear anything. I could not properly respond to my surroundings. I had so much to take in. I had so much to say, but I could not say it. I trusted my brain. My brain processed them all. It was my mouth I couldn’t trust. It was like my brain had too much to say and my mouth could not keep up. Almost like the opposite of when you’re angry. When you’re angry, the brain can’t keep up with the mouth. The mouth just keeps on talking without the brain’s permission, often, inflicting wounds. Both, though, have similar outcome. If you tried to talk, the words will come out like a shattered glass; hard to pick up and impossible to digest.
For the sake of nothing in particular, I tried to talk.
“What...”
Just as I predicted, I could not speak. My chest was clasped with the words I wanted to say. I felt like drowning. The nurse squeezed my shoulder. But nurses aren't paid to console patients so she slid the over bed tray table above my lap and left.
Those words didn’t matter to me. I did not seek hope. I did not want to be taken care of, nor did I want to live.
I got up to look out from the glass window. The sky was black and I could tell it had been raining for weeks. I saw my reflection. I was somehow relieved seeing myself. It was like watching myself inside my dream in a third person point of view, only, it was looking right back. I tried to struggle to wake up but it was hopeless, it was reality. I buried myself under the covers and tried my luck with sleep. It was depressing to know that it felt like I can have at least a good time asleep. I had no luck. I wish I had known about sleeping pill. I could have asked the nurse for it. But at that age, I did not even know which button to press to call a nurse.

I can’t remember how much time I spent telling myself to keep breathing. In the middle of it all, I suddenly heard footsteps coming to my direction.

“So you’re finally awake.” he said while pulling a chair to the bedside.
I had never seen him before but his eyes and lips resembled my grandmother’s.
“I’m Sachiko’s brother. You can call me Uncle Tim.” He said in a hurry while glancing at his watch.

I had heard stories about Uncle Tim. My mother used to talk to him over the phone. I could clearly tell they were not in good terms.
We were all sitting in the living room watching a movie when the oven had sounded ding along with the ringing of the telephone. My mom got up and answered the phone.
“Yes, Mikami’s residence.” There was a long pause but my mom’s face turning sour was evident.
“But you still haven’t paid me yet!” my mom yelled and hung up.
“What’s wrong?” My dad sitting on the sofa with me asked when he heard my mom’s angry voice.
“He needs money again. He hasn’t even paid me yet!” She said while taking the pizza out from the oven.
“What does he need it for this time?” my dad asked.
“He said it’s for his car maintenance. Can you fucking believe that? He should just sell his car then!”
“I bet you my life he hasn’t changed after he got out from the rehab.” My dad shook his head.

My dad was the most cynical human being I have ever known while my mom was the exact opposite. She would yell at Uncle Tim for one second but she would call him later and lend him the money that he needs anyway. At the age of six, my dad would often give me a lecture about the harmful effects of drugs. He would tell me that if I don’t want to end up like my Uncle Tim, I should focus my mind on school. My mom being the idealist would always tell him to stop staining my innocent mind.
“It’s for her betterment. She will learn about those things someday anyway. At least, she’s already been warned.” My dad would defend himself.

My dad always had Uncle Tim as an example of what I must not follow. And now, I was facing the man he and my mother had always loathed. But they are all dead now; my parents and my grandmother and probably our cat, Luis, too.

"As you know, you have nowhere else to go. You're moving with us." He said as if it was a command.

I didn't know whether to feel relieved or even more scared. Then I realized that feeling relieved was the most impossible thing to feel at that time. I suddenly felt like I was walking in a dark alley, just walking with no particular direction. No, walking is not the right verb. Crawling. I felt like I was crawling in a dark alley.

<3 Manganese

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Chapter One

Hello and welcome to the eighteenth year of my feigned existence. My name is Luisa; named after our cat Luis who died when I was eight, which is probably the reason why I am nocturnal. No, I'm neither nocturnal nor normal. I just prefer staying up at night. In fact, I like it because I feel safer is one, and not hearing Jean making all sorts of obscene moans is another. One day my uncle had to throw Jean into my room when my aunt came home way earlier than usual. My choices were limited. It was either I stay inside the room with Jean and be awkward with her or I go get some fresh air, if there's such thing, and meet a couple of friends. For some weird reason, I didn't mind her being alone in my room. What she should do to get out from there was her problem.
Right after I laid eyes on the outside world, I saw my aunt storming right into the kitchen. Our eyes met for a millisecond before she rolled her eyes off me.
“I’m not allowed to work beyond eight hours anymore. It's either you find a job or you throw Luisa out!" she said before she can even swallow the slice of soufflĂ© cheesecake she just stuffed into her mouth.
"You know you can’t throw her out. The insurance money she’s getting is what’s paying for this apartment" replied Uncle Tim who was now half-dressed.
My aunt inched towards him "Then find a job" she whispered into his ear in a sarcastic tone.
I opted not to listen to the rest of their conversation, or rather, argument. So I headed straight to Gem Park, which is around 7 blocks away. It’s not really called Gem Park. It’s a nameless park. I started calling it Gem Park after I saw an old vandalism saying ‘Gem was here’ in bold letters. Why Gem seemed to be so excited to have stepped a foot on that park remains a mystery to me. It’s an abandoned park with nothing but a rusty swing and muddy ground. But I prefer it that way, and probably Gem too. I planned to go home, if I can even call that home, before midnight. One of the house rules is "lights off at ten" which is the reason why I decided to go home at around eleven. It was now quarter to ten when one of my friends showed up. By now, you've already probably guessed that this friend of mine likes to play at night. I named it Louie regardless of its gender, but I assumed it is a he. I like being around with tamed, non-human creatures because from their perspective, I am probably a genius. I mean, I can talk and Louie can just meow. But if Louie could read this, I am as sure as eggs are eggs it would disagree.
"Just because you can talk doesn't mean you're superior" I can imagine it yelling at my face while snapping its fingers (claws?) in a Z form.
I can't blame them. And to be completely honest, I couldn't agree more to Louie, or myself since I just made that up. I sometimes even imagine the world with nobody being able to talk. Yeah, that would be perilous. A depressed wife would then simply slit her polygamous husband's throat instead of the traditional 'get the hell out of my house' and ‘fuck you’ lines. Okay, that was an exaggeration. I can probably play god and give exceptions to those who badly needs to get it out or to people who deserve to talk. Like the boy I used to sit next to in Algebra class before I dropped out. He didn’t talk to me that often, but every time he did, I had always found myself lost. His words were almost too good to be true. They are the type of words that dig into the roots; deep and deadly. People like him cause my confusion to grow even more. But I digress.
It was now past midnight, the only time I love being home. No, love would be an understatement. If there’s a word that describes how something makes you feel being connected to the outer space as you watch the stars through your window without anyone reminding you of who you are supposed to be, then feel free to scratch the preceding clause and replace it with that word. With that being said, I decided to go back to one of the thousands world I have.
As I was walking home, I saw a tall, familiar silhouette on a spotlight, the lights from the vending machine acting as its light. I heard something pop so I was sure this person just bought a soda from that vending machine. As I got nearer, I figured it was Jean. Her beige coat complimented perfectly to her height. Her now-worn-down chestnut brown hair swayed along the evening breeze. Her long and defined nose was still in place. I was surprisingly relieved that she got out from our house in one piece. I wanted to say hi. Not because I wanted to befriend her but because I owed her an apology for abandoning her. Of course she was in no way under my responsibility. I just needed an excuse. There was something in her eyes that expressed pain, ambiguity and relentlessness, and that was enough to adhere to my own curiosity. But before I could even think for an opening line, she walked into my direction.
“How can you put up with those kinds of people?” she asked hastily.
I don’t know what she overheard after I left but it felt like she was angry and was asking for a prompt answer.
“They are my only family” I replied reluctantly.
She was now pushing my wheelchair to the direction where I just came from. 
“What does family mean to you?” She asked in an almost motherly way.
It was soothing to my ear. It was awkwardly blatant in its most subtle way. I don’t even know why I didn't hesitate to go with her.
I did not answer her question. Instead, I acted insecure and childish. “Don’t you see this? I have nowhere else to go.” I said in a stronger tone pointing to my wheelchair.
“Well, that’s a shame. You think you are disabled?” she asked rhetorically.
“Anyone with clear eyesight, or anyone with poor eyesight aided with eyeglasses can tell” I answered anyway.
Her face did not show any expression of surprise.“Do you think that your physical disability is worse than a person who is incapable to love?” she smiled half way.
I was speechless. It struck me like a lightning bolt on a hot summer day. It was unexpected. I wanted to hear more. She lit a cigarette and started to blow squalid clouds of breaths and never said a word. She might have also felt my pain, ambiguity and relentlessness. There were a lot of questions I wanted to ask her. Why is she sticking up with someone like Uncle Tim? Does she have a family? What is she planning to do with her life? Then I asked myself the same questions, but I did not have answers. Not just yet. Afraid that she might throw the same questions, I let it go.  As for her, I will never know why she sat quiet the whole time. So we ended up just sitting next to each other until the first light. We talked about nothing. She was solitary in her own way, and I was too, and that was enough to make me feel that in that space, in that breath, and in that blink, I had not one sorrow, just sanity and solace.

<3 Manganese

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Vague Thoughts Of You

facing west, waiting for the sunrise
empty midnight sky, full of stars
clammed up streets with busy cars
i yearn for your beautifully bedraggled guise

as i remember the fierce smell of your perfume
it gently calms me down
you are a million miles away
yet nobody could ever be this close

chaos in this peaceful twilight
annihilation of my broken sight
as i sway steadily
filthy pictures painted perfectly

winter becomes quietly warm
flowers spring on fall with your charm
i don't believe in magic
until you came and took me to pacific


<3 Manganese

One Fading Summer


most of the time, things don't end up the way she planned it
sometimes, it feels like nothing is left to do but quit
and the only thing she is capable of is to dream
dream along with the stars falling like autumn leaves

'how far has she gone?'
but everyone knows nothing's done
a minute, an hour, a day, a lifetime wasted
every breath she takes is antiquated

but would you take the reasons why?
why she has been waiting endlessly beneath the sky,
waiting for something that has flown like a summer kite?
and why she wants to give it one more fight?

she never waits, not one morning she missed a glint
and like music, not one single hint
why she was blatantly imprisoned forever
by someone she knew one fading summer

<3 Manganese

The Unknown


I freeze in hell,
I freeze with joy and fear,
I loathe the familiar;
forbidden manifestations.
For I have stolen the depths,
I hoard them in my nails;
your imprudence, stranger,
I take them all along.
Stand still, for in the dust I have sown,
infinity, surpassing sanity and rationality,
against gravity,
I am the unknown;
and I have died before you were born.

<3 Manganese