I’m ready

This isn’t a cozy, feel-good post of some sort with the horizon and crashing waves on the foreground.

This is my 30’s catching up with me. And boy does it catch up so fast. It felt like yesterday when i was born; umm, not exactly yesterday but you get the drift.

Gone are the days when i could wear a tee without worrying about showing off the flat belly. Now I’ve got a pot belly for no fault of mine. Do you even know the difference between a fish, piano and a bucket of glue? You can tune a piano, but you can’t tuna fish.

Gone are the times when i could read a book a day. Now it’ll be a miracle if you can catch me read an entire chapter.

And, gone are the moments when i used to care about marks, scores, norms, traditions and what not. Now, i care as less as a wombat shitting cubes.

Yes, wombats shit cubes and green sea slugs are capable of photosynthesis. And i am gonna be 30. Not 69, not 420, just 30. The number itself feels so mundane.

Adiós my childhood, teens, adolescence, and my twenties. I let them down the way Taka let down Mufasa. No, Scar is better known as Taka which is dirt in Swahili. The only actual stupid adventurous stunt i pulled in these many years was jumping off a bridge.

But worry not. I’ve preparing for this age by being fluent in the dad ways. I have a dad bod, can spit dad jokes, and flip a patty like a dad – all of this without becoming a dad.

So yeah, bison.

See what i did there? Of course you didn’t, because you were stuck with the bucket of glue.

Art and beyond

I was sitting on my chair when I thought of watching a song on Youtube. ‘Numb’ by Linkin Park was one of the recommendations on my app’s homepage. I decided to listen to it. I knew the locked doors I was opening, the walls I was pulverizing, the ceilings I was shattering, and the ground I was breaking; all over again and all at once.

Somewhere in 2008 or 2009, parents got me my first computer. It was an assembled PC, with parts I got to choose. I spread the word around, and folks were eager to share their art collection — movies, songs, videos, and everything else you can think of. I got them all saved in my system’s hard-drive, and began the ritual that I would continue to this day. I sat through each and every song, movie and video that was given. I weeded out the pieces that didn’t make me feel that they were supposed to make me feel. I renamed them, categorized them and stored them in theme-wise folders.

Now, I didn’t know what art was supposed to make me feel. So, I settled down on a yardstick on my own. For as long as I can remember; I’ve experienced small bumps appear on my hands and feet. I didn’t know they were called goosebumps. So, I kept the pieces that gave me goosebumps. Numb, 21 guns, Wonderwall, Boulevard of broken dreams, It’s my life, Fireflies – those were some of the first English songs I listened to in the new-built desktop. I had forced open a door I didn’t know existed.

I scourged the internet, radio and every other avenue where I can discover new pieces – language no bar. I’ve not come across a single piece that is not worth listening once. I was looking for pieces that I could listen to endlessly, on repeat, till eternity breathes its last breath. Hence began my pursuit.

I had the joy of listening to songs and watching movies which I wouldn’t normally have listened to or watched. If it were not for my pursuit, I never would have heard ‘Nothing else matters’ or ‘Silver dagger’.

Then came a time when Robin Williams passed away, so did Heath Ledger and Chester Bennington. I did not know them enough to warrant my grief. Nevertheless, I felt grief and sadness because I had witnessed their works. They say that an artist lives on as long as their art lives. Surely, Robin Williams is an immortal if the maxim holds true. But, yesterday, I forgot his name and couldn’t recall it. I had to look up ‘Mrs. Doubtfire’ to learn his name again.

Is it really true that immortals live on forever? Why does a human strive to leave a mark on the Earth, if only to be forgotten after a decade? What is life if not lived in the present?

I’m listening to ‘November Rain’ as I type my words now. Maybe, it is all an illusion after all. We know this that the human made religion. Sure, there were beings – both human and non-human – that would go on and command awe from the stone-age humans who were afraid and excited at the same time when they witnessed an eclipse or a streak of lightning. Humans did make religion, like they made bread and fire – out of thin air. So, the construct of heaven, hell, afterlife, and any other event or place which we’ve not seen yet is a figment of our imagination.

So, why are we yearning for something that we haven’t seen? Maybe the illusion makes life liveable, if not enjoyable. They say; beware the human who can go in a crowded fine-dining place and eat by themselves — for here is a human who sees through the façade. I go a step further; you owe your awe to the human who is happy when alone, content before sleep, does a deed for the sake of it, and sees the world wrapped in a barter system and chooses to forego his share of the transaction.

Now I’m not sure how I ended up at philosophy when I started at art. In all possibility, I jumped over multiple trains of thought. Bah; I’ll listen to fireflies now. Death and pain doesn’t move me the way art does. I know the story is fabricated, movements are choreographed, scenes are edited; but they move me the way I can never move myself. The other day, I watched the ending scene of ‘Interstellar’ where Cooper meets Cooper. I welled up, cried, and cried a bit more. It happened with Coco, Inside Out, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler’s List, It’s a wonderful life, Maachis, and many more other movies. Songs that I don’t understand does this to me too – Hasta la riaz, Stay with me (not by Sam Smith), and any instrumental piece – like the ones by Yanni and J.T. Bruce.

I’ve positively lost my way now. I don’t recall why I started to write this piece, and I’m not sure how to end it. I’ll end it the way I end my podcast episodes.

Adios for now. And, sonríe si crees.