It seems
so long ago…when I first smelled the stench wafting towards me. That August
morning, as I saw the crescent moon giving way to the rising sun, I asked, ‘How
timid of you that you arrive gleaming shamelessly every evening when your bully
rests to return bright?”
Before, I
got a reply, the stench took over my senses and got me uneasy. Quickly it grew
denser, hovering closer and began suffocating me. Gulping to breathe in when I
looked up, they poured it. Dumped it. Over my head. Sticky, yucky, I felt it reach
my toes.
The filth
in their minds, they dumped on me and walked away with impunity.
I washed
away the dirt. But the stench lingered.
The
following day, they brought another bucket of sewage washed from their insides.
I washed
away the dirt. But the stench lingered.
The third
day, they had no more mirth. Yet they wrenched and spat.
I washed
away the dirt. But the stench lingered.
And then
he came to me. Neil Gaiman. He advised: ‘Make mistakes. Make glorious mistakes,
because it means you are out there doing something!’
I sat up,
puppy-eyed looking harder at him, desperately reading his lips, greedy to learn
the words before it spilled out. And I held dearly to his mantra, “…in good
times and bad, when the going gets tough, remember – Make Good Art! Someone on
the internet thinks what you are doing is stupid or evil or it’s all been done
before, Make Good Art! Time will take the sting [read stench here] out. But do
only what you can do best. Make Good Art!”
So here’s
raising a toast to Gaiman,
For making
me wiser than those men!
I plead
to Thee, to give them peace
As I turn
the stench into what only I CAN!
Make Good
Art!
The next
morning when I saw the crescent moon give way to the rising sun, I smiled and
said, “How humble of you to arrive gleaming every evening, unmindful of the
bully sun, artistically changing shapes in a rhythm of your own!”
My modesty makes me say… This, indeed, is a Good Work of Art… [By the optician and my husband Sanjeev] |
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