I'm not entirely sure why I'm starting
this, but I've been having some flowing thoughts for quite a few days, and I've
suddenly had the urge to write and let them all out, now. I've promised myself
before that whenever I get such a feeling, I'm going to leave whatever it is
that I'd be doing, and grab anything to write in and with. It's actually
frustrating how too many thoughts are lost because we either delay writing them
until they unawarely evaporate through our heads and shortly get replaced by
new, once-again-ignored ones, or as time passes, we start thinking that some
thoughts are unworthy of being written down. There's just no such a thing. It should
actually be a crime to strangle thoughts inside, and not let them out; through
spoken words, written ones, or even tears. Just because our head doesn't
physically explode, it doesn't mean we should take for granted its ability to
store in some thoughts.
Anyway. This is probably going to be very
random, because the thoughts inside have nothing in common except that they all
strive to be let out, and so I'm happily granting them their wish. One thought
at a time, totally pointless, but somehow still comforting.
So, I've luckily had the opportunity to
spend some time alone lately, all by myself, and it has been truly relieving. But
with a mind like mine –which I have discovered lately can't be around people
without observing and absorbing in their every detail, storing them inside, and
always comparing the new details with the old ones– it couldn't not continue
doing that. I have no idea if the details thing only works with people or if my
mind does observe the details of everything around –I'm yet to find out about
that–, but I've observed how it observes people's details, and it actually
impressed me. So, being alone, the only person it was allowed to observe closely
was; myself. The only difference this time is that I was aware of it observing
me, so I decided to join in and observe along.
I've observed myself while reading. Particularly
reading an e-book. I have noticed how comforting reading in the dark has made
me feel, with only the laptop's screen lighting the words for me to read. I
don't exactly know why I liked that, but reading with the lights on just feels
like I'm not really having my space with the book. Like someone's invading our
own personal space, someone is watching over us. In the dark though, it's just
me and the book. We can do whatever it is that we'd want, because it's just
us. The same way it differs being with my best friend around people, and being
with her on the phone or within our own WhatsApp conversation. It's not the
same, it cannot be accurately described in words, exactly like how it's
difficult to describe being with a book with no lights on. Lights just feel
like invaders.
Besides the dark, I had a word document
opened aside, to write in any thoughts that would occur to me while reading, and
to copy out my favorite lines that I'd want to reread later. But with the lights
off, I didn't clearly get to see the keyboard and the letters I wanted to type.
Typing has thankfully never been an obstacle to me. When lights are on, I
don't give much attention to the keyboard, my eyes might only throw a few glimpses
on the letters as I'm typing, but my mind would be really consumed with what
I'm writing, not how I'm writing it. Through the dark, it changed. My mind knew
it was being forced not to see the keys on purpose, and it panicked. I have
never been that slow while typing as I had been while I took notes through this
book. It annoyed me because it wasn't usually a problem, but because my mind
was forced to think about it, it deliberately started screwing up on something
that it was already good with. And this is exactly what happens to me through
everything with life. Whenever I concentrate on something in an attempt to get
the best out of it, I screw it up. Whenever someone tells me I'm good with a
certain thing, I become aware of that fact, and start making a mess out of
something that I have already been told I was good with. Only because I was
told that.
It frustrated me. I kept trying to concentrate on the words I'm typing, rather than the letters that I was looking for through the dark, but I was excessively using the backspace key. I tried typing really fast, not allowing my mind the opportunity to actually think. It would work for a few seconds but then my mind would concentrate and blow it all up again. I finally decided I'd just talk my mind into agreeing that whatever mistake I was going to do, I wouldn't use the backspace key for it until I was done with the whole thing, and only then can I go back and correct all my mistakes. It worked! It magically did. Because then, I wasn't really concentrating on not typing the wrong letters. I knew I wouldn't go back to it anyway unless I let the words I initially wanted to write out. My typos started decreasing as I concentrated more on the content. And every time I'd get done with something, I'd go back and correct any typos, and it went well. I realized then that this was exactly what stopped me in life from doing the things I was told I'm good in, because for some reason my mind believed that being good with something implied getting it done with absolutely no mistakes. I don't give myself enough room to make mistakes. I'm always concentrating on how I'm doing what I'm doing and not what or why. I didn't realize that typing in the wrong letter might eventually direct me to another letter that I would later need to find, I only concentrated on it being the wrong one.
I've realized this, and I'm not sure how
I'm going to change this about myself, but I can tell that it might have
changed something inside, and that after this, things are definitely never going to
be the same again.
Moving on..
Fictional Characters.
Fictional characters, a huge problem I
always face. I'm more into novels and stories, and so I come across a great
number of fictional characters with every book, only that I refuse to believe
they're fictional. The books I've been reading lately were full of deaths, especially
the death of fathers (which by the way scares me to death every time I think
about it happening to my life; I can't bare the idea of having to lose my dad
one day..), and I've realized how losing those characters affects me the same
way losing real life people does, if not more. I keep thinking about them even
after the book is over, wondering if their spirits hover around me like what I
like to believe about real life people who die. I keep rereading parts of books
when they were still there. The idea of their death always aches inside.
This all made me think of something. Why is
that we fall in love with fictional characters that easily? Fictional
characters are still people. We get really involved in their lives through
books, especially those who are the narrators, and get to clearly talk about
their own feelings and thoughts. It's because we get that close. It's because we
get to see the true parts of themselves that we even fall in love with their
imperfections. There's this quote I've always loved, it goes like, "I fall
in love with people and their honest moments all the time. Honesty is just too
beautiful to ever put into words". It's very true, applying it to people
in books. They get to be honest. However, it still occurs to me that we might
love them only because they choose the sides of themselves that they'd want us
to know about. Maybe we don't get to see the whole picture; we only get to see
what they want us to see. Or maybe, because we don't actually see them. People's
inner details are usually way more beautiful than their physical appearances. Or
maybe, because we don't get involved in their lives; we have the opportunity to
observe from afar. We get to love them for who they really are, not for how
much they give us, or for how it feels doing cute surprises for them, or for
how they listen to us, or how they make us feel. None of that. We never
actually get to observe someone's life in real life without somehow getting involved in it. Expecting things, feeling things. Fictional characters rarely
disappoint us. Maybe it's writers who sometimes do, but rarely the characters
themselves.
I don't know. I failed to understand why I personally
get attached to fictional characters that much. Maybe they're all the previous
reasons combined, but I still find it beautiful that I can fall in love with
someone I've never even seen, or interacted with. Beautiful.
One more thing that makes reading enjoyable
to me is, I always get to learn new words. I've previously always made sure to
write down the new words I'd learn through a book, but I've recently discovered
that new words can make their way inside on their own. I notice this every time
I write; new words always come out as I write, some accompanied by memories of
their places in certain books, and others popping out of nowhere, reminding me
of nothing but my mind's awesome ability to absorb new words without me
noticing. It's truly one of my favorite moments, when I come up with a word
that I've never heard about, only to discover I've read it somewhere. It makes
me smile knowing that I'd never run out of words as long as I read.
Now, Writing. I've noticed myself as I write
as well. I've seen a difference between what I write for myself, knowing no one
would read, and what I write to be published somewhere. And this greatly increased
my love towards writing stuff that no one would get to see, because it actually
brings pieces of me together.
Sometimes, I'd try to write my thoughts
somewhere and someone would oppose my point of view on something, and it annoys
me. That's not because I'm someone who insists on holding on to their own
beliefs, but actually, it's because I'm a flexible thinker, that it takes too
little effort to change my thoughts about something. Writing to myself enhances
this, I've noticed. It makes me definite about my thoughts, my ideas, and my
beliefs, that it's starting not to be very easy to change my view about something
unless it's logical. Writing to one's self does miracles, I believe.
Besides reading and writing, I still tend
to fall in love with the side of me that comes out the minute my room's door is
shut. I feel comfortable around me.
I love the way I smile at myself. The way I
laugh at my inside jokes. Particularly the way I let out weird laughs. The way
I blankly stare into space without someone pointing out how weird I
look. The way I stare at the mirror. The way I crawl up inside my bed, hide
under my covers, holding on tight to my pillow, for absolutely no reason. The
way I talk to my belongings and have them mentally answer back. The way I notice
I've acquired some close friends' personal qualities.
I've been asked several times what is it
that I often do in my room alone. I think I have an answer now.
I be
me.
I've truly noticed so much about myself by just being on my own for sometime. I keep discovering new things about me, and it makes me happy. It makes me connect my own dots. It's a blessing I so much want to keep holding on to.
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