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Randomness of A Procrastinator

@sherlock-marple / sherlock-marple.tumblr.com

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i. Lakshmi opens a casino resort in Macau, builds it higher than the moon and covers it in gold disguised as glass and steel and polished wood: things that whisper ‘wealth’ in quiet tones. She plays the game better than ever; her worshippers number the thousands, praying nightly at altars of slot machines and roulette wheels, all of them chanting her name, the threads of their fortunes sliding through her hands like the red watered silk she wears. Vishnu stands to her left and lets his touch linger at her waist, plays with the lotus in her hair; she thinks she’ll let him catch her this life, and smiles. … ii. Ganesh writes code in San Francisco, wears elephant shirts to work, spends his money collecting what passes for modern art— mostly Cubism and Andy Warhol, though he has a few framed photographs of tasteful nudes, and of course he can never resist stealing statues of himself from West Coast art museums— but only the ones that were stolen first (which is most of them). He writes letters to his father on Fridays, talks with his mother on the phone every night, and lets his brother sleep on his couch, still high on adrenaline and likely sporting a black eye or broken jaw. They don’t really talk, but Skanda ruffles his hair as he walks past, and Ganesh rolls his eyes. Some things will never change. … iii. Sarasvati sings on street corners, writes poetry for strangers, trades thoughts for coins and coins for thoughts, spends all her evenings performing on half-lit stages and half her nights talking of art, history, philosophy—she giggles until she snorts when most of her audience thinks she’s spinning lies. That’s not how it happened, they say. Of course it was, is her reply. I was there. I am always there. … iv. Brahma teaches at a local university and thinks, I am too old for this. But he writes books anyways, corrects dissertations, delivers lectures in a smooth, modulated voice, looks awkwardly away when his students come to office hours to flirt, ignores Vishnu when his friend shows up beneath his window, serenading him with a wine-tinged voice (still fresh and sweet despite the centuries). Come on! he shouts ‘til he’s blue in the face. Live a little! You are spending too much time with Shiva, Brahma answers, still prim and proper after all these years. But he leaves his door unlocked, doesn’t say a word when his wife comes home smelling like smoke and half-forgotten secrets, her eyes bright with new knowledge. Guess what I learned tonight? she says, and shows him, and he thinks he’s living quite a lot, thank you very much. … v. Ganga swims the English Channel, floats in the Dead Sea, takes a barrel down Niagara Falls, smuggles contraband on the Nile, spends a year, then two, then twenty in the Amazon. She enters the Olympics once—water polo, not swimming, does she look like a bitch to you ? (Nobody asked you, Parvati.) Her teams wins a bronze medal, and she goes home and tosses it in her river, watches it sink as she tongues the new gap in her mouth, wonders if her sons have been born again, wonders if they need their mother to drown them. … vi. Kali dances ‘til the soles of her feet blister, ‘til her toes ooze blood like carmine paint, macabre patterns forming on her soul-black skin. She dances in crowded clubs, chin tilted up, eyes wide open, screaming, screaming. She gets up in the morning, hunts down men-turned-monsters, mouth grinning, screaming, screaming. Her teeth are stained red (like her hands, her feet). She is always hungry. … vii. When strangers come to her temple and ask her how she finds the modern world, Devi throws her head back and laughs and laughs until she can laugh no more—the sound of it a monsoon, the sound of it a cracking of mountains. “The world has always been modern,” she says, smiling. (do not say she smiles like a tigress; the tigress smiles like her) “How do I find it? Simple. I keep my eyes open, and there it is, mine for the making.”

they build temples on every shore | a.s.c. (via crazyacenpokerface)

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Jean-Léon Gérome: Pygmalion and Galatea, 1890

Pygmalion loathing their lascivious life, Abhorr’d all womankind, but most a wife: So single chose to live, and shunn’d to wed, Well pleas’d to want a consort of his bed.
Yet fearing idleness, the nurse of ill, In sculpture exercis’d his happy skill; And carv’d in iv'ry such a maid, so fair, As Nature could not with his art compare, Were she to work; but in her own defence Must take her pattern here, and copy hence.
Pleas’d with his idol, he commends, admires, Adores; and last, the thing ador’d, desires.
A very virgin in her face was seen, And had she mov’d, a living maid had been: One wou’d have thought she cou’d have stirr’d, but strove With modesty, and was asham’d to move.
Art hid with art, so well perform’d the cheat, It caught the carver with his own deceit: He knows ‘tis madness, yet he must adore, And still the more he knows it, loves the more: The flesh, or what so seems, he touches oft, Which feels so smooth, that he believes it soft.
Fir’d with this thought, at once he strain’d the breast, And on the lips a burning kiss impress’d.
‘Tis true, the harden’d breast resists the gripe, And the cold lips return a kiss unripe: But when, retiring back, he look’d again, To think it iv'ry, was a thought too mean: So wou’d believe she kiss’d, and courting more, Again embrac’d her naked body o'er; And straining hard the statue, was afraid His hands had made a dint, and hurt his maid: Explor’d her limb by limb, and fear’d to find So rude a gripe had left a livid mark behind: With flatt'ry now he seeks her mind to move, And now with gifts (the pow'rful bribes of love), He furnishes her closet first; and fills The crowded shelves with rarities of shells; Adds orient pearls, which from the conchs he drew, And all the sparkling stones of various hue: And parrots, imitating human tongue, And singing-birds in silver cages hung: And ev'ry fragrant flow'r, and od'rous green, Were sorted well, with lumps of amber laid between: Rich fashionable robes her person deck, Pendants her ears, and pearls adorn her neck: Her taper’d fingers too with rings are grac’d, And an embroider’d zone surrounds her slender waste.
Thus like a queen array’d, so richly dress’d, Beauteous she shew’d, but naked shew’d the best.
Then, from the floor, he rais’d a royal bed, With cov'rings of Sydonian purple spread: The solemn rites perform’d, he calls her bride, With blandishments invites her to his side; And as she were with vital sense possess’d, Her head did on a plumy pillow rest.
The feast of Venus came, a solemn day, To which the Cypriots due devotion pay; With gilded horns the milk-white heifers led, Slaughter’d before the sacred altars, bled.
Pygmalion off'ring, first approach’d the shrine, And then with pray'rs implor’d the Pow'rs divine: Almighty Gods, if all we mortals want, If all we can require, be yours to grant; Make this fair statue mine, he wou’d have said, But chang’d his words for shame; and only pray’d, Give me the likeness of my iv'ry maid.
The golden Goddess, present at the pray'r, Well knew he meant th’ inanimated fair, And gave the sign of granting his desire; For thrice in chearful flames ascends the fire.
The youth, returning to his mistress, hies, And impudent in hope, with ardent eyes, And beating breast, by the dear statue lies.
He kisses her white lips, renews the bliss, And looks, and thinks they redden at the kiss; He thought them warm before: nor longer stays, But next his hand on her hard bosom lays: Hard as it was, beginning to relent, It seem’d, the breast beneath his fingers bent; He felt again, his fingers made a print; 'Twas flesh, but flesh so firm, it rose against the dint: The pleasing task he fails not to renew; Soft, and more soft at ev'ry touch it grew; Like pliant wax, when chasing hands reduce The former mass to form, and frame for use.
He would believe, but yet is still in pain, And tries his argument of sense again, Presses the pulse, and feels the leaping vein.
Convinc’d, o'erjoy’d, his studied thanks, and praise, To her, who made the miracle, he pays: Then lips to lips he join’d; now freed from fear, He found the savour of the kiss sincere: At this the waken’d image op’d her eyes, And view’d at once the light, and lover with surprize.
The Goddess, present at the match she made, So bless’d the bed, such fruitfulness convey’d, That ere ten months had sharpen’d either horn, To crown their bliss, a lovely boy was born; Paphos his name, who grown to manhood, wall’d The city Paphos, from the founder call’d.
(Ovid: Metamorphoses)
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observando
Sleeping In The Forest I thought the earth remembered me, she took me back so tenderly, arranging her dark skirts, her pockets full of lichens and seeds. I slept as never before, a stone on the river bed, nothing between me and the white fire of the stars but my thoughts, and they floated light as moths among the branches of the perfect trees. All night I heard the small kingdoms breathing around me, the insects, and the birds who do their work in the darkness. All night I rose and fell, as if in water, grappling with a luminous doom. By morning I had vanished at least a dozen times into something better.
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*Wishful Thinking You say that you are over me, my heart— it skips, it sinks. I see you now with someone new, I stare, I stare, I blink. Someday I’ll be over you, I know, I know— I think.

- Lang Leav #LangLeav

- Illustration by #Bìng

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I can relate to this, though not from a real person, but a fictional character from a Korean drama. T__T

uh yeah, same (◠﹏◠)

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The head of a company survived 9/11 because His son started kindergarten. Another fellow was alive because it was His turn to bring donuts. One woman was late because her Alarm clock didn’t go off in time. One was late because of being stuck on the NJ Turnpike Because of an auto accident. One of them Missed his bus. One spilled food on her clothes and had to take Time to change. One’s Car wouldn’t start. One couldn’t Get a taxi. The one that struck me was the man Who put on a new pair of shoes that morning, Took the various means to get to work but before. He got there, he developed a blister on his foot. He stopped at a drugstore to buy a Band-Aid. That is why he is alive today.. Now when I am Stuck in traffic, Miss an elevator, Turn back to answer a ringing telephone… All the little things that annoy me, I think to myself, This is exactly where I’m meant to be At this very moment
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What’s it like to be a human the bird asked I myself don’t know it’s being held prisoner by your skin while reaching infinity being a captive of your scrap of time while touching eternity being hopelessly uncertain and helplessly hopeful being a needle of frost and a handful of heat breathing in the air and choking wordlessly it’s being on fire with a nest made of ashes eating bread while filling up on hunger it’s dying without love it’s loving through death That’s funny said the bird and flew effortlessly up into the air

Funny by Anna Kamieńska, in Astonishments (translated by G. Drabik and D. Curzon)

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“Stranger, pause and look; From the dust of ages Lift this little book, Turn the tattered pages, Read me, do not let me die! Search the fading letters finding Steadfast in the broken binding All that once was I!”

Edna St. Vincent Millay; Collected Poems (via wordpainting)

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