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There comes a day in a person's life when they have to stand up and take responsibility. At least that's what they tell you. They lie. You have been swindled as surely as if you had mailed that Nigerian Princeling all of your hard-saved lunch money. Your naive attitude towards life has blinded you to the harsh realities of life. To cure you of your delusion, your parents have pushed you into doing something that you are not supposed to do. That, and your dad wanted to take a nap. You are to dismantle the cow. Congratulations! You've just taken a shortcut to vegetarianism. Believe us when we say that it happens. So, without further ado, let's jump in the RS manual for taking apart the cow. We'll warn you of the pitfalls you'll face. Of course, that won't do a damn thing to help you. You'll have to jump over those gaping chasms anyway. Knowledge is power. Ignorance is bliss. Take your pick. Step One: Plan B Step Two: Don't try to be cool Step Three: Don't do someone else's job Step Four: Look around helplessly Step Five: String 'em up! Yes, you won't be doing much during this step either. Unless you want to make a couple of experimental swipes with the cleaver [which is totally the wrong knife for this sort of activity] and hear the butchers scoffing in the background. Step Six: Divide and Conquer By this time, the smell on your hand is pretty much permanent. But you have come this far, might as well finish it. If you are in the village, you'll be running around house to house with either a gigantic bowl or a bucket filled with meat. If you are a not in a village, you'll be doing it building to building. Step Seven: And on the Seventh Day... By Cowzim Ibn Sadique The tiny spark They were asleep once more. He tip toed his way out of his room - careful not to make any sound. He was afraid the beating of his heart would wake them up again. What would he see today, he wondered? This time of the day, the uncertainty of it all and the promise of colour and splendour was what kept him going. It was pitch dark inside, but he knew just where the floorboards creaked and where to turn left without bumping into the wall. The narrow passage felt all the more suffocating, now that he could almost taste it. And then there he was. The doors were never opened. He knew he would probably never be allowed outside, they always remained within. The small key hole was all that connected them with the outside world. He looked back just one more time to make sure no one was there - and then he peeped through the hole. It took some time for his eyes to adjust to the light, and the vista of colours and sounds that hit him were overwhelming. For someone who till now considered the dismal air of his dark, musty room normal; the outside was to be marvelled at and feared. He longed to go out because his instincts told him to, but his commonsense told him to stick to his known, defined and predictable world. The outside was said to be a dangerous place, where you would never live to be a thousand. They said if you went out you would become unclean, the light would burn you and the sounds deafen you. When he was younger, 'outside' was the bogeyman from his nightmares. The fragments that got through the key whole stirred up something; he started to dream. The shouts and laughter that penetrated the doors were music that haunted him. Why were they laughing? Why did the children outside pretend to be something they were not? Why all the running and throwing of balls? His personal kaleidoscope made him smile. He hadn't noticed when they came. He was too engulfed until there was a hand on his shoulders - a reproachful, cold touch. And he knew this was goodbye to the colours and sounds. When he tried to explain, they stared at him wearing a condescending smile. What he told them sounded empty, the feeling he had was alien to them. Delusions, they said; traps to lure him out. He knew his arguments would be in vain but he still kept going. His uncharacteristic obdurate nature made them afraid. He was shut off. That night the walls were closing in on him. Suffocating him and reminding him of his confines. A monochromatic, immutable state of being. But in his ears rang the shout of children and a fragment of something he heard. “…then the traveller in the dark; Thank you for your tiny spark…” Never mind, he thought - one day. By Moyukh |
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