Tuesday 25 December 2012

Joy to the World...

Time for joy and time for cheer!

I've always loved Christmas time, ever since I was a wee lass watching the twinkly lights on the trees in the avenues or singing with carolers in my can't-carry-a-tune voice or grabbing every peppermint candy cane I could lay my hands on.

I don't celebrate Christmas in terms of religion, not being a Christian myself, but I've always felt that any major festival, to whomsoever it be of significance, is all about the spirit. In my book, I'll be with my roots and personal beliefs, but still, get into the spirit and respect for any other festival, be it Id or Hanukkah or Kwanza or Christmas or anything else. Because, really, ultimately, they're all times of joy, happiness, family and giving. It's the spirit of love and magic, friendship and brotherhood that it stands for and that is something that belongs to the universe.

So, to those in snowy places, Happy White Christmas! To those in not so snowy places (like where I am), Merry Christmas! To those who speak other languages besides English, I'll let the picture do the talking. They do speak a thousand words, after all.


And I would kill for a candy cane right now. Yes, I have an unhealthy obsession with peppermint.

Thursday 29 November 2012

Madden of Malham

Malham was far too small a place for anything to be kept secret. It was a far-flung village and parish, too far out to be a post town, its main businesses being its farms, gardens, festivals and tourism. Everyone knew each other by name or face. Everyone knew about Joan Tribley’s affair with the baker’s son and about how the Shiptons’ son was not the wife’s. Everyone knew when there was a visitor or a new tenant in the local inn. Everyone knew when it was someone’s birthday, or if there was a birth or death or wedding. But the one major mystery in Malham was the man who lived in Madden House.

Some folks called him Mister Havisham. Others called him the local Boo Radley. Nat called him Grandpa.

He had slipped away when his friends had declared after school that they were going to go out to the tarn to try and find the monster that lived in it. He had been tempted to join them, but had quietly asked Dom to cover for him and had escaped the group unseen. He trudged uphill towards Madden House, scarf wrapped tight around his ears against the cold wind of the waning autumn.

It was a three-story townhouse with ivy climbing over the white walls of the façade and lining the curtained windows. There was a garden out front with Worcester apple trees and Yorkshire roses lined with carefully arranged flagstones and a cherub fountain. The garden was immaculate, but strangely lonely, a silent companion to a seemingly empty house. Only one man was ever seen coming and leaving the estate, James the Housekeeper, known by no surname. He opened the heavy door when Nat knocked.

“Evenin’, James,” he greeted, wiping the mud from his shoes on the mat.

“Good evening, Master Woods,” he replied, his inscrutable face shifting into a small smile. No matter how much Nat complained or protested, James never called him by anything less formal. “The Master has been waiting for you.”

“How is he today?”  he asked, shucking off his coat and letting the housekeeper hang it off a stand.

“A bit better,” the housekeeper replied. “He managed to finish lunch.”

“That’s good. Did he ask you to read to him?”

“Yes, we read a chapter of Dickens today. He may ask you to carry on.”

Nat’s brows rose. “Oh, he spoke to you? That’s good.”

“Even asked a question, Master Woods. Come, he has been asking for you.”

Nat followed James the Housekeeper up the stairs, throwing surreptitious glances around him. He had been coming to Madden House regularly without the knowledge of his parents or friends for over four months, but never ceased to be intrigued by the telltale objects that lay around to give a clue about the mysterious master of the house. Thick leather-bound tomes lined the bookshelves, untouched by dust, but clearly long unread. Tiny curios lay strewn here and there: a rosewood crucifix with mother-of-pearl inlays on a wall, a porcelain angel on a table, an exquisite ship in a bottle sitting on a mantel, a wooden flute painted with tribal designs in an open case. They were all clean and tidily kept, all cared for by the taciturn housekeeper, but all still so oddly lonely, silent residents of a close-curtained house that told no tales outside its walls.

“Master George has arrived, sir,” James announced, ushering the boy into a bedroom on the first floor. It was a large sunny space with a wide window on one side and a roaring fireplace. Nat’s eyes roved over the ornate grandfather clock and the framed pictures that littered the mantel. Some of them showed an elegant dark-haired woman at various ages, one a strapping young man with a dead buck and a shotgun and a number of them described a smiling boy with dark hair that fluffed oddly in the front just like Nat’s did.

“Hi, Grandpa,” said Nat with a wide grin, dropping his satchel onto the thick rug and plopping down on the armchair situated next to the bed. A man was sitting up in it, dressed in thick pajamas and propped up on a number of pillows. Wispy strands of white hair clung to the top of his head and his hands were frail and lined, pale spiders against the dark red tartan quilt that lay over his legs. He did not look at the boy immediately, but kept his gaze out the window, staring over the dales.

“It’s real parky outside,” Nat commented airily, unwinding the scarf from around his neck. “The mates have gone off to the tarn; mad lot. They say they wanna find the ol’ Malgun monster. They’re gonna freeze their arses off. Ought to just sit in by a fire with a nice hot pikelet. Ta, James,” he told the housekeeper as the man placed a tray of hot crumpets with cream cheese and raspberry jam on the side table, along with two glasses of warm milk.

“I do believe you’re far too thin for a boy your age, Master George,” the housekeeper chided quietly.

“You worry too much, James,” Nat replied with a sideways grin, “and I told you, it’s just George. I’ve known you all my life.”

“Nevertheless, young master,” said James relentlessly with a pointed look and a hidden smile. He placed a pill next to one of the glasses and handed a book to Nat. “The pill is in case your head aches you too much, sir,” he added, addressing the aged man in the bed, who had not moved a muscle. “Master George suggested continuing reading from where we left it this afternoon. If you need anything, do ring for me.” He inclined his head in a polite gesture and exited the room, leaving the boy alone with the old man.

“I like ‘Great Expectations’,” Nat quipped, spreading cream cheese and jam over a crumpet before stuffing half of it into his mouth. “I read it from the library last week after I found out that you like Dickens, Grandpa. Miss Havisham is a right old bat, but it’s easy to feel sorry for her. And I like Pip; decent fellow, if not a bit dumb. It’s rather silly for a man to moon so madly after a girl. I bet Lia Whitley is prettier than her, and even so. I know I’d never be so mad. What do you think, Grandpa?”

Old Madden turned his head and looked at him with pale eyes that looked sunken in his aged face. Nat kept his smile up as he swallowed the rest of his crumpet and wiped his fingers on a napkin.

“I bet you’d agree with Pip, eh, Grandpa?” He ran a finger along the spine of the book, seeking out the embossed whorls in the leather binding. “You once told me that you called Grandma your Estella. It sounds a wee bit corny, but she must have liked it.” He fingered the hem of the dark green ribbon that marked the place in the book. “Are you in the mood to read a bit more now, or would you like to do something else?”

Madden’s gaze had not left Nat’s face. He was not unaccustomed to having the old man’s eyes bore so hard into him. It happened occasionally, on those evenings when Nat came to visit him and the man looked upon him as if he were a complete stranger. Otherwise, his mouth would stretch into a smile that was missing two teeth and his eyes would twinkle like little blue stars. Sometimes he spoke words of affection and interest in a hoarse, quavering voice. Other times, he laughed at something funny Nat would say: a thin, shaky sound that sounded half like a cough. If he did neither and was not in a mood to talk, he’d merely sit and listen with a smile to whatever stories Nat would tell him about his school and friends. James said that he was rarely aware anymore, that such moments were so fleeting that he believed them almost gone.

“Are you thirsty, Grandpa?” asked Nat, edging forward on his seat and holding up one of the glasses of milk. “It’ll get cold if you don’t drink it sometime soon.”

Old Madden’s eyes looked like smooth stones of the palest blue. Lines branched out on the skin around them, some deep like crevasses, made from age and laughter and weariness, some so faint that they seemed drawn with a pencil. He glanced at the glass in Nat’s hand before lightly shaking his head. Nat smiled ruefully; the man needed to consume something and was stubborn when he refused, but the fact that he gave any sort of reaction in itself was a good thing.

“Fine then,” he shrugged, setting it back on the side table next to the table lamp. “James said that you finished all of lunch today, but you need to eat a bit more if you’re going to keep up your strength. Maybe when you get a bit better, we can take a walk out to the cove or we can visit the tarn. I know that I mentioned a monster in it, but that’s just some silly story the mums around here make up to stop their kids from going. Not that it really stops us, but it’s really nothing.”

Madden gave no reply, but kept staring at Nat.

“If you get a lot better soon, I bet we could even go out onto the water: you, me and James, too, of course. We’d have to borrow Widow Fisher’s boat and her son, Ned, could take us out. Of course,” he winced, “she’d have to let us. Widow Fisher doesn’t like me much.”

The man’s gaze was unwavering, boring into Nat’s face like a pair of lances.

“Vincent Falkner is getting married next week,” the boy continued to babble, drumming his fingers on the face of the book. “He’s marrying Sally Taylor. The whole village is abuzz about it. Sally’s mum has been bustling around with dresses, ribbons and invitations, yelling at everyone involved in the preparations. Right old harpy, that woman, but I like Sally. She makes nice pies and always lets me have a piece on the sly. I don’t know Vincent that well; I only know that he used to be an altar boy at the church. Apparently, the whole village has been waiting for them to tie the knot already. If you get a bit more of your strength back, we can all dress up in our Sunday best and go. It’ll be fun. What do you think, Grandpa?”

Madden’s eyes roved over Nat’s face in a strange way that made him oddly uncomfortable. He had been visiting for a long time, but the man had never stared at him in such a penetrating way.

“What’s your name, boy?”

Nat blinked, frozen. He had only ever heard old Albert Madden speak a handful of times, all times speaking fond words in a wheezing voice that was heavily unused. This time, there was no trace of the familiar fondness and his tone rang with clarity.

“George Madden.” Nat laughed nervously. “That was your Papa’s name; you named me. Don’t you know me, Grandpa?”

Madden’s face was not the gentle aged face that Nat had become used to. It wore the hard expression of a stranger whom he had never before set eyes on. The old man shook his head and coughed; the action seemed to cost him so much strength. Nat nearly jumped out of his chair to ease Madden into his pillows and push a glass of water to his thin lips, but his wariness kept him frozen. His eyes flicked momentarily to the rope of the bell at the side of the bed.

“My grandson died of pox years ago, taking with him my name,” Madden spoke. His tone was hoarse, the words spoken without any emotion. “What is your name?” he repeated. A hard frown creased his brow, deepening the thin lines around his eyes. “And speak the truth, boy. I’m not always a doddery old fool.”

Albert Madden’s eyes were sharp and clear, unlike the haziness that usually permeated them. Nat stared in shock and fear, unsure of how to reply. How could he break the truth to a man who had called him by another name for so long, simply because he coincidentally resembled a dead boy whom he had doted upon? How could he lie to the mild old man whom he had tended to, read to and cared for every day for the past four months?

“N-Nathaniel,” he stammered. His hands trembled as they clenched the expensive upholstery of the armchair. “Nathaniel Woods.”

Madden stared at him for a moment longer, as if screening him for any sign of a falsehood. He turned away and leaned back into his pillows, closing his eyes tiredly.

“Nathaniel Woods,” he murmured. Nat remained fearfully motionless, wondering wildly if Albert Madden was going to forget about his real name or punish him for his lies. A moment later, he heard a soft snore as the old man exhaled in his sleep, his breath rustling the hairs of his sparse white moustache and beard. Suddenly terrified, he dropped the elegant copy of ‘Great Expectations’ on the floor, grabbed his satchel and sprinted out the door, snatching up his coat and scarf and ignoring James’s startled shout.

A week passed after Madden’s questions, during which Nat did not dare to return for fear of rejection or punishment. He spent his evenings with his friends, attended Sally Taylor’s wedding and fixed the broken chain on his bicycle, staying as far away from Madden House as possible. He was almost becoming used to the change in routine when James the Housekeeper came to his house dressed in a crisp black suit and accompanied by a lawyer. Nat barely heard any of his mother’s gasps and his father’s exclamations when James, now named James Browning, informed them about Nat’s relationship with Albert Madden and announced gravely that the old man had died in his sleep.

“In his last words, he had asked for George,” he added, glancing at Nat’s stricken face. His tone was in no way accusing, nor was it sympathetic. Nat wondered quietly if James the Housekeeper had any emotions or any other purpose in life besides serving Albert Madden.

When the lawyer read out the testament, the words ‘old friend of nobility’, ‘Duke of York’, ‘estate and belongings’ and ‘left to Nathaniel Woods’ swam around in his mind, but Nat could only think of the lonely old man with a failing memory, a wheezing laugh and a kind, lined face, the man who had called him grandson. When James reached into a bag and handed him the fine leather-bound copy of ‘Great Expectations’, Nat opened it to where the green ribbon marked its place and began to read aloud.




Frankly, My Dear, I Don't Give A Damn...

I'm a terrible person. I'm a terrible person and a reckless procrastinator. I'm a terrible person because I'm a reckless procrastinator, and right now, frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn.



Yes, I stole that last line. Couldn't help it really. Clark Gable was pretty much begging me to say that. It's like the time when I was studying for a test while sitting at my dad's table. When he came and told me that he wanted his table back, I stubbornly refused to budge until he said 'Get out of my chair!' like Prairie Dawn did to Grover when they were shooting 'Singing in the Rain' on Sesame Street.

Anyhoo, exams are almost up and I've been taking some time to do a wee bit more short story writing, mostly because I seem to have contracted a minor case of writer's block with my bigger writing project. Most of the said short stories have been elaborated responses to the prompts from Alice Kuipers's workshop on Wattpad. Delightful, really. I'm also looking forward to the Saarang Writing Awards in my own area soon enough. John and Rose have been on a bit of a lag, but I will get back to them soon.

Besides that, I've got half a shoe to finish painting. I've finished the left half of van Gogh's 'Starry Night'; I've just got the town part of the right half.

Moving on and drabbling me aside...

This one's an idea I got from one of the prompts. I love 'Great Expectations'; fantastic classic. And for the record, there really is a village in the Yorkshire Dales called Malham, a bit near Skipton. I did my research. And the story was submitted for the Saarang Writing Awards 2013.




Monday 5 November 2012

Arguments of a Nerdy Couple : Long Distance



Rose was bored. She was generally one to keep herself occupied, but her boredom was less to do with her activities and a bit more to do with where she was.

It wasn’t that she disliked living with her aunt in Montana. It reminded her a bit of her childhood home in Glasgow, where she had grown up as a child, and she liked going to the parks and hiking around the mountains on weekends with her friends Jen and Mick. They were dear people and she loved them to pieces, but it still made her alternate between melancholy and aggravation whenever she went out with them.

It was simpler when we were just kids, she thought moodily as she lay on her stomach, chewing on the end of her pencil. She scrolled through her emails, sighing when she came up with nothing.

“Rose?” Her aunt poked her head into the room, glancing at the odd combination of fairy lights and origami butterfly mobile with her Sandman and Batman wall posters. “Are you sure you’re not hungry?”

“I’m sure, Auntie Ailie,” she replied. “Jen’s mum had made meatloaf. She’s determined to fatten me up.”

“Quite right,” her aunt agreed with a decisive nod. She spoke in the American accent that Rose had never been able to pick up. “You’re really too skinny for your own good, Rosie.”

“Oh, don’t call me that, Auntie!” she groaned.

Ailie Connors sniffed from her place in the doorway, crossing her arms. “You let that John McDonald call you ‘Rosie’,” she complained. “I’m your aunt! Aren’t I allowed a sweet little endearment?”

“Anything but Rosie.”

“Specially reserved, is it?”

Rose frowned. “Auntie…” she began in a warning tone.

“I’m sorry, but I don’t like how you get so mopey whenever you come back here after your holidays! It’s as if you don’t even like living here and you know how much Uncle Dave and I love you! What are we supposed to think?”

“Oh, Auntie, it’s not like that,” she protested, sitting up and swinging her legs off her bed. “I love you guys and I love living here. I just miss him, that’s all.”

Ailie stepped in and held Rose’s face between her hands. “I love you too, sweet. I can’t believe you’ll be gone next year.”

“I won’t be gone, Auntie, just…displaced. Come on, you like John!”

“He’s a little too old for you,” she complained, threading her fingers through Rose’s hair.

“It’s only four years. That’s not so much! And don’t tell him that, please. Lord knows I’ve had to beat that out of his head with a cricket bat to get him to ask me out. And you do like him. You said so yourself that time when he fixed the radiator in your car and named every constellation in the sky.”

“I don’t dislike the boy; I just get scared at how attached to him you are. Jen and Mick miss you here and even when you’re around, it’s like you leave a piece of you with him.”

Rose looked down at her slippers, feeling immeasurably guilty then. She, Jen and Mick had been inseparable ever since she moved to America after her parents’ deaths. They had done everything together, but as the years went by, Mick had started spending more time with Trisha Hill and Jen had become attached at the hip to Lizzie Night. Rose had had the occasional boyfriend, but nothing had ever been concrete until she had met John.

“I’ll talk to them in school tomorrow,” she promised. “Mick’s out with Trisha tonight and Jen’s studying for English.”

Ailie raised a brow. “And you’re not?”

“I don’t need to study that rubbish,” Rose snorted, crossing her legs on her mattress and rocking back and forth. “I know it all.”

“But you were having trouble understanding that bit in Hamlet…”

“John explained it to me last night.”

“Oh, did he now?”

Rose shrugged. “Apparently, he played Hamlet once in a school play. It was a one-off theater gig, but looks like he was a hit. He’s a closet Shakespeare nut.”

Ailie shook her head. “No wonder you like him so much. Anyway, if you get hungry later, there are leftovers in the fridge. Don’t stay up too late.”

“I won’t.” Ailie threw her a small and a quick goodnight before exiting. “Much,” Rose muttered under her breath.

Exhaling in a sigh, she flopped onto her back and kicked off her slippers, wiggling her toes. She had known that John would become a fixture in her life the day she met him. He had tagged along with his best friend Jack, who had been visiting his cousins, one of whom had conveniently been Jen. She still remembered barging into her house with a banged knee and messy hair, professing loudly about how she was never going to trust Mick ever again and that if he dared to bring her three feet within range of a skateboard, she would pound him. Jack had chortled merrily and thrown her a flirtatious wink, for which Jen had promptly smacked him upside the head. John had introduced himself with a bright grin and had quipped that even he had tried skateboards once and had decided that not everyone was made to be Marty Mcfly. She had responded to that with, “Great Scot!”, making a delighted pun on his accent.

“You know, Rosie Rose, as lovely as you are and as happy as I am that you finally installed that webcam, it is rather frustrating that the first view I get of you is that of your feet.”

Rose rolled over immediately and scooted forward to her laptop screen where John was throwing her an amused smile from the Skype window.

“You’ve got a problem with my feet?” she asked, pretending to be offended.

“Oh, no, of course not. Your feet are very much…feet-ish. I just prefer your face.”

She laughed merrily and found herself glowing at the sight of him, freckled face, messy hair, brown eyes, big smile, gangly body, all of him. They had ditched the idea of phones early on seeing the resulting bills and sent emails and chatted as often as they could with their respective schedules, but she had not seen his face in nearly two months.

“I prefer your mug to your toes as well, Indy,” she beamed, “speaking of which…” She reached to one side, grabbing something off her table. “Thanks for the hat!” She dropped a fedora atop her head.

“I knew it was with you,” he grumbled.

“I was waiting for the webcam to tell you,” she grinned. “You’re not getting it back.”

“Yes, I am. That hat is on rent to you, missy.”

“You wish. I keep the hat, you keep the name.”

“Shared commodity?” he offered.

Rose raised a brow. “You’re in a generous mood.”

John’s eyes softened at that behind his half-rimmed reading glasses. “It’s a special day, so I’m willing to be generous. I’ve missed you.”

“Jack and Ian aren’t keeping you entertained?” she joked.

“You’re prettier than they are.”

“I won’t argue with that.” The corner of Rose’s mouth tilts up a bit higher as she touches the mildly pixelated face smiling broadly at her from her laptop screen. “I’ve missed you too, you idiot.”

“Such tender endearments,” he chuckled. “It’s a good thing I know your code.”

“My code?”

“You know, the one you use on me: the one where you call me an idiot when you actually mean ‘I love you’.”

“You’re a genius detective, you are,” she replied. “You’re wasting your time at college. Quit, get a mild-mannered flatmate, a pipe, violin and a deerstalker hat and change your name to Sherlock.”

He wrinkled his nose. “I don’t like deerstalker hats. It flattens my hair and makes it look like a mushroom cut.”

Rose copied his action. “Don’t ever wear deerstalker hats. They’re evil. And the name Sherlock isn’t for everyone.”

“You just like my hair.”

“Yes, yes, I do, and not one word from you, or I will puncture your ego.”

“You exist to wound me, love.”

“We’re both masochists in this relationship,” she shrugged, breaking off with a big yawn.

“Go to sleep, insomniac. You have an English test in the morning. Did you even study for it?”

“No need to. I got Hamlet to explain the whole thing to me.”

“Nice bloke, is he?”

“The best. Bit of a royal pain in the arse, but he’s also a complete nerd and a pathetic fanboy, so I’ll forgive him anything.”

John raised an amused brow. “Should I be worried, Rosie Rose?”

“Never,” she said confidently before blinking sleepily. “I’m tired, but I’m not tired enough to sleep,” she complained. “Talk to me?”

“Are you insinuating that I put you to sleep, Miss Carmichael?”

“I just want to hear your voice. Talk to me?”

“Alrighty then. Let us conduct tonight’s debate on the age old dilemma: a TARDIS or a Delorean?”

“TARDIS,” Rose muttered.

“You’re right,” he muttered. “Hands down. Star Wars or Star Trek?”

“I want to be awake for that.”

“How about I read you some Shel Silverstein?”

Rose smiled sleepily at John’s face. “Have I ever mentioned that I love you?”

“Occasionally,” he beamed. “I could always stand to hear it again.”

“I love you.”

“Good. Close your eyes, study slacker.”

“Give me good dreams.”

“Yes, ma’am. Invitation by Shel Silverstein. ‘If you are a dreamer, come in…”

Rose fell asleep with a smile on her face. The next day, she aced her test. 


Any Suggestions?

I'm considering changing the name of the John and Rose series. 'Arguments of a Nerdy Couple' seems a bit off-kilter, considering the fact that they do argue, but it's more of banter and their back and forth talk is kind of how they flirt. It is indeed banter, but 'Banter of a Nerdy Couple' just has no ring whatsoever to it.

Any suggestions? Do, tell.

On other notes, I watched Skyfall. Not your usual run of the mill Bond movie. It was so, so unique and was a magnificent tribute to all things old-school about dear Double O Seven, from Q, to the Aston Martin , to Moneypenny. Definitely worth a watch. Or a few.

Friday 2 November 2012

Quick Post


Everyone in East America, hope you're all safe and Sandy didn't hurt you all. Same to everyone in India who got a taste of Nilam! My prayers out to you all, hope you're all okay!

Sunday 28 October 2012

"Here Comes The Rain Again, Falling From The Stars..."

I'll admit I feel bad right now. I've been neglecting the blog, my manuscript has been shunted to the sidelines and poor John and Rose are a wee bit lost in their own sense. I've just been swamped with work and as a result, have been manically uninspired for words for the past couple of weeks. So it's just been me and potloads of design work alternating with the house swarming with guests, while I'm listening to mood music.

Yes, I like sad music. In the words of Sally Sparrow, 'sad is happy for deep people'. It's also a good backdrop for the rains. We've been lashed by a number of successive thunderstorms for the past week or so, alternating very juxtapositioned-ish-ly be bright sunshine. Mad, mad, mad.  The big men upstairs have got an odd sense of humor. 

But really, when the skies are dark and the house is quiet and the only sounds otherwise are the hum of the rain and the occasional rumble of the thunder's laugh, such haunting songs stir something wonderful right in the heart. My personal favorite right now is 'What If The Storm Ends' by Snow Patrol, followed by 'Running Up That Hill' by Placebo. Anything by Audiomachine or Adrian von Zeigler also places well. And Ramin Djawadi's 'Game of Thrones' soundtrack.

No matter what angle we see it in, what emotion we choose to associate it with, there is just something about the rains. For a good number of people, it can be an annoyance, especially when roadblocks and potholes come into question. For others, the constantly dull grey skies are outright depressing, because, honestly, who can dream of getting any work done when all you want to do is curl up in a comforter and sleep? For some others, the monsoon is a joy, a release, a reason to ditch any work to just go out and lose yourself in the rain.

For any person who has the heart of a poet, whether he/she is secretive about it or not, the rain is a common theme used, associated with a myriad of moods and emotions. The rain is a poet’s muse, a director’s set, a painter’s subject, a photographer’s shot. It is the most oft used and most inspiring subject for poetry in all its forms, whether it be through words, paints, cameras, dance, music or one of the many others that would take too much of the page if I listed out.

If we stocked the number of movie song sequences and climax scenes that take place in the rain, whether for a romantic mood, a scene of sorrow or just as accompaniment for epic music, we’d have a stack a mile high. When Vera Farmiga in ‘The Boy in the Striped Pajamas’ discovered that her son had been killed in the gas chambers in Auschwitz, the rain poured from the skies to mix with her tears as she screamed her anguish. When Tim Robbins in ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ waded out of the prison sewer, tore off his overshirt and leaned back to spread his arms out, the rain fell upon him as a symbol of his release. 

Almost every old crime movie and a good number of Hercule Poirot-ish stories would involve a scary, mostly-empty mansions and a violent storm that would conveniently prevent all inhabitants from escaping. There would be a million and one love songs out there that would have either been shot in the rain or used the rain as a theme. There always is that age old cliché about the kiss in the rain, be it as old as ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’ or more recentish, like ‘The Notebook’ or ‘Step Up 2: The Streets’. I personally wrote a little prose piece once, describing the Earth and Sky as lovers of old and the storms as their passion.

But what is it about the rain that evokes these kinds of emotions in us? Why do we feel connected to the rain, whether by moods of anguish, love, happiness, release, power, fear or anything else it may inspire in us? Maybe it has something to do with our inherent connection to nature. Maybe it has something to do with the way music stirs something in us, the rain being nature’s method of song. Maybe it has something to do with our unconscious love for anything that is beautiful. Whatever be our reason, the rain makes us feel. We love its gentleness like we would a close companion’s, we fear its wrath like we would a God’s. We revel in it like the earth does, we look to it for comfort as the skies cry along with us during hard times. The rain has a soul that twists and meanders like a human’s, which is probably why we relate to it so well.

Right now, October is yet to completely wane and we still have the months of November and December to pray for some good rains. Since I don't get snow where I come from, I'll settle for some good thunderstorms. Next time there’s a gentle drizzle, throw away your umbrellas and inhibitions and step out into the rain. Let it wash over you, cleanse you of your burdens. Let your heart match the thunder, your eyes be the lightning and your breath match the wind. There can be no better way to connect to nature, unless I get to come face to face with a wolf, which I don't see happening too easily right now.

And when you’re doing that, don’t worry about catching a cold or ruining your hair; a little water never hurt anyone. Just avoid mud on your feet once you come back inside. Then, you might just have something to genuinely be afraid of.