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brian-sarfati
brian-sarfati
Brian Sarfati is a Philippine-born poet from the University of the Philippines who writes in a primarily wonderful, innocent, and avant-garde style deriving inspiration from the poetry of ee cummings.
To render strings of scenes from your head into words on paper that another person could read in order to recreate the voice of someone unmet, and at the same time be presented beautifully and clearly; to choose the right words making the right phrases making the right sentences making the right paragraphs making the right chapters, and to have these chapters interweave into a cohesive story that manages to fulfil the reader and make him feel joy, sorrow, despair, or hope; is insanely meticulous, and inanely ridiculous. And to come up with characters that need to feel alive: to have to be so many people at once, each with their own dreams, wants, thoughts, feelings, identities, and treasured memories, how can one not explode? How can a mind not erode? And of all the hobbies, passions or pastimes a human being can engage in— from juggling chainsaws on a tightrope to playing the piano while painting yourself playing the piano to sculpting a hypercubic klein bottle, nothing is as delicately difficult as juggling a thousand possibilities of plot on a swinging tightrope of self-doubt while playing the instrument of your vocabulary to paint a scene revealing itself magically all the while sculpting an entire universe(!) piece by piece from the flesh and bone of your own pregnant imagination. Who, then, but only the most idiotic, brave, ambitious, and diabolic self-haters and self-lovers would write a book? It's a noble task, to be sure, for without its fair dose of literature, mankind would crumble and un-create back to the unthinking, unfeeling dirt from which it is made.
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Oct 28, 2014
Oct 28, 2014 at 9:29 AM UTC
The Difficulty of Writing a Book
To render strings of scenes from your head into words on paper that another person could read in order to recreate the voice of someone unmet, and at the same time be presented beautifully and clearly; to choose the right words making the right phrases making the right sentences making the right paragraphs making the right chapters, and to have these chapters interweave into a cohesive story that manages to fulfil the reader and make him feel joy, sorrow, despair, or hope; is insanely meticulous, and inanely ridiculous. And to come up with characters that need to feel alive: to have to be so many people at once, each with their own dreams, wants, thoughts, feelings, identities, and treasured memories, how can one not explode? How can a mind not erode? And of all the hobbies, passions or pastimes a human being can engage in— from juggling chainsaws on a tightrope to playing the piano while painting yourself playing the piano to sculpting a hypercubic klein bottle, nothing is as delicately difficult as juggling a thousand possibilities of plot on a swinging tightrope of self-doubt while playing the instrument of your vocabulary to paint a scene revealing itself magically all the while sculpting an entire universe(!) piece by piece from the flesh and bone of your own pregnant imagination. Who, then, but only the most idiotic, brave, ambitious, and diabolic self-haters and self-lovers would write a book? It's a noble task, to be sure, for without its fair dose of literature, mankind would crumble and un-create back to the unthinking, unfeeling dirt from which it is made.
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41
Why do we need to read? A silly question. It's for the same reason we need to breathe. But some people can't read. And lots of people who can read don't even bother to. Am I saying they do not breathe? No, but I like to think of reading as an "acquired necessity." It's like an acquired taste like wine or cheese, but once it enters your life, you find that you can no longer live without it, and you wonder how you ever existed before it... I guess in a lot of ways, Love is an acquired necessity as well.
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Oct 28, 2014
Oct 28, 2014 at 9:26 AM UTC
Why Do We Need To Read?
This world is right; I'm nothing after all. (The night is bright with millions of my dreams holding me safe) Up on the sky I dangle on a rope above the smoke of today's defeat. What's tomorrow but another retreat? (If I could fly into your thoughts tonight and if I could find one warm memory of me then all the stars can die for I will be alright.) Here comes the Wake eating up the light that clothes me. Soon enough I'll find myself gasping on my bed, wondering "Am I alive or am I dead?" (Just hold on tight my dreams, my love, my light; I'll come for you all one day Through all these narrow rooms where despair and darkness looms. I'll find a way to smile In the shadow Thanks to the thought of you.)
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Mar 16, 2014
Mar 16, 2014 at 11:37 AM UTC
Through These Narrow Rooms
I thought today would be terrible, but it wasn't so bad. Everything's alright. I don't know what it is. Even if I passed a hundred couples holding hands today, the spaces between my fingers did not ache . Even if the scent of other roses perfumed my solitary air, I felt no sorrow in being alone. I sat behind Her, the motor of my heart, today in the library and I felt my heartbeat. We never talked but I felt content just being so close. Even if I'm watching the full moon by myself, I'm chipper tonight. She's my Valentine my best Valentine my brightest Valentine, and the world is still.
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Feb 14, 2014
Feb 14, 2014 at 9:02 AM UTC
This Valentines
It was a hot, sunny, summery day, and the fire trees were in bloom. Their red leaves littered the streets with sunset though the midday light cast contrast on every little awning and ledge. You were hanging out by the Big Brother store, talking to the friendliest shopkeeper I ever knew, drinking soda and listening to his stories. From far away I thought you were a boy; your hair was cut so short. It was the first time I ever saw a girl without long hair, and ordinarily I would have been curious, but I had other problems, as you knew. As my little feet marched closer to the store I saw (though I tried to keep my head down) your face, which was so pretty with your huge luminous eyes and your fair soft skin. I was twelve back then, though, and so were you, so those weren't exactly the things on my mind as I reached the awning of the store, facing the storekeeper and trying my best to get it over with. I was disappointed because you were there; that there was another person to see me. I was even more shy back then than I am now. I must have made quite the curious first impression on you, huh? As I said, it was a hot summer's day, and the sky was robin's egg blue, and there I was beside you, about to purchase some juice and biscuits. And I was soaking wet with water. My hair and my clothes were heavy and dark and drooping, as if I had just been submerged in a river with all my clothes on. A trail of tiny blue puddles followed me from the gate of our house to where I was, where a big puddle was forming under my feet. I was frowning. You just stared at me with wide eyes as I told the shopkeeper what I was going to buy. Straight to the point. Oh, and back then I couldn't speak Filipino very well, and so my words had an outlandishly English accent. The friendly shopkeeper was used to it, but you definitely didn't hear me speak Filipino every day. He didn't even ask me why I was giving birth to puddles. He was cool like that. He handed me the juice and the biscuits. Great. I could splosh back home. But I hazarded to look at you, so ever so shyly I turned my head to look and remember who it was that saw me so I could avoid her. Then oh man, I blushed. I didn't know you were that pretty with your short hair and your wide eyes and your fair skin. I'll never forget it; how right then and there you lost it. All this time you were biting your lip while watching me, but then you just giggled and laughed and bent over and laughed some more. I was so embarrassed, but now as I sit remembering that moment, I realise how happy and innocent your laugh was. Then I made like a dish with a spoon and ran away in a blush as red as the fire trees. I hoped I would never see you again, but of course I did. I did, sometime later, when we were older, and I remembered you. You didn't let off that you remembered me from sometime past, but I couldn't miss the way you half-smiled and held back a chuckle after you studied my older face. I never did tell you why I was dripping that day. You never asked. You're cool like that. I swear though, that someday when we meet again I'll tell you, but for now it's my little secret, and you'll be the first to know. And oh how I was in love with you and, I think, always will be.
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Nov 18, 2013
Nov 18, 2013 at 11:13 AM UTC
Flashback To A Childhood Summer's Day
It was a hot, sunny, summery day, and the fire trees were in bloom. Their red leaves littered the streets with sunset though the midday light cast contrast on every little awning and ledge. You were hanging out by the Big Brother store, talking to the friendliest shopkeeper I ever knew, drinking soda and listening to his stories. From far away I thought you were a boy; your hair was cut so short. It was the first time I ever saw a girl without long hair, and ordinarily I would have been curious, but I had other problems, as you knew. As my little feet marched closer to the store I saw (though I tried to keep my head down) your face, which was so pretty with your huge luminous eyes and your fair soft skin. I was twelve back then, though, and so were you, so those weren't exactly the things on my mind as I reached the awning of the store, facing the storekeeper and trying my best to get it over with. I was disappointed because you were there; that there was another person to see me. I was even more shy back then than I am now. I must have made quite the curious first impression on you, huh? As I said, it was a hot summer's day, and the sky was robin's egg blue, and there I was beside you, about to purchase some juice and biscuits. And I was soaking wet with water. My hair and my clothes were heavy and dark and drooping, as if I had just been submerged in a river with all my clothes on. A trail of tiny blue puddles followed me from the gate of our house to where I was, where a big puddle was forming under my feet. I was frowning. You just stared at me with wide eyes as I told the shopkeeper what I was going to buy. Straight to the point. Oh, and back then I couldn't speak Filipino very well, and so my words had an outlandishly English accent. The friendly shopkeeper was used to it, but you definitely didn't hear me speak Filipino every day. He didn't even ask me why I was giving birth to puddles. He was cool like that. He handed me the juice and the biscuits. Great. I could splosh back home. But I hazarded to look at you, so ever so shyly I turned my head to look and remember who it was that saw me so I could avoid her. Then oh man, I blushed. I didn't know you were that pretty with your short hair and your wide eyes and your fair skin. I'll never forget it; how right then and there you lost it. All this time you were biting your lip while watching me, but then you just giggled and laughed and bent over and laughed some more. I was so embarrassed, but now as I sit remembering that moment, I realise how happy and innocent your laugh was. Then I made like a dish with a spoon and ran away in a blush as red as the fire trees. I hoped I would never see you again, but of course I did. I did, sometime later, when we were older, and I remembered you. You didn't let off that you remembered me from sometime past, but I couldn't miss the way you half-smiled and held back a chuckle after you studied my older face. I never did tell you why I was dripping that day. You never asked. You're cool like that. I swear though, that someday when we meet again I'll tell you, but for now it's my little secret, and you'll be the first to know. And oh how I was in love with you and, I think, always will be.
Continue reading...
16
All the time I keep asking myself “Is she worth all this suffering for?” I stare at your picture— Smiling through those deepest eyes of yours —and after crying until the ocean in my heart is dry, I somehow manage to convince myself that “Maybe not… There will be others like her I should stop weeping and be happy.” And all goes well for a while. But darling I have learned Through years of this charade That it is as futile as throwing stones into the sky To taste the air for a little while, For they will fall back to the ground As inevitably as my thoughts fall back to you. In moments sublime, with the crash and play Of picturesque peace and beauty, Through association, I see you, And I wish you were beside me. In the deepest of my thoughts, In the stillest of my dreams, You are my archetype of Love, And of everything that is desired in life. And I rationally fear That a mere lifetime’s width of painful edges Cannot cut this emotion That runs deeper than my heart is capable of. And of all the universes out there, Why am I in one where you don’t love me?
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Oct 10, 2013
Oct 10, 2013 at 9:32 PM UTC
Orange October
It’s just another world without you— Empty as the outside of Time. It’s now but another hollow street When you disappeared into your serene retreat. This galaxy of elegy and commemoration, These yesteryear’s cheers of annual celebration, How can they keep rolling, How can I keep going, independent of your forgoing? These voices have no weight and these stories have no soul Your conversations, your smiles, were all I cared to know And now, as good as any gravestone your faceless face now hangs alone— Framed in my heart for all to see I love you: Please come back to me.
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Oct 10, 2013
Oct 10, 2013 at 9:30 PM UTC
An Elegy
If we were away on an island and Each Today was the same as its Morrow, Then all the world, with its Time’s flowing sands Holding still, would never bring me sorrow. With your hand in my hand, my heart in yours; Alltime would pass in the space of a dream. And all of those countless beautiful hours, As swift as a butterfly’s flight would seem. But not to your soul, with autumnal wings, whose wanderlust grows and rockets above To travel beyond the truth of all things. No lover can dare encage you with love. Thus I watch you soar like a wand’ring star, Evermore free; you’re the sky in my heart.
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Oct 10, 2013
Oct 10, 2013 at 9:29 PM UTC
The Sky In My Heart: A Sonnet
If I were to cut open my chest And eat my heart It would taste bitter and sour And distinctly fermented With the flavour of age. I think it would taste delicious. Like grapes or milk Meant for wine or cheese. And looking at the flies on the wastebin, I wonder, Is that my destiny? After all, some lives taste better when withered.
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Jul 21, 2013
Jul 21, 2013 at 4:09 AM UTC
Grapelife
words: crystallized fragments containing reality (and unreality as well) driven by a Logic unable to prove its own existence. worlds: you exist in one; "the Universe" which is everything that [n]ever was[n't]: the moon, the sea, space, eternity you and me, this poem and the Universe is also a word which is contained in this poem and thus in your mind a word contains the world in which lives the person reading this poem that holds the wor(l)d
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Jun 1, 2013
Jun 1, 2013 at 2:38 PM UTC
Wor(l)ds