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ninajc
ninajc
20/F/English In love with words. / twitter: @TheNinaJC
Poets say how beautiful it is that the ocean refuses to stop kissing the shore no matter how many times it is sent away How chasing thunderstorms can make you feel so alive that sometimes you forget you are in the path of a hurricane. This is how we fall in love This is how we fall apart This is the burning flame This is the burst balloon This is saying “I love you” and only hearing a siren song This is feeling at home even with your hands around my neck Maybe I jumped knowing exactly where I’d fall Maybe I held your heart so hard it exploded If we are just two people playing with fire Why am I the only one who gets burnt? In sixth grade biology class they taught us that the average human heart is the same size as a fist. I didn’t know we would all grow up learning to use it like one.
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Apr 6, 2016
Apr 6, 2016 at 4:09 PM UTC
Stockholm Syndrome
I stood still and watched the sun drip across a candy-coloured skyline and melt into a puddle on the pavement. Clouds hung suspended in the air like wavering pegs on a washing line anticipating, frozen, a ghost trapped between two sides. Propelled into motion, the blanket of fog descends and suffocates. Wraps itself around the earth’s neck and breathes. Squeezing its victim into submission, this is the kiss before the bite. Sometimes I am forced to remember. In the transient passing of nature: a wisp of smoke, the crunch of gravel, the flicker of a firefly. I once thought I saw a shadow there. In silent screams the moon pulsates and I find myself catching honey between the cracks, scooping handfuls into my mouth for there is fear of forgetting to taste. I will watch the hourglass until the sand begins to flow backwards. It never does but, darling, we have waded in too deep to turn back now. It is only July, I remind myself. Flowers still have time to bloom; I am just a negative waiting to develop.
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Feb 27, 2016
Feb 27, 2016 at 4:28 PM UTC
The Summer of Silences
There is fire in my bones and lightning in your lungs. When we kiss it’s like a thunderstorm. Two tectonic plates­ crash against each other and somewhere in the world starts quaking. Seismic waves are quicker than calling. Continental drift is the earth’s defence mechanism for commitment. Static electricity, like miscommunication, is simply friction in motion. I am crushing sandstorms­ between my teeth, breathing in hurricanes like oxygen, swallowing the volcanic ash of survival; to think we are all made of liquid love and some will never feel the force of a tsunami. Sometimes I am stuck in the eye of a tornado, others I am spinning in it. Either way, we are a whirlwind of skin and bone; flesh and blood; bruises and scars. Laying in the fresh rubble of our own creative destruction, I realise, our love is an oxymoron; a natural disaster; a phenomenon scientists could only dream of understanding.
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Feb 27, 2016
Feb 27, 2016 at 4:17 PM UTC
Falling In Love With A Catastrophist
I am an old friend of bruised knees and bathroom floors, exhaling until the chest is empty and body no longer breathing; only absence lives here now. Cold stone tiles, so we meet again: spilling secrets into each other’s mouths until we see the light of dawn, we whisper with a hope of being heard, yet fear of being listened to. For weeks I have been swallowing metaphors like honey, gulping down apologies for breakfast, biting my tongue until the taste of forgiveness fills me – for once my throat is not made of molasses. There is a reason why our hearts began to curl like fists and we aimed them at ourselves, because after all, self-love has always been the most important thing.
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Feb 20, 2015
Feb 20, 2015 at 8:45 AM UTC
3AM refrigerator light confessions
Last week I was taught that no matter how complex an expression may seem if you multiply it by its conjugate pair you will always end up with a non-negative real solution. That is a metaphor for how we have learned to love. I used to like mathematics, as strange as it may sound, because memorising the value of pi was somehow easier than forgetting the notion of you and I thought maybe comprehending the mechanics of the universe would lead me one step closer to cracking the combination. In a world that spins at the rate of 27,900m per minute, a constant can prove tricky to find. Hence, there is solace to be felt in knowing that even when it is all said and done – when the final bullet has slipped from our tongues and we are left trembling upon nothing but the rubble of our own destruction, two plus three will still be equal to five. In an attempt to clarify a theory to the class, my teacher analogised that mathematics is like one big giant jigsaw puzzle: everything always fits together perfectly in the end Since then I have learned it is the method without the madness, the passion for the predictable; it is everything - that love is not. Not even the greatest mathematician in the world has been able to measure how much a heart can hold. There is no algorithm for how to make you come back; I cannot draw a line graph on the speed at which love left and even if I could, our gradients would never be the same. I may have both halves of the bed, but there is never enough space to fill it with. If a task takes four hours for ten people to complete and the same job takes five people twice that time, how long will it take for a human to feel whole again? Sometimes I think we are nothing more than two parallel lines that accidentally crossed paths.
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Jan 14, 2015
Jan 14, 2015 at 5:47 PM UTC
a mathematical love poem
Last week I was taught that no matter how complex an expression may seem if you multiply it by its conjugate pair you will always end up with a non-negative real solution. That is a metaphor for how we have learned to love. I used to like mathematics, as strange as it may sound, because memorising the value of pi was somehow easier than forgetting the notion of you and I thought maybe comprehending the mechanics of the universe would lead me one step closer to cracking the combination. In a world that spins at the rate of 27,900m per minute, a constant can prove tricky to find. Hence, there is solace to be felt in knowing that even when it is all said and done – when the final bullet has slipped from our tongues and we are left trembling upon nothing but the rubble of our own destruction, two plus three will still be equal to five. In an attempt to clarify a theory to the class, my teacher analogised that mathematics is like one big giant jigsaw puzzle: everything always fits together perfectly in the end Since then I have learned it is the method without the madness, the passion for the predictable; it is everything - that love is not. Not even the greatest mathematician in the world has been able to measure how much a heart can hold. There is no algorithm for how to make you come back; I cannot draw a line graph on the speed at which love left and even if I could, our gradients would never be the same. I may have both halves of the bed, but there is never enough space to fill it with. If a task takes four hours for ten people to complete and the same job takes five people twice that time, how long will it take for a human to feel whole again? Sometimes I think we are nothing more than two parallel lines that accidentally crossed paths.
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To be, or not to be? That has always been the question, but I've never been too sure of the answer. I'm not obsessed with Shakespeare, just death. Or rather death is obsessed with me -- I feel it. Surging through every synapse under my skin, buried deep within each crater of my soul: I no longer know what home feels like. Death haunts me. Like the shadow I've never quite been able to catch, but have always heard knocking. One day, that door will be opened-- darkness will consume me, if I could only find the light switch. When you don't like a song, you can simply stop listening to it; this record has been stuck on repeat for so long maybe I'll finally learn what forgiveness sounds like. But I'm scared. Of what will happen when the music stops playing.
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Apr 28, 2014
Apr 28, 2014 at 2:20 PM UTC
uncertainty
i used to think you were the first thornless rose to ever exist until i accidentally pricked myself on you and haven’t stopped bleeding since. that was the day i learned that sometimes it’s the beautiful things in life that can hurt you the most.
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Mar 3, 2014
Mar 3, 2014 at 5:05 PM UTC
thornless rose
i. do you ever think that maybe the sun gets sick of smiling down at strangers in an audience that never even bothers to look up? and yet still, each morning the spectacle continues to rise shining, singing to deaf ears blind minds— silent applause. ii. i feel the wind's breath creeping up my spine and can't help but wonder if maybe the only reason he whistles is to be heard. maybe the wind is just as lonely as the next passer-by he tries to hug but gets lost in translation: soft skin kisses transform into blows this power he cannot control— he calls it love. but others only ever see destruction. and maybe now they both mean the same thing anyway. iii. perhaps trees only sway as an attempt to unchain themselves from the roots that shackle them to the ground confined by the soil that anchors them to a cage they're convinced is called "home." they say every tree has a story to be told: the squirrel who hollowed out its heart and made a life out of the rotting rings inside; dead voices carved into peeling skin arms outstretched only ever greeted by air and the occasional bird that comes to sit on a broken-boned bridge that once led to somewhere. it's true. every tree does have a story to be told and if a tree falls in a forest and someone is around to hear it, it does make a sound. but the real question is would anyone be listening anyway? iv. i think in a way humans can be a lot like nature too.
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Jan 15, 2014
Jan 15, 2014 at 5:03 PM UTC
there's a lot to be learnt from nature
There is no "blurred line" just a clear cut crime scene tape with the warning "DO NOT CROSS" stamped all over it.
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Dec 26, 2013
Dec 26, 2013 at 8:10 AM UTC
Robin Thicke
You say, "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels” but I say surely something must taste nicer than the burning acid being forced back up your throat. Why not hug people instead of toilet bowls? At least they’ll hug back. Except Mia is your only friend now. And her cousin, Ana, of course. And I understand that you never wanted to die, but this is a thousand ton truck hurtling towards the edge of a cliff and Ana took the wheel a long time ago. There is no strength in this: in you, in a fear of calories. Even your bones creak as your muscles sigh with exhaustion - for this, is not a war you're winning. This is a battle with only one contender and I will not be the one to disarm you. That's your job and it always has been. I know you only wanted to be beautiful like all those stars in the magazines you saved under a file titled ‘thinspo’ but the only stars you ever saw were in your eyes from the dizziness and to tell you the truth, you are not pretty. For there is nothing “pretty” about the layer of fuzz your body grew to protect itself from the big bad wolf when really, the only growl was coming from inside your stomach. Or how your little sister is afraid to touch, let alone hug you, in fear of snapping you in two. For there is no glamour in having to remove clumps of hair out of the plughole at least six times whilst having a shower, just to let the water run down. Or that one time you "accidentally” took too many laxatives. Messy. There is nothing admirable about the way you sat shivering on your bed at night instead of kissing boys, or dancing, or eating ice cream. There is nothing to be marvelled at in dying. This, is not a life to be lived. God, this isn't even a life. This is being a slave to your own body, a walking zombie, a ghost stuck between two sides. You are not alive. But it was all still worth it, right? Slowly killing yourself from the inside out. A small price to pay for perfection, a bargain for a broken mirror; for a half-written book with 97 blank pages, a camera that only captures in black and white, a clock with frozen hands. And most importantly, for a peace of mind you never received. No refunds.
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Dec 8, 2013
Dec 8, 2013 at 11:59 AM UTC
the ugly side to eating disorders
You say, "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels” but I say surely something must taste nicer than the burning acid being forced back up your throat. Why not hug people instead of toilet bowls? At least they’ll hug back. Except Mia is your only friend now. And her cousin, Ana, of course. And I understand that you never wanted to die, but this is a thousand ton truck hurtling towards the edge of a cliff and Ana took the wheel a long time ago. There is no strength in this: in you, in a fear of calories. Even your bones creak as your muscles sigh with exhaustion - for this, is not a war you're winning. This is a battle with only one contender and I will not be the one to disarm you. That's your job and it always has been. I know you only wanted to be beautiful like all those stars in the magazines you saved under a file titled ‘thinspo’ but the only stars you ever saw were in your eyes from the dizziness and to tell you the truth, you are not pretty. For there is nothing “pretty” about the layer of fuzz your body grew to protect itself from the big bad wolf when really, the only growl was coming from inside your stomach. Or how your little sister is afraid to touch, let alone hug you, in fear of snapping you in two. For there is no glamour in having to remove clumps of hair out of the plughole at least six times whilst having a shower, just to let the water run down. Or that one time you "accidentally” took too many laxatives. Messy. There is nothing admirable about the way you sat shivering on your bed at night instead of kissing boys, or dancing, or eating ice cream. There is nothing to be marvelled at in dying. This, is not a life to be lived. God, this isn't even a life. This is being a slave to your own body, a walking zombie, a ghost stuck between two sides. You are not alive. But it was all still worth it, right? Slowly killing yourself from the inside out. A small price to pay for perfection, a bargain for a broken mirror; for a half-written book with 97 blank pages, a camera that only captures in black and white, a clock with frozen hands. And most importantly, for a peace of mind you never received. No refunds.
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