I spend so much time staring at blank canvases hoping beauty will appear before me instantly that I forget how the right brain works. I forget how art doesn't come, it simply is; you either have it or you don't. These are talents you don't learn, can't learn. You're born with the instinct to string words into sonnets and mix paints into masterpieces, and most of the time, no one else is capable of understanding just how you got them to be what they are; it's your own personal daydream that you can choose to get lost in, or lose in the crevices in the back of your mind. That's why I write until my hands go numb and my mind is in shambles. I figure the more I do it, the better it will become. The brain is more than an *****. It's a muscle that requires constant manipulation to keep it in tip-top shape and I don't ever want to fall into the background. I want to spend my life tip tapping on keyboards and scratching at paper with fine tipped pens as if my life depended on it. To write of things unknown to the not-so-artsy types. Because I've come to find that a math or science major isn't usually capable of creating crescendos with wordplay, or letting syllables shimmy and shake off the tongue like they're doing the merengue. It's a song and dance that takes more than simple muscle-memory: it takes heart and soul and usually a little bit of pain along the way. Starving artists aren't sad because they're hungry, no, it's usually because they've experienced life in a way that no one really wishes to. They've felt emotions rip through them like tidal waves and that's how they came to write so **** beautifully, or paint with such depth. Now a day's with depression levels shooting up like rockets, outlets are hard to come by but if you can source that pain into something beautiful, you must be doing something right. It's come to a point in my life where I believe half of my blood is infused with the ink I've used to label my hurt and ease my pain. It's all about what gets you by; it's become a lifeline. If it keeps me breathing for another second, another minute, another hour, another day, then I might as well let it grow like wild fire. Let it blossom into something beautiful.