not my view, but a reasonable facsimile |
I
took myself down to the local coffee shop one workday last week, fully
intending on drafting this weekend’s blog post. I had no idea what my subject
would be. Life of late has been more about living and less about musing—you
might say I’m gathering material for future posts—but I reckoned that, surely,
inspiration would strike once I assumed the position.
Armed
with a Mumbai chai, I took a seat in the window, opened my book, uncapped my coloured
Sharpie ... and nothing came. Nada. Zip, zero, zilch. The blank page leered up
at me, daring me to mar its pristine whiteness with my purple genius. I stared
back, immobilized, though not with fear. My mind was merely as blank as the
page in front of me.
My
Zen homework has taught me not to panic at a writer’s block. Sometimes it’s
just not meant to happen. On another day, my genius will blaze brighter than
the halogen high beams on an Audi. Just not today.
Sigh.
Rather
than forcing the matter, I decided simply to enjoy my tea and watch the street
action through the window. I kept the book open, though the cap went back on my
pen. My cup was almost empty when I noticed something so typically incongruous
of a First World society that I had to write it down: a white Porsche Cayenne
pausing at a crosswalk while a homeless man pushed a shopping cart laden with
all his worldly goods in front of it. Wealth and poverty in a single, poignant
image. I wished I’d had my camera with me.
Then
I realized I’d had a ton of impressions in the past half hour; seen countless
vignettes worthy of note (to me, anyway):
A
lapdog wearing a raincoat.
Tourists
carrying shopping bags.
An
older couple strolling arm in arm.
A sleek
and shiny Tesla—twice!
The
bus ballet (they really do a dance, merging around and into traffic from the
stop outside
the window).
A
quartet of orange umbrellas bobbing in a cluster along the far sidewalk. They
stood out so bright and cheerful in the grey drizzle, I christened them “orange
blossoms”.
The
faces on passersby: grim, worried, anxious, vacant, lots of frowns and not many
smiles. Sad.
A
toddler pushing a stroller while his mother steered him from behind, and the
tiny hand lolling from the stroller itself as the occupant enjoyed the ride.
A
hipster girl wearing a backpack as big as she was, pausing to read the “we’re
hiring” sign in the coffee shop window.
Soft
jazz on the shop’s sound system, followed by a cool cover of Roxy’s “Love Is
The Drug”, then something by Florence and the Machine (her voice is so
distinctive).
The
store manager came by to tidy the tables behind me. “On your own today?”
“Just
hanging out,” I replied.
“Killing
time?”
“Nah,
I was doing that in the office.”
He
laughed. I said I’d see him tomorrow, then I packed up my stuff and went back
to work.
It
might not be genius, but I got my post after all.
No comments:
Post a Comment