A Lover’s Recompense

To be, or not to be.

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23h53, the clock read.

It was almost midnight, she had writing to publish, judgments to read, and she was getting irritable. She’d been sitting at her desk for hours but suddenly the hum of the small fan heater at her feet seemed to be getting louder.

Why couldn’t she just figure it out?

After the break up, the one that broke her, she’d vowed to protect her herself ferociously from the affections of her heart.

In general, she’d found, hearts offer direction that is scrupulous at best. And hers in particular had a record of impossible obstinance and idealism to her detriment – her very undoing.

She stopped typing, a pair of hesitant hands hovering over the surface of the keyboard. She shook her head at the memory of pain and the fire that had refined her, as if the action alone would wipe the memories clear.

Since then, since that devastation, she’d sworn an oath on the scars that lined her forearm. Never again, went the pained promise, would she allow herself to be so consumed with the idea of the love of another that she lost her way, or her reflection became unrecognizable. She knew now just how treacherous the heart could be.

She’d even compared her previous (not-so-romantic) relationships to the story of Hansel and Gretel. After all, it was the children’s own affections and greed which had deceived them, she thought. Their desire for more crumbs meant they only looked up long enough to see the next crumb a short distance away, and then the next one after that, and so on. But never looking further to discern how far astray they were being led.

In fact, she opined, something could be said about that – the potency of instant gratification in affirming a myopic perspective.

Could that be what was happening now, between her and the man with the bottomless eyes?

She knew she loved him, perhaps even that she wanted to be with him in a doing-life-together kind of way. And to his credit, he’d been frank about his feelings and intentions for her since they met years ago. Unfortunately, years had passed before they were be able to contemplate earnestly the prospect of being together.

In a cruel irony, the years had taught her, among other things, no longer to trust (her) feelings. Sometimes, when he speaks about wanting her to love with vulnerability, she feels those years as a physical distance between them, and her heart groans with grief.

Now, she lifts the frame of her spectacles with the back of her hand to perch her glasses atop her head, and rubs her eyes generously.

02h31, the clock declared.

After a deep sigh, she rubs her temples and recalls an afternoon when it was his temples her fingers caressed, his head laying in her lap, eyes shut gently against the sun. Both of them submersed in a comfortable stillness. Neither one of them daring to speak over the sound of peace.

Sometimes, when I think about the books of the Bible, I marvel at the vast variety of wisdom contained in the Old Testament alone. I am stupefied. From the Levitical law, chronicles of the kings of Israel, to profound Psalms, and lamentations of the great prophets. It is these times when I consider Song of Songs.

From my reading of it, Song of Songs is a book about love, passion, and purity between lovers – whom many believe are King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. Recently, I have been thinking about the haunting refrain in the story of these lovers; “Do not awaken love before its time.”

To be or not to be? The question (which, thankfully, was never mine over which to agonize) has already been answered. Mine is to submit.

– Lele M

Called to Courage

I don’t even know if this counts as writer’s block.

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It feels like it. I’m bloated with ideas and an enthusiasm to share them. However, try as I might, there is an obstinate cork comfortably secured at the neck of my vessel. I can’t get it out. I simply don’t know where to start, or how to organise what I offer. It’s as though I’m over-inspired. I’m a deer caught between the blinding headlights of the blank screen with the incessantly blinking cursor. I feel like there’s something about the way the cursor flashes only when it is stationary that mocks the rate at which I’m typing.

What I know for sure is that my imagination is aroused and similarly, my desire to write has been piqued. I wonder what the great writers whose work I’ve encountered would advise me in this instance. What would Wilbur Smith say to offer comfort? Perhaps something unassuringly simple like “just start” or “trust your instinct.”

Instead, the advise I’d love to receive would be from the prophet Isiah. I want to write like the prophet Isiah. Notably, the life led by Isiah was one of absolute submission to the will of God. Isiah’s encounter with the splendor and holiness of God changed the course of his service and life’s work. But he could not be commissioned before the lesser version of himself died when the searing coal touched his unclean lips. And if Isiah’s hefty contribution to old testament scripture is anything to go by, he’s the right person to help me to overcome the fear of the blank page.

I wake up daily feeling as though an outdated version of myself is wrestling for relevance with the woman I am becoming. There is no question as to which version of me will emerge the victor. I have a favourite, and I’ve placed my bets on her.

– Lele M

Purple chrysanthemums

I received a gorgeous bunch of fresh flowers the other day.

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I’d never had anyone buy me flowers before then. The details surrounding these flowers are fascinating at the very least but I will leave them out here. What I will say is I loved them the moment I saw them and even more when I knew they were mine. I had never seen flowers as exquisite as those. There they were, lounging beside a window and soaking in the Saturday afternoon sunlight with a charming nonchalance.

I must’ve been about fourteen-years-old when I learned the word pulchritudinous, which means exceptionally beautiful. The word sounds like it describes a corrosive substance. I was amused by the irony of a seemingly clinical description for something as subjective as aesthetic perception. Until this past Saturday, I couldn’t imagine the kind of thing which would be best described by that word.

Those flowers, those delicate purple chrysanthemums, answered a prayer I’d long forgotten I had prayed.

– Lele M