Sunday, 14 May 2017

Linda

Cigarette is her father. Camera is her husband. Crystal is her son. Champagne is her lover.
Lights, camera, action!
‘Look at me dancing in these diamonds, adik!’ My mother. My Linda. A serpent of my soul, slithering in opulence and sweat. A goddess living in the kingdom of deities and imps. Born into a home of baby-breeding actors and thrown into a circus of trippy mannequins on the highway. There she goes, prancing in classic black Chanel with a cancer stick glued between her alabaster fingers, those broad hips swaying softly to the psychedelic poetry of Jim Morrison, clad in her John and Yoko Ono’s Bed-In Peace thin shirt that denudes her bosom. The swelling flesh is tingling and alive like stubborn mosquitoes on my salivated tongue. Her flaming red nails match those inviting ruby lips down to the deflowered genitalia that were once a warm home to me. She flutters her black cartoon eyes like a flirtatious darling; teenage boys and sidewalks would prostrate at her feet not long ago.
‘My baby, do you love me?’ she asks, flicking the ciggy amidst her ashen-coloured teeth. A poignant image of her green tudung attacks my brain cells as I drink in the woman twirling before my unwelcome eyes, boundless and free from a stranger’s hand in a desperate land. My mother. My Linda.

This is the end. My only friend. The end.

Morrison echoes in our ears. Jimi. Janis. Jim. There goes another one. ‘Yes, Mama.’ I whisper. Audiences view her like a picture book in an ancient library without alphabets and numbers, failing to read the shades of blue beyond her nose ring and mouth piercing that glitter like gold moles each time she drinks her Cola in the meth-fumed flask. ‘I live for luxury. I live for love. I love you too, sayang.’ She wobbles unsteadily like an acrobatic girl training to steady herself on ropes and giggles in my dumb face, chokes on her cigarette and puts the half-burnt menthol lipstick into the ashtray while smoke licks us all over. The woman in the green tudung stares frighteningly through the Swarovski-studded frame on the foyer table, black-mascaraed tears staining her plastic cheeks.
Money is her mother. Medicine is her sister. Music is her daughter. Make-up is her best friend. One, two, three, go!
‘You are ashamed of me, sayang. I know you are.’ Her sadistic aura and slurred speech stings like a honeyed venom through my psyche. The little girl in me gouges her eyes out, eats them for dinner and spews out my own face. She is blind to the night call of a phantom singer who pays a visit to Linda as he cuts the strings off from her body like a broken wooden puppet doll. Her domestic world is shut; she is flying home towards a suicidal music festival with her past paramour. 1969 Woodstock is waiting and celebrating her arrival in a hippie camper van of vivid colours. Wrinkled baby-arms probe impatiently inside their former mothers’ nests to shoot fast bullet of swimming tadpoles; to seek security, warmth and pleasure. This is a beautiful image of gods copulating with monsters in the garden of poets and politicians. The master, the brother, The Lizard King chants to his serpent sister in a welcoming foreplay.

The blue bus is callin’ us. The blue bus is callin’ us.

‘I am lighted again! Dance with me, adik.’ Strange scene pirouette in my mind seductively as I watch her body ignite with an old flame, like a race car competition, until she reaches the border of her homeland, driving fast and wild to win the famous grand trophy of blood, tears and gold. The green tudung has burnt away; its ashes are scattered among her dandruff-hair and blowing stubbornly in the stenchful wind of liquor and love. Naked slaves of physical harmonies and emotions grind against one another on the grass of grey-fluid earth. Linda arrives home. A wild serpent hunting for rats and sex. She hisses; ‘Where are you?’

Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill.

Morrison provokes behind her, his long pink tongue poking and invading my home. The beautiful union of brother and sister. ‘Here. Always.’ I mumble. She smiles sweetly at me, her sharp intake of breath a greeting gesture as she tastes of glitter and guitar with rock ‘n’ roll in her womb. An alien sensation stirs in the cloudy room of smoke, sweat and stained sofas. ‘Come here and kiss your mother.’ She discards her shorts and tosses them on the bed she shares with her man and men of bad fruits. The emerald ring radiates like a fiery beacon against her scale-like fingers, a token of my poor father’s love for his rebellious young wife. My mother. Our Linda. Thirty years sentenced to his jailhouse motel madness by the signed contract of drag aunties and chain necklaces have delivered the final blows to her head, breast and feet.

Ride the snake, ride the snake, ride the snake.
Father, I want to kill you.
Mother, I want to fuck you.

There’s a killer in the house and a family will die before dawn. I gaze at the long serpent of seven miles, touch her cold fragile skin and offer my white orchid to Linda to end her nights of secret sports and tender perjuries and for her coming home from caged debaucheries. Taking her hand, I ride the reptile through the summer rain in the blazing desert under the apricot spotlight. She smothers my lips until we puke cherry wine of rust and salt, flowing like a river from her eggs to my engines; sucking on her sugar-flavoured lollipop still. Our purities are extinct; we are two incognitos in the heated dry sandstorm. We descend rapidly like two trapped cannonballs that are hungry to be released for the destruction of an innocent town. Once the fireworks kiss the citizens and embrace their children, explosions of bright confetti will be a triumphant celebration among carnies and cannibals of our blood. Her new people will dance on future generations around a bonfire where they burn fresh condoms, torn clothes and pious peers. A new song of musical moans and orgy orchestras will become the national anthem as two serpents, two Lindis, brother and sister, recoil incestuously on sigils all around the country as they praise joyously for the return of their king and queen.

Thursday, 2 March 2017

New Zealand

New Zealand. Beautiful New Zealand. It has been 9 months since I went on a trip to New Zealand with my sister. The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien. Hobbits. These were the life supports for my sister and I. We are humungous fans of the books and the movies ever since we can remember. We watched the 12-hour special documentaries and 12-hour extended editions of the movies for countless times. My sister and I then made a pact that we would one day visit New Zealand; the land of Middle-earth. We wanted to be a part of Middle-earth. And finally, we did. This is how it goes:

We flew to Auckland and got on a transit plane down south to Queenstown. Our very first agenda the next day was to walk around and feast our eyes upon the beautiful countryside and mountain views along Lake Wakatipu. Honestly, New Zealand was something else entirely. I have never seen anything like it. We got to witness the very mountain which Peter Jackson shot as the Misty Mountains; the home of the Dwarves of Erebor in The Hobbit trilogy. I was completely beside myself!



The next day, my sister and I went on The Lord of the Rings' filming location tour in Glenorchy where they would bring us to visit a number of locations the movies filmed at. Our first stop was along the highway at Lake Wakatipu where the backdrop was of a beautiful white mountain during The Fellowship of the Ring where the nine companions were seen crossing the snowy mountain upon their perilous quest to destroy The One Ring. I was so overwhelmed, I think I almost shed a tear. Our next stop filming location was on the iconic scene during the camping of the Rohirrim before The Battle of the Pelennor Fields took place in The Return of the King. We also visited the beautiful river which was shot as the River Anduin that streamed to The Gates of Argonath known as The Pillars of Kings in The Fellowship of the Ring. The most interesting filming location of all was in the forest where the shot the beautiful scene of Lothlórien and the Uruk-Hai's marching across Amon Hen. In this forest, we dressed ourselves as Hobbits by wearing their infamous Elven-cloaks that was given by Lady Galadriel and held our own swords each! Talk about the best experience of my life!









But the absolute highlight of New Zealand was definitely The Hobbiton Movie Set in Matamata. Now, that was the main reason why my sister and I went to the land of Kiwis. To finally be in the iconic landmark of Tolkien's creation was a blessing that I can never thank you enough. It was astoundingly beautiful! Each Hobbit hole was so well done and carved; I really felt like I was in the movie itself and just waiting for any moment until Gandalf would show up and drag me to his next adventure! (Yes, I'm still waiting). I was lost for words back then. I am even lost for words now still.







All those years of reading, watching and being an enormous fan of Tolkien's The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings trilogy, I can only say this to myself: I finally made it to The Hobbiton Movie Set in Matamata, New Zealand because dreams do come true after all.

Books read in 2016!

I had officially broken a new record by reading the total amount of 80 books! 2016 had definitely been a wild journey year as I went through so many crazy adventures in the books that I read. There were times during those moments of reading that I cried, laughed, wanted to throw the book across the room and mostly, developed a love so strongly towards a certain new favourites that I just wanted to hug and bless my thanks to the authors. Without further ado, here are the lists of books that I had read in 2016:

  1. Dracula by Bram Stoker (1897)
  2. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (1818)
  3. The Enchanted Castle by E. Nesbit (1907)
  4. Fairy Tales by Robert Walser
  5. Queen Red Riding Hood's Guide to Royalty by Chris Colfer (2015)
  6. The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West (1918)
  7. The Mother Goose Diaries by Chris Colfer (2015)
  8. The Night Before Christmas by Nikolai Gogol (1831)
  9. Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen (1818)
  10. The Rainbow by D. H. Lawrence (1915)
  11. The Crucible by Arthur Miller (1953)
  12. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen & Seth-Grahame-Smith (2009)
  13. The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot (1922)
  14. Inferno by Dante Alighieri
  15. The Waves by Virginia Woolf (1931)
  16. The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell (1937)
  17. Bluebeard's Egg by Margaret Atwood (1983)
  18. The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen (1844)
  19. The Golden Key by George MacDonald (1867)
  20. Persuasion by Jane Austen (1818)
  21. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dreadfully Ever After by Steve Hockensmith (2011)
  22. A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett (1905)
  23. Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens by J. M. Barrie (1906)
  24. Peter and Wendy; or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up by J. M. Barrie (1904)
  25. The Light Princess by George MacDonald (1864)
  26. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens (1861)
  27. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott (1869)
  28. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway (1929)
  29. Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (1847)
  30. The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1850)
  31. Daisy Miller by Henry James (1879)
  32. The Turn of the Screw by Henry James (1898)
  33. The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story by Horace Walpole (1764)
  34. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë (1847)
  35. Agnes Grey by Anne Brontë (1847)
  36. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath (1963)
  37. The Love of the Last Tycoon by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1941)
  38. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (2008)
  39. The Hunger Games: Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (2009)
  40. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins (2010)
  41. Perfume : The Story of A Murderer by Patrick Süskind (1985)
  42. Jane Steele by Lyndsay Faye (2016)
  43. We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson (1962)
  44. Swann's Way by Marcel Proust (1913)
  45. Lady Chatterley's Lover by D. H. Lawrence (1928)
  46. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë (1848)
  47. Villette by Charlotte Brontë (1853)
  48. The Land of Stories: Beyond the Kingdoms by Chris Colfer (2015)
  49. The Land of Stories: An Author's Odyssey by Chris Colfer (2016)
  50. His Dark Materials: Northern Lights by Philip Pullman (1995)
  51. His Dark Materials: The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman (1997)
  52. His Dark Materials: The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman (2000)
  53. Lyra's Oxford by Philip Pullman (2003)
  54. Whitney, My Love by Judith McNaught (1985)
  55. Something Wonderful by Judith McNaught (1988)
  56. Washington Square by Henry James (1880)
  57. The Magic Toyshop by Angela Carter (1967)
  58. The Witches by Roald Dahl (1983)
  59. Until You by Judith McNaught (1994)
  60. Once and Always by Judith McNaught (1987)
  61. Almost Heaven by Judith McNaught (1989)
  62. A Kingdom of Dreams by Judith McNaught (1989)
  63. When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro (2000)
  64. As You Like It by William Shakespeare (1599)
  65. Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare (1599)
  66. Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone by J. K. Rowling (1997)
  67. Scorpion Orchid by Lloyd Fernando (1976)
  68. Wise Children by Angela Carter (1991)
  69. Volpone by Ben Jonson (1606)
  70. Because of Miss Bridgerton by Julia Quinn (2015)
  71. Hallucinating Foucault by Patricia Duncker (1996)
  72. Antony & Cleopatra by William Shakespeare (1606)
  73. In A Far Country by K. S. Maniam (1994)
  74. The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng (2012)
  75. Ripples and Other Stories by Shih-Li Kow (2008)
  76. Charlie and The Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl (1964)
  77. Matilda by Roald Dahl (1988)
  78. Powder and Patch by Georgette Heyer (1923)
  79. The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus by L. Frank Baum (1902)
  80. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens (1843)