Monday, October 12, 2015

Human

Humans are flawed creatures,
We lie, we steal, we cheat, we take lives.
Every mistake we make adds to our burdens,
In this ever chaotic world we call our home.
But through the howling madness of chaos,
We live, we strive, we fight to survive.
To make a name for ourselves,
To achieve and fulfill our greatest desires.
From our mistakes we learn and grow stronger.
To heal our fractured hearts,
To make up for our flaws.
That is what simply makes us . . .
Human.

A/N: I was searching through my creative writing folder from last year and came across this little piece tucked between the pages. Thought I might pop it up on the page. I think this was something I wrote with the intention to send it in for a competition but decided not too. Sounds a little bit too dark for some people's tastes.  

I'm now on Wattpad under the username LiulfrLokison, if you wish to check out anything I've put up. 

Friday, September 18, 2015

Sharpening a pencil (An eccentric girl)

The dark, blunt end scrapes across the pristine white surface, leaving a thick black line. The scrawlings are fuzzy and unintelligible; the girl sighs, exasperated.
Alone in her room, she scolds the pencil.
 ¨I sharpened you only a few minutes ago! You are very rude. At this rate you will be nothing but a stub by the end of the week!¨
She slowly pushes out the antique chair she was seated upon, plodding the short distance to her small rubbish bin.
Clutching her pencil and sharpener, she obsessively grinds the pencil down to a fine point.
Miniscule curls of wood and graphite tumble into the plastic-bagged abyss. The girl could imagine the sharpenings crying out in horror as they fell into the trash. She lightly touches the point of her writing utensil to test it.
Satisfied, the girl sits down and proceeds to contemplate her next sentence.

nightfall

nightfall
the evening star
serenades the dusk,
as ribbons of rusty sky are reflected
in the silver harbour
nestled between
the dark hills
who sigh their goodnights
to the calm sea beyond.
ink-blot clouds cling low to the horizon
and sheathe the crimson-globe sun
in their wispy embraces.
hear them murmur
to the pale moon
promises of a clear night
full of stars and
frosty grass
come morning light.
street lamps glow dull orange
dotting the hills
in scattered constellations;
man’s mockery
of the vacant sun.
rustles of motion
in the undergrowth,
in the branches of the peeling eucalyptus,
where the human hubbub
cannot reach them;
the night creatures stir.
among those who wake
is the keen eyed owl
with a haunting call.
listen to his cries;
he knows who owns
the moonlit hours
that lie before us.



Friday, August 28, 2015

National Poetry Day at Aotea 2015

~Marianne Moore


A poem is a Tardis: so much bigger on the inside than it seems on the outside.
~Carol Ann Duffy

There are no rules of architecture for a castle in the clouds.
~Gilbert K. Chesterton

~Plutarch

~Kirill


If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need.
~Marcus Tullius Cicero


The pen is mightier than the sword
~Shakespeare
The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.
~Sylvia Plath


~Carl Sandburg
~David Carradine


Friday, June 12, 2015

The Magic Chilli Sauce

One day I ate some chilli sauce
It was spicy and sweet
The fiery feeling that coated my mouth
You just couldn't beat
That night I went to sleep
With a fire in my belly
When I woke up again
My breath was rather smelly
At school my pal Matthew
Told a funny pun
I laughed hard and a fire burst forth
With the heat of the sun
Though my friend was melted
I smiled with delight
I have the power of a dragon!
With my fire I will smite
Legions of petty peasants
And scores of greedy kings
I will soon rule the land
With my fire and wings
I'm glad I became a dragon
Thanks to that chilli topping
Was it magic? I don't know
But the power has me hopping

Wedges

The spice
Sets fire to my tongue

The pepper
Sets fire to my throat

The wedge sauce
Sets fire to my being

The sour cream
Soothes my soul

Growing up

Run boy run, this world isn't made for you. Run boy run, don't do what they tell you to do

Run boy run, life isn't what you expect it to be. Run boy run, take this advice from me


The Change

Matthew is a poo
He doesn't share his food with me
Maybe one day

Matthew is so great
I love him beyond compare
Please can I have more

Who?

Who?

Friday, May 22, 2015

Matthew Never Shares

I stare longingly at it, my mouth watering. As he lifts it to his mouth I can see each individual crumb of crunchy cookie and every smear of sweet chocolate on his lips.
"Can I please have some?" I say in my sweetest tone.
"No," he replies in an equally sweet tone.
I am trying my hardest to master my desire, but it becomes too great.
"Give it to me," I growl. 
"It's mine," he says, turning away. 
Fine. 
I leap onto his back and attempt to wrestle it from him as he tries to enclose it in his mouth. I cover it and he bites my finger with an exclamation of rage. His fist instinctively clenches around the remaining bite and we both gasp with horror. 
He slowly opens his hand, the world still and silent, both of us frozen in the middle of the fight. A mushed lump is revealed. He cries with mourn at his lost piece of cookie, but quick as a flash, I whip it out of his clammy hand and eat it.
"No!" He swipes at me but the cookie is already dancing on my taste buds.
I shake my head out of the fantasy and watch as he takes the last bite. He turns to me.
"Do you have any water?"

Tunnel

The air grows colder, the fear inside me crawls deeper. The tunnel never seems to end. No one knows where the tunnel goes. All i know is i have to make it to the end...

OR DIE!!!!!


What?

Thin

When everything is hanging on by a thin thread. When you feel like all the strings inside you are about to snap. When you feel like there's nothing left you can do. When there is no shred of hope. Sometimes. Its easier to just let go and fall in to eternal darkness. Atleast there... no light can burn your soul.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Mortal Power - Chapter 1

My breath forms a cloud of mist in the cold evening air as I attempt to slow my panting. Don't look. Just keep hiding.

I take another quick scan of my surroundings, but it is difficult to make out much in the steadily fading light. I am in a classic grimy brick alleyway. Rats scurry hungrily over the abandoned items and litter, some as simple as old televisions and empty cans, other things that are bagged, piled and smelly. Whatever they are, I'm not sure I really want to know. At the end of the alley looms a wire fence topped with barbed wire. No escape.

I squeeze my eyes shut for a few seconds and open them, hoping to have adjusted to the dim and made my vision clearer, but to no avail. I hunch in on myself tighter, the cold slowly seeping through my ugly knit jumper and beanie. I try to position my thick auburn hair to insulate the places on my body where the clothing cannot, but my shivering simply shrugs it off. My teeth chatter with frustration.

I can't stay here much longer or I'll freeze to death.

I inch toward the corner of the alley and peek around; two uniformed policemen standing watch, hugging themselves and chatting half-heartidly. Of course they don't look intimidating with their sour looks and various weapons hung on their belts. I shiver inwardly when my eyes fall on the guns. Their meagre conversation drifts lazily toward me.

"How's the wife?"

"She still insists that we try for a kid. What's her deal?"

The cop groans. "What is it with women and wanting kids? Are we not enough?"

I can't help but slightly agree with them. "Well, I don't know if we can if we stay out here much longer, cause the cold is creeping closer to my b-"

My snort penetrates their conversation abruptly. Their heads snap towards me and I swear under my breath. "There she is!"

Shhhh! Why must you be so loud? I should've known I'm their target; Miss Take won't want to lose one of her precious little slave victims. As their feet pound closer to my discovered hiding place, I shoulder my pack and gap it down the street.

This is a sneak peak from my Percy Jackson fanfiction which uses my own characters.
Thanks for reading! If you want to continue reading click on the link to my Wattpad account - I'm Ranbow_Ink. Have a good day :)

Friday, March 13, 2015

Why?

Amazing Books to Help You Along

Here are a few great books I have found that I have enjoyed reading and found very helpful in developing my skills. I will keep adding great books!

Juicy Writing by Brigid Lowry. She is a funny New Zealand author who has a great perspective on being an author and acknowledges the bad stuff too.

Fit to Print by Janet Hughes and Derek Wallace. This book can be a little tedious to read at times, but is a great guide for punctuation, grammar, good writing and the processes of editing and publishing.

The Complete Handbook To Novel Writing by COM. Many authors contributed to these chapters, giving tips on everything from character and plot development to editing and how to decipher publishing contracts. I found this book fantastic and learnt a lot from it.

These and other books such as these can be found in the 800s section of the library (according to the Dewey Decimal System). That's all I have for now but there are a lot of great reads out there :)
Drowning, sinking, floating towards uncertainty. The bubbles of desperation and fear creeping over my cold skin. Water fills my lungs and and slowly drains my life. But i am not afraid of death.  I am staring it in the face and saying 'bring it on' because i have done all i need to do and i am ready. So i let go and relax and let myself be carried away in to nothingness.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Don't Die - Chapter 01 - Already Dead

Those from the writing club last year will have already heard this, but I suppose it's best that I publish it here before I begin reading the next part. Arigatou ~ Grayden



Ryan was seventeen years through his life sentence in hell. Or that’s what he thought. You see, his life was his hell; no one noticed him, no one gave him the time of day – not really. The people he did hang out with didn’t have the same personality type as him, so to Ryan they were useless.

Most break times, Ryan would stare off into the distance, passed the back corners of the field, passed the kids who thought the teachers didn’t know they were smoking their lives away, passed the million dollar houses that brought up the school’s value, passed the hills that blocked the school from half of the horizon, passed everything really. There was much on his mind while he stared away. Thoughts of his lost mother, his abusive father, the love of a girl who he couldn’t talk to, the endless taunts of his father’s drinking friends, the oppression of poverty, and much of everything else.

Ryan grew up on the edge of everything. When he was born, he was on the edge of living – there was something wrong with his blood. It was of an unknown blood-type and the doctor had to tell the new parents that if there were any complications they wouldn’t be able to save him. A few months later, Ryan’s mother, Mary, was on the edge of dying; that battle wasn’t won by Mary. After that, Ryan’s dad became an alcoholic, and Ryan was on the borderline of getting a meal a day. Then they were on the edge of losing their house. They had to move into a little area above an old newspaper office. They were still on the edge of losing that too. If it weren’t for the government, Ryan wouldn’t be at school. The next twelve years were much the same; a perpetual repetition of little food, late rent payments, violence and rivers of tears before the hand of sleep took them.

It was safe to say that Ryan had very little hope, but that was the only thing Ryan really did have. He didn’t own a cell phone, or any i-thingies, he had no care for the magic black box called a television everyone had in their living rooms – everyone but him. The news didn’t faze him, and neither did sports. He had about five CD’s hidden in a box under his bed along with an outdated Walkman that his dad didn’t know about. He cared for music, but he knew that if his dad knew he had them, he’d sell them and then buy a bottle of spirits with the money he got.
Weekends were either spend locked in his room or out in town. If he was lucky, he’d get asked to do some odd jobs for one of the elder characters of the neighbourhood for a few dollars. Ryan would work so hard for those few dollars – they gave him a sense of happiness. It would buy him some food, and he’d save the change for another day.

School days were the best days. Ryan would wake up earlier than necessary, just so that he could get out of the building before his dad would wake up. As soon as the clock hit eight o’clock, he’d be in the library studying. His education was very important to him and he would try to get as much study done as possible so that he could make it somewhere in the world. Once the class bell rang for first period, Ryan would’ve been one of the first people at the classroom. The school day was spent ignoring the idiots of high school but hoping that someone would actually want to talk to him in a positive manner (he’d been bullied horrifically when he was in the first year of school) and listening to the teachers constantly complain about having to find more work for him. When he left school, he’d go to the library to do homework or he’d walk around at the park until about six o’clock when he’d be expected home. After dinner (or not) he’d go to bed – much earlier than every other person in the world – as to avoid tempting the devil.

This was not the life he wanted to lead. Ryan wanted to be a criminal lawyer – if he was lucky he’d get approved for a student loan so he could actually study. Being a lawyer would give him power to stop others from coming into his problematic life. He’d be able to ensure safety for people who needed it and provide justice for those who offended. It was a necessary occupation. It was a just occupation.

The bell pierced the subtle silence, and Ryan got to his feet, leaving only indents in the decaying grass. He joined the mass of people moving monotonously to their classes, but he wasn’t really part of them – he didn’t belong. Like a white jellybean in a box of blacks, or a needle in a haystack. He could wish so much, pray so much to be a part of the general population, to be part of the bigger picture, but life didn’t extend its talons to Ryan. Ryan would remain an outsider, disconnected from all normal teenagerdom.

In English class Ryan sat at the front. He took all the notes, but was never chosen to answer any questions, share his opinions or participate at all. It was as if he was a ghost. The only thing that proved he wasn’t was when he called out that he was present in class – but it didn’t give him any satisfaction.

Of the two people who sat next to him, he was only interested in one of them. Kori. She was the same age as Ryan, but lived on the other end of the scale. Everyone knew her for her abundance of money. Mr Mason, her father, was the CEO for a multi-national corporation no one had actually heard of – something to do with motorbikes, or was it microwaves? No one really knew those details either. Kori didn’t like to talk about her father. When asked she would always change the subject to something more appropriate like Saturday’s party. 
Ryan’s liking for Kori had only extended so far, considering that she had never really said a word to him. She was quite the social person, but Ryan had probably put her off. For all he knew, Kori had tried to talk to him but he was so buried in books that he hadn’t listened. For all he knew, he had already blown his chance.

He would have loved to be able to talk to Kori, but she seemed too distracted by Michael who was busy trying to talk her into coming to his place tomorrow. Kori looked excited and upon accepting the proposal, Ryan didn’t feel too good. He tried to focus on the nouns and verbs scattered across the page in front of them, but upon reading the sentence he’d immediately forgotten what it had said. He probably read the same sentence three or four times before its arcane meaning was revealed.

The final bell rang and Ryan slowly packed his books into his bag and swung it onto his back. The other people in the class had already left, giving him a quick exit with ultimately no pushing and shoving. A peaceful exit for a peaceful person.

Hours ticked by in the library as the sky went from blue to orange to black. Old cases and new information had been revealed to Ryan in the dusty shelves. There had been a few shiny pieces of information, but most of it had been complete crap that wasn’t necessary at all. If only life just consisted of the shiny pieces.

By the time it was five-thirty, Ryan’s head was dropping and he had to use all his remaining strength to not get hit by a bus on the way home. By six o’clock his feet were dragging along the ground and he yearned for the soft embrace of sleep.

The door to the building was ajar, and Ryan made a point not to make it creak as he came through it. His father was home, probably in the office, and it was not a good time to disturb him. Ryan took a deep breath as he lightly trod up the cold wooden stairs to his bedroom. The curtains were still drawn, the light bulb still missing, the covers still neatly made. His father had not been in here.

Closing the door brought on the unnatural creak that cut through the fragile silence. Ryan cringed as the lock slid shut and breathed out slowly, knowing now that his father wouldn’t be able to enter in his unconsciousness.
Sleep came quickly, but it seemed as though morning came quicker. The sun shone through the thin fabric of the curtains and illuminated the room in a dull orange. Ryan slid out of bed before coming to his feet.

It was a Wednesday, the most stressful day of the week. This was the day Ryan’s father often made Ryan late to school for because he needed to get his articles into the Australian magazine company he worked for. Wednesday was not an enjoyable day for Ryan – it was often these days that he got the most bruises.

Ryan made no attempt to hide or to creep, as his father would most certainly find him. If Ryan even made it to school, his father would be there too – managing to get him out of class for a non-existent doctor’s appointment. There was no getting Ryan out of this task, no matter how hard he tried to get away.

Ryan decided to make it easy for himself. He made his way down the stairs in expert fashion and managed to get to his father’s office door without knocking over any of the stacks of paper and assorted pointless items that covered the building’s floor.

His father had the music on so Ryan had to knock loudly of the thick wooden door for his father to hear him. He didn’t come. Ryan knew better than to walk straight into the room and always was forced to wait outside until he came which usually wasn’t too long. He knocked again. His father still didn’t come. Minutes passed. Ryan pounded the door with both hands. Still no answer. Irritated, Ryan turned the handle and tried to force the door open. It was jammed. Stepping away just to give him distance, Ryan steadied himself before kicking at the door to get it unstuck.

The door should have never been stuck. But that was the only detail Ryan picked up. He should’ve picked up that Track Seven of his father’s favourite CD was on. He hated that song because it reminded him of his wife and always skipped it. Secondly, there was a light coming out from under the door – fluorescent. He had a pet hate for unnatural light, unless it was necessary. First thing each morning the curtains would be opened to let in the fresh solar illumination.

All these things became apparent to Ryan while his foot powered through the air into the door. As it made contact, Ryan wished he could turn back time so that he would un-see the sight that revealed itself unto him.

The room was scarlet. The office-chair, the scattered paperwork, the body on the floor. Ryan wasn’t sure what to think. He was sickened, even disgusted, yet somewhere inside there was a flicker of happiness, but only slight.
Whatever had torn his father to pieces had done a mighty fine job, taking careful consideration of all the surroundings. Even the window had been closed – that’s how they found their way in. They even barricaded the door with the desk, just to add a bit of flavour to the homicide. And they’d only taken one thing with them – Ryan’s father’s heart.

Ryan turned to flee but was confronted by a very tall man. That was the only detail he was able to take in before a finger was placed on his forehead and he fell to the floor.