Friday, March 1, 2013

My love begins...

My Love begins when you stop loving me


It is you who have started the love. I was enjoying the love showered by you. You were with some expectation but I could not give you that. I am unaware that you were expecting from me. I believed and you have promised that this love would be forever. But suddenly you have stopped your love because I was not reaching your expectations. Then I understood that I was missing something very valuable in my life. It is nothing but your love. Then I started loving you. Now, I don't need your response. I love your love. It is eternal. 

2 comments:

S Swaroop Sirapangi said...

Great expression. This agonized statement of your's requires to be recorded in the wider literary field of love!! Hope this happens at some point of time, at-least in your life time.

I some times feel you should have opted literature/fine arts as your academic discipline, instead of Political Science. But anyhow, non-literary/non-fine arts persons are performing extremely well too. Anyhow, I feel, it would be better if you can channelize your energies on literature in a constructive manner for better production of literary out-put in much more comprehensive manner. Constructive exposure towards literature enhances your creativity and increases your modes of delivery mechanism too.

With Best Wishes.

Nookaraju said...

What is interesting both in original post by the blogger and follow up comment was that ‘myths are operative only in such victims’ of what might be called the "poetic fallacy". I think, this is an expression that has a historical validity rather than a literary tenacity. To be precise, this is a Historical Text than a Literary Artifact. Because, this text entails a fascination with the "constructive" capacity of blogger's thought has deadened his responsibility to the "found" data. As a symbolic structure, this thought of historical narrative does not reproduce the events it describes; it tells us in what direction to think about the events and charges our thought about the events with different emotional valences. These inter plays are neither new nor relatively latent in both social science and as well as humanities, as far as my ignorance is concerned!! The logical conclusion could be that the hermeneutics of the given concourse of events mentioned in the text is emplotted as a "tragedy" this simply means that this historian has so described the events as to remind us of that form of fiction which we associate with the concept "tragic.

Nookaraju Bendukurthi