The Splintered Chapters E-Zine.

Music, movies, and other non-stifling leisure reads.

"It takes a very deep-rooted opinion to survive unexpressed."

Trinkets

 

A Shared Madness = Love for a band's music?

Singapore’s 987 FM seems to think so. I just got back from the most insulting and distasteful contest held by 987 FM to win meet and greet tickets to Fall Out Boy on Feb 10th. Basically, because FOB’s new album title, Folie a Deux = “a madness shared by two”, teams of two had to perform the craziest things they could think of to show their love for Fall Out Boy.  

 

If that sounds ridiculous, the things some of the teams did were even worse. The winning team (two 13-14 year old girls who won tickets, meet and greets and a signed guitar by Joe Trohman, lead guitarist) poured a bowl of hothot laksa (spicy noodles with coconut milk, for those non-Singaporean readers) over their heads into a pail, took off their socks and used them to scoop the noodles up into their mouths. As if that wasn’t mad enough, they took off their shoes, squeezed toothpaste onto the bottom of the soles and used KFC cheese fries to scrape it off, and yeah, they ate that too.


Like I said, the most insulting contest ever. The 2nd team ate live worms and some revolting concoction of curry powder, chilli sauce and other weird shit. One other team cut off their eyelashes, some hair and made a hair+tobasco+wasabi sandwich and fed it to each other.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am a huge fan of Fall Out Boy, and yes, I do want to meet them and tell them how much their music has helped me through tough situations. But, to do shit like that is an insult to both the band and myself. And honestly, I don’t have the guts nor the stomach (literally) to do stunts like that, as amusing as some of them were.

Guess I’m not ‘mad’ enough.

Nevertheless, I will still try my luck to meet them, without humiliating myself, after their concert. See you guys there.

 

Be nice to people,
Sad Weather Novella.

 

 


HELLO WORLD.

 


I wasn't doing much today. Yet somehow, it suddenly dawned on me that stupidity is a trait I can't seem to shake off.

I'm warning you: The paragraphs that you are about to read may cause immense confusion. 

Someone is probably an expert at doing this.  Someone probably has had years of experience doing so. Someone doesn't even care, should why should you? Someone probably doesn't even know you feel this way, like crap, like so motherfuckingly inadequate as compared to her. Someone probably couldn't care less.  Maybe it's just what they do?  

 

 
I sound like a bitch saying this but I don't really care. It makes sense right?  To want to hurt someone especially after you've been hurt so badly, whether it's consciously knowing it or not.  It's the same.  Being unaware of it is equally  as bad as doing it on purpose. 

And you should still go on, and live your life.

When you realize, this cycle, it's draining and tiring.

You stop thinking, stop dreaming, stop wasting your energy. Sometimes, you feel like you cannot take this anymore. It isn't hope that keeps you alive, it's life itself. Because even if you don't feel alive, life goes on. So why not, make the most out of it?

Even if making the most of it doesn't amount to living, you still have to do it.

Because doing something is better than not doing anything at all, right? Even if you know that you’re not truly happy. Even if you know that this will lead to nothing. Were we all born to suffer? Is that our true purpose here?

Sometimes, I think, that love alone is enough. That with it, maybe I'd be someone else. Someone so weak. Someone so contented. Someone who isn't me. Someone I will never know. Maybe that is why God hasn’t given me anyone.

 

PrettyOddThoughtsInTheMiddleOfTheNight  


BUNNY BITES 
by Charlemaine. 

Bunny's eyes gleamed with a black malice from beneath the flame-red mask. He had left his legacy of quivering bobtails and chasing clocks and nibbling leaves in a cage behind. Somewhere at the back of his head the faint, faltering memories floated in a grey mist. 

He remembered one thing clearly right now: a crunchy wet carrot in between his small hard teeth. Possibly the only thing he missed about captivity. That was what Missy had fed into the hatch of his cage, which he had escaped yesterday. He longed for that crunchy carrot again. She had been screaming when he leapt out of the cage, wailing something awful. Then Moira, Missy’s sensible elder sister, had beat him with a hairbrush for some reason his quick rabbit mind could not comprehend. Moira was not cruel. Her eyes had been filled with fear more than anger as she hit him. 

He didn’t mean to leave dear Missy behind. It was just that… 

…he had recalled, with sudden alacrity one fine morning, chasing time through a dark tunnel and landing right at the sword of a blood-lusting queen. He had recalled a fawn leaping through the woods as he bounded right behind and stopped to woo a bashful female rabbit. His name had been Thum…Thom-something. And he recalled an eternity of nosy loud children with intrusive fingers poking and prying at his soft skin as he crouched hapless behind cheap abrasive wire grilles… 

Then one Halloween they had put the mask on him. Just for kicks. A bunch of teenagers full of beer and laughter, dressed in various ghoulish shades – purple, green, corpse-grey. Missy had had more liquor than her age legally allowed and was all giggles when Rodney insisted Bunny be part of the fun. 

“Bunny don’t have a costume, Missy,” he had said, his breath warm and bitter. “Should we take ol’ Bunny trick-or-treatin’? Stuff him full o’ candy; he’d like that. Wouldn’t have to feed ‘im carrots fer a week.” And then the papier-mâché mask that smelt of cheap glue swallowed his twitching face as the kids laughed. 

The panic faded after a moment: the mask settled on his face as if it had been made for him. He watched Missy and Moira and their friends from behind his plastic child-friendly cage. The eyeholes of the mask framed everything he saw in a dark halo. He felt both isolated and powerful. Cut off from the house he had grew up in, his docile mind began to unfold with tales of his countless incarnations. Some were so vivid he could hardly believe them; others were dull and mundane; yet others were surreal and vague and ancient. 

The streets were cold on his pampered fur, ruffling through his ears and stirring up even more memories. A couple walked past him whispering sweet nothings to each other. They smelt warm and sweet. A young girl ran past on deer-light feet; she looked like Missy. An old man peered curiously at him through rheumy eyes, wondering what a soft white rabbit like him was doing on a filthy street. Or perhaps why it was wearing a mask. 

After all, he should be behind the bars of his clean plastic cage. 

Or in a dark tunnel rushing toward a deck of knaves and blood-red roses. 

Or chasing a fawn pointlessly through a sunlit forest. 

Or being poked by hard candy-coated little fingers. 

Bunny looked at the old man’s graceful, papery fingers and licked his lips. He was hungry for something wet and crunchy. 

He thought of Missy’s white face, the last he had seen of her before fleeing the warm cosy house. And he knew, with sudden sharpness, that it was not a carrot he had bit into. 

He saw the hot gushing blood as clearly as he heard her cries. He heard it right now in his head. It roared like thunder, trapped close to his quivering ears by the papier-mâché mask. 

Bunny's eyes gleamed with a black malice from beneath the flame-red mask. Fading memories were swept clean by the wet wind of the neon night. He had left behind his legacy of quivering bobtails and chasing clocks and nibbling leaves in a cage. And all he wanted now was a nice, wet, crunchy bite. 

It didn’t always have to be carrots. 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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