The Art Of Being a Weirdo (When It Comes To Her)
As the
author says, “I plan a lot how to greet, the body posture, the smile, the
series of conversations, and a lot.... but when she is there, this all makes no
sense, heart stops pumping blood, Brain stops braining, just as weird as I
portrayed as a weirdo in front of her,,,”
Scene
1: The Words
That Trip
The
library smells faintly of old paper and coffee. A ceiling fan hums lazily
overhead, turning the afternoon heat into a slow breeze.
With
everyone else, my sentences flow like a well-argued legal submission
-
clear,
precise, untangled.
I was
there, sitting alone, reading a fiction in the cover of M.P. Jain
For a
moment, I saw her coming towards me, a racing heartbeat
She steps
in, sunlight spilling over her shoulder like she’s bringing a piece of the
outside world with her.
But the
moment she appears, the script in my head crumbles like badly folded paper.
I look up
from my book, catch her eyes for a second too long, and somehow say,
"You…
uh… coffee? maybe?" ☕
It’s
clumsy.
It's a
situation like where an expert loses his expertise, a coach his experience
And all
those unexpected and unimagined doings and circumstances…
But she
laughs, not at the words, but at how my confidence melts into soft stutters
around her.
And in
that laugh, I hear something that makes my awkwardness worth it.
Scene 2:
The Extra Attention to Nothing
The
classroom window lets in a thin shaft of light, dust particles drifting lazily
inside it.
I am that,
just another guy in the crowd…
I’m not
the kind of person who remembers outfits or accessories.
But with
her… I remember the maroon dupatta from last Tuesday 🌹,
the exact
shade of her nail paint, the way she tucks her hair behind her ear just before
answering a question in class.
As the
author says, “I’ve never been a ‘detail collector’ in life. But for her, I
notice every frame, every flicker, not because I want to, but because my eyes
refuse to let go.”
Of course,
I am not a stalker in that sense,
But for
her, yes, I’m…Something else
I pretend
not to notice, but my silence is loud.
Some
details you don’t just see, you keep.
Scene 3:
The Wrong Jokes at the Right Time
The
canteen buzzes with the usual chatter, clinking cups, the occasional burst of
laughter from another table.
I’ve never
been the class clown, but with her, something changes.
I start
throwing random, borderline terrible jokes into conversations,
the kind
that have no setup or punchline.
As the
author says, “Humour was never my weapon. But around her, I become this
accidental jester, not because I want her to laugh at the joke, but because I
want to see her laugh… period.”
She still
laughs, something that I want to admire about her,
the kind
of laugh that creases her eyes and makes her forget anyone else is in the room.
Maybe the joke isn’t the point.
Maybe it’s
the fact that her smile feels like a reward. 😌
Scene 4:
The Staring Problem
Eye
contact has always been easy for me, except with her.
With her,
it’s either too much or not at all, like my gaze is caught between admiration
and shyness.
She
probably notices.
It’s like
I just want to portray all her moments, people call it staring, I call it love…he
kind that tries to memorise someone in real time.
In fact, I
think she waits for it sometimes.
Once, she
caught me looking. I looked away, pretending to check my watch or my phone, but
the smile on her face told me she knew exactly what I was doing. ⏳
She knows
me better than anyone in the room, even me..
Scene 5:
The Things I’d Never Say
I don’t
talk about the moon 🌙, about fate, or about the kind of questions that feel
stolen from poetry. But with her, I hear myself ask,
"Do
you think some people meet in every lifetime?"
She tilts
her head, thinks for a second, then says,
"Maybe.
But only the weird ones find each other every time."
And in
that moment, I realise I’m not a weirdo to the world, I’m only a weirdo to her.
And maybe that’s the best kind to be.
---- Raj
Patel
Maybe
still Stalking herrr,,,,,,
Great ✨✨
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