WHAT SCARES YOU- TRAPPED

Hello!

I’m thrilled to be writing this post today because WEP (Write… Edit… Publish) is finally back after a not-so-brief break of nine months. Since October is the month of Halloween in some countries, our team is celebrating with a special event called ‘Horror Fest’ for our first comeback post.

What Scares You?

When I first considered writing this post, my immediate instinct was to recall the most terrifying tales from my collection. Being from a hill town, I have a story to share from practically every corner of the seven hills that encircle my city.

But, as the saying goes, truth is indeed stranger than fiction. In fact, I dare say that truth can be far more horrifying than anything we can imagine in the realms of fiction. When I take a look at the world around me, I can’t help but feel that it is a much scarier place to live in compared to the fictional worlds crafted within the pages of books. We are constantly surrounded by wars, disasters, climate crises, health scares, harassment, violence, online trolling, and mental health issues. It makes me wonder if any author out there is truly capable of constructing a world more terrifying than the one we currently inhabit. Today’s reality, scares me, and it seems to form the ideal setting for a truly chilling ‘Horror Fest’.

For this month’s WEP, I present a poem that delves into the horror of our screen-dominated lives. Even as the world shrinks inside a mobile phone, I cannot help but see the growing chasm that emerges inside our homes. It is strange that we build bridges to connect with strangers while we grow apart within our small circles. We are happier staring at our screens at home rather than cherishing the relationships we have. This trap is one of the most terrifying aspects of our times.  

TRAPPED

in white, we bleak out yellow

suns, leave lonely lounge chairs

lull to sleep, abandoned book shelves.

Our doors shut out giggles

and whimpers, cold living rooms

no longer care.

We become homes ensnared in cyber space

Flashing

screens on dinner tables—

Excuse me, are you there?

an unmindful nod, a snoozed

conversation, snubbing and phubbing

pods in ears, our picnics robbed

of cool, lush meadows. We

strapped to chairs, our spines

long bent, the expanse

of the blue sky–720X1280–

day after day after day.

We become homes ensnared in cyber space

Unstrap

snap, cut, snap

escape whites, embrace

yellows, rebuild addas

for conversations. Unplug

look up, don’t phub

the hearth in the living room

waits… lest

We become homes ensnared in cyber space.

Tagline: HARROW-een : Ensnared in cyber space

(FCA: 431 words)

So, what scares you? Let me know in the comments section below and if you’d like to join the WEP October Fest, please link your entry to the post on the WEP WEBSITE


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27 Replies to “WHAT SCARES YOU- TRAPPED”

  1. This is so true, and yet so difficult to detach ourselves from the screen. I often think that we didn’t have any internet or even 24×7 television shows, and yet we never got bored. I am trying. Getting back to using a notebook and pen for my writing, to start with. 

    And it’s a wonderful composition! 🙂

    Like

  2. Hi Sonia – there seems to be a world of two types of humans – those that think and consider, those that just act … and I guess a third – who really have no choice … they need safety, food and water … you’ve described it perfectly … so many ways we can look at life now – but we do need that future. It’s worrying to put it mildly … excellent poem … cheers Hilary

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Exactly! seems like if it doesn’t happen in cyber space, it isn’t real to most people now. Even my own kids sometimes forget to just text me the birthday info, saying they posted it, why talk to me IRL. I worry that the baby’s born today won’t ever have real human interraction. Yes, that’s scary to me.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I see this in my grandkids, enamoured by their screens, now sometimes hard to engage, yet I will keep trying. What will our world be in another 10 years? I can only cherish those moments we have with those we love. Your poem makes it very clear what we risk, what we may lose.

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