Friday 30 November 2012

Meditation on a candle (with Wandering Gata in the background). 2



 Szaloncica sips his dark beer, smokes once again his pipe and contemplates the brilliant and brief light of the tobacco burning in the depth of his pipe. The candle is still alighted, spreading a tiny and tremulous light through the Szalon. The candle is certainly a star. Its mechanism is akin to the inner atomic motor that makes stars last for centuries, thousands of centuries, eons that even Szaloncica struggles to conceive. Szaloncicas have a very special relationship with time. Incidentally, it may be worth mentioning the abilities of Cicas for breathing time, for inhabiting time, like if they were able to expand every second and occupy it way much better, let's say, than the human's clumsiness regarding the consideration of any real use of time. That's why, let's pursue this digression a few seconds more, a Cica seems to sleep, when he or she is actually living at a different and slower and more intense speed. Anyway, it is agreed, candles are like stars. They burn out of their own matter. Its size, the gravitational force of its incredible mass, compresses the core and fuses atoms, hydrogen, helium. The result is this endless atomic reaction. Slow, fed by the star itself that lives and dies at every second, its power being the root of its inevitable decay. The star will end in a supernova, a white dwarf, a dark hole: the emphatic negation of a star, a well so deep that light, not even the strength of desires can avoid to be sucked in for ever. But such a kind of catastrophy is still thousands of years away from us. Anyway, the candle burns in a similar way, surely with a much less dramatic and bombastic end. The wick burns immediately once lighted. It looks like as any matter that burns so easily, soon it will be just an ugly dark thread cold and inert. But the light flares high only for a second: soon the heat melts the wax, and the wick sucks the wax up, and in the end it is the wax that shines in flame: it is the wax that burns, not the wick. The wax permeates the wick, every thread and particle of the wick, the former disappears in the latter. But the wick's fire does not melt right away the wax, it is not that hot: warm enough for melting little by little the wax that will feed the wick, and the wax will fuel the wick's fire that will produce the right amount of heat, for, in its turn, keeping melting slowly the wax. A perfect cycle, once ignited, of slow passion through endless embrace and fire. Szaloncica's definition of love. The wick is black, the wax is red, thinks joyously Szaloncica.

Wednesday 21 November 2012

Meditation on a candle (with Wandering Gata in the background). 1


Szaloncica usually has dinner in his Szalon with the only company of the light of a candle. So lonely he is that he feels impelled to dance for his gata. He thinks about actually doing it (and many times he certainly does it, anyway, after dinner, up the stairs, going to his bedroom, part of the Szalon, though: a Szalon in cica terminology has to be conceived in very general terms). He eats and thinks, under the light; sometimes enthralled by his very deep thoughts. We are trying to communicate the intricacies of those thoughts here, hopefully successfully respecting the nuances of the cica philosophy.
Candles fascinate Szaloncica. He half closes his eyes, and stares at the mystery of the candle. He smokes his pipe after dinner, but he does not leave the table. The candle still lights the Szalon and attracts his attention. He smokes again, sips his glass of dark beer and thinks.
It is not the first time: Szaloncica has been able to develop a nice corpus of thoughts lately about the candle and the mystery of its small and quiet self consumption. Tonight is different, the train of thoughts, as modern journalist would say, is different, because Wandering Gata, his gata, the gata he dances for, has been recently visiting the Szalon, the Ország, Szaloncicaország, for being precise. Now, tonight, this night, everything makes a little more sense, thinks Szaloncica. He smiles approvingly. You can tell when a cat smiles if you look attentively to his whiskers: lightly upwards.
Difference is, very simply, Gata wears red beret and Szaloncica favours dark clothes. Mundane wardrobe options, certainly. But nonetheless... :somehow months of thoughts coalesce.
The wick of a candle is black, true. It burns, it burns endlessly, its end is bright and red, but the wick never dies, the fire, the flame breaths through it; but only very slowly dies, that wick. Yes, everything dies, but the wick only very slowly. It burns brightly though, sometimes the flame is high and defiant, and illuminates fiercely the room. But somehow, in exchange, you would expect a high and quickly paid price for such a daring feat. And it is not the case. It is not the case. Here lies Szaloncica's fascination with candles. What makes the candle burn but not being consumed by her own fire?

Tuesday 13 November 2012

Szaloncicaország says goodbye to Wandering Gata

Szaloncica at the window of his Szalon, sadly saying goodbye to Wandering Gata after her official visit to Szaloncicaország. (Source: The Daily Miau)

Friday 9 November 2012

Wandering Gata's official visit to Szaloncicaország





The Sunday Miau includes in its latest edition a long illustrated article reporting the recent visit of Wandering Gata to Szaloncicaország. Wandering Gata was received at Miau Airport by Szaloncica himself, who performed the customary Cica dance in honour of such privileged and well loved allied of Szaloncicaország. The entire Ország celebrated the arrival with street parties.
During her visit Wandering Gata resided in Szaloncica's Tower, the Presidential Palace. There she witnessed sportive events of the highest category. Gatolimpics were opened with the celebration of a new edition of the 6 seconds marathon (won by Szaloncica) and a new and challenging competition in which Szaloncica won the gold medal for putting back on his glasses.
Wandering Gata visited extensively the Ország and adjacent territories. She showed a great interest in a curious variety of sheeps, who in addition to peacefully gracing are reknowned for the strange ability of uttering very long, sad and subservient sounds that the reporter transcribed as "Orrrr-bá-a-a-a-annn!".