Monday 28 December 2015

No Longer a Grey Sky (soulmate AU)

My blogging friend, Eve (Pen&Key) recently wrote a tumblr-inspired soulmate AU in which the whole world is black and white until you meet your soulmate, and I love these so much that I decided to write my own! It's very long (over 2000 words long, to be specific), so I hope you don't mind that, but I enjoyed writing it ^.^


There was what my sister would describe as a “grey sky” looming over me that morning as I left my apartment. I supposed Lauren would know what that looked like, having met her soulmate at the tender age of seven (!!) - a boy named Alex. Nine years later, and they were still inseparable. Some of us are just lucky, I guess. I wouldn’t know what a grey sky looked like – everything seemed grey to me. Every sky, tree, house, face, dress and street remained the same colour in my eyes, wherever I went.

I was wearing my black skinny jeans paired with my navy blue duffel coat. Lauren was always telling me that I should dress in brighter colours, but I didn’t see the point. It was hardly as if I was going to appreciate them. I was more worried at the idea of my soulmate than the absence of colour in my life, or even the question all the girls my age seemed to be asking: Will I ever find The One? Sometimes I wondered whether I really wanted to meet my soulmate. What if he was a creep, or rude, or an idiot? What if fate messed up and I ended up hating him? I didn’t think I could have coped.

Either way, I knew that some people could go their entire lives without meeting their soulmates – my mum being one of them. Neither mine nor Lauren’s dad had been her soulmate, and although I knew she tried her best to hide her hurt, I could always tell how it really made her feel. I saw the look on her face when Lauren tried to show her a painting she’d made in school and she couldn’t tell whether it was of a blue bird or a robin, and the flash of pain in her eyes every bonfire night as people gazed in awe at the explosions of colour in the sky. The absence of colour served as a constant reminder of her loneliness. As a child, every time I saw that look on her face, I swore to myself that I would never let myself become consumed by the search for my soulmate. Not just because he could have been anywhere in the world, dead, or in the arms of another, but because I did not ever want to end up like my mother, awash with the dim grey of despair that had been her life for forty-eight years.

I had to be the only eighteen-year-old in the country who hadn’t signed up to at least one soulmate meeting agency. There were hundreds out there, advertisements for them bombarding TVs and billboards. Hundreds of thousands of desperate people of all ages, waiting for the flash of colour that awaited them upon first laying eyes on The One. They said that when you met them, it was like two halves of a person coming together to make a whole, like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle connecting. I personally hated the thought. Who did they think they were, telling me that I was just one half of a whole, like I wasn’t a complete human being? If that was what having a soulmate felt like – being half a person – I was perfectly happy the way I was.

I was on my way to the park that day, hoping for some inspiration for my artwork. I’m not going to lie – it’s difficult being an artist when the only colour you know is grey. It was getting increasingly difficult to become an artist at this time, as more and more people began to discover colour - partly due to the modern dating agencies, but I didn’t care. I used coloured pencils in my work, using them according to the colour I thought the thing might be – I knew trees were supposed to be green, as well as grass, and the sun was supposed to be yellow, and my pencils had colour labels on them so that I could tell them apart. Other than that, I experimented. People like me were criticised often by the art community, and it was difficult to become successful.

“How can you use colours in your work when you have such a poor understanding of colour itself?”

“Find your soulmate, and come back again when you can actually see colour”.

Their words rang through my ears. 

As I walked through the park, I passed mothers pushing their children on swings and families having picnics on the grass. One mother had a wide book spread across her lap with her little girl peering over her shoulder.
“And what happened next, Mummy?” she squealed between mouthfuls of jam sandwich.
Turning the page, her mother replied, “The kiss awakening her from her hundred year sleep, she was met with a burst of colour as she laid eyes upon the handsome prince, and she knew that they were meant to be together. And they lived happily ever after!”

I kept walking past the playground to the quiet spot of the park where I usually sat when I needed peace and quiet. Living in an apartment, my neighbours were often too noisy for me to concentrate, and there wasn’t another place like this in the whole city. I sat on the wooden bench, half concealed by the canopy of leaves above my head – convenient for if it started to rain – and began to unpack my notebook and pencils. To my right, I had a view of the stream that ran all the way through the park and to several others across the city, the clear water rolling over the stones and under the bridge. Not many people came here, as there was nothing for the children to play on, but to me, the stream, bridge and still nature made it perfect. I spotted a birds nest perched on a tree branch just above the stream, and began to sketch.

I don’t know how long I had been drawing for when I first heard a splashing sound coming from down the stream, as if something was ploughing through it. It had begun to rain, yet still I remained dry beneath the layer of leaves above my head. The splashing was followed by the sound of barking, and later on by shouts. This was the first time I had ever been disturbed in my spot, and I was surprised someone had stumbled across it, even if it was just a dog.

“Wait!” I heard the voice behind it shout, a man’s voice, but he was too late. Before I was aware of what was happening, a white and grey husky burst through the canopy, its fur weighed down by a mixture of rain and stream water. I couldn’t help but laugh at the sopping wet creature bounding towards me, its now flat tail wagging at a thousand miles a minute.
“Hey!” I exclaimed, holding my hand out to pet the over-excited creature, though it had other ideas. I shrieked as the creature about half my size climbed onto my lap as though it were a puppy, soaking my dry jeans and duffel coat as it licked my face.
“Rose! Where are you, you stupid dog?” he man’s voice shouted, though the “stupid” part sounded more endearing than angry. I saw his Converse pacing around through the leaves of the canopy, a dog lead trailing behind him in the damp grass.
“She’s in here!” I shouted back, laughing.
“Thank you”, I heard him reply as his Converse approached the canopy “I’m sorry for troubling you, she gets like this sometimes…” His voice trailed off as his gaze found mine, and the colours around me came to life.

It’s difficult to describe colours without using the words “red”, “green”, “purple”, etc. It’s like there was a whole world I had been missing. We both stared at each other in awe. His face was pale, but it wasn’t white. There were many different colours mixed in – colours I didn’t have the words to describe yet. It made his cheeks warm despite the freezing weather and rain, and his hair was the colour I imagined the sun to be – burning and glowing. Was this what blond hair looked like? His coat was the same colour as the grass beneath his feet and his trousers were a bright colour, much more vivid than mine… I guessed it right be red. I looked down at my own clothes. So this was what navy blue looked like – dark, as it had been before, but there was more to it than that, other things mixed in.

“Please tell me I’m not the only one seeing this” he muttered, and I choked out shocked laughter.
“No, you’re not”. I looked down at Rose and noticed the colour of her eyes – an icy blue, startling and bright, very unlike the blue of my coat. She grinned at me, tongue hanging out, and it’s like I could hear her speaking to me.

You’re welcome, she said, before jumping off my lap to reunite with her owner. I stood up and walked towards the man, who I now saw was about my age.

When we were face-to-face, I said “Your eyes… they’re green. Dark green, like the leaves”.
“Yours are brown, I think, a bit like the bark of the trees - but they’ve got loads of different colours in them too. It’s not just brown, it’s… I- I don’t think I have the words”, he laughed nervously. With a start, I remembered something, picking up the notebook from the ground, where it landed after Rose knocked it out of my hands. His eyes widened.
“Oh God, I’m really sorry about that. She thinks she’s tiny”.
“It’s fine, it doesn’t matter now”, I said, waving his concerns away. I looked at my picture now and realised how wrong I’d been. “It’s just that – look – I drew the bark the same colour as the leaves. I couldn’t tell the difference”, I said with a laugh.
“Still, you’re really good at drawing!” he told me before reaching down to pick up my box full of pencils, which I had thankfully shut before Rose jumped on me. He opened them and stared for a second, reading the colour annotations.
“…So that’s what orange looks like”, he remarked as if it was the most amazing thing he’d ever seen.
“That's... awesome”. I said, a smile spreading across my face as I looked through the rainbow of colours lying in the box.

As we waited for the rain to stop, we learned a bit about each other. He introduced himself as Aaron and told me that he was in town to visit his brother, who moved here last year, though he brought Rose along too, as everyone he knew was scared to look after her on their own. I laughed at that. I told him my name was Amelia and explained that my sister had found her soulmate at just seven years old, so I felt as if the pressure was on. I even told him about how I felt about how cynical I felt about the idea of The One, and for once, wasn’t looked at like I was crazy. 

When I thought about the idea of two halves coming together to become one person, I did not feel at all like one half of a whole. When he looked at me, I could not have felt any more complete – like I was the most whole person he had ever seen.

For the next hour or so, we wandered the park side by side with the box of pencils, pointing out things like the colours of playing equipment and people’s clothes, matching them to their colours; a man in a bright orange rain coat, a little boy in yellow wellies. We stopped one girl and complimented her on her blue hair, and she was so taken-aback she blurted out “My boyfriend’s hair is green!”


It was dark by the time we had finished wandering the entire park, and I felt like I had seen every colour in the world - though I knew that as long as we were together, there was an infinite amount of them out there, just waiting to be discovered. He had opened my eyes for the first time in my life, and I knew I was never going back to black and white. 


I don't personally agree with the idea of soulmates, fate and the whole "everything happens for a reason" thing, but I find the idea of soulmates entertaining, and I hope you enjoyed this blog post. 

Speak to you soon, 
Lucy x

Saturday 26 December 2015

The return of the Christmas face

I hope all of you had a wonderful Christmas/holiday season (whichever is more important to you!). I got multiple pokemon hats, so I am pretty happy with the gifts I received! If you celebrate Christmas, feel free to tell me your favourite present(s) in the comments ^.^

It seems to have been a thing over the past three years that I take a selfie on Christmas day with what has turned into my Christmas face so, just to continue the tradition...

2013

2014

2015
(present)

I think I've changed quite subtly since last year, but what even am I in the first picture? Also the quality of my selfies seems to be improving.

I've decided to make it my New Year's Resolution to start writing again. Recently, I've been finding it really hard to put sentences together - not just on my blog, but in my spare time too. Until earlier this week, I can't remember the last time I was working on a story (yes, I am now writing a story!). Since a very young age, I have loved writing, and creating my own content and outlets, but I've been so tired recently that it's impossible to find the energy or creative motivation to write anything. I claimed in November that my blog would be resurrected, but that just hasn't been happening. I think it's mostly down to how tired I am. 

For now, at least, I am writing. I don't know whether I will post some of my stories as blog posts in the future (I don't know how much you guys would be interested my stories, for a start), but if I could create content again, that would be cool. As a quite creative person, it is infuriating when my mind turns blank!

Speak to you soon, 
Lucy x