DIARIES & MEMOIRS: COUNTRIES A-Z, India, Scotland

Body Maps

By Sreenithi

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I loved walking through Edinburgh Old Town, up and down the Mile from crag to castle. I loved walking through Holyrood Park and sitting by the lake. It was called St Margaret’s Loch, and you could spot an entire fleet of swans on the water, looking stately and proud. I was terrified of them though. At close range, you could really see why birds are the last living dinosaurs. But I digress.

Having lived most of my life in the busy, metropolitan Bangalore, I was not used to the idea of walkable cities. Perhaps that is a uniquely European indulgence, making it a great tourist selling point. Bangalore is too big…and too chaotic to be walkable. Need I even mention the hellscape of road traffic that could easily consume your daily commute? 

It wasn’t as though I was out and about every day. Much to my shame, I barely knew my way around my hometown. I mostly stayed indoors, sitting and stewing in my own thoughts and dysfunction. Suspended in grief for over ten years without even realizing it, there was no real sense of normalcy. My family was paralysed too, frozen, and barely getting through each day. I hated being at home, but I struggled to get away.

I didn’t go out for walks. I didn’t learn how to ride a scooty or bike like the other kids to give myself that independence. I didn’t join extra-curriculars or explore sports. The only way I managed to prolong my ‘outside time’ was to hang out with my friends after class. But not for too long, because then I would have to worry about getting back home late, relying solely on unreliable public transport or a known auto uncle from my neighbourhood. Sometimes if I was lucky, a friend would drop me home on his bike.

The thing was, I wanted to get away from home, but I hated going outside. Because I hated myself. I hated my face and my body and my hair and my clothes. I wanted so badly to be seen but I didn’t want to be perceived. But there was something more insidious: I was stuck in debilitating survival mode. The poor city planning and waste management, the collective disregard for traffic rules, the noise and pollution, the fragile bubble of safety (if you’re a girl) – all these were navigable if you had the resourcefulness and a can-do attitude. ‘India is not for beginners’ as the meme goes. You just learn to deal with it as you go, to embody the chaos yourself.

But I was too incapacitated. Too broken and grief-stricken to be a proactive go-getter. Which is why moving countries for my master’s degree was quite a seismic shift. It meant that movement was no longer optional. But it was also no longer hindered. The easy, serene, walkable streets of Edinburgh were an essential scaffolding to get me out of my own head. For the first time in my life, I was going outside on my own terms…every single day. And I loved it! 

Edinburgh was so beautiful to experience. I couldn’t get enough of it. I learned everything I could about this quaint, historic little city. The closes and wynds, the undulating lanes, the view of the hills, the faint speck of sea in the distance, and the perpetual grey sky, all these became etched in my mind’s eye. This was the right place for me – not too big to overwhelm, not too small to suffocate. It was the perfect size to hold fully in my heart. It was the first place that I fell in love with, the first that I chose as home.

But for whatever reason, my journey there was constantly turbulent. For one, I moved house over eight times in a span of just three years. Not to sound too superstitious, but it felt like the city would simply not let me settle. ‘You will not find success here,’ someone at a party said to me once as she did all of our horoscopes. Not too long before that, my childhood grief had burst out of me, delaying my career and jump-starting the healing process rather violently. 

My first job was terrible. I felt so poorly treated that I quit in just four months and I have been unemployed ever since. Perhaps I shouldn’t have visited the castle at the start of my course. But how could I have known? Nobody told me it was bad luck to go there before graduating. There were days when I walked down the streets, sat in buses and parks, crying bitterly, baring my ugly tears to the city. There was even a time when I broke down inside a church, and I am not the religious kind. But things only got progressively worse. It was part of the recovery, but it left me so hollow.

And yet I loved this city to bits. Vehemently. The thought of leaving was agonising. 

‘Why do you even want to stay when this place is not serving you?’ a friend asked me.

‘Maybe you’re not meant to be here, maybe something better is coming,’ said another.

I was told well-intentioned things like this all the time as I resisted the prospect of leaving. How could I even begin to explain that it was as simple as wanting to walk up and down the streets? Not any street, but Edinburgh streets, and the closes, because they had become the rugged topography of my newfound agency. How could I explain that it was as simple as loving the old, gothic buildings and the sound of bagpipes sneaking up on me from around the tourist-heavy corner?

I didn’t just fall in love with the fantasy of this city, I loved it to its bones and grimy underbelly (yes, the Fringe venue too). Sometimes I close my eyes, and I can see it all so clearly. Vivid little snapshots, as though I never left. Usually, it is a flash of the road starting outside Waverly mall, sloping down to meet the small intersection on Market Street before opening into Cockburn Street and curving upwards. I don’t know why this is the chosen snapshot. But then I open my eyes again, and it is like I was never even there. Like a faint afterimage from another time and consciousness.

I am now in the Netherlands, trapped once again inside a visa deadline which is fast approaching. The city planning here is even more impressive. It is brighter, nicer, and the Dutch surely love their flowers. Perhaps I learned to contain my attachments. Or it is just a natural consequence of growing older. But I don’t feel the same magic. I like Holland but the experience has been somewhat flat (no pun intended). Could it be that I am more well-adjusted now? Or too numb?

But how nice it is to be here! The clean air and the easy, walkable roads. This permission to exist so naturally and freely in public space, something I cannot quite experience in Bangalore. At least not without effort and privilege. Sometimes, it really is as simple as wanting to hold onto the material comfort of a place. Don’t fault a migrant for their superficial goals, I guess.

I miss Edinburgh Old Town and Holyrood Park. 

I miss the agency that warmed my legs as I walked back to my flat, late, on a cold winter night.

I miss the person that I used to be walking up and down those hilly streets.

It was a place where I felt like myself.

It was home. 

Popular & established authors, SHORT short stories, South Korea

Tongue

By Hyoungshim Choi

A temporary but urgent call to action! Centre of the Web partner Versy Talks is kindly running a free public online debate about the publishing industry from 21st to 31st May 2026. It does not take long to take part in the debate and state your opinion, and everyone is welcome! Sharing your voice will help boost both COTW and Versy Talks. Please help us grow, so that we can platform diverse and underrepresented voices from around the world. More information can be found here.

The alarm clock went off. “A new day has dawned, rise and shine everyone……” I pressed the switch. I needed to change the wake-up call on that damn alarm. 

—Did he really do that as a joke? No matter how much I think about it, our senses of humor just don’t match. It’s good that we broke up.

I muttered about this to myself as I got up and brewed some coffee. With half-closed eyes I cursorily washed the mug that was sitting by the sink. Apart from the fact that the inside had yellowed from frequent use, it was an ordinary cup. I poured the coffee into the cup. It was the same coffee that I always drink, but today it tasted incredibly bitter for some reason. 

—This is disgustingly bitter. Is it so that even the coffee is bitter just because I broke up with him?

I grumbled to myself as I gulped it down.

—Ah, stop bitching and just drink it. It tastes the same as usual.

Just as the coffee was about to go down my throat, I heard this from somewhere. 

—What the hell?!

I was so startled that I jumped out of my skin. No matter how many times I looked around, I was the only one in that broom closet of an apartment. I looked inside the washing machine, checked that the front door was locked, and even rummaged through the built-in closet. But there was not a single trace of anyone anywhere. 

—Have I been alone so long that I’m hearing things? 

It made sense, though, come to think of it. I had been stuck at home for four months now due to Covid, after all. When I first heard that I had to work from home, I cheered, just like anyone else would have. I wouldn’t have to listen to assistant manager Kim’s cheesy, cringe-inducing jokes, nor hear the shrill voice of my team leader, who was extremely irritable from all the sleepless nights taking care of a newborn baby.

However, I was disillusioned pretty quickly. Video conferences on Zoom and the like that were so boring they made my butt cramp, and the KakaoTalk (1) notifications coming through all the time under the pretext of attendance management, weren’t actually a big deal. Living alone in this cramped studio apartment for months on end without ever leaving is practically like solitary confinement. It got to the point where I even started missing the people I hated seeing! I decided to go to a cafe to get some work done for a change of scene, but the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases began exceeding 1,000 on a daily basis. Eventually, the cafe I was visiting closed down. As the number of confirmed cases surged, I started shopping online, too. As a result, I came to rely on online platforms for most of my daily requirements. 

Eventually, it got to the point where I was breaking up with my boyfriend through KakaoTalk. As soon as I saw the message that began, “If it weren’t for COVID, I’d like to meet and talk……”, I sensed that we were breaking up. I sent a reply saying, “Okay. Let’s stop seeing each other.” A long message followed, in which he rambled on about how we weren’t meant to be, told me to find someone better, and so on. I didn’t reply and coldly blocked him. Thanks to working from home, or to being confined at home, we ended things neatly and cleanly, so I should have been relieved, but I didn’t feel good at all.

I felt utterly terrible.

After finishing my coffee, I was at the sink, stirring my finger inside the cup to rinse it, when I felt something bulging out. Wondering if a grain of rice or something might have somehow gotten stuck, I looked inside the mug. However, there was something reddish rising on the white porcelain.

—What the …? 

I scratched the inside of the cup with my fingernail. 

—Ouch, I’m going to get hurt. Try to be careful. 

Right then, the voice I’d heard earlier came from out of the cup. I was so startled that I dropped it on the floor. 

—Hey, have you lost your mind? You almost broke me. No wonder you got dumped by a man. 

I was completely dumbfounded. 

—You’re only just a cup……. Who taught you such bad manners?

—Who else but you? Who’s the one who’s been talking all kinds of nonsense right in front of me every day? If I had ears, they’d have already rotted away by now.

Come to think of it, as working from home had gone on, it’s true that I had spent the days mumbling to myself the whole day with this cup in front of me. This symptom worsened especially after breaking up with my boyfriend. In the days following the breakup, I grumbled about him nonstop, pouring out curses at my cup. No wonder, since there were no cafes open even if I wanted to meet people, and since I didn’t have a friend to vent to at a time such as this……. All day long, the only things I faced were my computer and my mug. If my computer was what spoke to me, then my mug existed for me to speak to. While drinking water, while drinking coffee, I was in the habit of talking to the mug as I muttered to myself. 

—You should have just left me alone. How much pent-up frustration must I have had to have grown a tongue? 

the cup said, sighing. Hearing this, I felt sorry. Without a word, I took out a soft tea towel and carefully cleaned the cup before putting it back in the cupboard.

After that, I occasionally thought about the mug, but I never opened the cupboard. This was because I didn’t want to exchange a single word with that irritable, insolent, manners-nowhere-to-be-found jerk. Moreover, a cup with a tongue sticking out of it creeped me out so much that it just didn’t feel right to put anything in it to drink. Of course, I did think about throwing that strange thing away. But considering its personality, it was clear that if I threw it away it would blabber all sorts of things about me to anyone, so I decided to just put up with it. So I swapped my cup for a tumbler and strove to break my habit of talking to myself. I felt like I was going crazy keeping my mouth shut while just staring at the computer screen all day. But what could I do? I had to just suffer. 

—Give me some water.

It was about 2 in the morning when I heard that voice. I had finally fallen asleep after tossing and turning since 10pm, having developed insomnia due to a lack of outdoor activity. I covered my ears with the pillow and pretended I hadn’t heard. 

—Hey, I said I’m thirsty. Can‘t you hear me? 

That jerk goaded me again. It piqued my irritation. 

—Let me just sleep.

I sprang up, opened the cupboard, and shoved a tea towel in the cup. 

—What are you doing? I said I’m thirsty, thirsty! Take this thing out of me right now.

—Don’t be ridiculous. You think you’re human just because I talk to you. You’re so loud it’s driving me crazy.

I went back to bed and tried to sleep. As soon as I did, the jerk quietened down. I’d just dozed off when his sudden screaming jolted me awake. My heart was pounding. 

—What’s going on?

—I can’t breathe! Get this damn tea towel out of me.

—Ah, seriously, you’re so loud. You’re making a fuss over nothing. Do you know what time it is right now? Just be quiet. 

—Be quiet? Won’t you come over quickly and get this out of me?

—I don’t care.

I spat this out, rummaged through a drawer, pulled out a pair of earplugs and put them in, then victoriously went back to bed. But then he screamed breathlessly, at a high pitch of about two and a half octaves above normal, like a dying soprano singing a climax.

I could hear him screaming through the earplugs. 

—This is suffocating me! I said I’m thirsty!

Since the jerk wouldn’t stop screaming and raising hell, in the end I got up again and irritatedly opened the cupboard.

—This damn cup, I’ll just…… 

I picked it up and hurled it against the wall. The cup shattered with a crash. 

—Ow, I’m dying! I’m dying! 

he screamed in what seemed to be one last desperate struggle, before suddenly falling silent. At that very moment, the doorbell rang.

—Police! We’ve had reports of a domestic disturbance. 

The police, in the middle of the night! This is all because of that jerk! As annoying as it was, the problem at hand now was coming up with an excuse. 

—But what in the name of God should I say? 

I asked myself, into the wall. 

—What do you mean, what should you say? Just tell the truth. 

Out of the blue, the wall replied. I looked to face it in shock. This time, exactly where the cup had hit, a really huge tongue had sprouted. 

—Ah, seriously! Who would believe that!

I felt like I was going to lose my mind with anger and frustration. But I resolved to control myself and open the door. 

—What seems to be the problem? 

Two officers wearing black masks were standing in front of the door. I hesitated, not knowing how I should begin. Since they had eyes, I figured that if I just showed them that thing then they would understand the ridiculousness of the situation.

—Do you see that over there? The big tongue. It was originally in that cup down there. 

I pointed to the shattered cup on the floor, and the large tongue that had hung limply from the wall since the police showed up. 

—A tongue? What do you mean, a tongue? 

one of the police officers asked, looking back and forth between me and the wall. 

—You don’t see that tongue there? That tongue…. 

***

1. KakaoTalk: Korea`s most widely used chat app

Reflections, South Korea

The door called the organization

By Kim Ja-heun

Human relationships are like that. When people gather, whether they like it or not, they must open their mouths to speak. You have to reveal words that could have remained hidden, and you must listen to words that would have been irrelevant had they gone unheard. Furthermore, in any gathering of an organization, words inevitably pour out—this way and that. As the mass of the organization grows, the volume of words swells, branching out in every direction.

Even on a single agenda, conflict arises because thoughts differ. It is not a matter of “This is my thought, what is yours?” but rather an attempt to inject one’s own beliefs into others: “My thought is right, so why is yours like that?” It would be ideal if conflicting opinions reached a consensus, but when they don’t, the situation escalates into raised voices and flushed faces. When the clash is over petty interests rather than a grand cause, a sense of self-reproach washes over me as I watch, listen, and participate: Good heavens, why do I even have to be here? It feels like a homework assignment where the distinction between right and wrong will never reach a resolution.

Yet, I also realize that the opinions each person puts forward can be interpreted as a desire to do things well. If a few say one thing but the majority says another, it could be that the majority is right. When opinions are expressed, synthesized, and deduced to create something new, the resulting conclusion might return as a different kind of vitality.

Late at night, returning home through the pouring rain in Gwanghwamun, a junior colleague who lives in the same direction and I got into an extension of the meeting’s debate on the subway. My junior argued that the activities of the Self-Discipline Committee are ultimately political and that we must, therefore, increase our influence through numbers. To be honest, I couldn’t actively agree. My conviction is that a writer’s political expansion should be expressed through their writing. As political assertions clashed with my professional philosophy, the junior—who seemed to be from “Venus”—exclaimed, “Ah, senior, you’re being frustrating again!” I, coming from “Mars,” grew weary of the same problems repeating and closed my tired eyes, saying, “Hey, let’s just stop now.”

***

On a day like today, I feel an immense fatigue from belonging to an organization. Is it regret, or perhaps a realization? I think to myself that if I hadn’t joined this organization in the first place, I wouldn’t have to deal with this bitter energy on my way home so late. I realize once again that I am, by nature, ill-suited for the confines of an organized framework.

Closing my eyes, I sink into thought. I wonder, as my junior poet said, how a senior writer who is respected should behave. And is that junior, who says such things, behaving correctly as a senior respected by their own juniors? While pondering what human relationships are all about… I eventually lean toward the positive: Yes, this is all just everyone trying to do their best!

They say that as you get older, you should keep your mouth closed and your wallet open. Since I am not in a position to gallantly open my wallet, I suppose I should act my age by simply keeping my mouth firmly shut.

DIARIES & MEMOIRS: COUNTRIES A-Z, England

Building Silent Haven: Introduction & Chapter One

INTRODUCTION

I come from a background where feelings and needs were not discussed, leaving me somewhat in the dark as to who I was and what I needed in life. I did know quite clearly from an early age that art was a major source of joy and comfort and this was my saving grace. In adulthood I was unconfident and unsure about my choices but assumed that if I worked hard I could become a well known artist. I used to have visions of living in an exclusive apartment in New York and having shows in major galleries. Finding that I had major obstacles to this route, (I hated being out there and doing publicity, or talking about money for my freelance art commissions, for example) I lived frugally and just made art. Over the years the pressure built up, my choices of environment were very limited and this made me ill. I had no idea I had inner cravings for a natural way of life let alone how to achieve it. Eventually, the dam burst and the river flowed out freely but not in the way I expected. Looking back, the journey that I went on was so much more in tune with who I am and what my needs are. This journey was much more nourishing than I could ever wish for. In a labour of love, the idol that took shape came to be known as Silent Haven. 

CHAPTER ONE

In 1963, when I was five, my parents, brother and I moved from the home I was born in, in Yorkshire, to Leicester. The house was newly built and there were no other houses surrounding it; it was surrounded by open fields and felt spacious. That didn’t last. Houses were being built around us. My fondest memories were the first few days as the electricity and gas hadn’t been connected yet. It had a significant impact on me, and I remembered this when my partner and I started building the cabin at Silent Haven. There was no time to get the furniture in place before dark, so we all slept on mattresses on the floor in the lounge. My mom made food on a little camping gas stove, and we burned candles. There was a fireplace, and we lit a fire. I loved it. It was atmospheric; we were in it together, camping, surviving, basic and connected in this marvellous adventure. 

That was one of the best nights I ever had in that house. Then this chaotic but casual and relaxed atmosphere began to disappear. The electricity and gas were turned on so the cooking was done in its proper place in the kitchen, with food being eaten at the table. My spirits sank when the beautiful warm and exciting hub of the house got filled up with an ugly gas fire and I don’t think they ever recovered. The place just wasn’t the same after that and it felt like neither were the relationships. After that first night it was back to the frosty barrier of my brilliant, but controlling and frightening mother. I thought my upbringing was normal until years later when my school friend Claire said my mother ‘ruled me with a rod of iron’. My dad provided relief by cracking silly jokes and making me laugh, but anything emotional was immediately swept under the carpet.

The house sat in a lovely woodland garden. I loved the feeling of the trees surrounding and protecting us on two sides and how beautiful they were but we were on the corner plot, and it was otherwise very open. As the other houses were being built I retreated in doors more and more as I was painfully shy. My parents were about the only people in the neighbourhood who wanted to keep their trees; everyone else must have thought they were a nuisance, because they were getting cut down. I only realised after doing a session of eco-therapy at university, how disconnected I had been from the earth —this was until I bought Silent Haven, this land that quenched a long period of dehydration. 

After the electricity-free night in my new childhood home, I asked for a paraffin lamp as my bedside lamp. Stepping back into my inner child’s shoes, I feel I was responsible enough to have one. Of course, the answer was no. The compromise was a fake paraffin lamp, with a fixed key I could pretend to turn to raise the light level and a removable bowl. I loved that lamp nevertheless.

***

My childhood lamp

***

My parents were very creative and resourceful, and this is the thread for my way of life. I decided to become an artist at the age of 12. Fast forward to 1977, at the age of 18 I spent a year doing an Art Foundation Course at Leicester Polytechnic. It was situated in a beautiful old school. My dad would take me early before anyone else got there so I had time to adjust my hair and my make-up. The course consisted of all kinds of art: life drawing, sculpture, oil painting, illustration, photography and textiles. I loved it and wanted a degree in all these subjects but I had to choose one subject. I chose Graphic Design, I think because that was the most likely to make money. My grandparents were from a poor mining background and that was still in my system.

***

Metamorphosis, 1977

***

I left home in 1978 at aged 19 and went to St Martin’s School of Art in London and lived in Ralph West Hall of Residence for the first year, just beside Battersea Park. I loved the communal living. Although I had art as a meditation, I was on a destructive path of depression, drinking, smoking and experimenting with different types of drugs. I had been brought up in a household where, although I had many physical privileges, which I was grateful for, my mother had been in control of my life and on moving to London, I suddenly had complete freedom yet didn’t know who I was. I was trying to make sense of my world but was vulnerable and without boundaries. I was also extremely sensitive to noise and I didn’t realise this. Certain noises deeply triggered me, but at that time I didn’t know what they were. The drugs and alcohol numbed the fear. 

By Jules Smith

Reflections

Breaking consensus as proof of love (#1)

Last night I had a dream that I was sat at a table with strangers, as if it were a lunch table during a group retreat somewhere, and an older guy sat next to me and started talking to me about love. Somehow I understood that he was a Christian philosopher, and I told him I didn`t mind him talking to me, but I could assure him that he would not convert me to Christianity. He was unfazed by my words, and proceeded to explain that there are two ways to analyse love. The first is a cool intellectual way, observing that love exists between all of us. Which is a nice thought, he said. And the second way is by breaking consensus. He did not have time to explain fully what he meant before I woke up, but directly after I woke up, and was lying in bed, I started to contemplate this: How can love be analysed by breaking consensus? I came to the conclusion that breaking a consensus view (or putting forward an individual view that is different to the consensus view on something, held by a group of friends you are part of, or your family, or any other group) is a test of love because it is a potential source of conflict. But also it is a demonstration of love, that you love and trust other people enough to openly differ from them, though it should be done respectfully. It further could demonstrate a higher love of Truth and love of the truth inside yourself, equivalent to a high level of self-respect, because if you stay silent when you disagree with a group which you are part of, you are not being true to yourself or to the unfolding universe. But this is not always easy to deal with and practice. Sometimes we pretend it is easier to go with the flow and stay silent, even when going with the flow is actually blocking our private flow.

This post was originally published on Schemattic here.