Saturday 29 June 2013

"When a plane crashed into the World Trade Centre, my first notion was excitement, not anxiety- but borderline exhilaration. I was eight, and it was then that I was introduced to ‘terrorism’, ‘attack’, ‘bomb’, and ‘war’, I was introduced to the world outside.
...
I didn’t realize it then. It had been drowned in the series of events that followed. Our peace was threatened for the first time.

And there was a crack on the glass."
(Continue reading Part 2 here, or skip straight to Part 1)

Refugee Of The Desert- JAE Gregory

People of all kinds lived in my little glass box. The ‘refuges’, they were calling our glass boxes now, the ‘hideouts’. There were few left, in fact, now they were a rarity, and my glass box was doing hard to preserve itself in a single piece. It struggled to keep people like me in it, ‘the refugees’, I could hear a faint snicker sometimes. I couldn’t blame them. Sometimes, I even wished we could let them in, welcome them in our midst, share our protection.

But it was not really our safety they craved, it was vengeance.

Because some of my people had their blood on their hands. I, all of us had their blood on our hands. But I shared it most, because some people of mine relished that spilt blood, and sometimes, several times, every time, I had too. All their blood.


The world was moving on. Not really moving ahead, simply because none of it was over yet. In fact, it was just the beginning. The world had devised a novel strategy to deal with this new reality- which was to cast aside these, indeed, condemnable daily ‘mishaps’ as a mere part of life, a deep, dark, depressing part, yet an inevitability.

As in, the most ingenious escape to ever be concocted in human history.

Until one bleak August, our glass box broke. Or rather, shattered. It was strange, traumatic, but above all- unbelievable. For though it had been rendered weak and fragile, even vulnerable, over the course of the continuous ‘tremors’, it just couldn’t shatter like that, the way it did- one split second I’m touching it, and another, the glass is gone. Vanished, smashed to smithereens, imploded. All I remember feeling is the slight pinch of the sand-sized crystals as they tore into my flesh, some of them to remain there forever.

Another split second and we could feel the radiance upon us. After an eternity of watchfully observing it through the glass, speculating about it, wondering how it would feel, perhaps even yearning for it, now, finally, it was upon us. And it did nothing but burn, searing through our once tender, untouched skins.


It wasn’t unusual, it was bizarre. We’d never expected this. We always believed we would have the choice to get rid of our protection, remove the glass box, at our will, when we wanted it. I guess that was nature’s lesson- we have no control, we have no possession- even of things we spend lifetimes believing our slaves of our beck and call.

Suddenly, the world could see us. Heads turned when their eyes saw us. We were total strangers to those suspicious, perhaps accusing, glances. We were people from a different world altogether, a protected world, maybe a better world. And now they would smile at us, “No more protection for you is there, buddy?”

This time, there was no relish.


The glass box was in a country. It had to be in one anyway, every piece of land on earth was someone’s territory. But it was a good country, and we occupied a rather valuable spot in it- the glass box. The glass box had been painstakingly constructed over the years, formed to serve its purpose from a near ancestor who had probably washed his hands off this world, and so we took refuge in it. It was a treasure. It was my home. In truth, the glass box was my life.

But the reality still remained. We had returned to being nothing but ‘foreigners’ here again. And now, as the real treasure no longer existed, it was time to ‘leave’, time to pack all that we’d so laboriously reaped over decades into 30 kilos of luggage per person and get lost.

I wasn’t shocked or unwilling or depressed. I accepted yet again, too willingly, too easily. But that was one of my greatest merits. If only I’d known, it was also one of my greatest shortcomings.


My ‘motherland’ is a people bustling with hope. That’s the first thing you notice about it as soon as you spot its wayward streets sweeping with the incorrigible traffic between spectacular rows of streetlights- should they be nourished with electricity. Because when you step out onto the tarmac and meet the buzz of travelers at the airport, what you see in their attitude is not ignorance of all these ‘malfunctions’. You see hope, a fragile yet unwavering ray of hope that one day, just one day things might settle. One day some miracle would answer the prayers they’d despaired, and ‘power’ would be restored, in a list of many things, more important things, things akin to matters of life and death. Until that day, they would just accept and adjust. It doesn’t just run in the blood, it’s a complete way of life.

I would be lying if I said I was initially scared, because I wasn’t merely scared, I was terrified. I wasn’t looking at the hope in their eyes that a casual first-timer would see. I was looking amid the deep, dark and mostly bead-black eyes for even the slightest indication of a hostile. Or the sign of a friend. But besides the hope, or the despair, they were indifferent, unrevealing, and that was terrifying.

I had always loved my country, though it wasn’t patriotism, a far cry from that, or anything else remotely brave. It was only for those brief moments of escape, very brief- for none of us could risk staying in it any longer than that- in which I met yet another small world, still pretty much concealed from the rest of it, like in a temporary glass bubble. I met a world of love, of kinship, of family, my family. I met a world where people I’ve never met, and don’t think I share even a percentage of my genetics with, would lovingly come up to me, pat my head and explain how somehow, we were related. And even though I knew then that we weren’t really at all, I felt it in my bones that we were. Blood, for me, was thinner than water. Perhaps that’s why I could relish it spilling so easily.

But now, now it wasn’t merely a brief spell, a vacation. I was there, possibly, probably forever. But worst of all, I was exposed, unprotected, revealed. The world outside was no longer a whim or an imagination, it was a reality that I was facing, and the more I did, the more I felt it was nothing like the dreams I’d had about it. It was a living nightmare.

In this world you don’t trust anybody, not your closest pal, not even the nearest of your kin, definitely not your brother. I wasn’t an alien to them. I was an innocent deer that had just jumped in the midst of a pack of emaciated predators. And they had surrounded me, were watching me closely, as if studying their prey.

I lowered my gaze, even the eyes are deceiving. 


It was only the first time I met an orphan that it truly sickened me. What was I calling it? Oh yeah, the relish.

She had dull dark hair, sallow cheeks that looked as if all the blood and flesh underneath had been sucked out of them and pale tan skin. A pair of stolid honey-hued eyes that seemed to have receded in their sockets stared back at me. They couldn’t have been more indifferent or emotionless, almost zombie-like. I could tell she was a recent orphan; the confusion was glaring out of every feature on her face, or at least what remained of it.

I could sense a distinct similarity to this girl. If only her hair had more luster, or her cheeks were a little more lifted, or the blood would return to her skin, if only her eyes would become a little more alive, just a little more vibrant, then…then…the girl in that mirror would be me. Just like me.

She lowered her stare and I found myself looking at the bathroom sink.

19, 19 had died in that bombing. 17 of them were adults, probably parents. 17 parents had been blown into bits, ripped apart, piece by piece, mutilated like some insignificant lifeless toy, like my glass box. And something had whispered in my mind then, “Only 19?”

I threw up.

It had taken them thirteen hours to piece my mother together.

I fainted.
(...to be continued...)
- Bushra

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Tuesday 25 June 2013


I realize that if I was a celebrity I’d be getting lots of hate mail for this one, but thank God I’m not! Viral hit, that is what the international culture of Transhumanism will evolve into over the next couple of months after it has become the central topic of bestselling author, Dan Brown’s new book, Inferno, which hit the racks just last month. Similar to the case of the Illuminati, a groundbreaking phenomenon, society will spend a large portion of their time addressing it, an issue that they fail to grasp in the first place… But what is transhumanism really? 

To put it in simple terms, transhumanism is an intellectual movement aiming at fundamentally transforming the human condition by developing technologies to greatly enhance human intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities. They predict that human beings may eventually be able to transform themselves into beings with such greatly expanded abilities as to merit the label "posthuman".

I found the moral dilemma the author presented through the protagonists over whether or not transhumanism was to be implemented rather preposterous and the views of the side presented as villain rather sensible. Is transhumanism really a work of a group of fiends from hell or is it truly what is best for the challenging times to come? Before your brain escalates to a thought of, ‘Hell no, I don’t want my genes modified with’, let’s get some facts straight. As you can see in the sigmoid growth curve demonstrated in the graph below, the human race is currently at the point of exponential growth at its highest acceleration yet and it’s ever increasing. Soon enough we’ll have massacres over bread in Times Square and Champs Elysees and the death rates would go so high… and this is where Transhumanism comes in, dearest readers, the ultimate solution.


What if we had bodies that were modified to function just as good, or even better, with a fraction of the nutrients required? What if we became fast enough to ditch the car and go on foot everywhere? After all, we’re faster! There wouldn’t really be emission issues, would there? Would that be, as some parties claim, an abomination beyond proportion? Is this defiance of the deities that each of us conform to? When it come to science, where should we draw the line, or should we at all? I think not. This is just another step in evolution, it is not fast forwarding of the process. In fact, it is what’s natural. Isn’t transhumanism the result of our naturally ‘evolutionized’ minds? The debate between God and science that philosophers, scientists and preachers have been addressing since the brink of dawn is frustrating! God and science CAN co-exist, a point that Dan Brown has been trying to convey since his first novel in the Robert Langdon series, Angels and Demons. Every civilization that’s ever thrived had a God of knowledge or wisdom, be it the Egyptian, Greek, Rome or Hinduism. Spirituality and religion should push rather than hinder the borders of science. You may disagree with Transhumanism, but Apollo agrees.

After dabbling with a bit of HASH, Adam Ashraf's discovered he has become an addict. You can now read more of his random, outlandish musings on his column, Adam's Ecstasy, which will feature regularly on our blog. Disclaimer: All views expressed our entirely his own, and any wrath incited must strictly be directed at him. Write to him at adamashraf97@hotmail.com
Though, beware, we fiercely defend out own!

Saturday 22 June 2013

Finding Wonderland: Where It All Began
"They lied...there is nothing beyond the ocean," she said, casting a forlorn glance at the agitated water as its ripples danced ceaselessly around their abode, spitting its spray in measured intervals like the disappointment in her tone.

"At forever’s end we will find what we have so passionately hunted. Until then, let the ocean take you where it wills.” Replied her comrade just as he felt the fishing line go taut. Bracing for the catch, they gasped as the swishing fins of silver tore through the water’s seams, clashing spectacularly against the golden that burned bright in the mystic milieu around them. Indeed, Posiedon had been generous with their feast today, bearing one of its finest to serve the aspiring conquerors as they chased the last beams of sunlight, and what lay yonder…

Hidden, obscure, undiscovered…

But not for much longer.
Email subscribers: Please click here to view the issue.

Monday 17 June 2013

We might've thanked you guys a million times already, so this one could potentially get on your nerves. But we have much to owe you. HASH was an idea, something Haroon and I decided to blindly leap into just to somehow make our inner passions a meaningful part of our lives. So that we won't forget them. So that we could live them everyday. So that it wouldn't be that they don't count. Or reward. 
So that we could share them with the rest of you. And more importantly, absorb all the almost out-worldly inspiration you have to offer. It's hard to get through sometimes, most people still find it difficult to comprehend what we do. But we're inching forward. And with every millimeter conquered, it just feels as though another tiny, invaluable dream has miraculously come true.
So thank you, Issue 1 contributors, for giving us the wings to fly. Your works will be the parameters for what's next for a long long time to come. Be well. Live well. Stay inspired. Keep rocking the world with your awesomeness.
Loads of love and HASH-titude,
Bushra Ali

Special thanks to Florencia Raffa for the Cover Art. See her complete works and mini-biography in Issue 1.


Issue 2 comes out...this week!

Friday 14 June 2013

One who pursues knowledge is one who pursues unhappiness. 

A man who pursues pleasure finds joy in everything. 

The sinful man suffers The One’s wrathfulness, 

The righteous man finds happiness beyond measuring. 

Taken for granted some pleasures go unnoticed, 

Little things in life bring satisfaction and delight, 

Pursuing the unaquisitionable is foolishness. 

But keeping hope always, and dreams focused, 

Brings an end to fright and reveals light, 

And the music of life; no longer tuneless.

-Remington CW*

Contentment Smoking by Joshua Petker

*Remington CW is an 18 year old student from the midwest United States. He writes poetry as a casual hobby, usually of the philosophical or reflective type.

Thursday 6 June 2013

"I hadn't grown up in a bubble; I was raised in an enormous oblong glass box. The extraordinary thing about this glass box was that I could see everything of the world without. But to that world, I was completely invisible. The box was impermeable, it was impossible for me to shine in the radiance that showered around it. The glass simply reflected its bright glares. None of the beams reached within." 
    
(Continue reading Part 1 here)


The glass box had a connection. Several connections actually, and they all involve cables, electricity, radio waves and machines. They call this connection ‘media’. The media were our eyes.

For the most part, these eyes consist of a large, blank white mass called a cornea, which has no meaningful or obvious purpose. Then they have a large, spectacular iris that can change both color and shape- this is for the idle talk, often of the unnecessarily overrated and celebrated, which surrounds the pupil. It is the pupil that is the real deal, a massive black hollow in the core of it all. It can see nothing but that which is shown into it and that eventually becomes its temporary focus. Another extraordinary thing about the pupil is that the image formed on its wall is always upside down, never upright, never straight. Yes, the media is an eye, just like an eye.

I would watch through this eye, all the pain, sorrow and suffering, all the evil, brutality and savageness, all the pomp, show and drama.

But just as my heart would bleed when my sight unexpectedly wandered there, just as I could feel the lump grow in my throat, just as my body would numb and my blood would freeze, I would feel something, something that doesn’t allow any of it to actually happen, something that makes it all just a mere whim of my imagination, something that makes it all fake…

Relish.

When a plane crashed into the World Trade Centre, my first notion was excitement, not anxiety- but borderline exhilaration. I was eight, and it was then that I was introduced to ‘terrorism’, ‘attack’, ‘bomb’, and ‘war’, I was introduced to the world outside.

And to think in that first split second of introduction, I had relished it.

To read of so many lives lost at once- I shook my head mournfully, even joined in throwing horrible curses at these ‘terrorists’, perhaps even felt like cursing, even felt the genuine sympathy, grief and horror. But only much after I’d felt the relish. Maybe, a little too late.

I didn’t realize it then. It had been drowned in the series of events that followed. Our peace was threatened for the first time.

And there was a crack on the glass.

It always brushed past me, so smoothly, I dismissed it as soothing. It was, undoubtedly, relish always is. It was only when it brushed too many times did it strike me. When I saw the first bombs of a new war crumble the shattered pieces of Afghanistan from the safety of my glass box, then Iraq. Then, when I saw through my eyes all the other cold wars and old ‘disagreements’ resurface between nations, known and unknown, I felt it in me, the hope, the relish, the want…for more.

I never really believed it was evil. In fact, it was human. Wasn't it?

All this time the glass cracked, and I began to notice the cracks, too, my eyes could see them, somehow I had a feeling they were causing it, helping it- my eyes, those eyes.

And then, suddenly, out of nowhere, there was a gaping hole in it, as if someone had neatly cut it out. And that someone kept coming back for more. That was when our ‘kind’ got threatened, us distinct people- bearers of the glass boxes.

And just like them, my glass, my protection, my invisibility was getting weaker, endangered.

Yet what haunted me even more, what haunts me even now, was that even when I heard their blood had been spilt, they were being torn to pieces, mutilated by those bombs, and when I would read their numbers in the morning, those of my neighbors and alleged ‘companions’- though why it shouldn't matter for all the other innocent blood was beyond me- even then I felt the brush…the relish…the pleasure, 

“19? Only 19?”

…the disappointment.
(...to be continued...)
- Bushra

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