Monday, 22 October 2012

Ideas behind my narrative. (POINT 1)

The Nikahrat is somewhat of an angelic being because she sacrifices herself so mankind can assume to live guilt and care free of the turmoils in the world.
She feeds off sadness and despair but after a while a baby that is dependant on these negative feelings forms inside her. 
The infant is cruel, like a harmful parasite and causes Nikahrat nothing but more struggle and pain and it weakens her. At her weakest the baby is born but as she is giving birth, the baby clings onto her heart, ripping it out as it is born, killing its mother host. When this baby is born, a world disaster is caused by the sudden outburst of excess negative energy brought out along with it. 
The first thing this horrid creature consumes is its mother's heart and it is only then when her kindness is passed on and cleanses the infant to become a reincarnation and a new Nikahrat. 
It then starts on its duties absorbing up all the hate created from the disaster which her birth created.

At the time I was writing 'The Nikahrat', I was unhappy with different aspects of my life and the world around me.
I can't really explain into depths what the message and object of it is because it's a strong, personal emotion.
Sometimes it just seems easier if someone or something could deal with all our stress and problems. If we dwelled on all the wrong doing in the world then we'd send ourselves insane and when bad things happen we always come up with an excuse to blame something apart from ourselves.
All humans struggle to bottle up emotions: it's not healthy and it's painful.

So what if a creature existed that could take away these feelings of hurt and turmoil, like the good samaritan who helped Jesus carry his crucifix in The Bible?

But if this one poor creature had all the world's problems locked up inside it, it's inevitable that it too will have to have an outburst, an outburst perhaps so big and terrible that the effect could harm so many people due to the amount of emotion, hatred and depression that it had to hide for so long.

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