"Isn't it good Norwegian wood?"
I started listening to The Beatles properly a few years ago only after
reading Murakami’s Norwegian Wood.
The book remains one of my favourites even today. But it’s the kind of favourite
I don’t keep returning to, because it takes me to a place I’d rather not be in
(or have emerged from). As a consequence, I’ve also never been able to listen
to the song “Norwegian Wood” after I heard it the first time and felt myself
violently slip into that void. Until this morning, when it played on shuffle,
and I did not Skip.
I wonder what has changed, for the emotional intensity and darkness of
the book has definitely remained intact for me. I vividly remember staying up
all night and practically inhaling the book. Then, heading for class (it was a
part of the “Asian Novel” paper), and flatly refusing to share my thoughts because
I was so deeply moved. Somehow, talking about it seemed as though it would
tarnish my experience. Not to mention, I find it difficult to open up about
things I feel strongly about. Of course, it changes with time, and eventually I
do share (hence this post). Yet, that may not always fade the experience
itself.
Even now, I haven’t forgotten how my stomach clenched, and I felt as overwhelmed
as the lost Toru was every time the song came on. I can still feel the ethereal
Naoko slipping through my fingers with every page I turned. And I can clearly
picture the eye of the storm that Midori was… And I remember a hundred other
fragments that will forever stay with me, and skew how I see this world, whether
I realize it or not. Perhaps the picture is forever changing, adapting, and
rearranging itself. Or, it’s the other way round. Maybe, it’s both. What I know
for sure is that we have a relationship with art which, much like that with
people, is forever evolving. And it’s not just for us: it’s the same for the
creator too. Think Eddie Vedder’s “Alive”. A fragment shifts somewhere, the
light glints off another angle, and the duck becomes a rabbit.
This time, right now, a new picture allows me to access to another
beautiful dimension to a song. And just like that, in its own magical and
inexplicable way, the world will never be the same again, because such little
things are that powerful. I wonder what the next shift will bring. But for now,
I will listen to the song again for the I’ve-lost-trackth time. Simply because
I can.
Being able to describe what you went through despite not being an open person is commendable! And though this post does not give away a lot about you, it is one of the best posts I've read about the book! Kudos!
ReplyDeleteBeing able to describe what you went through despite not being an open person is commendable! And though this post does not give away a lot about you, it is one of the best posts I've read about the book! Kudos!
ReplyDelete