Boredom (en.es) The Inkwell Fiction Prompt #236

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Boredom

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Boredom, what is boredom? For her, it was the only thing left between her withered heart and the vast immensity of the sky. Only boredom, and the absence of anything else. Because there was no rage and no hope, only boredom, boredom that came pieced together with various pieces of melancholy and sadness. Lucía lived a ghostly life, full of routines and immutable silences...

Every day Lucía woke up with the same thought: "What for?" she would say. "Nothing," a voice inside her head would respond. Every morning her coffee would grow cold while she fell asleep with the thoughts and voices that inhabited her head, and if it weren't for her routine, even the bread on the table would harden from waiting, or rather, from doing nothing. Every tap of the clock's hands on her wall was a cruel and stark reminder of the cruel boredom that dominated her.

Since her son disappeared some time ago, the house had become a silent museum to his memory, to memories that chilled her soul and made Lucía cry from corner to corner. No one visited her, no one crossed her doorstep, and the curtains always remained blocking the light that should have entered through the windows. Sometimes it seemed as if the light itself feared Lucía's house or the ghosts that inhabited it.

Lucía walked aimlessly through the hallways, touching every wall, every ornament, every painting, and every belonging of her son, hoping for some magical, hopeful response, but the walls didn't respond; they remained silent and lifeless. Only the walls had boredom to offer her.

Lucía tried to occupy her time so she wouldn't think, knowing that boredom could be deadly; she had seen it happen before with her own mother. That's why Lucía washed the dishes even when there were no more, folded and unfolded clothes, and wrote shopping lists that she never made. But boredom was stronger, and it looked for a hole to crawl into and re-inhabit Lucía's house and mind. Boredom as punishment and boredom as condemnation.

Lucía sometimes talked to herself and said her own name out loud to remember it, and to remember that she still existed. "Lucía, my name is Lucía!" she would say.

Then she laughed at herself, but she laughed without any desire. Then she would turn on the television but not watch it, she would turn on the radio but not listen; everything was noise and senseless cacophony. Everything was boredom.

A neighbor appeared one afternoon; Lucía had already forgotten her name.

"You have to go out!" she told her. That afternoon, the two of them walked through the park, but the world was full of boredom, just like their house. People talking without saying anything, people laughing without joy, people living without living. Shared and disguised boredom, all meaningless, like existence itself.

One night, she dreamed that her son appeared, but he didn't speak and didn't look at her. It was just the two of them, motionless and uncrying. When she woke up, something that remained within her dissolved, and the boredom returned stronger than ever, denser and crueler.

Lucia stopped calling herself and counting her days. She no longer knew when it was Monday or Sunday, she didn't know if it was morning or afternoon. She only knew that she existed, sitting there, waiting for something that didn't happen and wouldn't happen. Boredom, boredom, boredom...

In Lucia's story, there was no ending, no miracle, no redemption. She was just a woman who became a shadow, a house that became a tomb. A life of waiting, and in the midst of all boredom, always boredom.

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The Inkwell Fiction Prompt #236 ▶ https://ecency.com/category/@theinkwell/the-inkwell-fiction-prompt-236

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Aburrimiento

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Aburrimiento ¿qué es el aburrimiento? Para ella era lo único que le quedaba entre su marchito corazón y la vasta inmensidad del cielo. Solo aburrimiento, y ausencia de lo demás. Ya que no había rabia y no había esperanza, solo aburrimiento, aburrimiento que venía ensamblado con diversas piezas de melancolía y tristezas varias. Lucía vivía una vida de fantasma, llena de rutinas y silencios inamovibles...

Cada día Lucía se levantaba con el mismo pensamiento: -¿Para qué? -decía -Para nada -le respondía una voz desde el interior de su cabeza. Cada mañana su café se le enfriaba mientras ella quedaba adormecida por pensamientos y voces que habitaban su cabeza y si no fuera por su rutina hasta el pan sobre la mesa se le endurecía de esperar o más bien de no hacer nada. Cada golpe de las manecillas del reloj sobre su pared era un cruel y crudo recordatorio del cruel aburrimiento que la sometía.

Desde que su hijo desaparecía hace un tiempo la casa se había convertido en un museo silencioso a su memoria, a recuerdos que enfriaban el alma y hacían a Lucía llorar de rincón en rincón, nadie la visitaba, nadie entraba al umbral de su puerta y las cortinas permanecían siempre cubriendo la luz que debería entrar por las ventanas, a veces parecía que la propia luz le temía a la casa de Lucía o a los fantasmas que la habitaban.

Lucía caminaba por los pasillos sin rumbo, tocaba cada pared, cada adorno, cada cuadro y cada pertenencia de su hijo esperando alguna respuesta mágica esperanzadora pero las paredes no le respondían, permanecían en silencio y sin vida. Solo las paredes tenían aburrimiento que ofrecerle.

Lucía intentó ocupar su tiempo para no pensar, ya que sabía que el aburrimiento podría ser mortal, ya lo había visto pasar antes en su propia madre. Por eso Lucía lavaba los platos aunque estuvieran libres, doblaba la ropa y la desdoblaba, escribía listas de compras que no hacía. Pero el aburrimiento era más fuerte, y buscaba el agujero donde colarse y volver a habitar la casa y mente de Lucía. Aburrimiento como castigo y aburrimiento como condena.

Lucía a veces hablaba sola y decía su propio nombre en voz alta para recordarlo, y para recordar que aún existía. -Lucía, me llamo Lucía! -decía

Luego se reía de sí misma, pero se reía sin ganas. Entonces encendía el televisor pero no lo miraba, encendía la radio pero no la escuchaba, todo era ruido y cacofonía sin sentido. Todo era aburrimiento.

Una vecina apareció una tarde, ya Lucía había olvidado su nombre.

-¡Tienes que salir! -le dijo Esa tarde las dos caminaron por el parque pero el mundo estaba lleno de aburrimiento también exactamente como su casa. Gente que hablaba sin decir nada, gente que reía sin alegrías, gente que vivía sin vivir. Aburrimiento compartido y disfrazado, todo sin sentido, como la existencia misma.

Soñó una noche que su hijo aparecía pero no hablaba y no la miraba, solo estaban los dos sin moverse, sin llorar. Al despertar algo que quedaba en ella se deshizo y el aburrimiento volvió más fuerte que nunca, más denso y más cruel.

Ya Lucía dejó de llamarse a sí misma y de contar sus días, no supo más cuándo era lunes o cuándo era domingo, no sabía si era de mañana o de tarde, solo sabía que existía ahí sentada, esperando algo que no pasaba y que no iba a pasar. Aburrimiento, aburrimiento, aburrimiento...

En la historia de Lucía no hubo final, no hubo milagro ni redención, solo fue una mujer que se convirtió en sombra, una casa que se convirtió en tumba. Una vida de esperas y en medio de todo aburrimiento, siempre aburrimiento.

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The Inkwell Fiction Prompt #236 ▶ https://ecency.com/category/@theinkwell/the-inkwell-fiction-prompt-236

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I guess lucia lost her beloved son to the cold hands of death. It must really hurt so much to live with such a pain, it would even be senseless to imagine a life without her dear son and not being able to do anything about it.

A melancholic yet beautiful story.

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If that's what happened, sadly, Lucia is based on a real person. One of the saddest stories I've ever known and experienced: watching someone's light slowly fade, ceasing to shine, and withering like a flower in a fierce winter. Depression sometimes disguises itself as excruciating boredom. I just want to thank you for reading my story and taking the time to comment. Thank you so much, and have a blessed day.

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Poor Lucía. I felt that quiet… like the kind that makes you check the fridge when you’re not even hungry.

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Lucia loved cooking before she felt this way. I don't know why your comment reminded me of that. Blessings today.

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I can really pick a very valuable lesson from this story. Most of the time, there are a whole lot of lessons we can pick from boredom that we underestimated

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Without a doubt, we all must fight against boredom and even more against other causes such as depression. We cannot allow ourselves to sink into sadness. Thank you for reading my story. Blessings.

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I've gone back to reread your words. It's an amazing story that tells a truth.

Years ago, when I was an adolescent, my mother made friends with the woman who lived across the street. My mother had a way of adopting lost souls. We would visit this woman in the middle of the day. Her curtains were drawn. The room was dark, except for the glare of the television, which was on nonstop. The woman spent her days in front of that TV. I don't remember ever seeing her outside the apartment. I couldn't describe that apartment to you, because it was so dark in there. Her children would come and go. The backstory to all of this, I learned (was it true?) was that her husband was in prison. She had effectively imprisoned herself.

Your story captures my experience with that woman who lived across the street. There is so much truth in your words, although I'm not sure where the line is between boredom and depression.

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Thank you so much for such a lovely and interesting comment. This character was written with someone very special to me in mind, and a beautiful light that went out could not be rescued. There is so much of her and so many memories. Thank you so much for reading this story. Perhaps this way I can keep her alive in my imagination. Blessings on your day, and my sincere thanks and regards.

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By writing about you kept her alive in all of us. She lives in every reader's imagination now...

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Wawu!!.. what a beautiful piece it is. It pains she let boredom envelope her to a stage of encapsulation.

I really enjoyed reading through. Greetings.

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Thank you so much, Oyebolu. You always have the right words. I really enjoy reading you. Thanks for taking the time to comment and for your support. I always appreciate it. Greetings from afar, my friend.

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The pleasure is mine. Greetings from here, too, my friend. Have a great week as it goes and continue to the us your distinctive story.

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The heartbreak that comes with losing someone that one loves to death can really change the better part of that person.

I guess that was her only son, and she used to be a single mother, or did get husband leave her after the incident?

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Thank you for reading, it encourages me to continue writing in this beautiful community. I wrote the character as a memory of a real person who was in my life and is no longer here. It was both cathartic and heartbreaking.

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Poor Lucia, she shouldn't have allowed her situation overshadowed her.

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Hello, @almadepoeta

Boredom, routine, and the forced loneliness of a separation steeped in nostalgia, unleashing a life without purpose in silent agony.

Unfortunately, your story reflects the lives of many around the world.

Greetings.

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