Talha was asking me to blow balloons. I've always been scared of doing that.I blow out into the balloon, but for some inane reason, I feel the air turning around and settling inside my cheeks, somewhere below my ears. It feels stuck there, trapped. And I feel like somebody's stuck two fingers inside my throat and I can breathe but I can't speak out. And the air just sits there like two, stubborn cotton buds, straining against the recesses of the small space beneath my ears, silently strangling my peace of mind. The problem with parasitic relationships, is that one of the two eventually dies.
We believe before we invent the vehicles to explain our beliefs. Two clowns, who had a juggling act together went to a pub and got drunk. "Gay" relationships didn't exist then, so it was all in the spirit of masculine, fraternal bonding. One of them believed in preparing a juggling act before a performance and improvising very little once in the spotlight. The other was more of an impromptu juggler. The first one, (let's call him "God", since he doesn't really care what you call him), asked the second one(let's call him by his full name; "Satan.A.Scientist"--he definitely cares what you call him), how it was, that he could come onto stage with such confidence when he had not planned his act at all. How could it be, he asked in wonder, that Satan.A.Scientist was loved by the audience everytime, despite his clearly less refined act, whereas he, who worked endlessly on minor details, trembled every time he walked out in front of that huge audience.
Satan.A.Scientist downed his fourth glass of Keystone, and asked the bartender if he could borrow his shiny black tophat for "dry purposes only". The bartender was a little dubious.(And he really can't be blamed since Satan.A.Scientist was wearing a bright blue suit with polka dots and a poofy hat on his head. He also had a big red smile and Rudolf's nose, but those are irrelavant details). He, however was having a busy night and in view of avoiding unnecessay trifles, he reluctantly conceded.
Satan.A.Scientist took the tophat and asked God, who was eyeing him curiously, whether he believed that Satan.A.Scientist could pull a white rabbit out of this hat by grace of magical powers at that very instant.
"Well," replied God " If I was perfectly sober, I would consider it highly improbable."
"And why is that?" asked Satan.A.Scientist.
"For one, I am a clown too, and I know all the tricks in your book. Since this tophat is not yours, you cannot have tampered with it and hence, cannot produce a white rabbit out of it. And for the second, if you did, I could probably explain why and it is not "magic" as a consequence."
"Then," said Satan.A.Scientist, "You believe two things. One, that I cannot. Not out of this hat any way. And second, if I were to pull one out, you would still not be convinced of "magic" despite the fact that you yourself just said that there is no possible way I could have tampered with this hat and thus, no possible way that this can be a trick."
"Well," answered God, "That's because I know that if you did, indeed, pull one out, you must have pulled a trick of some sort. I may have been ignorant to some your tricks."
"Ah! Precisely. You accept that you may be ignorant when it comes to full knowledge of some of my tricks, but not to to your ignorance of any elements of "magic" that might exist?"
"But I only believe that because you have explained some of your tricks to me before. Is it not your fault then, that you explain these tricks to me, and then, when I base my opinions on my knowledge of these tricks, you tell me that it is actually "magic"?"
"What, I ask of you, is the difference in "magic" and a "trick"?" asked Satan.A.Scientist."Don't they both share the faculty of wonder? If you can explain the white rabbit, does it make the trick any less skillfull, any less wondrous? Why would you need ambiguity to believe in "magic"?"
"I think, my friend," God said, tapping his finger on the rim of his wineglass, "That you spoil the scenario for yourself. If only you hadn't told me about all your tricks, you may just have been more believable."
Satan.A.Scientist smiled and asked God if he remembered who went first everytime the two of them performed.
"Ofcourse. I always go first because I am always better prepared."
"Yes, and after the audience has seen your flawless act, they start to believe that the juggler will not drop his balls. So when I come onstage next, I don't have to be as good as you. They already believe. You made them believe. It's your fault that that I am as applauded as you despite more time that you put in. They believe in the tricks you've taught them. And my tricks, though not as polished and planned as yours, are just as popular as yours. Even if I were to drop the balls, I would get away more easily with that faux paus and that is also why you make sure I go second. If they stopped believing in me, they will not lose belief in juggling as a whole because they've already seen you.You are the first act, and you teach them to believe. So if you messed up, they would cease to believe, not just in you, but in me too. You are the reason I live. You save both our asses."
The bartender, who had been quietly(and secretly) listening to this exchange, straightened his tophat and turning back to the row of shining glasses, murmured to himself:
"But the problem with parasitic relationships, is that one of the two eventually dies."