Author: S. Alim Reza

  • Perfect Peace [part 2]

    Photo by Fernando Rodrigues on Unsplash

    With whom could he share these innermost horrors, that he was living someone else’s life and that his dreams had become a nightmare?

    His friends would think he was an ungrateful jerk, and he certainly couldn’t share these feelings with Anne.

    He felt he had been duped by an evil wish-granting genie that took his fantasy of a happy life and trapped him in some endless maze of boring sameness.

    The shininess of the illusion of love and happiness had worn off and left him with a feeling of dread at the seeming meaninglessness of his existence and guilt for feeling this way about his life.

    After all, he couldn’t just walk away from a wife and children who loved him, could he?

    He awoke the following day feeling hardly more rested than when he had gone to sleep. He went to the washroom and then staggered into the kitchen to start a pot of coffee.

    “One of the few joys I have left,” Paul said to himself.

    Photo by Izzy Rivi on Unsplash

    He walked past the kids’ rooms and peeked at them sleeping.

    He felt like a fortunate man, and he was. A beautiful “millionaire’s family”  —  a son and a daughter both at an age still cute and hopeful before adolescence.

    He sincerely loved his children  and wife —, but couldn’t help feeling a tinge of resentment. As well as he was doing in life, he couldn’t help but wonder “what if” his life had taken a different direction.

    These were the things that haunted Paul.

    He boiled water and ground the beans fresh for his preferred method of caffeine ingestion: the French press.

    “Good coffee should be drunk black, and if you don’t like black coffee, you don’t like coffee. Either that or it’s shit coffee,” he’d often muse, usually more for his entertainment than for others.

    As he stood and waited for the coffee grounds to cook, he thought, “So she wants to drag me to yoga camp  —  fine. At least the day looks nice to take in some bald monks in saffron robes.”

    These were his favourite moments, being by himself in perfect peace.

    No phone ringing or time commitments, no kids bickering or wife chattering. Just an understimulated caffeine junkie, his boiled beans, and the dismal anticipation that his day would be downhill after that first glorious sip.

    He was at an age where most of his friends were just like him, fully committed to their families and careers.

    Most of his friends now were friends because of this, he had realized.

    This was also an age where he still had some single friends, which gave him a depth gauge to plumb just how far their respective lives had diverged.

    On the one hand, it was fun to live vicariously through their exploits and dream of his wild days. On the contrary, most single ones wished for what he had. Or, at the very least, used him to gauge what they were hoping to avoid.

    The “what if” game was fun but ultimately dissatisfying.

    Paul was here now and trying his damnedest to make it work.

    Sometimes, he wished for quiet and secretly hoped for a freer, less responsible life. A life where he could be creative instead of productive. To live off the artistic expression he knew he had buried deep within himself but forsaken in pursuing more material reality.

    He had planned to get into real estate sales because he thought it would be a way to make a good income while leaving free time for him to work on his passion  —  writing novels. That became a joke that he found increasingly unfunny.

    While the intention was good, he liked to muse that “the road to hell is paved” with just such intentions.

    The reality of raising a family and the financial merry-go-round left little to no time for him to do anything of his “true calling.” He loved his children and wouldn’t trade them for the world, but deep down, he wished his life was different.

    For all that he had, he felt as though something was missing.

  • Go to the mattresses


    When you’re pinned into a tight spot
    Sleep with your back against the wall
    On a mattress
    On the floor

  • Dead man’s switch

    Rigged to pop if anything happens. Haha, fuck you. My safety and well-being are now your priority, asshole.

    Dead switch, indeed.

  • Foreword

    The Arcane Diary has been a work in progress for nearly fifteen years, never mind how long.

    That it is now getting the chance to see the light of day makes me very proud to reach this accomplishment of completing the process of bringing something original of my creation into the world in this way, but also ashamed of the delays of distraction and ineptitude.

    When something is meant to happen, it happens, and this is happening now.

    I intend to produce a piece of work that is dear to my heart in a way different than I have seen done before. My hope is that even if the process is not successful that it should at least be novel. Puns will be kept to a minimum. I promise.

    One of the biggest obstacles to writing is nagging self-doubt

    Will my work get finished? Will it be any good? Will anyone like it or care?

    These are the first hurdles a writer must overcome before having the audacity to create something new in the world.

    The desire for acceptance and the greed for acclaim is another huge problem that alters the purity of the creative process or stalls it completely. Once this can be put aside, the only resistance is the piece itself.

    I have learned not to overthink this and to do it and see where the chips land. A total piece-of-shit flop of creation is still a creation that wouldn’t have existed if you had become stuck in your head.

    The process is highly cathartic once it begins. The story inside you is burning to get out – dying to become borne into the world and be shared with others. The reader gives it a life entirely outside of what a writer can ever imagine.

    To deny the creation the opportunity will seriously constipate the mind

    I was told to write and to write raw.

    That was great advice at first. Trying to piece together many of the pieces into a coherent work is a challenge in itself, leading to much rewriting and editing.

    Letting it happen naturally is the way to start it. Please don’t concern yourself too much about the final form it will take; that will come much later. This was a big stumble for me writing The Arcane Diary, wondering how I would make it happen and whether it would be profitable even to do it.

    The world that was when this story began taking shape no longer exists. This new world now is much more conducive for creating original work and sharing it with as many readers as possible.

    I have set out to do so by publishing using the web as a medium for creating a dynamic – and evolving – piece of work through time. It has worked surprisingly well with the story, as you will see. 

  • end loop

    parse documents
    extract meaning
    make sense
    make notes
    ask questions
    seek information
    ~end loop~
  • pirate meets ninja

    The criminal underworld meets the actual underworld.

    Bloody, violent, and add a romantic Mediterranean twist

    theirs is a love of

    A Thousand Lifetimes