• Of Flesh That Feels Too Much

    You know what the world worships now? Detachment.
    Nonchalance.
    The art of pretending you never cared.

    They say, “Don’t give a fuck.”
    As if numbness is strength.
    As if indifference is evolution.

    But I give a fuck.
    I give lots of fucks.
    Actually, I am a prostitute of feelings.

    I feel everything.
    Too much. Too deeply. Too honestly.

    A song from five years ago can still ruin my evening.
    A scent can drag me back to a version of myself I buried.
    I remember the way people laughed, the way they left.

    And sometimes I wonder —
    Who am I without my sensitive heart?
    Nostalgia?
    Grief?
    Melancholy?
    Empathy?
    Love?

    If I amputate my softness just to survive, what remains of me?
    A body that breathes but does not ache?
    A mind that calculates but never trembles?

    No.

    I would rather feel foolish than feel nothing.
    I would rather break than become stone.

    Because the same heart that hurts
    is the only one capable of loving like this.

    aaditya

  • The Edinburgh Bookstore Journal | Episode 1 | The Edinburgh Bookshop

    Some places do not announce themselves loudly.
    They do not beg for attention or sparkle with spectacle.
    They simply exist patiently and gently, waiting for the right person to walk in and feel a little less alone in the world.

    Today I walked into The Edinburgh Bookshop carrying a small but deeply personal plan.
    A plan I have been holding close to my heart for a while now.
    To create a journal of all the independent bookshops in Edinburgh.
    Not just to document places, but to capture the souls behind them. The voices that keep literature alive in a world that is constantly rushing forward.

    What I found here was more than shelves and paper.
    I found warmth. I found a conversation. I found the kind of kindness that only lives in independent bookshops. The kind that asks what you are reading, what you are feeling, and what you might need next.

    The owner of this beautiful space welcomed me with such openness and grace.
    They reminded me why bookshops matter.
    Why stories still matter.
    Why physical spaces filled with words are not relics of the past but quiet revolutions of care, curiosity, and community.

    There is something deeply human about standing between shelves that have been touched by thousands of strangers and yet feel like they were waiting for you specifically.
    There is something sacred about a shop that remembers your name, your taste, your silences.

    This is not just content for me.
    It is the beginning of a journey.
    A marker in time of when a simple idea became something real.

    To The Edinburgh bookshop, thank you for the warmth, the generosity, and the gentle reminder of why I fell in love with books in the first place.

    Here is to many more doors, many more conversations, and many more stories waiting quietly for their turn to be told.
    📚🤍

    -aaditya

  • the cost of an ending

    The Cost of an Ending” is about a writer who is hopelessly in love. He lives with a strange and unbearable ability. He can write the future of his own love story. Whatever he puts on the page eventually becomes real. He can imagine tenderness, closeness, moments of joy and intimacy. He can write different paths, different versions of events, different choices. Yet across every reality he creates, there is one state of time that never changes. No matter what he writes, no matter how long he delays, he always ends up losing her. That loss is the ending of his love story. It is fixed. It cannot be erased. It can only be postponed.

    Knowing this, the writer reaches a point where writing itself becomes unbearable. He understands that to finish the story honestly would mean accepting the one outcome he cannot live with. Caught inside this dilemma, he begins to speak to his own conscience. This conversation is not dramatic or confrontational. It is quiet and inevitable. The conscience does not comfort him or offer alternatives. It simply reminds him of the truth. That no matter what he does, the ending will not change. That the loss is unavoidable. That the story must end where it always ends. That he has to put it there.

    The conscience tells him something simple and devastating. If you do not end the story, he stays hopeful forever. As long as the final line is not written, the ending does not arrive. Time remains suspended. Hope survives, even if it leads nowhere. The writer understands this completely. He realises that he is faced with a choice not between happiness and sadness, but between certainty and possibility.

    He knows that if he writes the ending, he will lose her forever. The loss will become real and irreversible. But if he refuses to write it, the ending will never happen. He will remain in a state of waiting, trapped in a hopeless reality with no possibility of a future, yet still holding on to the presence of love. He chooses this state consciously. Not because it promises happiness, but because it allows love to exist without being taken away.

    And so, the writer makes his decision. He does not change the ending. He does not rewrite it. He simply denies its existence. He closes the book before the final line can be written. In doing so, he accepts a life of waiting over a life of loss. He accepts uncertainty over finality. He accepts hope, even if it never resolves into anything more.

    His final words are not a resolution, but a refusal.

    Then let him wait.

    That is where the film ends.

    Written & Directed by Aaditya Bajpai

  • The Silence Between Her Fingers

    How beautiful she looks when she tucks her hair behind her ear. There is something so disarmingly human about that one little gesture. It is soft and ordinary and yet it feels like the entire world pauses just long enough for my heart to forget how to beat. The way her fingers move, almost unaware of the way they draw every inch of light toward her. The way a single strand falls forward again, like even her hair refuses to let go of her face. That little moment lives rent free somewhere between my ribs, where breath becomes prayer.

    She never realizes how it happens to me every single time. She thinks it is nothing. Just a way to clear her view, a small motion before she speaks or laughs. But I swear the sky bends differently when she does it. The light shifts, the air thickens, and for the briefest instant, the universe rearranges itself around her. It is such a quiet kind of beauty, the kind that never announces itself but simply exists in its own rhythm, calm and unbothered by how much I am falling apart inside.

    When she tucks her hair behind her ear, it feels like she is reminding the world that she belongs in the kind of silence where everything feels right. There is something so tender about the way her hand lingers near her face, as if even her touch knows it is holding something sacred. I have seen her laugh, I have seen her cry, I have seen her walk away into rooms filled with light and sound, but nothing quite strikes me like that one effortless movement. It feels like love distilled into motion. It feels like the softest kind of confession.

    I often think about how much beauty hides in the small things. The curve of her fingers, the shy tilt of her head, the way she breathes before speaking, the faint touch of her thumb at the edge of her jawline when she’s thinking. But when she tucks her hair behind her ear, everything else fades. It is the only time my heart forgets to build walls. It is the only time I stop pretending that I am not hopelessly, irreversibly, devastatingly in love with her.

    There are moments when I think love isn’t supposed to be loud. Maybe it is supposed to exist quietly, inside moments like these. Maybe it lives in how I notice her even when no one else does. Maybe it breathes in the stillness between us when she looks away, unaware of how the light from the window paints her cheek like it has been waiting its whole life for her. I find myself memorizing that look, that softness, that warmth. I think of it when I am alone, when the world is cold and unkind. I think of it and I feel alive again.

    Sometimes I imagine telling her all this. I imagine saying, do you know that you ruin me every time you tuck your hair behind your ear? That you make it impossible to believe that something so simple could hold so much grace? That in that single second you make time feel like it has stopped running, like it wants to stay and watch you too? But then she would smile, maybe laugh, and I would lose my courage. Because how can I tell her that something so ordinary to her is sacred to me? How can I explain that I have built entire worlds inside that gesture?

    There is love that burns and love that breaks and then there is the kind that just quietly fills the spaces inside you until you do not know how to be without it. She has become that for me. Every time she tucks her hair back, I fall again. I fall into the memory of her, into the idea of her, into the impossibility of ever being free from her. I fall into that delicate ache that feels both like home and heartbreak.

    And maybe that is what love really is. Not the grand confessions or the endless promises, but the little things we notice and never say aloud. The small gestures that become lifelines. The moments we hold close because they remind us what it feels like to be human. Maybe love is her, standing there in a world that will never deserve her, tucking her hair behind her ear, unaware that someone somewhere is quietly falling to pieces in the softest way imaginable.

    How beautiful she looks when she tucks her hair behind her ear. I will never stop thinking about it. I will never stop falling for that small, fleeting movement that feels like the beginning and the end of everything I have ever felt. And maybe I do not need her to know. Maybe it is enough that I do. Maybe it is enough that I saw her once, that I saw her truly, that I was lucky enough to witness something that pure.

    Because every time she tucks her hair behind her ear, I am reminded that beauty does not need to be loud to be infinite. That love does not need to be returned to be real. And that sometimes the smallest things, the ones we almost miss, are the ones that change everything.

    -aaditya.

  • The Space Between Seconds

    So, do you know when I remember you? It’s in the spaces between seconds.

    It’s not in the loud hours or the tired nights, it’s in the pauses between them. When the world exhales and forgets to breathe for a moment, that’s where you live. In the almosts. In the might-have-beens. In that half-beat between when my heart forgets to beat and then painfully remembers how to.

    You know, I don’t remember the sound of your laugh anymore, not fully, but I remember how it felt like sunlight spilling into a place that never saw dawn. I don’t remember your exact words, but I remember the quiet after them, the kind that used to hum like safety and now hums like ghosts.

    Some days I tell myself I’m fine, and I almost believe it. Then the kettle whistles, or a stranger says your name, or a song decides to hurt me on purpose, and suddenly I’m right back there. Right back in that tiny room where the air knew your shape. Right back in that night where I thought we were infinite.

    It’s funny, everyone talks about memories like they’re solid things, like photographs in albums. But mine are liquid. They slip through everything I try to contain them in. They spill into my mornings, stain my afternoons, soak into my sleep. And I let them. Because forgetting you would mean forgetting the only version of me that ever felt real.

    You once told me that love is supposed to make you whole. Maybe you were right, maybe you weren’t. Maybe love just makes you aware of the holes you didn’t know existed before. Maybe that’s why I keep writing to you even when you’ve stopped listening. Because language is the only way I can pretend you’re still somewhere on the other end of the silence.

    I think I’ve made peace with not finding peace. Maybe that’s what growing up is, learning to live with the ache instead of trying to erase it. Letting it hum softly in the background, like a secret song only I can hear.

    So, do you know when I remember you? It’s in the spaces between seconds

    -aaditya.

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