There are people who arrive quietly and still rearrange the furniture of your chest.
Her eyes are the kind of blue that don’t ask for attention, they simply stay, like a thought you return to when the room goes silent.
Her skin holds light gently, not the way mirrors do, but the way mornings do when they forgive you for yesterday.
Her hair moves as if it remembers the wind long after it’s gone, and her neck carries a softness that makes distance feel unnecessary.
I don’t know when liking became gravity, but suddenly I lean toward the idea of her without meaning to. Some feelings don’t announce themselves, they just sit beside you and feel right.
If this is not love yet, it is something honest learning how to breathe.
And if it is love, then it’s the quiet kind, the kind you protect by not naming it too soon.
Step into the world of Typewronger Books, a charming bookshop in Edinburgh that does so much more than simply sell books. From its humble beginnings in 2017, when founder T began selling books out of a police telephone box on Leith Walk, Typewronger has grown into an essential creative hub for writers, readers, and artists alike. In 2018, the shop opened its doors full-time, and since then, it’s been a place where stories come to life and imagination knows no bounds. This is more than a bookshop—it’s a sanctuary for anyone seeking to connect with words in their purest form.
In this episode, we dive deep into the heart of this special place, exploring the community-driven spirit that makes Typewronger truly unique. With a strong focus on poetry, open mic nights, and zine-making workshops, this shop has nurtured the creative souls of Edinburgh. You can join in on the fun by attending monthly open mic nights, where poetry, comedy, music, and short stories take center stage. If you’re feeling adventurous, why not participate in one of their resograph zine-making workshops, hosted at their studio in Meadowbank? It’s all about making and sharing—creativity thrives here.
But the magic doesn’t stop there. Typewronger Books is also home to a typewriter, and it’s not just for decoration. You’re invited to use it to write a letter, note, or poem. Afterward, the wonderful founder of the shop will help you send it off, or you can take it home as a personal memento. It’s all about expressing yourself, letting the words flow, and feeling a true connection with the community.
If you’re in Edinburgh, visit this late-night haven, where the doors are open from 11 AM to 9 PM. Read, write, and find a sense of belonging in this beautiful space that encourages all forms of expression. Remember, every book read should be followed by something you create. Write more, express more, and keep the stories flowing. 📚✍️
Support your local independent bookstore. Write more, live more, and let your creativity soar.
I met her by accident, the kind that feels scripted only after it’s already gone.
We were standing inside the Bedlam Theatre, pretending to listen, pretending to be strangers who weren’t about to collide into something irreversible. Old walls, tired wood, stories echoing where footsteps once mattered. And then there she was, leaning slightly forward, like she belonged to curiosity more than certainty.
She had that kind of light on her face that doesn’t try to be beautiful. It just is. Skin catching the day softly, as if the sun had learned restraint for her. A smile that didn’t ask for attention, but took it anyway, wide, unguarded, the kind that makes the world feel briefly forgiven. Her eyes weren’t loud. They were calm. Honest. The kind that look like they’ve already decided to trust you before you’ve earned it.
There was an ease to her. Shoulders relaxed. Hair tied back, not to impress anyone, but because the day asked for practicality. She looked like someone who laughs easily and leaves quietly. Like someone who belongs to moments, not places.
I fell in love with her there. Not the dramatic kind. The helpless kind. The kind that happens when your heart doesn’t wait for your permission.
We spoke. Briefly. Casually. As if our voices were aware of the lie we were telling ourselves, that this was just another afternoon, another tour, another stranger. I remember thinking how unfair it was that she existed so gently in a world that never gives warnings.
And then she left.
An exchange student. Temporary by design. A passing chapter pretending to be a whole book. She didn’t stay long enough for me to be brave. Didn’t stay long enough for me to say goodbye. The word never even made it to my mouth. It stayed lodged somewhere between my ribs and my throat, unfinished, like us.
No closure. No ending. Just absence.
And that’s the confusion of it. Nothing went wrong. Nothing broke. She just left. And my love story remained exactly where it began, unspoken, unfinished, unbearably warm.
Some people arrive like storms. She arrived like sunlight through an old theatre window, beautiful, quiet, and gone before you realize you were standing in it.
I saw her today. Or maybe I didn’t. Maybe it was only the idea of her wearing a familiar face, moving through a very ordinary afternoon, pretending not to undo me.
She was struggling with a grocery bag, too full, cutting into her fingers like it didn’t know how precious it was to be held by her. I remember thinking how strange it is that the world keeps asking her to carry more than she should. I remember wanting to take the bag from her, not because it was heavy, but because loving her always felt like a reflex my body learned before my mind could stop it.
There was this one strand of hair. Just one. It had escaped, like it didn’t belong to the rest of her, like it was trying to tell me something I already knew. It kept falling into her face, soft and annoying and perfectly timed. She tried to shake it away, failed, smiled at her own failure. And God, in that moment, I wanted to be there so badly, not to say anything heroic, not to fix her life, just to slide that strand behind her ear. Just that. Just the smallest intimacy that feels larger than forever.
And that’s how I knew I was in love again. Not loudly. Not dramatically. But quietly, inconveniently, like muscle memory. Like my hands remembered her even when my life had learned to live without her.
It’s confusing how love doesn’t ask for permission. How it returns without explaining where it’s been. How it doesn’t hurt, but it doesn’t heal either. It just exists. Standing across the street. Carrying groceries. Being human.
This isn’t sad. That’s the strange part. It’s tragic in the way sunsets are tragic, because they don’t stay, not because they aren’t beautiful. I don’t mourn her. I don’t chase her. I just love her, again, in this soft, useless, impossible way.
And maybe that’s enough. Maybe love doesn’t always need to be lived. Sometimes it just needs to be noticed.
I saw her here right in this garden in Edinburgh. The air was soft and cool and every corner of this place whispered of something ancient and tender. The leaves had fallen quiet under the weight of autumn. The flowers were tired. Even the sun seemed unsure of its warmth. But then there was her. Standing there like the last piece of summer that refused to fade.
She bent down and touched a leaf that had turned brown, brittle, almost gone. I remember holding my breath as if I knew something was about to happen. Her fingers brushed against it so gently that even the wind paused. And in that stillness I saw it. The leaf shimmered for the smallest second, and the green came back to life. It was as if spring had found a way to bloom through her touch.
Her eyes were the kind you do not just look at, you fall into them and never really climb back out. They had that colour of honey mixed with dusk. A warmth that holds you without asking. A light that hurts and heals all at once. When she looked up the whole garden changed its breath. The world seemed to tilt toward her, as if everything in it was trying to get just a little closer.
The curls in her hair caught the light like they were made of it. They fell freely, the way music spills from an open window on a quiet street. I remember thinking that even if time stopped right there it would still not be enough to hold her beauty. There was something endlessly alive about her, something that refused to belong to just one moment.
And I, standing there like a fool, felt the season inside me change too. Everything cold began to melt. Everything lost began to return. I think that is what love does. It takes your dying autumns and quietly turns them into spring.
“Andrew Garfield is Captivating”, “This is Andrew Garfield at his best”, “It was like watching The Real Jon Larson in Andrew’s disguise”. Well, these were the reactions of the some of the biggest movie pundits out there after the release of Andrew Garfield’s Tick Tick Boom.
Andrew plays Jonathan Larson, a real-life theatre wonderkid who died tragically only days before the premiere of his era-defining and revolutionary musical “Rent.” Just to be clear, Andrew Garfield had no prior experience in the theatre when he signed on for this film. He jumped at the chance and said, “As artists and as human beings, how can we stay on the edge of ourselves, always extending and evolving, and having our consciousness and sense of self stretched, without those forms of challenges?”
Personally, this was Andrew’s best on screen performance till date, A revelation with a magnetic performance up there with his strongest till date. I have been a fan of him since his Amazing Spiderman Series and now seeing him potraying Jonathan Larson, is literally a treat to the eyes and ears. He sings, acts, cries, laughs, and showcases perfection in each and every breath that he takes in the movie.
The story is both genuine and unique, as well as universal. It’s thought-provoking, and it has a lot of fantastic concepts running through it. What Lin did with the narrative, I believe, truly pulled us inside Jonathan Larson’s head. He was able to take Jonathan’s songs and visually display them in such a way that they added to the narrative in ways that neither the script nor the book could.
At the end, I just want to mention that this movie is literally a love letter for all the die hard musical fans. And I would like to end this with a quote from the movie, for you all to read and interpret and do comment below what is your interpretation. “𝒀𝒐𝒖 𝑱𝒖𝒔𝒕 𝑲𝒆𝒆𝒑 𝑻𝒉𝒓𝒐𝒘𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝑻𝒉𝒆𝒎 𝑨𝒈𝒂𝒊𝒏𝒔𝒕 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑾𝒂𝒍𝒍, 𝑯𝒐𝒑𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝑨𝒈𝒂𝒊𝒏𝒔𝒕 𝑯𝒐𝒑𝒆 𝑻𝒉𝒂𝒕 𝑬𝒗𝒆𝒏𝒕𝒖𝒂𝒍𝒍𝒚 𝑺𝒐𝒎𝒆𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝑺𝒕𝒊𝒄𝒌𝒔 ” – (Tick, Tick… boom! 2021)
Amidst the shorgul of town, you find yourself lost, lost in a breath, even the way, that’s ahead.
You feel that you’re responsible, because that’s what is set by patriarchy. Learn to say NO, when you are tired, everyone’s equal, there’s no hierarchy.
There’s no generalisation, of any color with any gender. You can wear whatever makes you feel “YOU”. You can also apply nailpaint and mehendi, don’t care, when anyone says, that’s not for you.
You should respect all, love all and be there for all. But you should also stand against wrong despite what gender, the bad belongs.
Above all, love yourself, and make yourself feel wonderful. Even Cry, when you feel you’re broken, or when life’s down. You’re good and you’re bright, You’re a gentleman, and for you there’s so much of light. -aaditya bajpai
I am so happy to share with you all that my book titled “The Unadvised Writings” is now published by Notion Press Publishing Company under the ISBN number 9781684878741. This book is a collection of poems written by me. I had started writing when I was in 9th standard and since then I have been dreaming that one day I will definitely publish my own book. I want to thank the publishing house for helping and guiding me through the whole process. I also want to thank my family and friends, because without them and their support, all this would not have been possible.
You can purchase the book from the website of the Publisher through this link – https://lnkd.in/eESCS-PN
I dissolve in you, your body, and your soul dwelling into me. Staying awake amidst, the shorgul of town. Your smell, your essense is enough to put life into the dreary desert of my heart. Meeting you every now and then, it all doesn’t feel enough. For like every heart requires, the stream of blood to flow through it. I require, you to engulf within me, and our souls, they merge, so intensely, that even the cupid would fall onto earth, to seek our blessings. I want to die in you, you still keep me alive. I want to lose thyself in your darkness, thee still drag me out to light. I don’t deserve you, you still embrace every nickle of blood, that flows in me. This ain’t a filthy manifestation nor it is my search to survive. This is love, the love, within you I strive, within you I find. – aadi