
It's Nikko
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The Sculptor of Silence
In a quiet village tucked between misty hills and ancient woods, lived a young man named Elian. Like many in the village, he spent his days wandering the trails, staring up at the stars, and asking the same question that had echoed through generations: “What is my purpose?” Elian was a seeker. He sought meaning in the clouds, answers in books, wisdom from elders. He visited temples, meditated for hours, even climbed to the top of the Windspire—a jagged peak the villagers believed brought visions to the worthy. However, he returned empty-handed each time. One afternoon, as he sat by the riverside, skipping stones and sighing with frustration, an old woman approached. Her back was bent like a bow, her hands speckled with clay, and her eyes shimmered with something that felt like certainty. “You look like a man waiting for something,” she said. “I’m waiting for purpose,” Elian replied. “Everyone says it’s out there. I’ve searched, but all I find is silence.” The woman chuckled. “Silence is not absence. It’s invitation.” She placed a lump of clay in his hands. “Come,” she said. Elian followed her to a modest hut on the edge of the woods. Inside, shelves were lined with strange, beautiful sculptures—twisted forms, laughing faces, sorrowful creatures. They weren’t perfect. Some were cracked. Others tilted awkwardly. But all of them seemed to breathe. “This is what I do,” the woman said. “I shape the silence.” Elian watched her knead the clay, her fingers moving without hesitation. It wasn’t graceful, but it was alive. Something in him stirred. “But how do you know what to make?” he asked. “I don’t,” she said. “I start. The rest follows.” She handed him a small block of clay. “Stop seeking. Start shaping.” For weeks, Elian returned to the hut. At first, his hands fumbled. He made crooked bowls, wobbly figures, lumps that looked like nothing. But the old woman never criticized. “It’s not about making something great. It involves creating something. Slowly, Elian began to feel it—the quiet thrill of bringing form from formlessness. He stopped asking what his purpose was and started pouring himself into the clay. His thoughts, his fears, his dreams—they all surfaced through his fingers. One day, while sculpting, he paused. Before him stood a figure—tall, uncertain, one hand reaching forward, the other curled to the chest. It looked just like him. Imperfect, confused… but becoming. The elderly woman surveyed the scene. “That’s your first true creation.” Elian blinked. “What do you mean? I’ve made dozens.” “Those were practice. This one… came from within.” In that moment, Elian understood. All his life he had been chasing answers like wind—trying to catch something invisible, intangible. But when he stopped chasing and started creating, the answers had found him. Years passed. The old woman passed on. Elian inherited the hut, the tools, and the silence. He became the village sculptor—not because of fame or talent, but because his creations spoke to people. They saw themselves in his work: the hesitant child, the grieving mother, the restless traveler. Travelers still visited the Windspire, still asked the stars for purpose. Some stopped at Elian’s hut, curious about the sculptures. He welcomed them all. Some he taught. Others just watched. He would answer those who inquired about how he found his calling: “I stopped seeking meaning and started making meaning. Life isn't about finding what’s already there. It’s about shaping what isn’t yet.” One day, a young girl named Lira came to him, eyes full of questions, palms empty. “I don’t know what I’m meant to do,” she whispered. He smiled, handed her a lump of clay, and said, “Good. Then you’re ready to begin.”
By It's Nikko9 months ago in Fiction
India-Pakistan Relations: A Legacy of Conflict and a Hope for Peace
**India-Pakistan Relations** The relationship between India and Pakistan is one of the most complex and tension-ridden bilateral engagements in the world. Born out of the traumatic Partition of British India in 1947, the two nations have remained caught in a web of historical animosity, territorial disputes, and mutual suspicion. However, there have been brief moments of hope, dialogue, and cooperation despite the hostilities, indicating that peace is not out of reach.
By It's Nikko9 months ago in History


