Thursday, September 25, 2008

THE fictious STORY

there was this young guy in Germany(i think) who had nothing else to do in his life. but his achievement motivation was high. he wanted to do something different and prove himself to the world. he worked for it day and night. one day he kept his ink bottle pen paper everything an desk & sat down to write down his ideas. he slept off because of his fatigability and in his sleep he spilled ink on some 20 odd papers. when he got up he was disappointed to see his papers are ruined. he was planning to throw it in dustbin. then a sudden idea struck him (dimag ki batti jala).he wanted to use that to prove himself because nobody else has done this. he took it to a printer who was even more creative. he printed these cards with special effects available at that point of time. and voila! the great key to the unconscious was born. unfortunately the creator couldnt reap the benefits. but yes his dream came true.....he is (rather his inkblots )an indispensable entity in the realm of exploring the dark unrevealed buried secrets of the unconscious.

5 comments:

cc said...

you know that shows how much our dimak key battis burn! i was thinking of drawing a series of cartoons of different peoples reactions to an accident scene where a guys lying on the road with blood out of his brains- a psychologist's reaction would be to ask the person next to him/her/it (no not for an ambulance or dial emergency on their own phone) but look at blood and say " What does it look like? What does it remind you of? or what could it be? that smear all over

cc said...

plz justify your writing (format) i love everything else about your piece though! :/

cc said...

Switzerland not germany !!!! passout question! shame om you

Ann Choolackal said...

swiss? really????maybe herman made me think of germany?wat abt d format?

Unknown said...

loll, Hermann must be rolling in his grave :P You know something though, its like as kids we learnt to do draw butterflies that way..I mean put paint in the centre of paper and fold it and open it. Never thought someone would actually make a test out of something so simple and I would actually read its theory. Some people sure know how to complicate simple things - I guess that brings us down to how it all lies in the perception