ISLAMABAD: HERACLITUS HERAC
Russia—old Russia, Soviet Russia, and even before that—a land where the whispers of history are preserved in the very crystals of snow. Where the winds of the Neva River carry the echoes of ancient philosophies. Where Tolstoy’s characters still sit in some forgotten café, endlessly debating life and war. Where Chekhov’s lines linger in the silence of the streets, muffled yet unmistakable. And where, in the stillness of the night, when the roads are empty, time itself seems to come to a halt—like a scene from a forgotten novel brought to life, like a story stepping out from the shadows, unannounced and unexpected.
Russia is my love, my soul dwells within it—especially in Saint Petersburg. There, as I wander the streets, an inexplicable presence walks beside me. An unseen companion, neither fully tangible nor entirely imagined. A presence that may be nothing more than a thought—or perhaps, something far more real.
These streets, these alleys, these old buildings—they all stand as silent storytellers. I walk and find a bench, light a cigarette, and watch as the smoke dissolves into the air. And then, from a distant alley, a shadow emerges. Slowly, it approaches—adjusting the brim of its hat, fastening the buttons of its coat. It sits beside me. I try to recognize the figure. Could it be Chekhov, lost in contemplation over a new story? Or perhaps Dostoevsky, dissecting the psyche of another tormented soul? Or maybe it is Tolstoy, having arrived at yet another philosophy of love and war.
I part my lips to speak, but the figure speaks first:
“You know, life is nothing but a long wait—just as I once waited, perhaps as you are waiting now.”
I turn toward him, startled. But in the next moment, the shadow begins to fade—dissolving into the mist, as though it had always been there and yet, had never existed at all. The snowfall grows heavier. I rise and glance back at my footprints, which are slowly disappearing.
Perhaps it was all real. Perhaps it was merely a dream. But those who have truly felt Russia know that in this land, time and reality hold no fixed abode. Some moments remain forever etched in the heart—like an unfinished poem of old Russia, never fully written, yet eternally alive.
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