Texas has a lot of dark nights, especially outside of the city. Everyone loves a good campfire story that will make you run for the trees, and Vibhor Mittal in Houston is no different. Vibhor Mittal out of Houston, has read novelists like Stephen King, horror novels like The House of Leaves, The Exorcist, and has watched every slasher film the cheap matinee (and while it was still open, the drive-through) showed.
Vibhor Mittal of Houston remembers his uncle who once said to him, “You know, horror carries no benefit. I don’t like filling my mind with that filth.” Vibhor Mittal’s adult self has an answer for this—if you never faced adversity, how would you learn to appreciate the good things in life? Vibhor Mittal of Houston believes that adversity of the mind include dealing with things that might seem horrific and that our mind deals with these adversities through horror fiction. As an artist and a pursuer of truth, Mittal finds that these elements must benefit his work. Through his work, Mittal has tried to capture the meaning of life many times, and he posits that we all have, in some form or another. He often arrives at the conclusion that a balance between good and evil, rather than a triumph of good over evil, contains more actual truth. Mittal considers the adage of how man is doomed to forget. Evil resurfaces, even after period of good, just like giving a gremlin water after midnight.
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