Wednesday, January 31, 2007

anything you like

Do I attract you?
Do I repulse you with my queasy smile?
Am I too dirty?
Am I too flirty?
Do I like what you like?
I could be wholesome
I could be loathsome
I guess Im a little bit shy
Why dont you like me?
Why dont you like me without making me try?

I could be brown
I could be blue
I could be violet like sky
I could be hurtful
I could be purple
I could be anything you like




Monday, January 29, 2007

9/11 Mysteries (Full Length, High Quality)

Who hates freedom?

the one missing

I can remember every day dragging but you know, we both know, that when I write the recollection will come in flashes. Brightest colour flashes.

I'm sitting right here, right at this undersized table, staring vacantly at the screen and my father calls to tell me Grandad's dead. He was taken into care on New Year's eve, moved to hospital a few days later and, being that age and this time of year, I couldn't say I was surprised.

I can say that I was shocked. So shocked that I stared at the wall for a full ten minutes before I even began to react.

*****

I guess it's like knowing there's a leak in your ceiling, that everytime someone spills water in the bathroom it gets damp downstairs. We all know it's there and there's a thought, nay, a certainty that one day we really ought to get around to fixing it or something's gonna go wrong but still, when the almighty crash happens and you find your iron clawed tub on the living room floor because you left the tap on - shock.

It's like contents insurance for my student house. It's like getting cancer from smoking, or having to sign over a grand in backdated rent because, secretly, I hoped they'd just never notice.

Why do the things you expect still hurt you that way?

*****

Euchre. My family's game. My grandfather's game, and every time he dealt a joker he'd make hearts trump and every time he'd win.

I've never played before, it seems years since anyone has so I am taught, and play opposite my father, in the place where he sat.

*****

And there is someone missing. Not just in the euchre pairs but in the car, where I sit on my own instead of on his lap and in his house, where my parents sleep in his separate bed and downstairs, I lie rigid, imagining the moment his face will come round the side of the door, his gentle voice to tell me a story.

It is sad, not because he's gone but because I am a child again, and he has always been gone. I miss him, not as an adult, not as a young woman with a degree in the making and my own place and my own life, but as a child.

He hasn't been here for years but I want to be sat on his lap, I want to be read to, I want to come upstairs to find him sleeping in my bunk bed and smell his smell on the pillow.

The one missing has been missing for years, and I miss him more now, not because I thought he would come back.

I thought I would go to find him.

*****

The funeral is the brightest January morning, in a hospital chapel that is small and peaceful and the buzz, such as it is, is that the organist from the cathedral will play. And she does, the Dark Isle and songs of Scotland and in the midst of it, the Saints.

how I'd love to be in that number, when the saints go marching in

And it's a lovely service, they say, the eulogy my mum and I wrote together is read, how he worked and where and how hard and for how long and that he liked cars and to read and to play the accordion and mouth organ and the names of we fortunates who survive him.

It reads as if my mum and Alice sprung into being from the earth. It reads as if he'd never married, which is how Granny wanted, as if he'd never loved a woman in his life.

*****

The burial at Holm, blinding, freezing sunshine, so close to the sea you can smell it, the green grass and the earth and the whiskey my cousin passes round and down he goes, my family and his friend carrying the coffin, then the earth.

The earth. And it's really, really over this time. And I never went to find him, like I always said I would, and he never knew me like I hoped he might.

****

And his friend, his Bruce, tells us about the nights of talk and hip flasks, cards and my grandfather on his stool, playing tune after ditty til morning, with everyone praising him. And my grandfather, walking for miles each day. And my grandfather, taking a knife and pulling the peel off an apple in one long spiral. And talking about his family.

And the last photo I took of him, last summer, my grandfather, walking away.




Sunday, January 14, 2007

blank

So my Grandad died, a few hours ago. I found out about ten minutes ago, and I guess I'm writing this because I have to do something, anything, but sit and think.

Because, you see, there are no songs or books or things to remind me of him, all the memories are in my head and it's very very important that I don't think right now.

I can count the times I've seen him in the past years on one hand, can count the times I've spoken to him since I was about 8 on one finger.

He's gone now, so no time left to make amends. Nothing left really to do but sit and try and find anything anything anything to distract me from the fact that he died alone.

and you ought to write that on the ceiling

Friday, January 12, 2007

abode - an ode

He says he only has nightmares at my house.

Which is fair enough, because even the fact that my landlord is coming over tomorrow to inspect the place hasn't inspired me to tidy.. That Matt will even sit, let alone sleep in here is testament to his devotion but still. Eventually his inner 'queer eye' is surely gonna snap and just burn this monstrosity down.

Although, if I could drive him to just burning the rubbish, that would save me a job.

Because of course, there is the fact that, with my bed being on the floor, everything is even more inclined to gravitate downwards. Y'know, Cup'a'Soup packets and the like. Even my lamp is on the floor, meaning that anything teetering above ground level (say, balanced on the desk) becomes a fire hazard. Like my teddy and bed companion of a decade - Floppy the bear - who made the ill advised move of falling from one to the other, thus scorching his ass and making me cry big baby tears.

There is this incredibly long list of reasons why I will never be a good mother and housewife.

The toilet brush, that was a good one as well. The brush bit actually fell off the stick bit whilst I was cleaning the loo, begging the immediate question - did it fall, was it pushed, or did something actually grab it and pull?

Note to self - make sure the poking device constructed out of used toilet rolls in order to chopstick said brush head out of toilet is in the bin-bin and not the kitchen bin. That would be gross, and questions would be asked.

And then the blue Bloo block I bought as an offering to appease the toilet beast, but then couldn't lift the cistern off to put it in so, having left the task to Christoph, grabbed it off the windowsill a day later to find it was... wet. And turning my hand blue. With what I can only assume in the long sleepless nights was toilet water.

Perhaps if I offer Mr Jones a cup of tea, he won't notice the fact that his old family home looks like it's been home to some kind of Greek beer orgy.

Then, of course, the fire damage - two net curtain holes and one scorched table to date.

Perhaps if I light one stick of incense for each fag I smoke with the window closed, the smells will balance out into zen-like scent of calm. Then again, think how many holes in surfaces that might cause...

I can get rid of the booze bottles, at least. That won't take more than ten... thirty minutes, yup, and I can hide the pizza boxes. And the only thing wrong with the bathroom is that the gigantic bar of Lush soap I got for Christmas is engaging in some kind of merging/Pagan hand fasting ceremony with the wall and the... other bars of soap.

Of course toiletries are a whole new issue. Where exactly are all the really embarassing ones? The Immacs and Veets or whatever they are, the razors and deodorants and spot cream and tampons and lady painkillers and empty pill packets and - oh! - the novelty inflatable boyfriend, where the hell is he?

Why is it the only mortifying thing I know the whereabouts of is the cystitis medicine the previous German occupant left behind that I've been saving for when Christoph's family come to visit from Munich? How is it I've only just realised how easily that joke could backfire on me?

More to the point, it's 11pm and I don't really know where all my underwear is.

Ok.

Clothes = wardrobe. Rubbish = bin. Books = bin. All dirty cutlery and crockery = ...bin. Miscellaneous - garden. (There was a mattress, street light and desk out there when we moved in, will a traffic cone really scream negligence?)

Perhaps I could just sleep in and come out in my pjs looking all bleary and confused and he'll feel so awkward he won't want to impose further by looking into my 'Primark vomiting into an ashtray' modern art spectacular boudoir. Although, then I'd have to explain Morning Matt, who'd also still be knocking about all bleary and confused. Morning Matt is different to Daytime Matt or even Evening Matt. Morning Matt scratches itself and tends to kiss people.

Hmm.

Of course what I want, what I really want to do is to answer the door in my £2 dressing gown, fake satin extravaganza with 'Fuck the Pain Away' by Peaches blasting simultaneously out of all three of our computers (while Craig and Christoph adjust studded dog collars and Matt snorts a line off a heap of dirty laundry on the stairs) blow a big cloud of cigarette smoke and say - may we help you?

But knowing my luck it'll turn out to be my parents and they'll notice that I haven't hoovered before anything else.

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

begin again

This feeling.

That I need to explain myself. That I don't want this blog to be a depression blog, a pity blog, and in order for me to write even when I am not unhappy, certain things must be said. Like shit, and fuck, and even cunt, and sex, and drugs and all the things that are in my life and my thoughts and so will be here.

That I want to censor my writing as little as I want to censor myself. Cuiusmodi sum - whatever I am - this is what I will write.

This feeling.

That religion just makes me angry. Jesus Christ and God as he taught him are the most beautiful things I have ever heard of and I want, so so so badly for what I believe in them to be true. I want there to be a love that strong and that pure, I want that passion to exist. But I can't find it, because whenever I get near all I hear is hype and hypocrisy, and so many amazing people, so many amazing friends who I love and who love me but none of them can quite help me to understand how this religion is in anyway related to this God.

This feeling.

That I let every one of those friends down every day that I fail to see the world as they do.

This feeling.

That my grandfather could die at any moment and I will never see him again. And this, I have come to realise after a decade of denial, is just the way it has to be.

This feeling.

That the man I knew as a child has long gone anyway.

This feeling.

That I hate my degree and I feel like I am wasting my life.

This feeling.

That my job makes me feel hopelessly inadequate because no matter how hard I try I always fail and I have not got the sense of self to separate the way I view myself from the way my bosses view me.

This feeling.

Of trying to think of another feeling that warrants a mention so that I can delay the inevitability of the next sentence which I know is coming but I am currently too scared to write.

This feeling.

That depression is not something that just goes away. And I haven't been feeling low because of some weird after effect of the drugs or the pill or even the illness itself. I am low because I am still ill, and if I don't take some kind of positive action soon I am going to deteriorate and by the first anniversary of my love affair with anti-depressants I will be back there again.

There. The bad place. The anxiety and insomnia, the nightmares and occasional hallucinations, the sadness so crippling that sometimes I couldn't even move. Literally, physically, could not move.

I don't know much but I know that I cannot go back there again. You don't win against depression. Every day you feel ok is a tiny little victory but the battle is not the war. Perhaps the war will end someday but I realise now that I am going to fight again.

And to fight, I need this blog. That might sound awful but I do. I need this outlet, this space, because I only realise now that every time I created something out of a terrible feeling I won. Just a little bit, just for a little while but that writing that I put on here and the strength it gives me now to read it back and the comments I received - they are each tiny little victories against this bastard feeling that wants to defeat me.

This feeling of how much I need those little victories.

This feeling of wanting to fight.