Oubliette

I sometimes think you are every bit
as wicked as Germaine says you are.
From those first clawing aches
and heavy clots
that kissed farewell to childish thoughts

to immature scares in the early days
when it was easy to think
using you… was a foregone conclusion.

Was I right to block you out with
pills and latex and fervent prayers?

Gertrude was right when she said
I have more control over my writing
than I do over you.
Yet you are mine;
my flesh, my burden to bear,
I do feel your mystery heavy inside me;
I’ve never seen you and I never will.

Nizar Qabbani says man comes forth from the womb;
it’s nothing to do with ribs
so why do I feel this lack of control?
Of course the irony now is that
as I hurtle towards my middle age
I feel your urgency more than ever
and now, now I can’t answer you and the question,
the question that circulates in my mind
like a constant white noise
is that when I finally need you…
will you yield?

Past my ‘Sell-by-Date’?

I was recently staying with my parents in the UK who were interested to know more about the man I had been seeing for the previous 5 months. I happily regaled them with whatever they wished to know and remember quite clearly one evening saying to them: ‘if this works out it would have been worth staying single for all these years as he’s great’. I think he broke it off a week later over Skype – life loves a bit of irony doesn’t she?

Apart from the usual discussion we had about why it wasn’t going to work (he hates his job and wants to move back to the states – fair enough) two things have stuck out about that afternoon and as the weeks go by it’s those things that have made me more and more irate; more so than being ditched. And those things are the following:

  1. In my distress and disappointment I asked him what he thought I was doing wrong to still be single after all this time. He told me that living in HCMC wasn’t going to help (I would agree that living in an area with a small ex-pat community, a large number of male travellers just wanting a shag and a huge proportion of Vietnamese men who are approximately 3 foot smaller than my giant 5’8 proportions doesn’t bode well). He continued by saying that sleeping with someone too early wasn’t a good idea either. Sorry, what?
  2. He is 30 and I am approaching 36. I was also told that he has time and he didn’t want to waste mine because (obviously) I am over the hump that is the grand old age of 35 hurtling towards middle aged 40 and my eggs are crying out for fertilising. Of course!

I suppose I ought to be comforted by the fact none of these things are actually about my personality, personal hygiene or intelligence…just plain old archaic and frankly irritating double standards and hypocrisy.

I find myself wondering as I wake up alone again as to when did my womb become an issue as to whether a man was willing to make a sacrifice and make the effort to try and stay with me or not?

Not to sound bitter but if Mother Nature had sat me down at the age of 18 and said the following I might have just given up before I began. I imagine the conversation would have gone something like this:

‘Now dear, here are the cards I intend to deal out. You will be on a long term relationship from 20-30 when everyone else is single and then be ditched just before you turn 30 when everyone else is starting to get engaged and/or buying a house together. This will be to free up time so you can then waste 3 years with a guy who cheats on you and likes to retain his powerful alpha male status by slapping your arse in public before you finally tell him to f-off and disappear to the Far East’. All this so that I can then be single for 3 years and ideally pretend I live in a nunnery and not have any sex during my self imposed years of singledom until some wonderful man decides that because I haven’t put out for a while I must be a decent sort that he shall date and not screw over? Brilliant.

Why is that when I met G and we slept together that night I didn’t judge him and was still happy to meet up again based on his personality but not so the other way around? He claimed that this wasn’t the case regarding ‘us’ but just from his experience back in Canada but he was still a ‘thing’ he brought up. We met randomly on a night out when I was feeling tiddly, reckless and just wanted some fun. How was I to know that we were going to hit it off? Who goes out on a night out, meets someone and takes time to think  ‘hmmmm….if I want this one to be my partner, I shall keep my french knickers on regardless of the fact I haven’t had any attention for months and feel like a wizened, invisible and ugly spinster most of the time while my coupled up partners get to have hugs, kisses and sex whenever and wherever they want. I know! I shall play the game and hopefully he will call me, date me and put me out of my misery?’ Maybe some people do but I thought the whole point of feminism was to give me a choice in the matter so that even if I wanted my cock and eat it, I could.

I was surprised and disappointed (again) recently to learn that a good male friend of mine whom I respect  (he is a very intelligent senior leader) who started seeing a woman a few months back felt that he went off his latest squeeze when they slept together on the first night…the chase was gone.

Seriously? Is this seriously something I have to think about? At the age of 36? In 2015? I still have to play stupid games to find a partner and deny myself basic human pleasures? For a while back there I decided to purposely not play games feeling that if a guy was like that he wasn’t the guy for me but as I enter my 3rd year as a singleton while all around me are seemingly engaged, pregnant or otherwise involved…I am starting to want to give up and just join in with the charade and be as false as the guys want me to be.

Just to add insult to injury, when G ditched me I decided that I was going to fulfil all those other ambitions I have seeing as clearly love in the family way just isn’t happening right now. I looked into MA’s and charitable organisations I would like to work for. I was met with websites that actually said  ‘open to all those who are aged 35 and under’. I could have cried. So men don’t want me because I am 36 and neither do the charities I want to work for. So my unused shrivelled up eggs and womb really do define who I am now and not my intelligence, work experience, determination…in fact all those other facets that make me who I am.

Why not tattoo across my forehead ‘I am 36 and past it – only those with children and/or aged 40+ may apply to be my partner; job optional’. Oh but I can’t because then I’d be accused of being a Feminazi or some other ridiculous term.

I’ll go now and hug my cat whilst tightening the screws on my chastity belt lest I remain forever the ‘spinster’.

Bile

I recently learned that my Godfather had passed away. None of my family had seen or heard from him for a number of years after a messy divorce left him bitter and upset that my parents refused to take sides. He died after having had a total Gastrectomy (removal of the stomach) some ten years ago and clearly had been living under the black cloud of cancer for a long time. His death made me wonder whether those years of anger and resentment had somehow manifested themselves in his physicality.


For J.M.

The  room is vast. I have walked miles, days to see him laid semi-conscious on wooden planks suspended by a chain at the other end of the room. When I first arrived, the whiteness blinded me; BILEonce the door had been shut it had seemed like there had been nothing to focus on until I moved a couple of inches away from the entrance and my eyes fell upon the dark spot ahead. With no landmarks or clocks, it is like time has been suspended but I know it has been eons since I began to walk towards him because my stomach twists in hungry protest and my throat rasps with every intake of breath.

There is nothing apart from the white that billows and sometimes weaves around us occasionally so I can focus completely on him. A shrivelled cocoon that used to house a man. Now it is a mass of bones thinly wrapped in tissue paper skin, with a mop of dark hair threaded grey as a grotesque bow to complete the package. He lies supine, sore eyes facing the cloud-like shapes above us, refusing to make eye contact with me even though I’ve struggled to walk this far to see him.

‘I’ve waited years to see you. To clear this all up.’

He turns his head away to face the decades that await us all. Even now, he cannot bring himself to speak to me.

‘Please, face me.’

He turns and I start in horror as I watch small mites crawl from orifices of his decaying body armed with needles and thread to sew his mouth shut. His eyes rage at me defiantly.

‘Fine,’ I say and look beneath the wooden planks of his makeshift bed. He squirms in anger and resentment but can no longer shout out to me, his protestations fall helpless against the fleshy wall of his gums. There it is. In a large glass bottle suspended in a thick bilious fluid is his stomach. Deformed and rotten with cancer, it was removed a decade before but in this half way corridor it has been partially reunited with him. In fact, the intestines have pushed the rubber bung out and are starting to feel along the chains to find him again. As I watch with morbid curiosity the small intestine finds him and, using his belly button as a handle, pulls open the door to his torso to reveal a blackened liver that looks at me ruefully from a myriad of pustules. Hastily, I pull the bottle out and hold it aloft. The stomach blinks at me and I begin to walk back towards the entrance a kilometer. Howls of anguish echo. He knows. He knows what is about to be said.

I crouch down and look intently at the bottle, twisting it to see how it fares in different lights and angles. The speckles and spores of cancer change tone but always remain at base level, the colour of a thin gruel.

The stomach blinks again and from the lacerated tubes spells out the following tale…

‘When it first happened he couldn’t bring himself to talk to you because he felt as though he had failed at work, at home; it wasn’t how things were meant to have been; he was destined to be the high-flyer, Alpha-Male, self-made man. The disappointment was crippling. But as the years marched on it became harder and harder to turn things around and speak to you. Pride and resentment consumed him. Every event you took for granted; Christmas with your family, another anniversary, was a bitter and empty meal . He fed me only lies, anger and fear that served to starve me. Eventually I succumbed and couldn’t pretend to digest it all anymore. I leaked the years of poisons and they destroyed him. Within days he had me removed and blamed me for his predicament. ’

Guiltily the stomach contracts until I can no longer see the eye. Sadly, I realise this is all the closure I am ever going to get.

Thoughtfully, I walk back to where he now lies half sleeping, his pale lidded eyes half closed as though squinting at something bright. Gently, I return the stomach to its place beneath his hanging bed. Gently, I touch his hand and walk back to 1987.

As I emerge through the door I’m in a large drawing room in Cobham, Surrey. A Christmas tree glitters in one corner, John Lennon is playing softly from the play room down the hall and with a start I see the white again weaving its line across my line of vision. What reality am I really in I wonder and then he pats me on the back, hands me a drink before walking towards his son, Jamie and I realise it’s his cigar smoke, always was, his calling card (the smell lingered for days). Emma skeleton keysappears in the doorway holding Georgina’s hand and I have this strange feeling that I’m suddenly disengaged and watching this all through someone else’s memories. It’s like I’m watching him laugh and move with ease around our families and friends as though they are all in a cinematic image and I find myself wishing I didn’t know what happens next. That it turns out differently for us all.

The Airing Cupboard

mad bunny       It had been exactly fifteen minutes since Matthew Mattison had left the devastating note on his mother’s chest of drawers; next to the blackened used cotton wool and parked upright by a fading photo of a dog she had owned for a short period of time when she had been ten.

It had been an exhausting day. He had been forced to recover from at least two tantrums both of which were not taken as seriously as he would have liked. The first had erupted after he had been made to attend a gym class at 8.30am even though it was a Saturday and he had planned to create a lego house for his new toy car that he had demanded the week before. The second had come to fruition after attending said gym class his heartless mother had refused to buy him a milkshake to make up for the inconvenience of it all.

So that was it. He had written his missive.

He was quite proud of it actually. He had discreetly taken a page from his father’s writing pad in his bureau and borrowed not just a thick envelope that he didn’t have to lick to seal, it came with its own glue but his dad’s best pen – which coincidentally he had decided to keep on his person as a consolation for having to sit in the airing cupboard to make his point.

As Matthew Mattison sat next to the aging boiler that hissed and creaked he rested his head against the soothing warmth of the wall and imagined the best scenario that could come from his letter.

Upon reading it, his mother would throw her hands up and wail, beating her chest as her sobs racked her and brought in his father from garden where he was currently picking out weeds.  He would rush to her aid and tear it from her both reading and comforting her as the words made their inevitable impact upon him:

‘By the time you read this, I will be gone. It is clear you don’t love me and never will. Don’t come after me, you will never find me. Farewell mother and father and may we meet in Heaven someday. I hope you have a child that you truly love one day. M.M’

It was cramped in the cupboard. Matthew Mattison tried to stretch his tiny frame but all too soon met the edge of the airing cupboard where he had decided to hide. His plan was to hide out for as long as possible to shock his parents into realizing how much they loved and missed him and then dramatically turn up – maybe around suppertime, he was pretty sure Saturday night was lasagna night, his favourite –  and then he wouldn’t have to attend gym class ever again and he would get that milkshake because they would be so happy to see him.

Twenty minutes. Why was it so quiet? It was slightly irritating to him that he hadn’t been missed for twenty minutes – what were they doing? To amuse himself he tried to make shadows with his toes using the fractured light that was filtering weakly through the crack between the door and its frame.  That soon became dull and he decided to tap out a tune they had learned in Mr. Darwin’s music class the previous day.

Twenty-five minutes. Droplets of sweat were beginning to congregate at the nape of his neck and tickle his spine. Faint pangs of hunger were starting to cramp his belly and he was just about to wonder whether it was all worth it when he heard voices coming up the stairs. This was it!

Eagerly and with a smile broadening across his face he shifted closer to the door so he could hear their reaction.

‘David, are you finished in the garden yet?’ His mother was saying

‘I think so – my back is aching from all that weeding’ his gruff voice returned.

The door to their bedroom was opened and Matthew Mattison who was in the airing cupboard adjacent to their bedroom rolled to his right and placed his hot ear to the wall so he could hear the moment the letter was discovered.

Drawers were being opened and shut and he could hear his mother shutting the windows and closing the blinds.

The sound of the shower in the en-suite was next, its water pattering against the tiles like tropical rain.

Matthew Mattison sighed with annoyance. When were they going to see his letter?

More shuffling and then he heard the shower curtain being pulled back and forth.

Surely his mother would notice while his father took his shower?

Giggles.

This was unexpected. Matthew Mattison’s heart stopped. What? His parents hated him that much that they had read the letter and found it funny? Shocked and perturbed, Matthew Mattison crawled towards the back of the cupboard where it was dusty. His hands were filthy from the floorboards and as he wiped them on his shorts he was stopped short yet again by a groan. Maybe finally his parents had stopped laughing and realized it wasn’t a joke – their son had actually gone.

More groaning. This was more like it. Devastation.

With complacency he relaxed against the wall, happy and comforted that his plan was working. He had just closed his eyes awaiting a more in-depth conversation when he heard the en-suite door bang as though someone had opened it yet the shower was still running. And then, terrible sounds, horrible sounds. The banging of a headboard against the flock wallpaper, moaning and groaning that got louder and louder. Without really knowing what he was hearing, Matthew Mattison knew that this wasn’t the behavior of two terrified and shocked parents but two people…two people….

Horrified, Matthew Mattison scuttled back to the door of the airing cupboard and tried to open it but couldn’t. The noise from his parent’s bedroom was becoming excessive. They were actually enjoying what they were doing. He’d heard rumours of an act mummies and daddies were supposed to do but had never really equated that with his. His mum and dad were far too angry and annoyed all the time when he was around to do that.

Panicked now he pushed against the door.

The bed next door continued to push again the wallpaper

Again and again he leaned his whole body against the door. To escape, for it all to be over. He tried putting his fingers in his ears but it was no use. He banged against the door with one last almighty push…

His mother screamed just as the door gave way and Matthew Mattison fell out the airing cupboard wet and sweaty like a newborn baby.airing cupboard

Silence

And then…

‘Darling, what’s that on your bedside table?’

Rustling as the envelope was opened and read.

‘Oh so he’s gone has he? Well thank god for that. It means I can have you again my sweet…’

Muffled giggles soared through the door and into the hallway where Matthew Mattison lay still on the carpet his eyes open with shock, his mind replaying and replaying and replaying and replaying…..

Mirrors

No, nothing inspired by Justin Timberlake here. Dan and I chose a line that we liked from each other’s work and then tried to turn it into something else. I chose the following line from a poem he had written: ‘rows of misshapen mirrors line the inner sanctum of her thoughts’. 

 

mirrors

They come and visit her once every six months. Dutifully, they arrive as a foursome, leave familiarity outside in the car park and meander unwillingly across gritty tarmac, through dust smeared and sticky sliding doors and down the green corridor inhaling bleach to where she sits. A monolithic memorial to life. A lump of flesh and bone. A living historical document crumbling at the edges and slowly decaying into invisibility.

She prefers to sit by the window on a high back brown faux leather chair so she can gaze outside at a world she can no longer access. The view provides her with cyclical entertainment as buds burst and then shrivel before they become hidden under hoar frosts that spin spidery patterns across her line of vision. Her ability to sit still for hours like this amazes the others she shares the room with but that’s because they don’t understand what it means to marinade in a mind that is dissipating. A mind that was once sharp and alert to languages, music and reasoning but now lies dormant, asleep in a cloud of dementia.

Her family certainly don’t understand. To them she is now a chore to be undertaken like washing a car on a sunny Saturday morning or defrosting the fridge. Fragmented conversations with her often lead to fraying moods and guilty consciences. Unaware that rows of misshapen mirrors line the inner sanctum of her thoughts, they constantly question and then feign interest when a response comes that is in a tangent all of its own. Their voices slow like a record on the wrong rpm as though that will help piece together the fragments of memories and links that clutter her thoughts. As the hands of the clock make their seemingly soporific journey her family one by one cease to make effort and begin to distract themselves in their own ways. Her adult son sits and picks the hardened skin around his thumb nails whilst idly fantasizing about the woman they passed earlier in the car park; his wife writes out a shopping list while her grandson and daughter idly flick through photos on their phones or angrily text friends they weren’t able to meet up with because they are with her. All are bodily present in this chilly room with its aging television in one corner, frayed and out of date gossip magazines and childish board games but none of them are present. They think they are so different from her but as they sit isolated in their collective boredom they don’t realize they are all the same, lost in fleeting thoughts. The only difference is that she remains unaware of their frustration and therefore absolved of any type of embarrassment.

As the daughter looks up from her mobile, she sees reflected in the glass pane the sliding doors behind her yawn open and a nurse wheel in a trolley piled with boxes, small bowls and bottles. She stops just shy of the giant grey box of a television parked by the shelves of blockbusters and they start to line up; the decrepit somnambulists, each standing patiently awaiting medicating. Some stare at the daughter with watery eyes as she finds herself unable to look away, others stare into space with sagging chins while a few look eagerly at the nurse excited at the prospect of consuming drugs that might help pass the time.

The nurse doesn’t appear to expect their Grandmother to line up like the rest. Instead, she bustles over with a small metal tray pebble dashed with pink, blue and yellow pills in a variety of shapes and the family watch idly as frail fingers flail at the tray trying to capture them. Eventually, they submit and the fingers that resemble claws lift them to the slit like mouth where they are gobbled up. This is the only movement she makes all afternoon.

A movement in the clouds outside posts a weak shaft of sunlight through the window and this draws her son’s attention from his thumbs to hers. Crinkled like pale tissue paper, he finds himself musing on what those hands have touched. From wooden spoons heavy with strawberry jam in the summer;  soaking cuts on his knees with iodine; the wheel of their old brown Mini, bales of fabric in her shop; his late father’s hands. He wishes he could enjoy these afternoons more.

Shadows gradually creep along the skirting board, crawling up and enveloping the murmuring specters as they chew up softened medication, inhale the bleach from the cleaner’s mop in the corridor outside and wonder idly what will be served for supper.

The daughter notices that the time has come to move from this place and leave her alone again. With the most tenuous of emotions, the brother and sister say their farewells before hurtling outside into the twilight. His wife is more formal and places warm hands on her shoulders, pressing down as though there is an ‘on’ switch there that will spark her back into animation. It is left to him to tenderly kiss her furrowed forehead and stroke her silvery dry hair to say goodbye before he too retreats and heads back into the waiting arms of the Autumnal air outside.

Part ii:

What does she think about each day as she glazes over and vacantly fixates on the middle distance? If for a moment one could bend the laws of physicality and tune into her like an FM Radio, amongst the white noise and the fuzz there would be this:

The feel of leather against her sweaty palms; the glittering internal night sky of switches, buttons and dials; the smell of oil and before her the abyss illuminated only by two shocking shards of light that guide her through the thick clouds. She is a pilot and the thrill of it makes her tremble as the sky rushes past. This is the first time she has flown at night and she looks to her co-pilot sat beside her and she pauses to examine the deep lines around his eyes as he concentrates on the dashboard. The dim light of the cockpit makes his eyes seem like darkened pools and as he moves to look at the shard of red from the sunset to the right of him it is difficult to tell where his eyes stop and his hair begins. The thrill of it all overwhelms her and quickly she looks back and refocuses on what she has to do to quash the sudden desire she has to reach across and touch the hairs peeking out from the cuff of his shirt.

He is a friend of a friend and has agreed to take her up at night so she can practise. She has been jittery all week in anticipation of this evening knowing they will be alone together for a substantial amount of time and anxious that something might occur to prevent it happening. Now it is and she looks to her left  seemingly observing the slivers of light bouncing across the horizon but really her vision is looking at him in the reflection. She wonders if he can tell.

The fractured mirrors of her mind  mean she cannot piece together what happens next but in her mind are the next collection of photos, well-thumbed like a favoured photo album and greying with time…it’s not even clear to her whether these are real memories or ones formed by desire and wish fulfilment:

They’re entwined together. She re-visits the feelings of lust, joy and love; the snapshots of him lying on top of her damp and spent; him beckoning her over to sit with him on the sofa so they can read together; him imparting knowledge of topics she had never heard of before. She pulls each out of the recesses, mulling each one slowly and delicately, chewing it over and wistfully swallowing the sensations they bring. Cautiously, not to cause herself too much hurt, she thinks about the moment she fell for him…but also the moment she realised he didn’t feel that way for her and the crushing disappointment that brought. It’s a brief dalliance and after three weeks he has to leave for work reasons. They make promises to stay in touch…

A baby cries out for her and she sits alone, squatting on the floor by the bedroom door, her back up against the wall as tears cool her inflamed cheeks. He never called again. The friend who introduced them plays ignorant when she asks after him, hungry for information but always starved. It was a cruel trick to have been played out; her dark thoughts curse a God she doesn’t believe in for playing with her emotions so callously.

The memories expire as her thoughts are interrupted by the nurse with medication.

Strange how a short affair can stay with you for decades. The man is sealed in a block of ice in her mind – he never aged, he never developed faults, grey hair, a paunch or disgusting habits. In her frazzled mind he remains perfect and she thinks about him every day, seeing signs of his existence in the most mundane of items: a calendar denoting the month when they took the plane up, his name formed out of letters from her prescription, a scrabble word that sums up how she still feels about him, somebody who looks familiar on the television…

These are the thoughts that chase each other through her mind as her family sit beside her. Unaware and disinterested.

Glass Eye

Apologies in advance for the language in this one!

Yeah I know it’s a cliché to be writing letters like this just before I exhale my last breath but I no longer give a shit. There’s some stuff you need to know. Not because you really need to but because I know that that lame arsed nosy bitch of a sister-in-law knows and is probably twitching at home just waiting for me to scuttle off my mortal coil finally so she can get that womble sized ass of hers out of the door as fast as that fucker Usain Bolt to tell you. So I better get in there first.

Here’s the thing. I fecking grew to hate your Ma during that last decade we were together. You had probably already figured that out. Maybe the shredded photos you found all over the carpet like a charity shop rug gave it away, or the punched hole in the garage door after I wanted to hit her so bad I had to take an aim at that instead – I was never that kind of man to hit a woman and you better not be either. Possibly it was the fact those fuckers at social services came round cos some knob end teacher of yours thought we were neglecting you cos your uniform looked a bit dirty. God I could have punched that woman straight in the face; right on the bump of that crone’s nose of hers for that. The only reason you smelled dear boy was cos you never freaking thought to wash unless we told you to and your Ma was too busy messing around with those losers down the club to notice clothes weren’t getting washed. And no it wasn’t my place to do it. I made the money. She made the house run. Or was supposed to. Lazy bitch couldn’t even do that right.

So yea, I guess I’m also writing this an apology. I’m sorry we were lame. I’m sorry we were always screaming at each other and basically forgot you were there. I hope this gets to you in time but I’m not even sure where to send this fucker to – I’m guessing you are still in the same home you ended up in 5 years ago? I’m not sure as I haven’t heard from you for awhile.  Your aunt’ll know though. Yea, she’ll know alright.

So anyway, back to the confessional. Not that I want you to think badly of her but basically your Ma was a whore. If it wasn’t that Dan she was hitching her skirts up for, it was Chris behind the bar, Gary who ran the chippie; I think she even boned the neighbor once and I swear to God he must’ve been about 50 or so at the time and she only in her early 30s.

I used to ask her why but all she would throw back in my face was that I ignored her. Spent too much time with my guys down the pub when I wasn’t working. Wasn’t giving her enough attention. Bull. If she’d made more effort I’d have been home every night but what kinda man wants to come home to a stinking cesspit of a home, a woman who smells of some cheap shit cider and who needs to wax her top lip;  a kid that needs its nappy changing and egg and chips on the table? Well, that fucker Gary clearly liked it and eventually it was Gary she left me for. Yea, so not only had you been taken off her hands but she kicked me out in all.

Thing is, Ben, I’ve never been the type to just walk away from a situation. I can’t do it and I sure in hell hope you’re like that too. So for six months I lived in this shitty little bedsit opposite my actual home. I could see what your Ma and Gary got up to through the window most times. She sure did look a lot happier and that twisted my guts to see. I noticed a bit of a swell to her belly and used to get all fired up at the thought of her having that prick’s baby – but turns out she was putting on the lard, you know what I mean? Some chicks do that when their happy. It’s like they feel they no longer need to make any effort. Just be aware of that Ben. Don’t ever let a girl think you’ve only got the eye for her; she’ll pack on the pounds faster than an addict shoots up.

Anyway, there was this one evening when I was mighty sore at the sight of them coming back late drunk. They couldn’t even wait to get in the front door before she’s pulling at his belt and spreading her legs for him…in the doorway! The freaking doorway!  I hope isn’t too shocking for you Ben but you need to hear it all. Anyway, I’d had a binge with the guys and like they say, that fecking red mist just come down on me all of a sudden. I pushed myself out of that tatty sofa your Gran gave us (you remember it? The one with that shit paisley pattern and covered in fag holes?) and stumbled down the stairs and into the street. I could hear her screaming before I even rolled the first punch but feck me it felt good.

I don’t really remember what I did except I woke up in hospital in cuffs and the fucking pigs all over me like ants. Anyway, you know what I did and I’m sorry, I really am but what’s mine is mine and that fucker Gary had no right, HAD NO RIGHT. She was mine; we hadn’t even got a fucking divorce or nothing. So it turned out, as you know, I did in Gary and your Ma followed him a few days later. The only good thing to come out of this situation, Ben was the fact they asked me if there was anything I wanted from home. So I asked for your Ma’s glass eye. You may not have known this but your Ma was blind on her left side and used this glass monstrosity for reasons of vanity. That thing freaked me out. I once came across it once in a glass in the bathroom. I wasn’t too happy about that Ben so I will admit to teaching your Ma a lesson about that. I only did that now and again when she needed reminding how things were meant to be in the house, you know?

They gave it to me in a box after her funeral. The daft pricks had wrapped it in tissue paper – like it was something precious and fragile! As soon as I got back to my cell, I remember taking out a teddy of yours I brought with me (it kinda smelled of you still…yeah I know…surprising) and ripped out one of the eyes and replaced with your Ma’s. It looked kind a freakish and all but did the trick.

Ben, you need to know that those bastards who keep me in here want to tell you what I used to do with that teddy but I think you need to hear it from me. Some nights I’d stick pencils up its butt and twist until the stuffing started to come out. Other times I scrub the fucking toilet bowl with it until the shit stains looked like a crap hair dye job. Other times they found me smashing it against the wall of my cell.

They want to give you the teddy when I go, but can you do me this one favour? Stick it in my coffin will you? I want to be cremated with that bitch and you.eye

I love you.

Dad

Sofa

This was borne from another one of those afternoons spent with Dan and Ashlee in a cafe…I seem to spend an inordinate amount of time in Cafes in Ho Chi Minh City! I then read it out at a book launch for publishing house Ajar later on at an event held at Saigon Ranger, D1.

Two cushions used to sit side by side
With complementary colours and textures
Of a strongly meshed fibrous weave.

Once vibrant and so much desired
they’ve started to stretch out and fade;
much like our feelings, I fear, my friend.

Zips that held it together
burst now and vomit forth out
all that’s stuffed up and furious inside.

That stain on the back of the left one?
It’s a puddle of tears, angry coffee, spilled bubbles
that together spell out my integrity.

Two cushions that move further apart.
One’s been scratched to pieces by the cat;
one’s got a seam that’s unravelling

with colours that no longer connect
as if it’s been burned by the sun;
while the other spent too long alone in the dark.

I think it’s time we replaced our shamed dirty sofa,
bedrock of our so called great institution
cos the springs have all gone from the bottom
and the cushions no longer make sense.

sofa artwork

Giang Dien Waterfall

For ABL

Up to our necks in the black mirror
beneath lavender blue sky backdrop
with sable leaves of a puzzle overhead
our damp bodies writhed;
you disturbed my peace of mind.

Strange how the heat of an April’s eve
turned so inexplicably cold
and when I think of you now
my fingertips crack.

waterfall poem