Monday 4 March 2013

Accidental visual poetry


Incase it's too hard to read,

content: "I don't know. Sometimes I feel like an entirely different person.

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Friday 1 March 2013

Spot the subtext




‘You’re dragging your feet’ 

‘I’m not dragging my feet it’s how I walk, I always walk like this’ she said. 

‘News to me’ and they passed into the home ware aisle 

‘Do we really need new bedding; the one we have is fine.’ He rolled bits of fabric between his fingers

‘The one we have is old and faded and you spilled soup on it’

‘And you stained it all with your hair’ 

‘I thought you liked my hair!’ 

He put his hand up to his eyebrow and stroked it slightly, ‘I didn’t say I didn’t.’ 

‘Fine’ she said. 

‘Fine’ he replied.

And then…

‘Child’ he muttered

‘What?’ she wasn’t really listening, she was counting up the amount of money a month she spent on dye.

‘I said this is for a child’ and he walked away from her. 

‘Why don’t we have something fresh and light? Something that’ll air out the room’ 

He stopped and stared, ‘If you want to air out the room open a window’ 

‘It would be too cold’ she said grabbing her sides 
 
‘It’s cold enough already’ he shrugged, ‘How about black, it’s easy’ 

‘No! Everything is black, black and dark I’m sick of the dark.’ And she sat down on the display bed with her hands tugging at the sides of her hair. One by one she felt them ping out her head.

‘You like black. You wanted a black bedroom.’ He dipped down beside her, half bent and half straight lightening his voice slightly

‘Well, now I don’t’ 

‘Since when?’ he stood up straight. 

‘Since awhile. I want a change. Don’t you?’ she asked

He scratched the back of his head the way he always did when he was anxious. It left red claw marks on his neck and she would always count them when he was sleeping beside her. Grunting. Snoring. He didn’t think he snored. 

‘I think it looks fine.’ He shrugged 

And she wondered how many scratches she’d have to count tonight.

Wednesday 27 February 2013

working progress



Clack, clack, clack, clack. Dum.
Enter.
Can fingers sweat? I don’t know if they can but mine feel like they’re pouring.

Replying. Elipses, elipses. Stop. Why did it stop? Why has she stopped typing.

“Hi, my name is Brian.  I love your profile picture, you seem like a fun person, fancy a chat?”
Was it creepy? Was it sleazy? When people say fun they don’t usually mean fun, they mean sex. Did I mean sex?
Elipses. And a stone in the water sound.
“Hi Brian, it’s nice to meet you. You must have a good read on people ;) so tell me about yourself?”
Wink face. That means flirting. That means I’m flirting.
Clack, clack, clack, clack. This isn’t so bad, it’s okay. It’s just a conversation. Some well deserved adult conversation.
A burst – “Dad, dad, dad, dad!” 
Slam the laptop down, “What have I told you about knocking! You lot have no manners! Can I not get two minutes to myself for Christ sake”
His little face crumples like a wet napkin and his mouth goes that oval shape I hate. “Oh don’t cry. Don’t cry” – between sobs he snivels, “I j-j-ust wanted a st- story”
It’s not a big ask, and I like books after all I work with them. All day. Everyday. Non stop. It’s not a big ask but why do I feel like he’s asking me to flip the world inside out for him?
Snot and tears.
High beams through the blinds. He wipes some tears from his eyes and says “Mummy’s home” excitedly.
Ah,
Christ.

The will of being ill



There were a few things I loved about going to the doctors. The way the chairs were arranged around the room made perfect tunnels circling around the room and you could pinch the hair on old women’s legs if you tried hard enough. Even when it was sunny outside the room was cloudy, the maroon wallpaper, the red chairs, the brown carpet all made up a time capsule of the 60’s. It smelled of dust after rain, but I wouldn’t be able to name that smell for a number of years later. A massive crack cuts through the quiet, “Kirsty Allan, Room 6 please” with a high ping at the start of the word six.
 After my appointments my mum would take me to the chemist across the road and I would marvel at the colour coded array of shampoo’s and play with one that looked like my Gameboy. She would buy me lemonade and a magazine. I would be excited to have my new prescription because it felt like I was getting better already just sniffing the faux lemon of the medicine.
Eventually I was too big to pull at the threads of people under chairs, and I nervously thumbed through women’s magazines that my mum was reading. I would flip over the celebrities in the ring of shame, circling a nipple that slipped out of a dress. My face would burn as I quickly skipped anything that said the word ‘sex’ or ‘sexy’ in case my mum saw. The stuffing of the chair was coming out and I would pick it and keep it under my nails. The carpet tiles under my feet shuffled and I would roll it, counting down from 60 waiting. It sounded like someone was playing static from the video player, a muffled voice mutters, “Kirsty Alln Rm 9 please” I looked to my mum and she says it’s going to be okay and I use her arm as a crutch. The operation had worked, but the medicine hadn’t. I took in a breath of musty air and felt my heartbeat slow a little.

It was the air that made me choke this time, and I squeezed my inhaler feeling my chest tighten. I see a silver haired woman glare as I spluttered so I scraped the chair in her direction. I read the posters around the room, ranging from how not to beat your children to how to make sure you’re not having a stroke. The seats had changed, or was it the padding? I had to move my arse around the seat to get comfortable. There were toddlers fighting over coloured beads attached to wire on the table and a young boy was so vigorous he moved the little table mid way across the room. I sort of laughed and wished they had that there when I was young, and rolled my favourite bit of carpet under my seat. The horrible static sound rang out, “kisssshhyy alln room phowar”. My boots clambered as I walked up to reception and pealed the sealing off the wooden panel as I almost whispered through the window, “excuse me, was that me?” A pair of glasses peered at me and asked, “name please?”

I didn’t look ill. That was my main issue. I felt my stomach feel like knotted waves, turning from drizzle to a hurricane as I was walking up the path, walking normally over cobble stones I used to jump on, one by one with my mum when I was little. I don’t look ill. I was thinking about the old dears, the men with hair coming out their ears, the newborn babies with mothers that had milky spit slide down their clothes. I would go in and take a deep breath, open the door that would creak in the way that makes my teeth want to crawl away shivering from my mouth, I would stand on the grey stain on the worn carpet and say, “Kristy Allan for Dr.  whoever’s name I had written on my hand this week” I would sit down and kick my bit of carpet if it was free and hopefully not catch the eye of anyone as I read my book. That is how it goes down.
The automatic doors pulled apart and I stepped in, I pushed the door and waited for the creak, but my teeth remained in place. I went to take my breath and instead of the familiar musk I was assaulted by fumes of plaster, of paint and bleach. I looked up from my shoes for the first time and realised that my surgery wasn’t my surgery anymore. It was pale yellow like my medicine from when I was little. The carpet was no longer tiled and stained with mysterious grey patches, it was replaced in a solid blue material that was like felt on my finger tips. I pressed my finger nails into the palm of my hands as I went up to reception,
“Hi, uhhm Kristy allan for – “
 she interrupted me, “you only have to let us know if you’re late. Go take a seat”
 I don’t know what my favourite seat is anymore so I sit across from the kids table and spun a bead. I jumped up when I didn’t hear the static, nothing cut the silence except a booming echo of “Kristy Allan, Room 2 please”
They even got my name right.

Lame-o poem






I cannot turn a head.
I cannot turn a phrase.

And in the night I can't
turn my spine to your side of the bed.

I cannot speak but if I did it would be a
mothball and it would gather
it would fall
And I would be meek in my words.

what can I do.
What I can do.