Tuesday, 11 April 2017

he ain't heavy, he's my brother

(to my brother, on his almost birthday, with his permission)


take care of your little brother
she said

maybe she did
maybe she didn't

but i heard her anyway

and took it/him to heart

so i fed him bits of bird and stone and bone 
and gut and cloud and tongue

protect your little brother
she said

maybe she did
maybe she didn't

but i heard her anyway

and took it/him to heart

for lack of sword, i sharpened my gaze
for lack of armour, i iron-sheeted my chest
for lack of dragons, i made some up

so i could scare him good

then save him

carry your little brother
she said

maybe she did
maybe she didn't 

but i heard her anyway

and took it/him to heart

when he bathed, i gathered his bruises 
from beside the tub, 
and tattooed them under my skin

when he slept, i breathed in
his sadness, his rage, his bewilderment
and remembered to  never exhale

he grew

i failed

maybe she said it 
maybe she didn't

but i heard her anyway

nothing short
of swallowing him
would have done

i failed

so glad

i failed

so glad

i failed


he is heavy


of a weight 
his own 

that i could never

and therefore

never

had to


he's my brother


Monday, 10 April 2017

side door

i want to tell you
a secret
they may not have told you
(they didn't tell me)

like all secrets,
it's been hiding
in full view

(you will most certainly
recognise it
from harry potter,
alice in wonderland,
sleeping beauty,
and other great
modern artists)

the secret is a door

that keeps changing shape

(a hole in a tree, the arch between two legs, an opening in the forest that looks nearly like a path, the space between your baby's teeth)

but is always there,
recognisably itself

on the side, and small

it is a door to love, patience, time, peace of mind, joy, acceptance, connection, truth, freedom

or...

... whatever else you are seeking

(have lost, wish to find)

unlike other
better
known
doors
ports
highways
paths
bridges
labyrinths

that lead to all these things (love, patience, time, presence) (lost, found) and more

this one does not

require you to have

read the small print, followed the steps, found your teacher, taken the medicine, practised the sequence, chanted the mantra, gone through the moves, taken your time, solved the problem, formulated the question, found an answer, discovered a solution, accepted the inevitable, developed a theory, gained experience, made peace with your childhood, examined your soul, fixed the leaks (in your bucket or your heart), resolved the tension, worked through the anger, embraced the sadness, or any

of the other things you could (you can, you might, i know i will)

spend a lifetime doing (and oh, it would, it will, be life well-spent)

it is open to
all
at all times
without ticket
id
or proof that you are

worthy, ready, or deserving

just turn your head
one quarter (or so) (this ain't no newton physics)
to the right
to the left
whichever way you fancy

there.

see it?

you can open it (it's never locked)

and any time,
walk through

letters

just in case you all think i stopped writing: i haven't.

i've been writing on umbilical cords, that's all.

i wrote a letter to my daughter, and watching her read it from first to last word was an act of courage and self-love.

then a letter to my mother started shadowing me. i could hear it rustle behind me in the dry forest leaves, but every time i turned around it was gone. i could feel it lying close to me in bed at night, but it turned transparent and disappeared slowly as the dawn turned to light. also, it kept changing. its contents. its shape.

i sat myself down to write it anyway, come what may, and all i got was a painful little poem. it went like this

      Chère maman,

                 a letter to my 
                       mother.
                too scary.
               
               wait a little.
                 Try again?

                        Au!

nothing but the truth will do. no matter how little. no matter how painful. as long as it's true.

start small then. small but straight.

the truth is that i don't remember how to tell the truth to my mother.

and now for the courage to tell her, rather than you...
                 

Wednesday, 29 March 2017

more goats

i was a tad obtuse, there. sorry.

i do know the answer to all of the questions in the previous post.

they are, respectively, 'both, everything, everything, both, all three, yes and no (and thank you mum!), yes and no, yes and no, yes and no, everything, everything, yes and no, both, yes and no.'

there, i think we can safely say that we have now fully covered this sensitive topic.

(or... maybe, maybe, maybe, these questions were never meant to be answered, but lived.
and maybe, maybe, maybe, that living might well take a life-time.
and maybe, maybe, maybe, that is just as it should be...)

sea-sick goats

well, well, well... there is a topic....

all right, i confess, the title is a decoy. i just want to talk about sex without attracting anybody's attention (that's why i do it online, of course, as opposed to, you know, in my living-room) (but the people in my living-room don't really want to talk about sex) (with the exception of the starry-eyed teenager) (and the hungry-looking man). oh oh oh...

anyway, i prefer to talk about it here, under the guise of goats. without the risk of being interrupted, contradicted, looked at askance, or drowned in follow-up questions...

so, sex. a tricky topic, wouldn't you say?

yes, i could not agree more. i'd love to say it used to be real simple, but got complicated when i became a mother. that would be food for thought enough, but no, it was always tricky. and keeps getting more so.

the plot only thickens, as we used to say.

the thing is: i simply do not understand sex.

(yeah, yeah, get funny on me... after boyfriends galore, two husbands, four children and forty-two years on this planet, i must know something about sex...) (maybe, but not anything that matters...)

i don't understand what sex is. i don't understand what it's for. and i am clueless as to how/what to do with it.

it's as murky and dark as it ever was. possibly more so...

...

when i was eight years old i decided to think seriously about my future career (well, 'decided' is a big word, it was just that any conversation with a grown-up i didn't yet know like the back of my hand would, sometime in the first thirty seconds, include the question: "So, what do you want to be when you grow up?". Little did I know they were only asking because that same question was haunting them and their unrealised destinies day after night, after day after night. In my innocence, I believed grown-ups were, you know, 'grown up' and that they were already 'doing something'...).

in the span of one year, i decided that i would 'later' become a) a missionary Catholic nun in Burundi, b) a prostitute, c) a general in the Russian army, and d) a writer.

of these, (d) is the only option i confess to these days when people ask me, as they still do, "So..., what did you want to be when you grew up?" (yep, still the same haunted people...)

with the amazing 10/10 vision of historical recollection, i can now see that (a)-(d) were all attempts to understand sex.

(a) was born of my first real crush, Soeur Marie-Sophie, 27 years old, brown as a tanned nut, with a laugh like a secret waterfall. To me she looked and smelled like pure golden sunshine. She descended upon our grey northern village school with tales of lions, jungles and gorillas, and photographs of little dark children sitting on her lap or helping her build 'their' school. i gave all my savings away to Soeur Marie-Sophie and her project, and for years wrote her long letters filled with dreams of the day when i would finally be able to join her.

(b) was what my mother called 'a small misunderstanding'. i had discovered a shelf in the village library devoted entirely to Harlequin romances. based on this abundant source, i became convinced that prostitution was a higher divine calling with good money, flexible working hours, and highly enjoyable duties. i guess someone must have 'put me straight' on that one at some point, but i still feel that in an odd way, this was the closest i ever was to 'getting it'...

(c) what can i say? uniforms are sexy... and i always had control issues.

(d) although this here post is probably the first time i write 'about' sex, i would not, could not, have ever written a word 'without sex'. it is from sex that all writing is born. i know that...

...

so much for archaeology. somehow, all the pieces of the puzzle are right here (have always been here), but i don't know how to put them together.

since those early days, i must have read millions of words about sex (from the bible to leonard cohen lyrics, from pornography sites to academic feminist treatises, from tantra manuals to rumi's poems)

and all i have to show for it are questions. lots of questions.

for example:

is sex something that one does, or something that one is?
and what does sex have to do with god and the divine?
for that matter, what does it have to do with creativity?
is sex something inside me, or is it something that happens between me and someone else?
is it a thing of the mind, of the body, of the soul?
what about sensual pleasure? is that sex?
does that mean there is sex (loads of it) between me and my babies?
can you have sex without touching?
can you have sex without thought?
what happens to sex in motherhood? how is it transformed in the bodies and souls of mothers?
what does it mean to be sexually awake, as a woman, as a mother?
is it possible for a human being to not be sexually awake?
what would that mean? what consequences would it have?
what about orgasm? is it a good thing (like giving birth) or a bad thing (like too much alcohol and sugar)?
is sex something you can give to someone else, receive from someone else, share with someone else? or is it only something you can experience in parallel?

i could go on... i don't know the answer to a single one of these. i don't mean i don't know the answer intellectually (even though i really don't), i mean, much worse, that i don't know the answer in myself.

....

as i was writing this i suddenly remembered myself, aged 13, in the dead of night, scribbling a feverish note with some of these very same questions, addressed to my mum, who would be leaving for work before i woke up, return long after i would have left for school, scribbling away with a sense that it was a matter of life or death that i should know, right now.


i also remember her answer, waiting for me in the morning on the dining-room table, in her beautiful round handwriting, with a thick grey marker and in capital letters. 'Yes and no!', underlined.

....

yes and no.

....

29 years later, and i am still not a farthing wiser...


Sunday, 26 March 2017

fox and bear

There is an old Russian tale (or maybe it's one of Aesop's fables?) about Fox and Bear sharing a field. The first year, one day in early Spring, they meet by the edge of the field to discuss what to plant, and how to divide the harvest. Fox's eyes shine with mischievousness as he says to Bear, "Brother, I have such a good idea. I have a sack of grain here, let us plant it in our field and divide the harvest equally among ourselves." "How?" asks Bear. "Well, how about I take all the bits above the ground and you take everything that grows underground?" Bear thinks about it for a while. It sounds fair enough. Come harvest time, Bear slowly shuffles to the field to collect his part of the harvest. But Fox has already been there, and taken all the grain, leaving nothing but bits and pieces of flimsy root for Bear.

Winter comes and goes, comfortable for Fox, hungry for Bear. The next Spring, the two meet again by the side of the field. Fox is carrying a heavy sack of potatoes that he drops at Bear's feet. "Here, Brother," he says. "I have taken care to bring our next crop". Bear is in no mood to thank him. "You cheated me, Brother, but that won't happen again. No, this time you can have whatever grows under ground, and I will take what grows above it...". Fox pretends to look contrite. "Whatever you want, Brother, me, I just want it to be fair and square...".

When the time comes for the harvest, Bear makes his slow way to the field, just in time to see Fox take off towards the forest, laden with bags and bags of potatoes... leaving behind piles of useless toxic greens.

The third year... well, who knows what happened.... the tale doesn't tell. my personal hunch is that Bear found Fox and gave him the beating of his life. Or worse...

i remembered this tale this morning, thinking how often we look for nourishment in the wrong place, at the wrong time. how often we trust the cunning mind when it comes to feeding us. feeding our body, our heart, our soul. and how often the cunning mind cheats us, leaving the body and soul hungry.

where is your food growing today? what would it mean to harvest bountifully from this day? do you need to dig among the roots? search among the greens? do you need to plant something? water something? let your field lie fallow?

what will feed both Bear and Fox in you, today?

Thursday, 16 March 2017

shoebox


A few years ago I posted on facebook this photograph of myself as a child. This is what I wrote about it at the time:

'From a treasure trove of never-seen-before (at least not by me) photographs found in my grand-father's house after he died. I think I never realised before to what extent my childhood identity is constructed on the basis of the photographs of my childhood that I know (have always known). These unexpected 130 new 'images' simply do not fit into my idea of who I am/was. Looking at them is an unsettling and deeply delightful experience.
It reminds me of something I read, I think in Knausgard's 'Love', about how as a father of young children it dawned on him one day that his children would create the story of their childhood from a small handful of memories and moments, and that as their father, he would never be able to predict which of the millions of ever-changing moments in their days and years they would pick for this narrative.
Anyway, here you can see that I could dance.'

i felt a need this morning to look at this photograph again. Something to do with the spring weather, the sweetness in the air, the way the woodpeckers are courting each other above 'my' tree. 
Something to do with my baby's unadulterated delight in the sunshine, a straw, my dirty trousers on the floor. 
Something to do with missing my grand-father, who not only held on to so many photographs, but was also the first and main photographer of my early years. Finding these photographs when I did felt like a gift from beyond the grave.
This morning, it also felt like a wake-up call. I arose from a dream of walking with my grand-father through the forest, compelled to find this photograph, his voice still lingering in my head. 

'Look,' he said. 
'Look carefully now. What do you see?'

I see bliss. 

I have often wondered about the red thread. What is it that has kept with me/by me through the years, the lands, the dreams, the masks, the endless cell regeneration. 

What is the thread connecting the pieces, from the child i was to the woman i am? 

Based on mind memory, i would have said 'mind', i would have said 'memory', i would have said 'pain'.

Based on my grand-father's dream wisdom and magic eye, i would say bliss.

Bliss is the thread that runs through my life.

(just writing this down makes my heart expand to the size of the Sun)

'Anyway, here you can see that I knew bliss.'