Showing posts with label prose & poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prose & poetry. Show all posts

Meet Me Here


Here are the pink things. The rusting, dusty windowsills and the faded flowers. The blood sitting close to the skin of your cheeks. An eyelash sitting there like a cow in a field, reclining. The old papers stuffed haphazardly into a file, and the stickers partially worn away, pieces of glitter and a decade still casting a tiny glimmer across the shelf.

Here are the things that provoke some feeling like happiness, but pressed into a clear plastic folder, taped into a diary. A note. A memo. A gentle question not heard. A question hidden underneath a layer of sand. And the grains that cling to a wet foot go to strange places, just like you. They can't come back. But would you want them to?


It's just you, and the ocean, and a cloud of worry. And me, by the window, rain tumbling and flowers growing thick in the cracks of the brick. Weeds climbing the walls. Fog on my glasses. A condensation that you feel in your chest, like a healthy dog's nose nestled somewhere in there.

Come someday, quickly and at night, like a fox under the stars. They'll be there. They remember. Their sparkles a beacon beckoning us, we'll meet there and trace veins with fire, knuckles with new cold. Blood and blue. Me and you.


Let's Run Away (a tiny poem)


let's run away
into the sky
don't know how to get there
but can't we try?

legs treading air
hands on the stars
let's run away
and make the sky ours

The Day The Iceberg Hit


necklaces and shoes on the seabed
ghosts in the coral nestled deep
waiting in the dark for the fishes
bubbles filled with secrets to keep

it was such a long time they waited
buried in a darkness so pure
remembering a moment of collision
a greeting for a snow white shore

time and blood all stopped
and light cracked into an end
crushed by the sharp touch of death
the last prickled envelope to send

sinking was fast yet too slow
a stopwatch pressed right down
but the day the iceberg hit
they had no idea they'd drown

meet me in the woods +♬•*

I went to a woodland area recently for some video-filming purposes, and it was so nice to be there. I love the thick sound of the canopy rustling in the wind, and the sense of being inside a vast, living space. And there's something cathartic and fun about getting caught by thorns and touched by dirt. It feels like an outside home in a lot of ways, and I always think when I go there that I should go there more. So here are some pictures from that day in the woods, and a poem.



///

meet me
in the woods
where your heart beats slower

where the time is still
and the dead leaves pound

meet me
by the moss
that convulses in the light

where the branches snap
without a sound

meet me
at the mouth
of the long dead stream

where your dream sits in pieces
at the foot of the mound

meet me
in the woods
where your heart beats slower

give me
your breath
and you'll never be found

///



Dead Petals


I'll never let you go
In the secrets in the snow
The violet light the cold
The dim glow growing old

I'll wait until the day
Sleep soundly on the fray
The butterflies and ghosts
That remind of you the most

An essense lost so soon
But looking at the moon
I know I will remember
The hazy day september

Forever it will be
A trinket just for me
A secret wrapped in soft
Dead petals in the croft

Blue

Nothing's easy, is it. Everything's smooth like you're riding down a slide at a fancy swimming pool, and then you're under the froth in a blue kaleidoscope. That's where you've gone. To hide in miniature sun-dappled waves. Blue-purple dunes on the back of your hand. Tumbling, always.


But that's where we're supposed to be, isn't it? I buried a smiling face in the sand once, and forgot where I'd left it. Maybe someone else found it, held it in their arms, threw it in the sea. Fate is a separate star, twinkling out of sight while I sleep.

You gave me seven dreams, like gifts. All wrapped up and grinning. There you were first, a fuzzy-headed mischief maker. A guide somewhere that was unfamiliar to both of us. It was in a different time, I think. A strange place filled with wonders. You laughed and I sifted through artefacts.

We arrange puzzle pieces and burn them. Something's made in the blue. And nestled somewhere inside is the pulsing red. Those things that move your eyes back and forth, up and around. The pull that keeps you awake, whirling slow. A staccato wave. A pulse, soft.

For The Lights

For the lights. Fireflies and candles behind the eyelashes. Flickering in and out of fate. Small gifts drifting and bouncing. Accelerations. Palpitations. Calm.


The sparks I collect disappear from the jar again. New flint scrapes my skin. Knees bleed just a little through the pulp. The salt taste tiptoes on your tongue. They come again on the froth. You dangle your legs in the stream. 5000 miles and 52 string lights.


The blinking white glow from the side of my laptop watches me while I sleep. I dream about sudden anger from a stranger. I want things to be right. I crouch in a dim staircase. I wake up there, a gasping puddle. The morning shrouds us in haze. My veins ache.

For The Moon & Stars


Good morning moon
I'm glad you're still here
In pale morning sky
Without any fear


Good evening stars
How have you been?
I see you've let
The night begin


Good night my friends
From far away
Thank you for bringing me
One more day

16-3-28

This text is an old document from when I was trying "morning pages" - writing when I woke up, just whatever came into my head. Sometimes fiction, or just thoughts. This one is from March last year. I always like the typos, so I've left them as they are.


The light pooled at my feet, catlike, and almost purring. The kitchen was a mess, but not the kind of mess that was hideous. The perfect kind of mess, just messy enough to be really satisfying to clean, but not so messy as to make me feel overwhelmed and trapped. I love cleaning up spaces like this. So this Sunday morning, it was my time.

First, I shifted all the bowls and other dishes that needed washing. They got nice and clean and sparkly, dried, and put in their places. Nice. Looking neat already. Then rearranging all the items that have been used and never put back or cleaned up properly. Cleaning coffee stains and flour off the table, and then some dusting and hoovering to get rid of any crumbs and tiny silts of things just resting on the floor. Goodbye, folks. Soon enough the whole kitchen was bright, organised, decluttered, and generally happy-looking. But for one small plant pot I now noticed, upturned between two baskets.

You’re a turnip
In the dark
Unexpected
What I needed
Apparently
But actulal

Got a lot of feelings all turning around in the fan and whizzing back out, sleeping, asliding,
Across the sloep and crying, little rabbits crawlin, not hopping, n

never saw your heart until it poked through your jumper all sharp
sticky sugar crystals in blood red
and the raw onion slices all tumbled to the kitchen floor
and the stinging tears came and shattered
a sticky, acid mess



A List Of Secrets


Limbs & limbic systems
Stars & scars
Blood & cranberries
Fruit & wine


Oats & obstacles
Scrapes & rasps
Woodland at dusk
Brown paper & twine


Spells & secrets
Whispers & gold
Pins & needles
Twigs & bone


Falling asleep
Pillows & mountains
Make believe house
Rotary phone

The Caster's Cusp


Good colours and beating hearts, torn and crumpled and dog-eared pages. Marks left by witch children, scattered and crumbling, soaring with blustering winds and co-mingling with scorched grass. Spells spoken in hushed tongue, conjured from soft syllables - or pinked and pearly dewdrops, dried breaths kept safe for centuries, twigs cracked and twirled through soil. Spells from words and patterns, tiny baby's breath enchantments from thoughts and rustles and sighs. Commas on the dirt.


Have A Heart


You can make it out of paper, you can rip it in half,
You can smash it with a rock, you can wash it in the bath,
You can pull it from a bush, you can find it in a ditch,
You can leave it in the forest, you can buy it from a witch,
You can eat it with your breakfast, you can pluck it from the fire,
You can throw it out the window, you can steal it from a liar,
You can smuggle it from Neptune, you can have it from the start,
But you've got to have a heart.


Evil Girls


evil girls
spread wings
fight fire
see things

evil girls
crouch low
eat hearts
breathe slow

evil girls
touch gold
watch worlds
unfold

evil girls
stretch thin
crush souls
then grin



Antiseptic


she finds the trees
beaks in a circle
nature's knees
patterned with dirt

she whispers "please"
the woods are silent
compassion in leaves
antiseptic on hurt

Curved Memories


Memories are fickle. Submerge them and watch them flake apart. Time puts crumbling splinters in our skulls. Time buries itself under oceans and shadows. Sharks and coral drift among remembrance. We are real and we are not.


We are sequences plotting out patterns in sand, kicking pebbles across streets. We are strings and threads tearing, coming loose, wrapping around rocks.


We are chattering skies and swaying branches. We are floating dust and falling light. We are here and we are forgotten. Fireflies in secret, hovering in the blue.


We are lace and fire, rust and vapour. We are memory, and we are gone.


Short Story: Dead Girl Jam

Here is a small story I wrote about a girl's nonchalant consciousness after her suicide. I tend to write stories and poems and things in feverish moments and keep them unfinished in a folder, but I think it's good to let them out every so often just because we often think of writing in terms of polished, printed books and generally finalised and edited items which hold stories when really the journeys and the drafts and the ideas are just as valuable. There are so many ways I could assess and edit and re-write this story, and there are so many things I could write and then keep hidden or throw away (sometimes wisely), but each draft and each new word is not only part of a journey but also a little part of a person and a life and a universe. Or something. Anyway, here's the story.

Dead Girl Jam 



I am the hole in a bagel, the empty sky, a gap between legs. Mind the gap is printed on the platform. The gap is me. I move for your feet if I’m feeling polite. I am the darkness in a bedroom at night. I am the bubbles in beer. I’m here. That I know. I’m most definitely here. Hidden. I am the between.

Or maybe a gap-shaped girl. Cold and soft and alone. I’m thinking about the Pet Shop Boys, then thinking about pet shops as a concept. I whisper to myself “alone, allein, alone, allein” as if in one language it is not enough. I smile at the yellow lines on the platform. They’re yellow like a joyful cartoon sun, they’re yellow like the children’s hospital ward all decorated with suns and simple yellow sweetness. An attempt at cute. The hospital tries. The sky is grey today, a thick, bright sky of a dark kind of light. A light that has been filtered through a dusty curtain before it met us this morning. There are few other passengers, shuffling slightly in long smart coats in the cold, some carrying newspapers. A small curiosity moves around inside me and I am tempted to see what headlines mark today, but I quash the urge. No one else’s stories matter. I don’t need to think about them. I don’t need thoughts in general.

Everyone is varying levels of restless and groggy. The morning is still seeping out from the sky like a viscous treacle working leisurely across a slightly slanted kitchen counter. I hear the train lines making electrical rustling noises. A man reacts almost imperceptibly as he notices too, but I sense his noticing as if he was a dog whose ears pricked up in excitement. The train is coming fast into the station. I look at the yellow lines, sloppy around the edges, and I wish my love to them as if they are my dearest friends, and then I am running. All my force pushes me past my dear yellow friends and I push off the edge of the platform like a superhero, like I am going to fly. There is a scream as I hit the air, and seconds later I am dead.

I’m mud That’s all I can think. If it was even really a thought. I’m mud. I’m mud, I’m mud, I’m mud. There’s a breeze. I don’t know where it is, but it’s there, just gently flickering at me. A bird is chirping. The sky is a blue that singes, a too bright blue. I can see pockets of light. Blobs of light. Lava lamps of sky drooping into me. I can see. Why can I see? I find a memory of an old photograph, burning and blistering. I find it because it’s what the sky looks like. But I shouldn’t be able to see at all, so I don’t know how to feel about it. I don’t think I feel anything. The globules of sky are widening, changing, familiarising. I can see.

I realise I am in the tree now, near to the birds. Chirp chirp. I try vaguely to see downwards. There is a long yellow blur there, down below me. What is it? I move like a sheet in the wind. I catch on the branches and then I fall through them, slowly and sloppily like a jam. Maybe I’m the lava lamp. Maybe after you die you become a lava lamp. I laugh to myself, or, actually, no, I don’t laugh. I can’t laugh any more. But I would be doing it, probably, if it wasn’t for the circumstances. It’s funny, is what I mean. I can sense it’s funniness and a part of me warms. I enjoy it. I slip and fold downwards in the air. I am nothing. I am nothing, but a sort of nothing that is amused by the thought of jam. I am a nothing, then. Not the nothing or just nothing, but a nothing. A nothing in particular. A specific nothing. I flop or slip or fall onto the surface, whatever it is that was underneath my tree. What I can see is still delicately bubbling in front of me, but I know what it is. I am standing on the train tracks I died on.

When was it I died, I wonder. Maybe it was yesterday. Maybe longer. I’m not really used to having to assess this sort of situation. There are no obvious signs of a recent death that I can see. I walk along the tracks. To be more precise, I’m not walking. I’m not exactly doing anything, physically. I have an acute feeling that I may be a mass of jam, but there is nothing to see of me. There is no thing that I am, but I am moving. Whatever I am now is moving. Am I thoughts disjointed from a body? Am I a typical ghost? Am I a unique jam-like spirit? I don’t know. All I know is a feeling and vision with a certain appearance of viscosity. It’s quite disgusting, actually. But perhaps that’s just my lack of experience. Obviously this is weird for me. I’m used to being a girl, not an amorphous blob. Mind you, what’s the difference?

I canter over to the train platform (I can use any verb I want, so I’m using canter. You can’t exactly argue with me when I’m a dead girl jam, can you?). I canter over to the train platform and I see my friends, the yellow lines. The long yellow blurry thing I saw from the tree. My lava lamp vision is starting to settle now. I say hello, I coo a little to the yellow lines. They were my last goodbye, after all. My friends. The thing I gave all my last love to. Paint stripes. Well, maybe in my eulogy I’ll be called “arty”.

I clamber onto the platform and lie on the yellow lines and just exist, in whatever semblance of existence this is (It’s probably unnecessary for me to get into a philosophical debate here, although maybe it’s best to do after you’re dead). You wouldn’t think a ghost would have to do anything resembling clambering, but I suppose I don’t know if I’m a ghost. I shouldn’t assume I’m a ghost. I’m something. I’m a nothing.

I am awake, slowly but suddenly, because of course I’m a contradiction. Like everything. Like the distant sadness and happiness that happens all at once, stupid feelings swirling together like those jars of peanut butter and chocolate mixed into each other. Too much, too fast. I remember. I’ve never tried the peanut butter and white chocolate spread in one jar like a sickly entwined couple on public transport who are captivated by the newness of each other’s touch at the expense of the conservative comfort of other people around them. Personally I find it sweet. There’s a naivety and a fluidity and unconsciousness of body and bodily fixation that seems pure and gentle to me. Or something. I guess every disgusting couple is different, but it always reminds of something personal. Some old happiness. Some old love.

They’re at a distance now, because my memories on waking are like when you wake up without your glasses and everything’s just blobs of colour, blurry forms. That’s my memories now. There are some feelings, though. I wouldn’t have expected public displays of affection to be my first thought, but apparently that’s the emotion bubble that burst through the surface of my eyes and brain at the moment of consciousness.

I rise as if from a black pool of water, here, refreshed, alive and breathing. I take in my air in gulps. The breaths make me feel uneasy. I feel my whole self in my throat, shuddering at something - I’m not sure what. And there is a sense - like I’ve said - of memory, of some cold feeling tracing my shoulders. I’m sick. I’m sick. I think to myself that I’m like a shell. That creeping unease trickles in veins, in threads down my body. I’m scared to exist, it seems like. Something like that. Anyway I get up and shuffle myself around. Familiarise myself with… myself. Curl my toes. Stretch my legs. I feel sick. I feel sick. Dew moistens my feet as I step, back and forth, hopping rabbit-like on the grass. I’m naked and grass is everywhere. There’s a greyness to the place. The woods. I observe my wobbliness as I hop. I shiver deeply and feel the electric and surge of blood and force through my arms and my spine. I’m lithe, but stiff and timid. My hair is lengthy, flaxen, some tangles from sleep. I’m a little straw-headed, goose-bumped, bare thing. There is too much. Too much sensory stimulation. The wind is too much, but it’s only a breeze. I close my eyes. I stand still and feel the dewdrops on the soles of my feet. Dewdrops. What nice alliteration there is to that word, I think to myself. I repeat the word in my head. Dewdrop, dewdrop, dewdrop. I whisper it into the cold. My whispers melt into sobs.

There’s a rustling to my left, clear as the bold touch of breeze against my naked skin. I look through the edge of my tears as they thicken quicker than I can blink, and I see a man. His eyes wide and his mouth ajar, he stops still like a deer caught. “Dewdrop”, he repeats, slightly questioning, but mostly with a tone of confirmation, like it wasn’t real until he said it.

Bodies are funny. I mean, they’re funny in general. They make fun shapes, they’re oddly fascinating when they have no right to be as unremarkable shapes of flesh that we see all the time when we walk down the road to the post office. But they’re also funny when they’re not there any more. From the perspective of a dead girl with a certain viscosity of self like me, but no actual body in the traditional and generally accepted human sense, bodies are increasingly hilarious. You’d think I might miss mine, but I don’t. It was the cause of a lot of weird issues, for a start. I mean, I am - or rather, I was - a girl. And the sheer amount of times I walked into door handles when I had it, well, I don’t miss that. No thanks! Glad to be rid of door handle related pain and trauma forever. That’s probably actually the best thing about being dead. But when I start thinking about bodies I just can’t stop laughing. I almost can’t begin to remember because I’m too busy laughing. I keep getting this picture in my head (or in whatever the equivalent of my head is now), or holding a strawberry, and tasting it, and feeling its pitted skin with my fingers, and of ripping off the little leafy crown, and I can’t stop laughing. Whoever was I with a body?

Anyway what brings me to bodies is them. The people. The living, I mean. I’m here with them in some afterlife, I suppose. I keep expecting Bruce Willis to show up, but he doesn’t. Disappointing. I keep wondering why I’m here, though. Is this normal for dead people, or am I in a subcategory of dead people who are doomed to live a subsequent life as an invisible jam with deteriorated senses and memories? It does carry some of the conventions of traditional ghostly narratives, but the whole jam thing is pretty weird. As far as I can tell what’s weird any more. Critical thinking is a bit different after you’ve died. Things get confusing.

Still, everyone’s here. I mean, there are people here. Shuffling down the platform like awkward crows jostling each other. There’s a woman with a loose ponytail and a long coat, with little woolly tight legs poking out. She’s yawning, just a little bit. The train is here. I can feel myself standing (I don’t know exactly what I’m doing in this form, so let’s just call it standing) at the edge. Right at the edge of the platform where the doors are. And the doors open. The woman is the only person to step on through this door, and as she does it she glides right through me. I don’t really approve of that. She freezes as she passes through me, right foot hovering over the gap, toes almost touching the metal lip of the train floor. Then she’s in. And I’m here. Cursing my diminished, ghostly awareness. Something just felt wrong about that. Like rubbing a cardboard box with a gloved hand. I watch the woman. She’s taken her seat next to a toddler with an iPad and as the train pulls away from the station I think I see her crying.
“Yeah,” I think, “I feel emotionally challenged when I see children younger than seven with expensive electronics too.”

Moth Poetry

A little while ago I created a Steam group to post snail-based poetry to (this action kinda sums me up as a person), and it sparked a stream of insectile limericks. Here are some about moths (because moths are my favourite).


There once was a moth called Dave
Who lived in a nice serene cave
He sat by the sea
Whilst having a pee
And narrowly dodged a big wave

Moths are big fans of the moon
And fear getting trapped by a spoon
They're just like me
'Cause when I stir tea
I always stir with a harpoon

My dear moth brother named Tim
Is sweet but remarkably dim
He flies round the lamp
Calls himself "champ"
And makes up rude songs on a whim

Inside Out Girl & Other Tiny Stories

Here are some tiny little stories you can fold up and put in your pocket and crumple up and rip apart.

 

Nymph


I was born in the forest. Not sure how, not sure when. The moon was always there, watching me silently and loudly all at once, its glow saying a thousand things and listening simultaneously. I've always wondered how it did that, but I think it's impolite to ask the moon how it glows. I have some little ideas about my birth. Perhaps I seeped out like sap, or perhaps I'm the daughter of the insects. All I know is I've got wind and water inside me.

People are here sometimes. They're all loud noises and legs. But they don't see me. They smile and run and fall and I watch them. They have water inside them too, I’ve seen some of it come out. It's a brilliant red, like a ladybird or a robin's breast. If they cry I try to touch them a little on the cheek. I can't say whether or not they notice, but regardless I always do it. I hope the moon would be proud of me. I will climb up and visit it one day.

*

nice words:

flaxen
peppermint
chestnut

*

The Angel


The angel in the cottage brings me flowers. I sit by the river, the still part with rocks peeking out. I hold the small white flower in my small white hands. The angel looks at me just to look. His eyes are peppered with glowing sparks as he observes me. I hold the thin stems up to let them catch the light, arching my arm into the sunbeam above me. The angel coasts through me and we crash into the gentle river. I am laughing in small pieces like hiccups.

*

Forever Falling


I have been falling for years. If I was to have the sensation of walking again I would probably have to adjust for a good while. When I first fell it was from the ledge of adolescence. I didn't see it, I just took a step and I was falling, and I have been falling ever since. All I see is colours and light spots cycling past me. They are beautiful and weird. A lot of things about this are calming by now. Falling was scary for ages, but now there are many things I can appreciate about it. I guess one day I will stop. I still believe that. 

*

I keep his blood in a locket but in his he keeps a star,
Shrunk to a tiny spark that he can look at from afar.
He needs the brightness of the light in a vast dark,
But I need the deep, hot liquid of his heart.

*

Writing poetry at four minutes to midnight, sitting in a dim golden glow, watching you play with your hair, sitting in softness and warmth, blue-white light on your face.

*

Pop Song


I like climbing. Falling down is how I express myself. I carry bright colours and a flask of hot tea in my bag, and a pop song for when I need it, to release in the field and watch as it gallops through clearings and across trees. Pop songs waste no time in leaping around, running back and forth, jumping and crying, red-faced children that they are. They make me smile and I'm good at soothing them, coaxing them back so we can look at a candle together and sit and eat scones. Me and pop songs treat each other real nice. My pop song is always grumpy at me, but she loves me. I can feel it in her melody when she stifles it in her cheeks and gathers up the air in her arms, smirking at me from across the grass.

*

Inside Out Girl


One day I puked myself inside out and now I am the beautiful inside out girl and you love me in the most pure way.

I know it is an unconventional relationship but I am glad I get to float around your body as vapour and you still laugh at my jokes and we can't hold hands but our bond is stronger than our bodies and I have never been as loved as I am in this form.

Mashed Berry

In November last year I wrote 50,000 words for the sake of it in the brain-melting endeavour known as NaNoWriMo. The story is called Mashed Berry because its underlying plot revolves around magical, mind-altering berries which are utilised in various ways by the story's characters. 

Synopsis:
When rich scientist Dean Gaffney and a spooky electoral candidate team up to moderately inconvenience the world, Lilly is forced to help, but how can she help fix this unpleasant situation, and how are a bunch of slightly rebellious alien teenagers involved?
Excerpt:
"Dean Gaffney ordered a suit of gold leaf on the internet and lay back in his racecar bed with his goblet of $900 whiskey. He switched on a shopping channel on his new 6D television and watched intently as a smiley, bleach-toothed man who looked as if he was in receipt of frequent electric shocks rambled excitedly about a pair of dinosaur earrings with precious gemstones for eyes. Dean was quite impressed and wondered if he should get his ears pierced and start a collection of such beauties. He grabbed his mobile phone from atop his personal minibar full of amaretto and 29c lager, stopped for a split second to admire his own name scrawled unintelligibly in diamonds on the back, and dialled the shopping channel’s number. He sang along jollily to the hold music before purchasing the dinosaur earrings for $670. He was going to look gorgeous."
This is an unedited draft, and most of what I've written was forced out with my only goal being to meet the word count at all costs, so there is a lot of truly awful writing here, but there are parts of this story I really love too.

I am presenting the entire unedited text for your scrutiny/enjoyment/embarrassment. Good luck in there.