Friday, 23 November 2018

Christmas ghosts.


The clock struck one once more. Three times in the last hour and still no sign of the Christmas ghosts, thank the Jesus. Christmas ghosts, how he’d enjoyed them as a boy. Haunted dolls houses, lost slaughtered hearts, apparitions in the cloisters of a misty midnight cathedral. Christmas ghosts on the television, on the radio, in the books that he’d read. Christmas ghosts, an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of underdone potato. Yes, there’s more of gravy than of grave in Christmas ghosts - whoever they may be.

He smiled. If only it were really that simple. The clock struck one again. 

He’d made the dolls house, unhaunted and with the fanaticism he seemed to do everything back then, night after night until perfection was reached. But still the apparitions had come and gone like shadows passing across the landscape, never quite sure, not quite able to say definitively that yes, this was not what it seemed. A slow haunting and how quickly passion can change, how quickly love can dull into routine. Lost hearts - so easy to lose heart - lost hearts, lost chances, lost time, the tick of the clock and then one once more. Hickory Dickory Dock, just a running mouse after all. Bong.

Of course, everything always started well. Well, if it didn’t why start it? But life and love is complicated, interesting at first but after a while, not all tinsel and mistletoe kisses and even Christmas Day becomes dull once the dinner is eaten and the turkey legs are bones. Christmas ghosts. He stared at the whisky whirling in the glass, ice cubes glinting in the Christmas tree lights, round and round and almost hypnotic, taking him back as the clock struck one as the Christmas ghosts appeared conjured by the deep heady spirit.

‘He’s been!’ The sound of laughter as they rushed down the stairs frantic for the ripping off of the paper, not bothering to read the tags. After all, who cared where these things came from? Who cared? They were all from Father Christmas, weren't they? Surely the elves had made the doll’s house, tall and slim, red-bricked over three floors with a shiny brass 10 on the deep red door and a dark slate roof. Laughing, ripping, a frenzy of paper and discarded ribbons, over in minutes with an excess of gold-foiled chocolate coins, perfume, and wine.

The past. All ghosts now, shadows flitting in and out of his selective memoried mind, dreams that awoke him sometimes in the night to a damp pillow and a sense of loss that he could never quite lose completely. Loss, the ghosts of Christmas past. The whisky whirled in the present, still catching the glow of the Christmas lights. He topped it up and toasted himself. ‘Merry Christmas to me’, he declared quietly and almost without any bitterness at all, almost but not quite.

Oh well, Christmas was not the time for bitterness, a bad time to wallow in the memories of the past. He’d bought the doll’s house in real red brick and grey slate, tall and thin with a shiny brass number 10 and a brass knocker on the door. He’d fitted it himself, screwing the brass screws into the wood. Knock-knock, who’s there? Who’s there? Dreams made reality with hard work and effort and time, full of noise and the stamping of feet on stairs and then suddenly, emptily, silent. How pointless it seemed in the glowing light of this present time, the past blown to the winds, so hard to catch hold of, even at Christmastime. Just one Christmas it had lasted and then, as he always knew it would, the dream was over and gone, and the house echoed in its own quiet emptiness so full of old ghosts.

‘Merry Christmas to me’, he declared quietly, lifting his glass and toasting without any bitterness at all, well almost.

The clock struck one. Yes, time had moved on and the present was fine. It didn’t do to look for the ghosts of Christmas past and court the memories that they always seemed to bring. In the words of the song ‘let it go’, he thought. But letting go was so hard, so very hard to admit the loss of the past even with the gain of the present. He was sure that if he examined the knocker screwed to the door outside - made brass-monkey by cold Christmas air - the angel would be gone and replaced with what? Marley? No, not Marley, Marley was fiction. With the angel gone it would be his own face that he saw staring back at him. His own ghost, the one he’d made for himself and would always haunt him. Angels weren’t made to last. ‘Merry Christmas to me’.

He raised his glass and toasted the future yet to come. His own face reflected in the swirling liquid glass and made amber and oriental by the deep peat of the whisky. A wise man maybe? He laughed at the thought. No wisdom here, no wise man, only the same old ghost. 

The clock struck one.

Tuesday, 4 September 2018

End of summer 2018...

I don't blog much any more. Oh, I still have thoughts, ideas, infatuations and screams, but I either keep them close or share in small dribs and drabs. To be honest I sometimes even forget what my blog was for. Well, it's still all about me, a record of me that if anyone wants is there for them. I hope it's my grandsons or my friends or anyone that knew me but not as well as I may have wanted, but strangers will be fine, anyone will be fine.

I'll try harder maybe. But in the meantime, I like this, so here it is.


The Autumn seems to have arrived unannounced, tumbling the crows and turning me to words once more. These are the fading days, the days of bittersweet ripeness, of papered petal roses and dreams. This is the place where Summer ends and Autumn begins with a dash rather than a full stop.
A Summer
The switch is flicked
And with that click
Summer is off
Autumn is on
Mist inrolling
Swallows gone
Land grips heat
Earth cooling each day
Dreaming the passion
Hot thrusts in May
And so the earth cycles
Time turns to sleep
Blankets are tucked
Thrown in a heap
Distant orderly conduct
Dreams thickly knee-deep
With pillows all plumped
White feathered replete
Soft reminders
To bind us
Time for a dream
Waking days passed
And that’s the scheme
A wilderness of winter
Time of deep dark
Comfort comfits coffins
So soon to embark
And what is not to love
In passing of time
Each moment a miracle
Each instant sublime
Time time time
Each second divine
That is the message
The nub of my rhyme
Time time time
Gentlemen please
Drink deep
Seasons pass
It's all in the scheme.

Monday, 23 April 2018

Failing feet - a poem

A time approaches 
when my socks will sit in drawers
awaiting toes
that my knees won't bring me close to.
Distant feet
at the end of short legs,
they may as well be in China.
What then?
Barefoot in the park?
Or do I forgo my Robert Redford moment
and make a stick with a hook
catching up a black sock
like I once caught bright yellow ducks
at the street fair each September.
I don't want to ask for help.
And how would that help anyway?
Ah, feets don't fail me now.
I'm not immobile, but tap dancing?
Well, maybe a soft sand shuffle.
I pick up my socks and throw them to the wind.
Perhaps I should move on and get used 
to the feel of softly shifting sands between my toes.

Sunday, 1 April 2018

It's Easter...


So that’s Easter done with thank goodness. These holy religious celebrations are not very much fun are they? At least from a ritualistic perspective. Give me a burning wicker man, a Lord of Misrule, or a bloody good Satanic orgy every time – oh and wine and beer and lots of it. Just a thimble full of wine and an ice-cream-less wafer doesn’t really do it for me.

I know, I’m shocking aren’t I? I’m surely going to Hell, where no doubt a dozen demons and devils are waiting to give me my just deserts (ice cream hopefully) - and that’s how they do it isn’t it? Promises and threats. It’s what all religions are all about. Be good and you’ll go to Heaven, you may even get a few virgins to shag when you get there, be bad and you’ll go to Hell and burn, and burn, and burn - unless of course you are a Catholic. If you are Catholic, you can do whatever you want as long as you pop into confessional and admit your sins on a weekly of fortnightly basis. Mind you, deathbed confessions are also taken (your soul may be at risk if you do not keep up repayments on your faith or other loan secured on it).  Handy that isn’t it?

I spend a lot of time thinking about religion. Maybe I feel guilty that I don’t practice one despite being Christened into the Church of England when I was so young (a baby) that I had bloody zero say in it. Of course what could be better than to be a member of a church founded by a syphilitic, womanising King who decided that he wanted to execute / divorce / send into exile his numerous wives because he liked a bit of a change? Can you really think of anything or anyone more unholy? Despite this there are a lot of people who believe in the teachings of the Church of England and will defend their right to be mediocre to the hilt. I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with jam, or bring and buys, all that kneeling and standing up, and afternoon tea with the vicar, but it’s hardly a pilgrimage to Mecca is it.

Mind you it’s not just the C of E, it’s not even Christianity in all of its ridiculous forms, including the rattlesnake handlers, the Creationists, and all that wearing of hair shirts and self-flagellation in the name of God. No, all religions are a bit hit and miss aren’t they? Bonkers really.

Now, I can kind of understand how you might want to worship the sun, or the moon, or the Earth even - after all you can see them and without them you’re pretty much buggered. I can also almost understand why the Romans, Greeks, Egyptians, and all the other ancient religions had loads of gods in human form to make sense of the world they lived in. But Jesus? The Bible? Let’s face it’s a bunch of stories not so very different to Grimm’s Fairy Tales. You may as well worship the seven dwarves or little mermaids – which I’m sure some sects somewhere probably do.

Of course it’s not just Christianity, it’s all of them right-on religions - Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, Sikhism, Paganism, Shinto, Jainism, and all of the other four-and-a-half-thousand recognised religions to be found on this tiny planet – more if you count the ones people have tired of and no longer purposefully exist like the ancient Roman, Greek, Egyptian, Mayan, Inca, Aztec, and who knows how many others?

But ask any religious zealot, including those in the Women’s Institute, and they absolutely know that they are right and their's is the one true religion. Mrs Norma Normal doesn’t even think about what religion she might have been if she’d been born in Afghanistan, or India, or Ethiopia, or China, or Haiti. After all She’d still be Church of England, or at the very least Christian – the one true religion – wouldn’t she?

Errrrr… No!

And that, in my mind, shows just what nonsense all religions are. It’s more about geography and the community you live in, what your parents and teachers think and ram down your throat, how open to influence you are, how accepting, how gullible, how desperate to believe that there is something more than what you know and can see. Sad really, isn’t it? Your soul hanging by a thread of chance…

Now I don’t know if there is a supreme being or not. For all I know there could be thousands, tens of thousands, but not all of the religions on this planet can be the one true faith, can they? There are too many of them and some of them worship alligators. You might as well worship Disney.

Oh, you do. Well, you do have the right to decide. Anyway, that’s Easter done with, thank Whatever.

Friday, 23 March 2018

A bit of a journal - four.




Today, with nothing pressing to do, we decided to go off piste. Now obviously in a place this bloody hot it hasn’t anything to do with skiing or snow. It’s all about maplessness. Yes maplessness, such a brave move on an Island that’s only twelve miles wide and eighteen miles long but:

-       Maps are meaningless on Barbados. Roads that should exist don’t, and those that shouldn’t exist do.
-       Signposts are only there to trick you into going the way they are pointing.
-       There are no ‘you are entering’ place names on Barbados, in fact I’m not even sure anywhere has a name.
-       Roads can be highways one moment, then turn a corner and they become a potted dirt track in the blink of an eye and often stop in a set from a bad slash movie.
-       The roads are really a spider’s web.
-       Though it’s not in the Bermuda Triangle it should be, as compasses do not work here.
-       Even though you can see the coast, and think you can drive towards it, you can’t.
-       The potholes look shallow, but are bottomless.
-       Other drivers can’t see you as you are driving down, or up, that one in four hill. You are invisible to them.

Yes, driving and navigating has its challenges on Barbados. Even so we set out full of gung-ho spirit to explore mapless - what a jolly jape you might say.

Of course within minutes of leaving we were hopelessly lost. ‘I think it’s up there.’ I said. Not really knowing what it was and not realising the slight incline was actually a steep hill that went on for miles and then ended abruptly  in a village that seemed only to be inhabited with barking dogs, no way forward, and too narrow (due to the three feet drainage gullies on each side of the very narrow track) to turn. We reversed carefully and slowly, trying not to draw attention to ourselves and took a road to the right. This was better. The road was okay, not too steep but after a mile or so became a dar gulley full of rusting cars and vans with shacks either side. Surely nobody lived in those tumbledown dwellings? And then a door opened…

This time there was room for a hasty turn, and (after barely missing a detached fender lying in the road) we were off once again. How jolly (as I said before).

Back on a road, with some semblance of tarmac, we breathed a sigh of relief. We were definitely on the right road, up high but on the right road, up very high, but definitely the right road. We could see the coast in the far distance as we entered a mass of trees and then… no more road. A great view though.

Into reverse once more until we found a place to turn, then down, down, down and bump, bump, bump.

And so it continued our mapless adventure. Through burning fields of burning cane sugar stubble, the smoke so thick you could barely see, the flames so close to the road you could feel their heat, through villages we will probably never come across again full of smiling children coming home from school, down roads through deep gullies until we found a sign pointing to the ABC Highway, a road we do know, and strangely enough we did.