Archive for Writing

Perspective

// February 27th, 2009 // No Comments » // Writing

“I see you’re still making a grand entrance these days, Madeline”. The greying coffee-breathed physics lecturer whose name I can never quite remember –or perhaps ever even known- squeezed past me with a stifled smile, and out the doorway of the staff common room. I chuckled politely.

Every morning it is that same step, without fail, that I stumble over on my early morning journeys to the coffee grinder. A pointless step, a step with issues. The designer of that step has some personal problems that need psychological awakening. Why take it out on the staffroom entrance?

The lights flicker nimbly in sleepy neon blinks and I fumble at the drawers for a moderately clean teaspoon. The grinder is empty- just my luck.

Somewhat disappointed in my unnecessary success in locating a clean teaspoon, I rest my legs, collapsing into the leathery, torn couch that moans in protest.

The room is dark, but the lights gradually pick up speed, and after half an hour of thumb twiddling and foot tapping, I am awake enough to survey the daily notice board.

Nothing too interesting, a stick-it note about a student with notoriously low pants who should be penalised upon identification.

A memo regarding the carpet cleaners arriving Tuesday.

I pull out me pencil and scratch down a somewhat aggressive message to my fellow co-workers about allowing enough coffee to be rationed for each and every one of us. I smile and nod contentedly at my nobility, and begin to turn towards that troublesome door…but something catches my eye.

A thumbnail Polaroid in the corner of the notice board, firmly secured with a pink pin.

My eyes struggle to adjust to the dim lighting, and size of the picture. It barely fills the small space.

It is a snapshot of a baby’s tender, wrinkled hand clasped around a pair of fingers withered, faded and blotchy- a little like my own.

This is not unlike other touching photographs I have seen, but there is still a profound sense of sentimentality attached to that small portrait.

I realise how long I have stood, gazing at the noticeboard, and allow my eyes to wander downwards, to a floral bordered letter posted below the photograph.

A Prayer chain.

Our condolences and heartfelt empathy to the Edwards family, whose two month old baby girl, Shae, was taken from them jus yesterday afternoon. The child had been born suffering internal bleeding, in need of organ transplants and a collapsed lung. After two months of fighting and growing love, she died in hospital.

Please leave a thought for the Edwards family as you go about your day.

The piercing quiet rings out through the room, and I feel tears dripping from my cheeks.

The clarity that rushes through me creates a severe self-anguish, as I survey my petty complaints about the coffee grinder. I angrily remove my contribution to the board, and rub my hands over my face.

The sound of my own silent weeping stirs a realisation in my pounding head.

“Edwards…his name is Mr. Edwards”.

I Am Dancing In The Dark

// February 24th, 2009 // 3 Comments » // The Arts, Writing

Kaleidoscope

I am dancing in the dark
and it seems, to be seen
by the roadside, barefooted
as I twist and I lean
in my dance in the darkness
With blindness and beauty
my senses are led
When even the owls, in the knots of the trees
choose to woo at the moon
instead
Still, I go on dancing
not a question in mind
for the quiet that moves me
the silence, my rhythm
is felt in the beat of my skin
and I find
as it sweats through my veins
quick and heavy
the energy swims
and the silence remains
as headlights, a blur
and the streetlights above
turn to inkblots
in the lids of my eyes
and I’m gone
turning, spinning, absorbed in the nothing
that I have become
as it fills me
this static that lurches and leaps
in my chest
in my hands
in my feet
as I dance
in my world of black ink
with the owls and the moon
and the filth on my feet
with a curious heat
burns my skin
from within
and I’m gone
one, two, six
one, two, nine
one, two, one
holds the time
and it’s mine
in my dance in the dark