Writer, researcher, music lover, cancer survivor with CMMRD ("double" Lynch syndrome)

Category: Poetry (Page 7 of 20)

Where Nessie Lives

it’s not that far to go
it lurks just below the surface
like the loch ness monster.
everyone else thinks it’s fictional,
a figment of my imagination,
because they’ve never seen it.
but I have, I’ve felt the waves rush
to the river bank as it moved,
I’ve reached out and touched it
oily skin, its skin much thicker
than mine. I’ve negotiated its humps
as it invited me aboard its back, I’ve
felt the powerful swish of its tail,
I’ve held on for dear life as it moved –
because it felt like it was all I had,
and it understood. it was no mirage
to me, and it still lurks there now.
I know I can revisit it at any time,
sometimes unwillingly. sometimes
I go there just so it doesn’t sneak up
on me. Nessie is always there.

I know there is a starry sky up there
somewhere, but for now I’d rather
cling onto Nessie. it’s a comfortable
fear down here, and she knows me
best, now that she’s shaped me,
manipulated me, turned me into a
mirror of herself, a shadow of me.
the water is hypnotising. it would
be so easy to dip a toe in, even though
it’s cold, even though it hurts, even
though it’s the darkest place I’ve
ever seen. the temptation is great
for no logical reason other than to
feel so deeply.
the water runs so deep
and Nessie is the way in.

she is
easily accessible fear
trepidation on tap
anger on demand

there is
a pool of trauma
hidden in this lake
where Nessie lives.

Nessie says ‘tumour markers’
and I panic, stop functioning,
struggle to catch my breath,
just sit and glaze over like these
words are mine, thrust upon me –
and why don’t they belong to
others around me too? – but
they don’t, they’re just mine
and I have to handle it. so I
take a deep breath, grasp onto
it. the consultant says he’s
sending me for a tumour marker
blood test and I say okay as if it’s
fine, and it sort of is, because
I’m strong enough. I could carry
Nessie herself – instead of bobbing
in the water as she takes me
wherever she wants me to go
because she is in control – so
yes, I could carry her weight
but I wish I didn’t have to.

the important work of forgetting

time yet again to get on with
the important work of forgetting.
there’s no jab for not being able to breathe
no injection for anxiety
you just have to train yourself to
breathe again, like
you’ve never done it before.

concentrate like it’s hard
– because it is –
like your life depends on it
– because it does.

put all of your effort into this thing
that is coming so naturally to
everyone around you. this thing
that nobody else even has to think about
has to be the only thing you think about

until you don’t think about it anymore.
and who knows when that will be
or how you will get there?

How unfortunate for you

How unfortunate for you
that you love this collection
of broken cells.

How unfortunate for me
that that’s all my body
is in my mind right now.

Maybe one day that will change.
Maybe not.

you don’t have the monopoly on grief

you don’t have the
monopoly on grief

and neither do I.

we’re just

kicking up copper dust

and wishing we were high

going through the motions

as if that’s good enough.

there’s a competition in my head

to find out who’s more tough

and I’m winning, I’m winning

I’m stronger by far,

but we’re rooting for each other,

at least, in my head

we are.

easy saturday

The stormy bank holiday when
plans fell through so it was
Scrabble and a fry up, lazy Saturday
afternoon with my legs outstretched
and your half of the sofa reclined, your
heartbeat reverberating through the
backs of my knees as you snored and I
watched easy tv

not your average wednesday

‘easy, easy’
they say,
when nothing is easy

and my eye welcomes
the comfort of my
fingertip
and says this is a
pressing matter

and I’ve buried myself in bricks
for days
hard thoughts
heavy thoughts
thoughts that leave no room for
anything else at all

and I sink
and I sink
and my thoughts are nothing but
this

and the day comes that
I’ve been waiting for
and I’m going alone
like I wanted
but didn’t want
and it happens
and it’s okay
probably
maybe

and it’s over

and just like that
the bricks are gone
I’m still on my own
but comfortably so
and I can stand
and there is light
air all around
no dusk or dawn

just like a switch
midnight to midday sun

and everything feels fine –
until next time.

jack daniels

the cold glass on my wet bottom lip
my top lip enveloping – and then I tip
the scent stings my nostrils and
my teeth welcome it
head goes back
a slow swallow
and the roof
of my mouth
goes numb
the taste
is blunt
and then
nothing
matters
anymore.

maybe I am a mess
but I love these
nights.

Siblings

I spoke to my brother
for the first time ever
the other day.
He didn’t say much.
I apologised for being
twenty-eight years late
but I wasn’t good
with words when I
was one year old.

I went to see my brother
by myself, for the first time ever
the other day.
I didn’t know if he was expecting me.
I chastised myself for
forgetting his exact spot
but it had been a while
since my last visit.

I walked up the path
scanning the rows for him,
came up behind him like
my parents and I usually do
put my hand on the black stone
like it was his shoulder
and moved around the side
to read engraved
“Carla Rodriguez”.
My brother waited
in the next row.

Shamed, I walked towards him and
again, put a hand on the stone
– not as natural a gesture
as I had hoped, as the stone was
lower than I had remembered.
Just another thing I didn’t remember.
I walked in front of him and said
hello for the first time in my life, probably.
Muttered some words in hushed tones,
checking there was nobody else around.
The day was pleasant.
I hated the sound of my own voice,
as I always do, but more so
in the quiet of the cemetery.
So futile and hollow.

I told my brother that my visit
would be our secret. It’s all we have
that we share, just the
two of us. A woman with two
children a few rows away
shouted at her kids to be quiet.
I hadn’t even heard her children.
“She’s trying to wake you up, I think,”
I whispered to my brother. One of the
children looked over at me, and the
woman followed suit, suitably
embarrassed. After a moment of
looking back at her, and unsure
what else to do or say, I said
goodbye to my brother. I think
I told him I would come back.
And I will. It won’t be the only
conversation we have, the only
time we say hello, the only time I
see him on my own, the only secret
we share. I think my secrets
would always have been
safe with him.

each consonant a chasm

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