The Joy of the Tomboy

I would follow my brother and his friends around, like a
puppy. I didn’t know how to make friends. I was like a magpie in
that way, trying to acquire something I hadn’t earned. If friends
are real and have integrity and honesty, they are a lot more
precious than what the magpie sees shining out the corner of his
eye, and thinks, can I have a share in that?
I had followed my brother when he had gone to meet one
of his friends. I must have been about seven or eight. My brother
was a year older than me.
We sat cross-legged in a circle, triangle really, on a
grass verge. The friend said, as if I wasn’t there, ‘Why is she here?
Why can’t she stop following us? Why can’t she get her own
friends?’ That kind of thing.
I was a very quiet, shy sort of follower and I just clung to
them like a limpet, yet my brothers friend must have thought, and
rightly so, that I was cramping their style. I shouldn’t be there!

It didn’t start off that way, but it got tiring for them after a while,
quite understandably, ending up in a general
dissatisfaction with the status quo. I theorise, even at that early
age, my brother allowed it, dare I say, encouraged my trailing
along because he enjoyed the idolisation. Some older brothers
may gladly forgo all the intimacies of boyhood friendship, if the
baby sister becomes a public and ardent admirer.
I completely bought into that tomboy thing, whether it was
through sheer desperation to be accepted and belong to a group or
maybe I genuinely enjoyed playing football. Perhaps I’ll never
know but I loved getting covered in mud and grass and didn’t
mind cuts and bruises.
I do remember being a dirty tackler. My methods were
questionable. I must have been aware that I was female on some
level and could get away with some things, tackling wise, that the
others couldn’t, thus making any game I was in, unfair, but it was
generally just kicking around. During one kick around, I
remember I was at some friends/neighbours house and they had a
sprawling overgrown garden, with what seemed like dense
vegetation and a wild wood at the end, probably grossly over
exaggerated by an overactive and childish imagination.
At one point during the game, the ball went into the
overgrowth. I went in immediately to retrieve it and was pulled
back by one of the boys in the game. He looked at me in horror.
‘You can’t go in there.’ he said. ‘You’re a girl.’
This was a defining moment for me. I felt a myriad of
emotions all at once. I was afraid. I couldn’t work it out. Next
moment, I was arrogantly amused. I knew something he didn’t.
He was misinformed. Next moment, I was indignant, singed by
his prepubescent sexism, shocked and confused by his youthful
chauvinism.
Next moment, I felt disappointment, then bitter dismay
and lastly an inexplicable sadness. My life flashed before my eyes
in that instant. Limitation and femaleness seemed to suddenly be
inexorably linked. I knew I could have got that ball without any
harm or injury and I can’t remember whether I rebelled and went
in, or hung back, temporarily weakened by the fact that I was
someone who couldn’t go into a few bits of weeds and bushes to
retrieve a football.
Many years later, the event crossed my mind, but now all I
saw was concern in sincere and honest eyes.
He was looking out for me…maybe, maybe not. After all, he didn’t know me enough to genuinely care about me. It was probably all about social mores, either a natural protective instinct on his part or something he’d digested culturally in his young and tender years. He was genuinely alarmed at the idea that I should go and get that ball from the dense and thorny
undergrowth. I hadn’t met him before that day and I haven’t met
him since. He was just a kid and so was I.

The Joylessness of Slugs

You’re a slug

You’re cold

You’re tired

You’re hungry

You’ve just spent several days

getting from the hedge

to the paving stone

And you are exhausted

Your children are hungry

They were crying when you left them

And what do you want right now?

What would make it right?

Cat food

Some kindly soul

Or careless cat owner

Or overfed cat

has left some

delicious, mouthwatering cat food

with a side serving of beer

The beer was either left by the cat

Or by one of the tall beings

who had poured the liquid on the ground

by mistake

Anyway, this ‘beer’ you like, is right by you

You’ve caught the scent

you are down that route

Second wind

you have found the strength to sliver down thereabouts

You are onto it

Life is good suddenly

You get that sometimes don’t you?

You know, when you dare to think that life is good?

That maybe, just maybe, the powers that be might favour you?

Or that the wind has changed direction

And you are no longer the scapegoat

The cursed

The person for whom sods law was invented

No bad luck tonight though eh?

Tonight, lady luck shines on you

You can smell the cat food

in all its horsey meatiness

Oh and the beer, the sugary, yeasty, malty, nutritious beer

Let’s go!

A light in the kitchen

Floods the paving stone

As I take my fill

I feel grateful

You think a slug can’t feel grateful?

Well, I do.

I’ve been on my butt for days

Slivering along

It was never ending

I thought I would go mad

So exhausted

But now everything

Just everything is okay

The universe has blessed me for once

me, a lowly working slug

Now after eating and drinking at the door of this

warm generous host, I will have the energy and means to feed my babies

Oh, wait, what’s that?

A bright light at the end of a big steel phallus

And at the end of that

a human

With a packet of something

Looming face.

Long body, legs, arms

Packet upturned

White stuff coming out of it

Is it snow?

It’s coming down

Upon my body.

I stop eating the delicious nutritious cat-food

It…it burns, this snow

Should snow burn?

I look up at the human again

They are smiling

If they’re smiling

It must be okay

But oh, it’s burning

It’s burning so bad

And they’re watching,

Waiting

Looking at me

So creepy

Oh, it burns

It burns so

And then I see

I am turning to liquid

My body is…

Pooling like blood

Oh, what are you doing to me?

Don’t!

Stop!

Please!

I am losing sensation

I look up and they are pouring more

Of what I thought was snowflakes

But now I realise must be a terrible poison

I don’t feel so good

That grin

It’s inside of me

They are

So pleased for my pain

They are happy for it

I’ve never felt pain like this

Help me

It’s agony

I can hear myself scream

Can they hear it?

They are grinning again

Grinning into my soul

Pouring down the snowflakes

the snow keeps pouring down

on my delicate skin

My body is seared

the snow is like acid on my skin

My body is water

The humans are happy

My kids…

I will not see them again

and now the human’s grin

also burns into me

It burns

It burns…

The Joy of Nostalgia

Is the Joy of Nostalgia

Just a clean white curtain

On a dirty window

And if you were back there again

Would you hate it

With a bigger passion

Then the first time round

Or maybe it really was as good as it seemed

And the world got worse

And not better

And nostalgia is all

Some people will have

To keep them warm at night

But in the experiences of today

We can make the memories of tomorrow

And the Joy of Nostalgia

All over again.