Daisy Chain Mail - Unfinished

“If I get this wrong I could die by my own hand, it’s as simple as that. It’s been killing me slowly for years, this illness inside of me. You’ve seen it these last two years and been powerless to help. And you’ve tried as hard as anyone could. For years I had no one and when the fits took me I tried to struggle on through it on my own. I tried to fill the hole inside myself. Maybe one day I’ll manage. Maybe I’ll manage with this. But I owe you an explanation. I owe you all an explanation. And talking will never do.

I wasn’t there. I was never there. When you spoke to me and when you held me. When you drank with me and when you fucked me. I wasn’t there.

Working in the warehouse in Nottingham. Working with the elf-like kid in jack boots with the pointy beard. The lad who was turfed out of his college for putting up posters for a college election advertising himself as the Trenchcoat mafioso sometime after Columbine, called to the jewish principal to answer to the fears of students and their parents. The lad who had tried to do himself in. The lad who spent his days on Nazi internet forums and writing a novel for the Doctor Who series set in the English Civil War. I wasn’t there. Read the rest of this entry »

The Fireman - unfinished

Prague, the “magical city” had in the end been a city like any other in this at least, that it was populated with people I couldn’t find it in my heart to love. I was hurt. Some time way back when I had been hurt so deep that I couldn’t find that in myself. In one way or another I had failed. In one way or another it hadn’t worked out. I had no novel. I had no short story collection. I had dissembled and acted out the whole time, just like anywhere else. It was that cliche of cliches: I had gone away and not escaped myself. On coming back, I was going to be a fireman. I had decided. Or rather I had not decided at all. I was desperate. Nothing had come to anything. I hadn’t come to anything. Something inside me had long ago gone wrong and the chances of finding a place for myself were looking slimmer by the day.

I had been a teacher. And not a good one. Native speakers were sought after for their take on life, most came to live a little, and this was reflected in their teaching, which didn’t get bogged down in the usual grammar but was led by conversation. For years I had been depressed by those around me and their limited conversation, but living in these moribund parochial towns had hidden my own shortcomings from myself. I was no conversationalist. Nor was I a natural extrovert. I was bad with people full stop and teaching, I came against this every day. Read the rest of this entry »

thefrenchcover.jpg

I am currently tying myself up in knots working on a commentary for my last attempt at a poem - my Asperger’s side took over last night and I got into some lengthy philosophical debate about the nature of knowing! I think this was in large part due to not wanting to rewrite the single short paragraph, or two or three at most, that I lost at the beginning of this week trying to write the same tricky section in which I describe my comparison in the poem of the myths at work in the state’s use of 9/11 and the moon landings; in re-writing it, I had to make it more complex to keep my focus.

I can’t concentrate now, something I put down either to writing late last night, to the cigarettes I had, which also contributed to poor sleep, or to the onion bhajis I’ve been eating and the Ginseng I’ve been drinking all day. Whatever it is, I can’t go out and run because it’s pissing it down, and know that if I played guitar for a while, I would later regret having done nothing when I have to go to my Mum and Dad’s for my mum’s party, something which will be a real challenge for me. And so, I’ve decided to try and do something to work towards a second poem using the same method as the first, only to comment on it this time from the off, if possible, and certainly to show a few workings out. Read the rest of this entry »

I came back from a run yesterday, my last day of absolute freedom, the last day of holiday without M who had gone to Prague for a few days - she booked it last minute to get away when she had a few consecutive days off work at the same time as her brother’s birthday - and as usual, tried to find something constructive to do with the short period of time I had before leaving for the airport. Read the rest of this entry »

He hadn’t meant to raise his voice. She had had a hard day, he knew that, even if he had to make an effort to remember, like he had to remember to speak slowly to the new girl at work, Irina, the girl who made him nervous with her long brown hair, flawless complexion and that hourglass figure that made him feel her time and tolerance was running out as she stood there smiling effortlessly at him as she did; he didn’t want her, at least, didn’t think he did, but all those adolescent traits of tender tongued awkwardness came back to haunt him. Still, even then he could only hold back his impatience for a moment. He was patient, gentle, calm, but a perfectionist in the kitchen and once his creation was plated up, bums should be on seats. He flicked the landing lights a few times. She was listening to Harry Potter over her hairdryer again. He only hoped she had her door open.

He caught himself thinking that if she had not, he would not go up there but simply shout the louder, possibly act all mardy. He noted that that thought that once would have followed that could be summed up as “is this what things have got to?” didn’t, possibly hadn’t for some time.

He sat down with his dinner, setting hers down besides, lit her new fancy candle with his no longer contraband lighter, took a mouthful, and then jumped up again, grabbing at her plate, first with his hand, and then more angrily with the tea towel he had brought in, the one with the charred corner she always joked about - first, as he had noted once again on its presentation to his hand as the first neatly folded towel in an ever-rotating stack, hilariously, then endearingly, then once again invidiously as the drawn out joke seemed to . Red in her Eeyore dressing gown she caught him storming out to the oven and smiled, jokingly blocking his exit. He walked back and placed the plate on the table, taking his seat.

“One day I’ll come up and put vinegar in that bath and give it a good stir before you jump in. You’ll poach yourself you have it that hot.”

She had caught him on the hop. Her nonchalant manner always made him feel like a fool when he overdramatised his efforts. He always realised in retrospect. Every time. Not once had he stopped himself from going through the motions once again. And then, as he always realised in that same regretful sigh of a sequence of thoughts, he was always late for dinner at his mum & Dad’s, talking over the cricket, the Formula One or the golf, talking about work with his dad, with whom he would roll his eyes at the constant bangs on the wall and the shouts. And then that dusty old comment, not even a joke.

They ate in silence. It had come out well. The bacon had firmed up nicely with the little blowtorch she had bought him because “he liked his kitchen gadgets.” he had resented that, but had always eyed them up in the shops though he felt the need to mock them on the television. (He had worried once or twice that if she could pick that out, how much more easy would it be to pick out that peculiar timbre in his voice that he could feel inside his throat when he intoned that Irina just wasn’t up to the job with these pedantic e-mails she took so long to send, and that Karen just loved to bitch, that she wore only the latest label goods, revelling in the fact that they were ephemeral, and listened to that Ministry of Sound album or whatever that she got free on her MP3 player.) The chicken was deliciously soft - and didn’t look undercooked through all that Gorgonzola. The anya potatoes were a revelation, the broccoli just so.

He enjoyed the food for a while with not a thought in his head. Bliss. He then realised they weren’t talking. He chewed on.

“I used that little blowtorch on the parma ham,” he said. He always wanted to demonstrate that her present was a good choice, that he was grateful.

“snice,” she said.

He chewed on.

She carried on eating.

He still had to work on presentation. They make a big thing of that.

She hadn’t said a thing about it. Any of it!

And there was something desultory about the way she was holding her fork. And her wrists were limp.

It has always struck him as token of his being genuine that his anger burst up too quickly to think of something pointed to say. She would never get angry like that, whereas he was rarely shitty and incisive with it, something she could be so much of the time. He put down his fork and knife noisily beside his half-full plate.

“Oh, for fuck’s sake!” He said. She looked up at him in what seemed like mock surprise. “Is it still about this sixty fucking four?”

She looked at him, her brow knotted. He wasn’t sure she had understood: it hadn’t come out too clearly.

“What?” she said eventually, and, he was sure, disingenuously.

“This whole fucking thing.”

He was aware he wasn’t being too specific.

“What thing? There is no thing, I’m eating my dinner.”

“In silence.”

“Well, look, it was you who was storming off to the bloody oven two minutes after you called me with this look on your face. I’ve just had a bath. I’ve had a long day. I’m relaxed. I’m eating. Is that ok?”

He didn’t answer. He picked up his cutlery again.

“It’s nice,” she said. He looked at her. “It is nice,” she said, laughing a little, inscrutably. She took a bite.

“And the bacon is crispier.”

He said nothing and took another bite before shaking a little more salt on his potatoes.

She stood up and walked off. He ate uncomfortably. She didn’t come back. Was she crying? Should he go after her? Wouldn’t that be admitting fault? He wasn’t at fault, was he?

He had a little broccoli on his plate when she came back with a bottle of wine. He always cooked too much. And there was some left over. The cauliflower cheese had been too much. Maybe she picked up on these kinds of things. She had two glasses. She poured them. There was a little piece of cork floating in his. These things annoyed him, but it would be churlish to pick it out.

She carried on eating.

“That Ragi Omar thing’s on tonight,” she said eventually.

“That one you wanted to see,” she added, redundantly. If there was nothing wrong as she was maintaining she would never have said that, he noted. He began a sigh and tried to turn it into a normal breath, losing his natural rhythm of breathing as a result and trying consciously to bring it back down as he finished off his last piece. That and the subject. He knew she wasn’t interested. He felt a reverberant low timpani drum beat of dread. She would perhaps force herself to watch it only to break later in the night into some long held-back complaint. The tension would stretch out the whole evening and continue then into one of those DMCs, deep and meaningful conversations such that Ollie, the mature student at uni he used to look up to with the longest relationship of any of them, used to talk sardonically about as he swung across jungle ropes on his irony dial TV with the rock band stickers transplanted from his ‘pawned’ Les Paul copy, the kind she dragged him into just as he was falling asleep so he had to talk while treading water.

” Yeah,” he said. “I don’t know, though, maybe it’s too depressing.”

Sometimes he talked automatically, he realised, no doubt for the umpteenth time. All these defensive strokes, never just letting fly with what he thought.

“We could watch a film,” he said. He wanted to distract her.

“Yeah,” she said, “if you want.” The reply, and its tone, dismayed him. It was clear she wasn’t that keen, that she was trying to go along with what he wanted. He resented the idea all the more now, and it was clear he wouldn’t enjoy any film they chose, and especially if they decided to go out for one. He had registered for this film club with DVDs being posted to his door. Roped in by all the canny advertising over the urinals at the shopping mall, calculated no doubt to catch all the men in their lowest level of cerebral immune defense. She was never in the mood to see the films he chose. And there was no backing away from it now. Thinking he wanted to watch a film, she would insist, and it would only postpone any potential argument for later.

He really wanted to see that Ragi Omar thing.

“I’ve got one,” she said, finally lying her fork and knife on her plate beside a hillock of cauliflower cheese and the mound of Waitrose’s finest gorgonzola she’s managed to surreptitiously squeeze out of her chicken breast and draining her glass of sharp wine. She walked out taking both plates with her.

Why did he have to suggest it.

He turned the TV on as she got ready. He flicked around the channels, news, a woman of indeterminate attractiveness walking in the Lakes (he remembered walking around campus with Ollie talking about this and that and commenting on the endless girls walking by, picking out those like this and going over their originally improvised routine of asking one another whether she was “unconventionally attractive” and responding that, being “conventionally unattractive,” she was half way there: it seemed funny at the time, but then, everything did), and settling on the One Show, a magazine show with the Baggies fan who used to live down Hagley with a piece about a pig farmer making lard. He resolved, as lazily as he could in the few remaining moments of laziness available to him, to use it more often.

He sipped at his wine and felt a tension rise to his head as he heard her come down the stairs, walk straight round to the kitchen and turn on the kettle. A peculiar thought struck him. He should have bought Ollie’s guitar when he had the chance. He had considered it. He had never thought of that before and it unsettled him.

He heard the spoons go into the mug and heard her as she clicked off the kettle manually, poured the still-bubbling water and opened the freezer for her favourite ice cream. She came in. There was a fist sized corner of ice cream left in the tub she sat on his lap. She put the mug of hot water on the table in front of them and rested her knees on his leg, taking out two hot dessert spoons for them both. Putting her right arm slackly around his neck, she took her spoon in her left and dug the tub into his legs and crotch digging out a good mouthful. She had changed into her newest sexy outfit (she always had one) and

A year ago at Christmas I got a book, a collection of stories by Adrian Tomine called Sleepwalk which touched me deeply. I had come back from Prague, where I had spent Xmas with M’s family, and my notebook. I had been dog-sitting for hours every day as they went to visit M’s grandmother, who was seriously ill in hospital, and I filled page after page with scrawlings, sketchings and ideas. Read the rest of this entry »

A single early morning or poor night’s sleep can throw me out completely, making me unable to write for days. I am tired today following a couple of day’s of early rising to take M____ to work. I used to have this problem with working at the hardware store. Half eight seems about the earliest I can start at work and not feel any ill-effects throughout the day, indeed, throughout the week. Any earlier and my brain literally never fully wakes up and I feel a constant lack of energy. Of course, when that happens I resent it so much. Read the rest of this entry »

I’m depressed. I came back from a working holiday, an educational trip to Venice and Florence yesterday and today I’ve been going over old writings from the time I had to come back from Prague one summer when I had been hoping to stay and write. I had come back because my laptop had broken and that depressed me more than missing people and missing home. I had come back then to go on aspergic chat forums on the internet, working myself into tears.

On the trip I had almost a religious experience, seeing the inspiration of christianity for the first time in years and almost feeling that I could build up a relationship with Christ. One of the other guys on the trip, a house parent, is a christian, and a lovely guy - I couldn’t imagine meeting anyone nicer. And I got on with everyone on the trip, and really enjoyed being in their company. They liked me too. One of the reasons I might be crying now is that one women on the trip, with whom I had a deep conversation one night, told me how she found me very laidback and good with the students. She kissed my hand when I offered it, in my reserved way, when getting off the bus. On the trip I saw another side of myself I rarely get to express, getting on with people I see eye to eye with and have something in common with.

I am rewriting this now since I lost my first post when I enabled scripts in my browser, but when I was first writing it I had a reverie of losing it, of hitting doors and smashing up tables and the like at work. I lost it, and then, perhaps as I tried to work out what it was that was so upsetting me, and scrambled around for ideas,  the reverie developed and one of the big cheeses at work accused me of being inadequately spiritually developed. It started around the time I was writing about my spiritual experience there.

I had thought of an additional structure to Family Fortunes some time back, throwing in Lord of the Flies, that novel I was writing when my screen broke up on my laptop, into the mix. And I have been looking over that today. Well, it is too much, and that is no doubt part of my depression, since this is what happens to my novels every time. They grow unmanageable. And remembering how things were in Prague is also depressing. And how my life repeats itself. How I am always living in my stories, but that they are always inchoate on paper, just full and deep and atmospheric in my head. They prevent me living but never progress.

I made some notes today and tried to draw this narrator that I have borrowed from Lord of the flies. It is rich this way, but there are many thematic contradictions. Lord of the Flies is behind me, and I have forgotten its inception. I should leave it behind me.

I can’t afford for this novel to die on me.

I am not good at moving from one thing to another. Perhaps that is all it is. Or maybe it is nothing to do with my writing at all, but more to do with coming back to my life and seeing how little i have in common with people here, when I could have so much. And seeing too the lifestyle on the continent, watching people so alive in the many piazzos. While I was there I so wanted to move again. I get stale so quickly.

I’ve got a lot in any case to think about.

Got up late this morning. I had eaten Weetabix last night and it hadn’t agreed with me. I had slept very shallowly.

Rushing in the morning, I had a few reveries. Mainly, I went in to training and sat down in the usual circle, and the beardy guy was there who has featured in my reveries since the time some guy came in to sing religious songs. I was dismissive of hymns, or had in any case consistently been so in previous reveries, and he asked me to play the guitar instead, saying perhaps something about the song being there for the group to bond rather than with any religious intent. I played. Moving by Supergrass, a song I have been learning recently, and actually singing along. So I did that. In any case, he then went on to make a few comments, saying that such a song shows none of the musical complexity of a hymn. I told him the poverty of his argument was such that I would almost have been ashamed to tear it apart were it not for his way of trying to show me up. I went on to talk about how the church had repressed musical innovation, banning the modus lascivious, the major scale, for a long time.

I was tired all day. Enthusiasm in the morning gave way to complete exhaustion later, and coffee did nothing for me. Besides, it was so hot that I was stifling in my jeans and skater shoes.

M_____ is working and it was the night for Spanish, but I couldn’t face it. I wanted to get some writing done. I barely got a paragraph written, though, before I had to give up for tiredness. I read a little of Jonathan Coe’s What a Carve Up, which I am enjoying, before I had a brief lie down, a near nap, and came down to try to write up a little of my food diary so that I don’t miss out on the most important parts by the time I see the dietician.

I did give in a little today and asked for an appointment with the mad doctor at the college. Spoke to the college’s resident bluesman who has been ill recently, and he told me about the fact that he had seen the good doctor about his high blood pressure and the doc asked him about what he was like as a kid, and whether he was a hot or cold temperament, and did everything but take his blood pressure. Still, I figure I can’t lose anything from it.

Going to Venice/Florence on Friday, and I really need to be well rested for that. I have bought some Valerian tea.

Training day today with the students coming back tomorrow, and another incredibly inane session of, first, “counselling,” though in actuality a lecture on Transactional Analysis, which seems to be a theory ecompassing as many ill-defined and misused terms as possible (the term “grandiose,” it seems can actually be used to describe somebody who refuses to admit that they are wrong in a maths classroom). Then we went on to the usual bitch about management.

I sat there and designed my ideal guitar. This is a trick I use from time to time, but there was a slightly new development this time. Often I think of the pick-ups as being turned on and off by popping them on and off, that is, down and up again, but this time I went a little further, by setting them on a hydraulic platform which rises and lowers by the action of metal sliders which are a little thinner than the metal panels on telecasters, which slide backwards and forwards with the controls for the respective pick-up on them.

Later we went shopping to Mardy Hell so I could buy some shorts for the trip to Venice/Florence. On coming back I really wanted to get down to doing something and so I started reading, managing for once to read in the Lounge with Mum and M____ talking - the television wasn’t on, so this probably helped. I read a little of What a Carve Up, which I am really enjoying, though the narrative tricks are beginning to seem a little less clever and more irritating now, though that may have been the effect of not being able to follow so well when I was in the lounge. Anyway, an interesting idea while I was reading a passage about a particularly venal politician. I thought how I could pursue politics myself, trying to stand as an independent MP. I wondered about what ironical name I could have, that is, as a party that isn’t a party, but then thought of how I might not be good at it at all, and that I certainly wouldn’t enjoy it, and I thought then about a website which could organise campaigns for a variety of independent MPs with the rationale that independent MPs are a good in themselves. I followed that thought for a while and then got back to the book.