One step far away

imageShe’d been there for seven days and so far she’d survived. Done better, in fact, than she had imagined when envisaging it in advance from one step far away. Given the circumstances, the disruption, the different location and altered routine – a routine she stuck to, swore by and depended upon as if her life were a cup made out of the finest bone china, her routine an armoured tank to huddle inside – she was pleasantly surprised. Perhaps things wouldn’t be so bad after all, or not nearly so bad, anyway? And anything not so bad after all or not nearly so bad anyway, was good in her books. If she was going to be bold: perhaps even better? Her doom and gloom predictions were bleak, end of the worldy, of the cut her down and slice her apart variety. She had thoroughly expected to be lying in a heap by now, catching boot heels and trainer soles and fending off umbrellas. To be upright, standing, walking even, was a miracle she couldn’t help thanking the constellations for. Maybe the misfortune that had dogged her ever since her real life dog had died had realised it was time it departed, making way in its absence for another breed of fortune to arrive; one that was bright, shiny and pleasant, a joy to have around? Maybe her dreams would come true, allowing along the way her wants, needs, hopes and goals to be both met and realised?

Ok, so it was still winter and wet, dark and cold most of the time. But it was also unseasonably mild, given that by now it would usually be freezing and the rain, although persistent, was at least intermittent and light. For England, that was unusual.

It was also unusual for her to be feeling so chirpy at this time of year and so excited about the future. She had energy and enthusiasm to spare. By all accounts, she should really be holed up inside, hiding behind the walls of an apartment or snuggled beneath the folds of a duvet, curtains drawn, lights low, music bleating softly… She hadn’t realised how much she had missed her former life – her friends, her family, her country – until she had come home from being away for a while.

Maybe in order to appreciate what you have and know what it is it does for you, you have to journey outside, venturing beyond what feels comfortable and safe to then realise in coming back that it was enough in the first place?

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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Under the Bed

imageLast year, there were lights
dancing in the sky
that looked like alien spaceships.

This year, there were moths
coveting a lamp.

In winter, gekkos
hide behind the mirror
and spiders crawl under the bed.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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The dishcloth dog

imageI have begun a new piece. It is three days young. Starting as a simple, non-challenging project – one designed to take me from A to B (with A being Mallorca and B England), a sad parting attached to a reluctant returning – it has quickly evolved, presenting me with a list of demands: a cashmere circumference, merino eyes, a mohair tongue and snowflakes of mixed synthetic origin in an array of colours: coal, chalk, slate, berry, pearl and ice… I expect glass beads and metalic sequins to follow, as well as lace edging in a yet-to-be-determined yarn. Promising to be many-layered and complex, it should help to keep me occupied for a while. And while I cannot speak for the length of that illusive allotment of time, that intangible allocation of clock and calendar digits, I can at least relax in the knowledge that it will be long enough for me to start to settle and adjust. It’s a brave new world out there (big, loud and scary) and I am a timid old thing (small, quiet and soft), it could take some practice.

Stitching a new friend out of yarn and thread

In times of upheaval, being busy is important, distracting us from what we cannot cope with or do not wish to see, acting (if you like) as the ideal wall of defence against externals that could otherwise turn around and bite. Fearing change and needing routine, this (the necessary employment) is especially true for me. Think of it as a holding agent – a boat to cling to or ride within whilst navigating a vast and choppy sea roughly the size and temperament of the Atlantic. I need my dishcloth mutt: today, tomorrow and next week.

Since arriving (four days ago for me writing, longer for those of you reading this), words have deserted me and what I have managed is painful, taking ages in gestation and demanding much in labour to be set down. I’m also unable to read, my mind resisting the page like two opposing magnets. Television works better, although only intermittently depending on what I’m trying to watch. Having been away for three years and not having watched anything at all for two of those, I am out of touch.

It was the same yesterday when I went into town (and here, I mean Windsor not London: diddy rather than hulking, slow rather than fast, outskirts rather than central). The world appears to have grown in my absence, leaping forward several decades in the course of several years, so that – walking into a bank, navigating the likes of Superdrug or Boots, attempting to connect to WiFi in a café or pub – I have no idea what to do or where to start. Even the bank has changed. What happened to the cashiers? Like Scarlet Johansen in Lost in Translation, I am totally confused. And the confusion is like a weight bearing down on me, crushing my ability to navigate.

I’m trying to stay positive and strong, placating my inner brat with all of the things it likes: hot drinks in take away cups, people-filled venues, central heating and warm clothes, quiet time, creative time, cuddles and company, upbeat music, light and fresh air, exercise, routine, sewing and yarn, plans, projects, ideas and dreams, romantic notions I choose to believe in, life after the brief diversion of here… And while it might not be the solution I am seeking or anywhere near a cure to my current malaise, it’s a start to somewhere and something and that’s good enough for now.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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The Clucking of Hens

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“There is no point in trying to suppress the babble of words and ideas that goes on in most adult brains. So if it won’t stop, let it go on as it will, and listen to it as if it were the sound of traffic or the clucking of hens.” Alan Watts

It’s my last day. My flight leaves tomorrow. I’m packed, the boxes have gone, the dog has been to the vets for pre-flight jabs. And I’ve tidied, washed, ironed and cleaned, to the extent that the house feels empty. I am no longer here.

I am lying in bed beneath a blanket writing by candlelight. In the main room, a fire burns. Outside, its raining. It has been for hours. The shift I had hoped to avoid caught me unawares, materialising without warning. It’s winter now, properly; not sometimes or some days… Still, at least I will be better prepared when I land, which is something.

I’m not sure how I feel, as I’m doing my best to avoid thinking and feeling is strictly banned. I’m scared that if I pause for long enough for it to sink in, the everything that’s happening around me (which is pretty scary and big) will rise up causing me to drown. I have a tendency to suffer from overwhelm at the best of times.

To keep the monster at bay, I drink lots of camomile tea and dose up on sedatives – all herbal, mind. I move a lot, too – all nervous energy atop impatient feet.

Looking after my dog is helping; tending her agitation, aiding my own dis-ease. What she is suffering is bad enough: she sees boxes, cases; knows something is happening to her environment, chipping away at it, but she can’t quite explain what it is. Is mummy leaving? Is daddy going on a trip? Has she done something to anger or upset? Why are things disappearing: her blanket, her bowl, her bed? I know where she is. Being in limbo is uncomfortable.

I wish I knew what was on the other side, whether I will love or loathe it. I wish I knew how long it will take, the exact length of this interlude. I wish I could have a guarantee that if I hate it, if I am unhappy, I don’t have to stay that long. I wish someone could promise me that the temperature will be favourable, that there won’t be much rain and that the sun will always shine. I wish there were answers. In their absence, I have no idea where I am, how I feel, what is happening. Like my dog, I am confused.

I reach out my hand to those around me, looking to them for comfort, only to realise too late that they are only interested in subtracting. I lend my shoulders, my arms, my breasts… while my heart endures a battering. I need to widen my circuit, balancing the flow between to and from.

Tired, drained, I shrink back, taking refuge in the one place only I can find. It’s quiet and dark. Even in a busy cafe, nothing reaches in. Safe within the void, held by the flow, I find comfort. For now, it works.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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Dinosaurs that have shrunk

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In my house, there are things that go bump in the night. Only they’re not ghosts, they’re gekkos; lizards in miniature – like tiny dragons or dinosaurs that have shrunk.

Hidden from sight, they live in my room behind the mirror, peering out from holes and cracks that seem to multiply as the creatures inside them expand and spread out.

Habit driven, compulsive, they wake religiously at 5am, their too’ing and fro’ing reminiscent of a cat on tiling, a possum on tin. Only these things are lighter… smaller… the weight of a sugar lump, the size of a sardine.

Making knuckle balls out of finger bone, my partner seeks to expel his anger, venting his manhood onto ears that are tired of listening. To them, we are the intruders; this, their home.

To think that in the beginning, it was just Gordon and Griselda… I doubt even Google could name them all now.

by Rebecca L. Atherton

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Where bluebirds fly

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“Home. A patch of land. A group of people. A place. A feeling. That eternal search to belong. Like many travellers I’ve been on that journey. That adventure. That search. And as I board another plane I’ve come to realise that mine is a portable one. It has no bricks and it has no door. Sometimes it’s surrounded by the most beautiful people and sometimes none at all. It’s nowhere I’ve been and none of the amazing places I am still to discover. Home is wherever you’re with you.” ~ Rebecca Campbell

I’m not one for quoting – unless it’s in regard to Twitter or Instagram, where I quote without a second thought. I prefer to write the text myself. But every so often, something I read touches me physically, its hand reaching deeper than I would have thought possible, and it is in these moments, and instances like them, that I feel compelled.

Although what is written above was written about someone else – and could also (coincidentally) just as easily have been written about you – it might equally have been written about me, so close is it to my own truth. I am constantly searching for that place to call ‘home’, that special ‘somewhere’ I belong. And while I look back and romanticise certain parts of my life – as, no doubt, I’m sure we all do; tinting them with pretty colours as if decorating a room: I know in my heart this image is a lie. The truth is colder, darker, challenged: soured by trial and trauma; conflict. Things that go bump, bumped. Things with sharp edges, cut. Hands that held, mouths that touched, words that were shared, crushed. Even the London years (years I consider to be amongst my best – when I felt like I was, perhaps for the first time, beginning to discover myself: who I was, who I still am…) were, in truth, difficult, chaotic and tragic. There was a run of three years (ironically, in my favourite home: the one I look back on the most – often choosing as my ‘special’ place when I meditate, somewhere I go to for solace and comfort when scared or upset) when I felt like the Universe might actually hate me. I even went so far as to convince myself that I was cursed. Slightly paranoid, perhaps, (superstitions long-harboured fuelling my rumination) but real enough nevertheless.

~

What happened..? I turned thirty, reaching a place I had never considered: somewhere so far off, so far away, I naively thought I would frolic in front of it for eternity. Somewhere I somehow managed to convince myself would betray me if I ever so much as touched it. A place that I couldn’t see beyond, because it had nothing to offer me: no hope, no joy, no love, no growth; only ageing, dying and death.

I’m not sure where this belief originated, or why it was so strong. And I don’t much like rewinding myself towards it. But it deserves a mention every once in a while, because it was very real and it lasted a long time. Fed by a string of events that stole each and every rug; rendering, as they did so, my beloved house bare: I went from whole to incomplete, solid to broken, losing valued and vital ingredients.

In the course of that three years, I lost my soulmate, my closest friend, my partner and my grandmother, who also happened to be my mentor and my muse. My life tilted; the ground gave way and, dislodged, I fell: down, down and down. I think, perhaps, I am still falling.

~

As I attempt to collect myself and navigate my last few days (days I am sure you are by now well and truly bored of, so often have I mentioned them), I am looking for ways to ground myself: favourite places, collected friends, walks along the seafront, drives in the sun, mornings sitting outside as much and as often as possible; afternoons meditating, practicing Reiki and self-hypnosis; industrious evenings, my hands foolishly kidding themselves that if they refuse to pause or slow, they might actually manage to tie up all loose ends before the boxes, part-packed, have to be sealed and delivered to the waiting ship.

The notion that home might be somewhere I can harbour inside is therefore one that appeals, my implacable itch provoking a constant need to move – travelling, seeing, experiencing… all the world has to offer. I want to soak up what I have for so long denied, refilling my heart, reigniting my spirit, rescuing and repairing my soul. Maybe my own lack – the inability to feel anything close to full, whole or complete – fuels this? Or maybe it’s something more? Something that’s in my DNA?

~

I have moved many times over the course of my life: from my childhood home to school; from my school to university; from my university to London; around London and then out to the country, a place I hated. Bored, depressed, fed-up (with the cold and the isolation; the separation – from people, activity, entertainment, etc.), I determined to move, succeeding in just over a year.

I landed in Mallorca, a place I had never given much thought to or considered a possibility as an abode and it was quick to get under my skin. I fell in love: with it’s architecture, it’s history, it’s landscape… Then, as always intended but nevertheless too soon, we were off, travelling to opposing coordinates.

~

Sydney was slower: a lot, initially, to take in. Far away and upside down, it was different in every way possible, and yet it was also exactly the same – only Burger King was called Hungry Jacks, Cafe Nero was Gloria Jean’s and John Lewis was David Jones. It confused… It also arrived in bits.

We (being me and my partner) spent a month in a hotel – challenging and not nearly as luxurious as it sounds. Think noisy guests, repetitive meals, expensive broadband and limited TV. Picture windows that don’t open, showers that run cold, a wardrobe with a safe instead of coat hangers and a maid who keeps moving your things. In addition, it didn’t have a pool, the bar area was impersonal and it was full of salesmen. It was a far cry from what I had imagined.

Followed by a week in an apartment with an exceptional view, all ocean and ship. Sadly, the interior had a lot less to recommend it. I wore shoes everywhere, even in the bathroom. And I didn’t sit on the sofa once, not without putting a blanket down. My only victory (and even that was double-edged) was my dog. Having just come out of quarantine, she was (to put it delicately) overwhelmed.

After that, there was more stability and we spent ten months in a Tibetan-styled house – perhaps the nicest place I have ever lived. I even got used to the giant cockroaches that ran across the floor, vanishing before you could catch them, and the fist-sized spiders that clung to the trees in large funnelled webs.

Then holes appeared (politics in the workplace, recession-led redundancies, an economy in crisis, the elimination of certain vital Expat-assisted living funds…) and suddenly we were in suitcases returning to Europe for what ought to have been but wasn’t ‘a brief rest’, a quiet licking before picking up and rising above.

~

Two years older; two years wiser; two years more bitter, angry and hurt (we stayed here, breaking promises – amongst other things): I am about to move again, only this time the moving is backwards. And it doesn’t matter how often I am told that it isn’t, or how earnestly I am urged to believe that it is temporary – a break, a blip, an interlude… I can’t quite attach any enthusiasm to it. The result: me struggling, thoughts unravelling, all snag and tattered thread.
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