Musings and thoughts on life, parenting, depression, music, food, books, and ferrets. May contain Balls. Tell me how I've damaged you @jessikart on twitter
I think we've covered
how much fun I had over the festive period. If this were a film, we
would now cut to a montage of me crying, staying in bed, listening to
Madness on repeat, having an eight hour bender with my Mum the day after my birthday, opening
the fridge door & shrugging before closing it again,
chain-smoking, staying up into the wee small hours and then an
absolute storm surge of wine.
And then, just at the
end, before it fades to darkness, one other little image would creep
in too. A little image of a little thing (no, not me). A small statue
that I've never seen in person, probably never will. A tiny thing, a
seemingly insignificant thing, a silent thing that nevertheless
speaks to me and holds my hand in the bleakest of moments.
Her. Fearless Girl. I
love this figure so, so, so, so SO much. I love her, just for being
her. I love her boot clad feet standing apart, her fists planted on
her hips, her chest out, her chin jutted up, the calm defiance of her
face. I love the way the billowing of her clothes suggests movement,
the sway of her ponytail. I love how even with that susurration of a
breeze doesn't distract from the fact that she is planted solidly,
ready to take on whatever is coming at her.
Then you do see
what is coming at her, or perhaps considering taking her on. Older
than her, bigger, stronger, heavier, seemingly more dangerous,
unpredictable & ferocious, harder, more powerful. The Bull of
Wall Street was there first, intended to represent all of those
aggressive, macho tendencies, that need to overpower and conquer, to
be ruthless and feared.
This girl came along
with her response. To stand in front of something meant to intimidate
her, something she can have no hope of defeating, and her response is
instead to stand her ground and with every fibre of her being say
simply 'I am here.' In contrast to her small, slight frame, the bull
now looks clumsy, dull witted and lumbering, his body turned as if
he's no longer ready to charge, but is weighing up his options as
this girl stands there and says 'I am not afraid of you.'
And somehow I know with
absolute certainty that if he did decide to run at her, she would
prevail. Either he would screech to a halt at the final moment or she
would neatly sidestep – possibly even with an arm flourish of
faux-politeness – and again, he would be the wrong-footed one, not
this bold girl facing down the world with no hint of fear, her dress
rippling, hair swinging, her boots linking her to the position she
defends. For all of her lack of stature, she is stronger than than
the Statue of Liberty, because she has freed herself of gestures and
of being scared. You could bounce rocks off her, but I doubt you'd
even consider it.
I love her. She's
become iconic, and I also appreciate she's been controversial too.
Even as I write this, despite what I've just written about her
refusal to back down and move away, she is, ironically, doing just
that very thing and will no longer be facing her formidable foe. No
pasa nada. She'll still be out there somewhere, that spirit and
blithe determination living on, inspiring and encouraging others to
follow her lead. Her beauty lies not in her face, but in her power,
not in her size, but in her strength.
When it comes to
fearsome vs fearless, I'll always back fearless. For she is small but
mighty.
The Blondies weren't
with me for Christmas. A bit longer than that, really. They left the
day before my birthday (which is 22nd December, just in
case you'd unaccountably forgotten to add it to your diary), and they
didn't come back until the 27th. That's an awfully long
time to be on your own, and a fairly painful one too.
I'm not bleating in the
hope of sympathy. My family offered, in various ways, to host me, and
I refused all offers. Because if I can't be with those whom I love
most, then I don't want to be with anyone. Alone I can choose to
sleep or not, eat or not, get dressed or not, drink (yeah, there was
never going to be a 'not' attached to that one) or just sink into
misery and cry endlessly, sitting on the second bottom step of the
stairs, reflecting on everything that has, could, and will go wrong.
Again there is no 'not' attached to that scenario. It happened. Quite
a few times.
But I tried not to let
it, or at least not to give into it too much. The temptation to
listen to tear jerking music so that I could descend into solo self
pitying snivelling was strong with this one. But I Jessed up as much
as I could, listened to endless podcasts, went into hiding on social
media because I didn't want pity. Trust me, I was already wallowing
in that. I attempted to only listen to happy, upbeat music instead,
to at least provide one less excuse for leaving discarded tissues all
over the house.
Trying to stave off
insanity, I plunged headlong into madness. Divine Madness, the
soundtrack to my childhood and early teenage years, introduced to me
by my brother, and never unloved since. The first nine tracks take me
back to being 13, playing Sonic 2 on the megadrive with my best
friends, glasses of Ribena in front of us, right up to track 10. It's
such a simple song.
I never thought I'd
miss you
half as much as I
do.
And I never thought
I'd feel this way,
the way I feel about
you.
I can't quite write
those words without having to swallow a bit too hard. Idiot. But
sometimes the simplest lines are – like love – the best. They
cut through pretentious, self-conscious referencing or airy-fairy
metaphors, to what is open, direct, honest. What is true. And
sometimes it is as easy as a hot knife slicing through butter.
I could write on and on
about love, about how it feels, what it is, how it changes us
forever. I could tell you all of that, and god knows I have done in
the past, self-indulgently and at length. But it really is the
simplest of things that convey our truest feelings – a look, a
handhold, an understanding. An appreciation of what someone gives to
us, even unknowingly. It seems so little, yet means so much. But
being small doesn't mean it's not mighty.
How can it be that we
can say so much without words? Because we know. Because when The
Blondies finally came home, they followed me around the house like a
pair of not so little turtle doves, gently cooing, and I quietly,
secretly rejoiced. Loves of my life, I don't need to say it, do I?
You know. You know what it must be. It is madness, to love you as
much as I do. But to me, it and you are divine. Promise.
We went to Horsey Gap
to see the seals. Along with pretty much every other person in
Norfolk, or so it seemed. Christ, it was mobbed. The slowest
part was just inching down the track into the car park, and then
following the traipsing hordes up onto the dunes, where you're
securely held back by constantly having to sidestep family groups,
and are, in any case about half a mile from the seals. Compared to
Winterton or Blakeney Point, both of which have utterly captivated
us all over the years, this was decidedly underwhelming.
The Girl expressed this
most openly, by sulking and trudging and saying 'when can we just
GO?' because that always improves a situation, and makes everyone in
the vicinity radiate patience and joy. But not too long after this,
both Mum & I conceded she had a point and began the walk back to
the car, our route taking us past that familiar Norfolk landmark, a
coastal pillbox. Usually rubbish strewn, graffitied, left to moulder
away in the landscape, smelling of wee. This one was no exception.
But maybe it was. Built
as a solid, squat, defensive structure, over 70 years on the Norfolk
coast had done its work, and the outer shell had been weathered and
beaten into submission, revealing the structure beneath, which again,
faced with the elements had begun to buckle and corrode, facing
outwards like an offensive weapon, not the protective construction it
was once supposed to offer.
Sharp, curling, cruel
little spikes rippling metal, perfectly placed to take out the eye of
some unwary seal porn enthusiast, or catch on your coat, or scrape
the legs of those children whose parents thought it would be a
perfect #makingmemories photo opportunity and had hefted their
offspring up onto the roof of the pillbox without quite formulating a
plan as to how to get them down again (clue: not easily). Prongs
really, to hack into delicate flesh, to catch and harm. The hurt
beneath the benevolence, the steel beneath the outer skin. That which
is its strength and support is also that which damages.
'Well now' I thought to
myself. 'there's a HANDY METAPHOR. That something that from a
distance looks blunt and solid has been so ravaged by time and
passing circumstance that when viewed up close proves to have scars
and open wounds that are in themselves capable of wounding. But you
have to be close enough to see that, to feel that. That's the only
way it will touch you, or you touch it, although everything in you
screeches 'noli mi tangere'. Or in my case JESUS CHRIST THE GIRL DON'T
PUT YOUR FACE THERE EVEN AS A JOKE.' Not that I'm anxious or anything.
But it is a handy
metaphor. We hurt the ones to whom we are closest, or those we touch.
We let them in, or let them near, and they see us in our weather,
eroded state, the cracks showing, spikes and all. And that it why it
hurts, and that is why sometimes we are cautious – because we fear
being hurt again. And that's also why sometimes it's so familiar that
we forget the danger of not approaching things as delicately as we
should. We assume familiarity equals safety.
You just know I'm
going to end this with some other kind of clunking great metaphor,
don't you? Yep. Because having tested if a certain prong was indeed
at a level certain to take her eye out, The Girl turned to me and said
scornfully 'It's totally blunt Mum. Not sharp at all. It just looks
like it should be.'
I've held off writing
this for a while, deliberately. Partially because at the time, I
didn't have the time to do so. Mostly because I didn't want to
piggyback on what was someone else's moment – because it was their
moment. More than a moment really, it was their triumph. Whilst those
of us who were around during it had our own little moments, it was pretty
much down to one person that it even happened at all.
If you follow me on
twitter or we're friends on facebook, you probably know I broke a
fairly prolonged period of silence in November to talk about an
exhibition that was open for some of those brief moments at St Peter
Hungate in Norwich – Vanishing Points, the landscapes, archaeology,
artefacts of the Western Front. It was supposed to be solely a
photographic exhibition, but like work, it expanded to fill the time
& space available, and instead became something far more
expansive, personal yet distancing, brutal yet sensitive, visceral
yet haunting, the ghosts still flitting past us out of the corner of
our eyes, just as long as we didn't watch, still moving.
An awful lot of you
visited. It was like the biggest, longest tweet up that
Norwich/Norfolk/even further afield has ever known. I hugged a LOT of
people. Sometimes more than once. I grinned lots, I did a happy dance
more often in public than one should ever do, I even performed a
Charleston around the Visitor Book. I cried too. So many times.
The comment that kept
coming up again and again from people was 'moving'. And it was.
Despite having been recruited to help with 'generally kicking arse',
having known pretty much every detail of every feature, of every
element – sometimes in the most nitpicky fashion – I still, when
first faced with it all, burst into tears. And I don't mean I got a bit
mimsy mouthed, and let one tear trickle down my face, artistically.
No. I properly went. That sort of involuntary response that makes
both hands fly up up in a gesture of prayer to cover your mouth, the
noise that comes out of your throat that can only accurately be
described as a strangled 'mmmpppfff!!', followed by an inevitable and
instinctive 'Sorry!' in a high-pitched quavering register that no one would
ever recognise as your voice. Twice, in two minutes, that happened,
before regaining control of myself, the back of my hand pressed
against my mouth to prevent further outbreaks.
It has previously been
recorded, both here and in other places, that my emotions are never
far from the surface. I laugh easily, can be a mopey lachrymose twat
at the brush of a feather, bridle & swear with no provocation.
But in this case, I wasn't alone. For all of my irrational, fractured
behaviour, I am sometimes capable of being disciplined, and in this
case and place I was, assiduously totting up visitor numbers, and
people who, like me, cried.
1,019 visitors came in
through the door in a little over 60 hours. On average, one person an
hour cried. Not including me, or anyone else making it a new reality
(I say 'new' reality, because it is/was always a reality, but
Vanishing Points gave it a new life). And some of those people who
cried, made me cry too, just seeing their responses, seeing what it
meant to them knowing what that response would mean to the person
responsible for it. Sometimes it was old men I can only describe as
Paul Whitehouse characters. Sometimes a relative of the deceased.
Sometimes when I saw people realise the reality of war is not
numbers, but stories.
But the reactions,
despite me knowing how good the exhibition would be, despite
understanding it, despite doing my best to help – those reactions
took me aback. I realised again the power of stories. How one
storyteller can create a narrative that changes us, for the better. I
know that's not an entirely popular opinion, it hasn't hasn't found
favour with others, and the storyteller could not have done his job
without help, insight, and support from many others, playing their
parts in different ways. But I was there, as much as I could be, not
as much as I wanted to be, and I saw the impact that it had. People
who wandered in, smiling & laughing, before departing, slightly
hollow-eyed, tearful, and so obviously captivated by the words and
landscapes. It lingers in me still. I find it strange that those
hours of mine I so gladly gave are no longer so consumed by the
stories I wanted to be told, whether visually, with long
interpretation boards, or the starkest of words under a monochrome
sky, they're ghosts now too. Not just of the places they died in, but
the place where people came to meet them for the first time. I miss
them.
I miss them, and I miss
talking to people about them, about lives and memories. That will
slip away so easily, if other people don't take up the baton of
carrying on memories and telling those tales. That was what Vanishing
Points did. It told stories, various stories, in various ways, and it
connected. It was beautiful and bone shaking, hilarious and
heartbreaking, terrible, yet terrific.
So thank you, to those
who came (Hi Mum!). Thanks to those who kept me company and kept me
in coffee. Thanks to everyone who played a part. I owe a pint at
least to Julian S and Andrew 'no I'm not Nick' M A stupid &
ridiculous amount of thanks to Matt for all of the negotiating &
facilitating he had to do. Nick... mates, innit. I'd go to the cross
for you. Actually, I did, which was the first public snotting I did.
After all of the build up there he was, our predecessor in looking a
bit arsy, and fighting pointless battles. His spirit lives on, even
if the exhibition doesn't.
Goodbye Francis.
Different stories took hold of different people. Yours will never let
me go, so I suppose it's not goodbye, not really. It's thank you. All
we have left of you are footprints, fragments, fingertips. But what
more can anyone hope for than to have left some kind of trace of
their story?
'Because it is my
name! Because I cannot have another in my life.'
I was mooching about at
Norwich Cathedral last week, because apparently I don't spend enough
time hanging out in freezing cold medieval places of worship, taking
crap photos of graffiti on my phone. I could add a few examples of
these photos here, but you seem nice, and probably don't deserve
that.
Anyway, as I lurked in
dark corners and stalked around cloisters and reflected that I
definitely do require a far more dramatic coat to make an impressive
entrance (my £20 much abused Primark overcoat is fantastically warm
& waterproof, but it does make me look a bit as though I'm
wearing half a sleeping bag intended for someone of more generous
proportions than I. Or, as my son put it 'Your legs look like two
pieces of string hanging out of a sack'), I snapped a few later bits
of graffiti too. Like this one.
Lovely handiwork, I
think we can all agree. And because it's historic, it's important,
so most people assign it not to 'vandalism', but instead as a 'vital
record' or 'human heritage' or slightly less charitably (and almost
certainly wrongly) as 'bored choirboys/parishioners' etc. The same
people who would have a fit if 'J. Brown November 25th 2018' were to appear
next to it.
As we know that's –
perhaps ironically – a modern attitude to have towards graffiti. As
we also know (shh, you do know, I've told you often enough)
'graffiti' only entered the language relatively recently, only
appearing because a term was required to describe the inscriptions
being found in Pompeii during its exhumation. It held no negative
connotations then, it was just a handy term for people leaving their
mark.Now, of course it's anti-social and a sign of how far society
has fallen. You know you live in a rough area if it's described as
'riddled with', 'covered in' or 'besmirched by' graffiti. In these times,
Banksy would surely replace Pestilence as one of the horsemen of the
apocalypse. Except that the pale horse traditionally featured
wouldn't be pale these days, but tagged to spray-painted
indecipherability, because That's The Way of The Modern World.
And it is, to a greater
or lesser extent. Graffiti creators these days tend not to leave a
calling card of full name, date, or anything that could be considered
as personally identifying. Instead we have nameless political
statements, street art created by someone whose greatest identifier
is their alleged anonymity, endless tags. No one signs their name any
more.
'I mean to deny
nothing.'
Seriously,
when was the last time you saw a piece of graffiti that was just a
simple entry in the visitor book of walls, that was in any meaningful
way 'recent'? A carving, pen stroke, or scrawl that actually states
nothing more than 'I was here'? If you want to make a 'Kilroy woz
'ere' joke right now, please do so only inside your own head.
These
days, people leave only first names or initials or tell you whom they
love or hate. They make statements, or daub political slogans or tag
themselves to be seen, heard, read, left for as long as their message
is allowed to remain. Left behind, yet very rarely recording who they
are, or when, only where. Whether passing through in a brief moment,
leaving it to be seen by an intended audience, or just because it
gives them bragging rights over a location. Be seen on the scene as
The Young People almost certainly wouldn't term it, unless they're
hipster wankers who'd say it ironically at their pop up crowdfunded
start up heads up... thing.
What
we don't get are things that mark out individuals, as people that
future generations might be able to trace. We are always told by
people these days that graffiti is antisocial. I, for once not trying
to be contrary, disagree. I think it's interesting that the rise in
people viewing graffiti as antisocial seems to coincide with
graffiti being seen as something subversive, a little bit naughty,
something to clutch your pearls over. It also coincides with people
becoming more anonymous in how they choose to communicate with a
wider, unknown and unknowing world.
Yet still, graffiti is created, by & for people. Still people find
that texts, emails, blogs, forums, social media as a whole, is not
enough to say what matters to them, not if it can be traced back to
the author, if it leaves any kind of footprint that can be followed.
And that's even without considering the age old method of one person
making noises out of their mouth and those sound waves being received
into the pink and shell like area of another. Graffiti still retains
the honour of hiding its face from the world whilst shouting at it. Like a snooker player plotting the trajectory of a ball at The
Crucible, the end result is what matters, not who holds the cue.
Those who still leave these marks have told us what matters to them.
We don't always have to know their name to understand their message.
'I have given you my
soul; leave me my name!'
(yes,
congratulations if you also had to study The Crucible at one point).
She's not though. She
is very definitely not my friend. She is the Megabitch to my
Snotface, a Snotface without a Drop Dead Fred to lighten things. The
Megabitch who just won't shut up.
Solitude the one
thing that I really miss.
And it is. Because
she's always there, the black dog, the Megabitch, that persistent,
insistent voice just slightly behind me, growling poison into my ear
that becomes intolerable and impossible to ignore.
Guess my life is a
compromise.
Which is why she's here
again, the hound. I don't feel in control of anything, so I've let
the leash slip, and now she's running circles around me, making me
doubt myself, every thought, word, deed. I can't step forward because
I'm scared she'll trip me up as she runs so freely.
There's a black dog
on my shoulder again
I'm playing with it
but it's gone to my head.
Not much seems to be
helping. I can throw a stick as far as I can humanly hurl anything,
but she always comes back to play some more, she never tires of this
game even after all of these years. If I get the chance, I'll chuck
her a treat or two, and then run REALLY fast in the opposite
direction, but...
Like Carlito's Way
there are no exit signs.
And the Megabitch is
there with me again, a faithful frenemy, whose loyalty I get so tired
of running away from that I stop and just give in to whatever
rough-housing she feels like inflicting.
Freeze me there
until I'm numb.
And that is what I
become. Whilst living in a constant state of fluttery, panicky
anxiety, I lose all motivation. I just stop. Everything grinds to a
standstill. I get nothing done, there is no maintenance carried out,
and I crumble, internally at first, before the cracks start to appear
on the exterior, as the Megabitch continues to run amok, chasing
cats, squatting everywhere, moulting and generally being a pain. And
I don't want to talk about it or look at it.
My mouth is so dry,
My eyes are shut
tight
Because maybe if I
don't acknowledge her, she'll go away and find some other sap of an
owner who'll indulge her needly nuzzling, and I'll be left in peace.
If I don't look, she's not real. She is, though.
Black dog is coming
tonight.
She's always there,
really, but the nights are the worst. That's when I give in to her,
when she's too strong for this wee short arse to control. The
Megabitch stalks me all day, but it's night time when she pounces and
makes me entertain her, over and over again with the same old games.
Regret, jealousy, paranoia, guilt, fear, self-loathing, confusion,
sadness, anger, all her favourite toys and treats, that will keep her
happy as I sink lower into myself, wondering why other people don't
have this bloody black dog to take up so much of their time, or if
they do, they at least have it better trained than I do. That
constant feeling of not being good enough, not skilled or talented
enough, not being funny, or clever, or interesting, that everyone
else is better, worthier, more important, more cared about, so they
don't have to put up with their only companion being the black dog.
My dilemma, but not
my choice.
It isn't. I don't have
a choice in when she's going to reappear. I might be able to give her
the slip for a few days, weeks, months, even, but like the bloodhound
she is, she will always track me down and pin me to the floor. I
don't know what to do or how to do it, but I'm faced with something
that I can't control or influence, still less call to heel.
Winston Churchill,
can you hear my voice?
Probably not, because
he died before I was born, but he understood the black dog, he knew
how it feels to be the unwitting and unwilling host to the
Megabitch. How things that should be simple become overwhelming and
insurmountable.
Melodrama there in
my kitchen sink.
To give you some idea,
my kitchen sink has been blocked for over three weeks. I've tried to
sort it out repeatedly. Nothing's worked. I could – should – call
out the council to sort it out. But I can't. I physically can't. The
black dog is splashing about in my kitchen, having a great time
whilst I wobbly carry the washing up water upstairs to empty into the
bath. Because I don't want people in my house. I'm scared they will
judge me, accuse me, blame me, because the Megabitch is so out of
control that it's embarrassing.
Double vision the
way it is.
And it is double
vision. I seem to see things as the Megabitch does, twisted and
confused, everything in an altered state, always with the worst
possible interpretation on events and actions, always the negative
to everyone else's Instagram. Her eyes become my eyes, misted with
self-pity and her unbearable weight on my back. But the thing is, I'm
still here too. I still see (in a screwed up, squinting fashion) who
and what I am, the stupid things I say and do under the pressure of
her, and I tell myself 'it's not me, it's HER' but I can't stay
clear-sighted enough to prevent her from behaving the way she does
and dragging me down with her as she basks in the mud. And I know
she's wrong with what she says, but she barks too loudly and
distractingly. She needs to be rehomed.
Am I coming home to
you again?
NO, but yes, but no.
She's still living here, but it's just not suitable any longer. My
circumstances have changed, I don't have the right kind of house, let
alone a garden, and I can't trust her around The Blondies. I can't
afford to keep her.
Or am I stupid just
by design?
See? That's her yapping
away again. I may have some fairly fundamental flaws in both my
personality and brain chemistry, but I'm not stupid, I'm not dense,
I'm not 'a wee bit dumb'. I do, just about have enough insight into
what is happening to me, and how I can try to escape it. That's the
worst part, I am not what she tells me I am, but whilst I host her, I
behave in ways that make me seem as awful as she tells me I am. Deep
down, I'm not.
Does it matter if
you really ever know?
Yeah, it does. It does
matter that I keep telling myself I'm better than her. It does matter
to me that I remember that when she's bounding about. It does matter
to me that I try and stop her from pushing me into these awful
self-destructive figures of eight, where the only tail being chased is mine. It does matter to me that I don't
let her win, because I am better, and I've beaten her before. It does
matter, because I'm the only one fighting this, and because I can't
rely on anyone else to tell me, and being a responsible dog owner,
it's up to me to try and keep her under control. Except...
This black dog is
out of control.
Too fucking right mate.
And whilst I am going to try and take her to obedience and agility
classes to exercise her, eventually, I'm going to have to exorcise
her. She has me exhausted and angry, tearful without crying,
irrational and erratic, and I'm done with her. The Megabitch,
snuggling up to me and telling me she's my friend, briefly seeming
like she'd be good for me, only to turn and snap, sinking her teeth
down to my bones. I have to shake her off, my shadow, my shade, my
dark side, my black dog. She's not a pet, she's a parasite, eating
away at me and hollowing me out, destroying the foundations of things
I am trying to do. New beginnings, fresh starts, something I can call
my own, that only I can do, and be proud of, instead of being
unseemly, an embarrassment, a space of silence with no words, no
contributions, just an apathetic emptiness of a black dog that
overwhelms me, as her noise and frolics press me down into the waves.
I am not the black dog.
She is not me. She is just my shadow, dogging my heels. But I will
put my boots on and kick her arse, and keep kicking it until she's
gone. I might lose the odd battle, but I will win the war. She is not
my friend, she is the Megabitch, and she might make me a bit
snotfaced at times. But I will write the fuck out of her. She can
howl all she wants, but I will roar the black dog down.
And just to add, as a PS... I'm ok, so don't worry about me. If I wasn't ok, this would have just stayed in the drafts folder, and never made it out to the wider world. The fact that I have kicked my arse into gear enough to blog is a good sign, promise. Even if it doesn't make for the most fun reading. It means the Megabitch is at least back on the lead again.
I cried the other night. That’s nothing especially out of the
ordinary. I cry a lot. But just over a week ago was a bit special. My
anniversary of adding yet another burden to an overpopulated planet that
urgently needs a Malthusian style cull in order to maintain the fragility of
life and ecosystems in order to survive, still less to thrive. Or, to put it
slightly more cheerily, it was The Boy’s 13th birthday.
My Precious First Born is now a teenager. I can’t pretend I
wasn’t listening, head tilted and ear cocked as 06:59 ticked over to 07:00 to
see if The Curse of Kevin would kick in and my golden-fluffy haired moppet
would suddenly transform into a lank, greasy, groaning pile of BO, acne, and
hormones, swearing and seemingly having no control over how his arms swung. The
Fear was real indeed.
In the event, the minute passed without incident, other than
realising that for the first time ever in his life he’d set an alarm on his
phone to make sure he was awake for the
momentous notification that he’d officially passed from childhood to the
terrible teens. Also, for the first time since he started school, a weekday
morning saw him sitting up in bed when I went in to his room.
Beautiful Boy. Far more beautiful now that he ever was as a
baby, although of course to me he was the cause of infinite gaze, admiring the delicate
perfection of his every millimetre. Growing more beautiful by the day, seeing
those features, so dear to me, develop and unfurl as he’s grown. That face,
those eyes, those hands that have held mine, those feet that have walked beside
mine for so long, and are bigger than mine now. The reassuring, solid comfort
of his hugs, the way he still leans his head against my arm for comfort. I’m
not sure how much longer that can last for now, because he’s barely an inch
shorter than me. So for now that’s still something to treasure, as long it is
there, as long as it’s a reminder that he’s my boy.
A lifetime ago, or so it seems, I wrote about him growing
up, and growing away from me. That was my fear. That he would slip through my
fingers and I wouldn’t be able to hold onto him, that I would lose him as he
flourished. It seems odd to remember
that now. Because that’s not how it’s happened. Even allowing for the upheaval
and changes in our lives, that’s not how things have become. It could so easily have been the case, it
would have been so easy to make different decisions that placed barriers
between us and meant that I didn’t spend the first ten minutes of his 13th
birthday giggling and cuddling, and the two of us sharing silly memories and
words of happiness.
It was a moment, just a moment, the same as millions of
moments that we have shared between us since the first time I saw his face. The
same as the moments when I’ve shouted, or he had a tantrum, or I changed his nappy,
or cooked a dinner he didn’t like, or walked him to school, or read him a
story, or made him groan with a terrible joke, or told him off, or cried with
pride over him, or had to listen in excruciating detail to something about
Pokemon. It was just another moment in the journey from infant to adult, with
me as a witness to his every triumph and disaster, every failure and
accomplishment. But those moments count, because each and every one adds up to
a life. A life I am privileged to share and know.
And he hasn’t changed, not really. He is still that same
affectionate, loving, considerate, honest, tactile and thoughtful little person
I remember from the lunchtime he asked ‘Why doesn’t Mummy fucking need this at
the moment?’ I have no doubt that the next few years will be more trying than
those than preceded them. But those times too will eventually be no more than
moments either.
And that is why I cried, then (bit choked right now, tbh).
All of those moments, hard, difficult, fun, loving, all of those moments brought me to the point where I looked
through his bedroom door to see him, my newly teenaged son sleeping as he always
has, in a state of utter abandonment, arms above his head, and I had my own
moment, like a slideshow on fast forward, seeing all of those moments together
condensed, concentrated, compacted, all of those precious, countless, forgotten
but unforgettable moments that have now added up to teenage years. Seeing it
all unfiltered, that life I could not be without, and those moments that have
made it this way.
Happy birthday for the other day, my beautiful boy. You are
what keeps me honest, because you don’t know any other way to be. You make me
brave, because you always are, and you never pretend not to be scared. You
remind me to be kind, because that’s all you know. You never hurt, because I
love you. You make me laugh, you make me proud, you make me cry, because I am
an embarrassing mum who threatens you with public displays of affection. I
could not ask for any more from you than just years more of moments together.
You and me, Bee. I’ve
learnt more from you than I could ever teach you. Happy Bee Day – you brightened
my northern sky more than I could ever have known, and you make me want to be
the best I can, for you. I love you OBeeWanWookieBee. You are, and always have
been, as everyone tells me ‘such a lovely boy, he really is’. Please don’t turn into a little
shit now though. Fingertips, matey boy. Fingertips, always xx