The Spirit Of A Second Thought – 24th December 2025

the unsent letter

a warrior armed with raw feeling
striking without thought
where a diplomat may be kneeling
no battles need to be fought

bearing a truth

those absolutes need crossing out
refined with a quiet ‘perhaps’
because all truth contains an element of doubt
with their wordy traps

better left to time

let the hand hover and pause
momentum is difficult to halt
the desire to retract one’s claws
gets framed as being one’s fault

Shared with Poetic Bloomings #573 – spirit

Landline – 23rd December 2025

“Do not touch me…”

“Seriously,” I said.
I’m not just the next generation:
I’m a real survivor.

Hard as old bread.

Quicker than grandma’s slippers
thrown with boomerang precision. 

At the age of five, I could already “read”
my mother’s mood to avoid collision;

At seven, I had a set of keys
and instructions: 

“You can find food in the fridge.”
And, from there, were all deductions.



At nine, I was my own chef,
discovering my own taste.

I knew what I liked, what I was
and exactly the future I faced.



Spending days outside, without a phone, 

with just a well-planned route: 

the hill, the river, returning home at night, 

perhaps minus one mud-stuck boot.

Real maps made of these small battles

that I survived. 

Scratches treated with saliva
and leaves, medicines contrived.


If it hurt, we just laughed
and sought distraction from the pain,
because further adventures beckoned
so there was no reason to complain.

Eating bread with sugar on top,
drinking from the garden hose;

microbiomes that yoghurt would dream of.
Allergies? What are those?



I know fifteen tricks to remove stains 

from grass, fat, blood or ink, 

because we only had one set of clothes
and wore them til they’d stink.



Transistor radios, black and white TV,

gramophones, vinyl and cassettes,

carrying CDs and a Discman,
singing songs no one forgets.



Tightening tapes with a pencil
means little to an MP3

soon with a driver’s license,
there was a wider world to see.

Travelling the country in a rusty old car, 

without hotels, air conditioning or GPS,

just with a tatty, discoloured car atlas

and an old beer mat with a barely legible address

Always arriving safely, 

maybe late, but with a smile. 

The last generation to live without the internet,
and revolution was all about style.

I had no backup batteries, 

or worries of a dead phone. 

The landline hung on the hallway wall,
unanswered if there was no one home.

Believing that any missed calls meant:
“I’m fine, I’ll call you back.”
I read books while I was waiting
or fixed myself a sneaky snack.

I fixed everything with tape or a clip;
I rarely bought anything new.

With only one TV channel to watch
There was always something else to do.



Made of “emotional asbestos,”
flowing easily from the back of the duck.
With the reflexes of an urban ninja
They were the times of making my own luck.

Carrying a menthol candy
older than your child in my pocket. 

I survived without sunscreen and a helmet
Or seatbelts in my rocket.

Schooling without computers,
youth without multiple screens.
Encyclopaedias had all the answers
once you’d deciphered what it means.

I had to trust my instincts
and say what I thought aloud.

Now I have more memories
than you have photos in the cloud.

So “Don’t touch me,” I say again
Though I’m not sure you could anyway.

Here’s my number, call my landline
and make sure you’ve got something to say.

An epic poem for me! This one is inspired and paraphrases an article that I, frustratingly, neglected to note the origin. I’m annoyed with myself about that!
I’d also like to add that I don’t particularly agree with much of the thought within this piece. Of course, everyone reminisces about their past, their childhoods, etc, but that doesn’t make it better than now – just different. I’ve never subscribed to the ‘things were better in my day’ philosophy.
Congratulations if you read this poem to the end! I know that I might not have!

Hand In Hand – 21st December 2025

https://www.zameen.com/blog/river-jhelum-pakistan-facts-significance-edited.html

Very much inspired and paraphrased from this delicious article at Think BRICS

As dawn breaks over the snow-capped Pir Panjal mountains,
the Jhelum still in shadow;

two families, divided by the flowing glacial waters
and a simple line on a map,
dangle their clay pots to the nurturing artery.

Far away, the suited make their big decisions;
here, there are only silent prayers


~ may you never run dry
~ may you never become a sword

A winding course through the Kashmir Valley
criss-crossing metaphorical lines of control;

more important than war and upheaval,
a shared humanity in need ignores the partitions.

As shifting monsoon seasons and melting ice
counter past famines with floods,

a civil society builds its trust in amity.

At The End Of Another Busy Day – 20th December 2025

In a quiet, wood-panelled den,
there’s a low fire
crackling in the hearth.
Two leather armchairs

face the flames.
Don and Ben sit

with a small glass
of amber sherry each.

You know, Ben,
a lot of fireplaces….
I’ve known the best of them.
But this…
this one has a good heart to it.

There is a soul in a real fire.
Something

a manufactured flame
can never learn.

Right, exactly.
The phoney ones
spit and hiss.
No respect for the burn.
This wood here…
it’s loyal.
Like good oak.
I have a place,
incredible place,
where the oak burns
like slow gold.

My grandfather’s house
smelled of olive wood.
Old, gnarled branches

that remembered the sun.
The scent was like smoke

and memory mixed.

(Taking a slow sip.)
This sherry…
there’s a story in it.
Some sherries are just vinegar
wearing a fancy coat.
This one speaks up.
You can taste the years.

Spanish, I think, Don.
It has a quiet voice.
A nutty, whispering finish.

Whispering—I like that.
Good phrase.
It doesn’t shout.
It just… sits there,
being excellent.

A log settles,
sending up a shower of embers
that spin and fade.

There.
That little collapse.
When I was young,
I believed each spark
was a tiny story ending.

I like a clean end.
Not a messy one.
Wind, for instance,
is messy.
Whistling through cracks,
no discipline.
A fire like this…
it’s all agreement.
Everything burns on purpose.

Contained, but alive.
There is a dignity in that.

Dignity. Sure.
Look at that flame,
curling up
like it owns the air.
And maybe it does.

It asks for nothing.
Not even our attention.

(Nods, swirling
the last gold
in his glass.)
That’s the real thing.
No asking.
Just being.
We’ll do this again.
With my oak.
Oak that knows
how to hold a flame.

I would like to taste that smoke.

They fall quiet,
two old men
wrapped in warmth
and amber light,
speaking of everything
and nothing
as the fire hums
its slow,
familiar hymn.

Obsolete Wonder – 19th December 2025

Shared with W3 #190 – quoting Wordsworth*

The world clicks by in screens of graphic gain,
each hour refined for either profit, loss, or trend.
Praising the sharpest tools ever made to explain,
yet wondering why these days refuse to bend.

I walk beneath the wires and silent trees
and feel a hunger numbers cannot feed.
Our minds seem full of malaise and disease,
which is surely something none of us need.

I’d trade this clever age, so sure it’s new,
to be a Pagan suckled in a creed outworn*,
to hear a god breathe as the wind blows through,
and see the ocean settle for a new dawn.

These times, obsolete is the wonder, not belief;
The myth awakes where certainty may sleep.

You Can’t See Me When I Close My Eyes – 17th December 2025

Shared with dVerse Quadrille #238 – hibernate.
The initial line is taken from Jae Rose’s poem ‘Coax’.

It is hard to
live fully above ground.

The nail that sticks
up gets hammered down.

Protected in silent procrastination
like a seasonal hibernation,
sleeping through until cessation.


When things settle down
I’ll return once more,
But until then, I’m
waiting for the thaw.

Belly Up – 16th December 2025

The belly up dog
rolls in recognition;

celebrating the leash,
revelling in submission.

In a democratic house,

its institutions sing

“we are free” until
it doesn’t mean anything.

The belly up dog

doesn’t need to be told

he’s free to roam

the lonely nights of cold.

Inspired by a couple of quotes:

we now live in an era when the slaves celebrate their slavery.

Nick Tosches


Democracy is a con game. It’s a word invented to placate people to make them accept a given institution. All institutions sing, ‘We are free.’ The minute you hear ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy’, watch out because in a truly free nation, no one has to tell you you’re free.


Jacque Fresco