This braided poem was assembled after reading a couple of posts at Sonia Dogra’s blog, borrowing the first line and then weaving together the lyrics from Nomeansno’s ‘It’s Catching Up’, with an imagined meeting with an old friend both now and in the past. Also shared with Poetic Adventures
We bring with us the weight of others Living rent-free in our heads
– Have you heard the news? – The dead walk
We’ll meet in my room again
How to disconnect from the connected?
A sweet, dusty smell of cigarette ash A comfortable haze, a bitter beer taste
– Do you hear that sound? – Like fingers scratching underground
We’ll drive our parents crazy
The burdens of reality are distraction Voices wild and unnerving
– Do you hear that sound? – That slamming door
Put on another record to soothe the pain
My only friend, history made us enemies It only felt like forever
– I’ve fought it all my life – I can’t fight it anymore
We carry a deep nostalgia for last week
Here again, drawn to that sound Everything changed, and nothing too
So much for the myths we made Throwing rocks at the running police Looking out from the tenth-floor flat And dreaming of release
The tunes were busting on the stereo And cigarette smoke filled the room Bass was shaking the floor below They were banging with a broom
Nothing to do and nowhere to go We made fists and painted shirts Promised ourselves we’d never stop No matter how much it hurts
Time went on and the myths grew large So much, they hung around our necks Weighed down with hypocrisy Until the truth could no longer flex
The tragedy of being human is that even when we are doing our best to be kind and compassionate, sometimes we still hurt and get hurt by others. In moments like this, I believe that compassion becomes a matter of faith: Choosing to believe in our own innate goodness, even when others refuse to see it; and choosing to believe in the goodness of others, even when they are refusing to show it.
Kai Cheng Thom
Today I’m feeling: Relaxed and happy Today I’m grateful for: Being able to accompany Amy via video call as she makes her drunken way from the city to her home in the early hours. The best thing about today was: Talking to Jochen for a two-and-a-half-hour catch-up on things. It felt very comfortable and natural even though we haven’t talked except via messages for more than a year. We have a common understanding born from our musical backgrounds despite having variations in taste. We get it. Jochen is one of my tribe. Daily thought Do you remember a time you let something external bother you too much? Yes, too many times, unfortunately. Sometimes the situation feels like it can’t be escaped due to financial responsibility and risk for example quitting a job to get away from a shitty manager. In cases like that, it feels like having no control and I couldn’t be brave enough to get away. Perhaps ego also plays a part and wanting to be right to the detriment of my own health. Looking back it is easier to see that I could have understood the situation better and concentrated on the things that I could control rather than get upset about the things I couldn’t. Just thinking about some of those situations now though still winds me up so I wonder if I could behave better if it happened again. I’m weak and in denial. Maybe one day I’ll get it! Write a thank you letter to someone you love. Well, I didn’t do this specifically but I did get a burst of energy today writing emails about vinyl production and south-east Asian touring possibilities. Talking with Jochen for a couple of hours sort of fills this criterion too. I don’t consider myself to have many good friends but I love those that I do have and that includes Jochen. He’s one of the good ones.
I took this picture because I was surprised to see this little fella just sitting here camouflaged in the early evening. Better than finding them dried up under the sofa!
Hello, my old friend, where have we been? I travelled around the world to see the things I’ve seen The past is a cloaked memory yet difficult to forget Here we are again with little time to be upset
All the hopes and dreams we shared, left along the way Stuck in a nine-to-five, kids and rent to pay Do we recognise each other with the words we are using? No longer in need to win if one of us is losing
Gratitude Journal
I am so happy and grateful for the beautiful temperatures in the evening and morning. What a wonder this earth is.
When I got home yesterday, Tangmo slowly made his way over from his house. He looked so sad and we comforted him and petted him as he lay down on his side, not understanding himself what was wrong with him. Occasionally, he would raise a paw, like a request, ‘Please help me’. Amy shed many tears and we can’t help but share his sadness.
Yesterday I felt inspired to start writing about my 1979 diary entries (see link below) but today I feel tired in my brain. Perhaps I should eat some lunch and guzzle another coffee and come back to it.
I’m not even sure why I’m at school at the moment. We have nothing to do and I avoid people as much as possible, scared that they will give me something to do. I sit in my classroom just reading and writing.
My 30 day abs challenge got more difficult but I’m getting through it each time. I think that is tiring me out, though I can say that it also makes me feel good. Can this old body go for another 100 years?
Thankfully, I didn’t drink much last night so woke up early and started doing a few things and the day has ended up quite well. A few ideas for more things I’d like to do this year. Slowly, my man cave is getting in order.
Gratitude Journal
I am so happy and grateful to my old friends, who are busy now, as we all are, but haven’t forgotten about me. I won’t forget about them either.
Weight: 80.5kg Resting heart rate: 47
My friend Rosie, in Sydney, posted on facebook an offer to draw/paint pictures to send to friends and so I picked Jochen (Hinterlandt), Kyaw Kyaw (Rebel Riot) and Lachlan (Art As Catharsis). I can’t recall if I arranged for her to send out the actual pictures too but they all received them digitally around this time. A great philanthropic idea for sure and I was very happy to take Rosie up on her offer.
To-do list
Dye hair.
Sort more old writing and things in room.
Next Thai video and Drops.
Find something for teaching KT.
Wix forum options.
Did it list
Read 3 chapters.
Got up early.
Dyed my hair.
Recorded another TCRAH.
Sorted through old writing and letters.
Streamlined more online processes.
Installed forum options to WIX – looks achievable to do what I wish.
Heard some great new music.
Posted Rosie’s pictures to Jochen, Lachlan and Kyaw Kyaw.
Watched next Thai video and Drops x2.
Had long lazy buffet lunch with Amy.
Reacted calmly when discussing having to go to Chiang Mai on Sunday.
It was good to get up early and take advantage of the day. I’m glad I didn’t drink too much last night and though I did;t hang out much with everyone celebrating NYE I felt contented reading comics by myself. I have to go to Chiang Mai next Friday to apply for my new passport and thinking about the best plan for going and coming back. This afternoon we heard that Ting’s mum had died today and we discussed about going to Chiang Mai for the funeral. We will have to go and come back on Sunday. it’s not optimal but as Ting took the trouble to come to my mum’s funeral, it is the best thing for me to do. Ting has to fly all the way from the UK.
You may not wake up tomorrow.
What did I do well today? What could I have done better? – where was my self-control tested? What will I do tomorrow? How can I improve? – what have I learned that will help me tomorrow? Savour a memory from the past.
I’m shattered, we’ve been at Reading Music Festival for the last four days. Tenting down in the dust and dirt, eating half cooked veggie burgers in a sea of tin cans and plastic food containers as a thousand people walk by you in the blink of an eye, on their way to getting pissed at eight in the morning or coming down off the previous night’s high.
Crusty scroungers push a pram full of puppies in search of free amber nectar or tar of any sort. A hundred young girls queued for the seven or eight toilets, from six in the morning, daring each other to go in the one second from the end. People slept where they fell and some fell in the bushes where people pissed. Some never slept and others slept through while their favourite band was playing.
In the arena was a comedy tent, the Melody Maker tent and the main stage and you’d be lucky if you could get anywhere near any of them. Well, we did get to see Sebadoh’s guitar breaking set which was about the most exciting thing all weekend. In fact time did seem to drag at certain points but we were kind of happy that we had nothing to do except drink and relax, and occasionally running across to the record fair to the nice clean toilets.
First thing to do when camping with 50,000 other people must find a decent toilet which other people don’t know about. Most people had to pay a pound to go in the record fair but we just slipped in each time claiming to work there. Of course, we had plenty of friends in there, Simon, Rich, Baz, Gaz, Mark, John and his wife; we even got roped in to do Simon’s stall for part of Saturday morning.
Anyway, on the campsite we came up with Rob, Rich, PJ and Warren, who none of us knew and didn’t hang around that much. On Sunday, joined by Chrissy, Sharon, Selena, John, Tina and Rob who out drank us as we slept through their insane partying; I wish we could’ve stayed awake on that last night but we’d just had enough by then.
We eventually left on Monday morning after a very nice man helped us get the car started. A beautiful bath and an hours sleep saw us into the evening but we exhausted of all energies and just kind of lazed on into bed, Broni reading me love poems as I drifted off once again into unconsciousness.
And then today is still slow as we clean up the house in preparation for David and Louise coming down soon and then Kerry’s return tomorrow. Things are starting to seem much bigger now as we have only four weeks to go before I leave – it’s scary. Yeah, it’s scary, kind of huge.
I was sat in PJ’s campervan drunk and stoned and it hit. These guys here, I’m going to miss them. Not so easy to just ring up and gossip, and I’ll miss out on the tiny stories, the little things that help you understand what people are like, the details, you know the bits between the lines. When you communicate over a great distance you feel like you just want to mention the really important things, big things, but I’ll be wishing to hear the other things too.
Jeez, it’s a strange and wondrous world. What more can happen to a man in the mere space of one week? Now seven days since last entry and I told of possibilities of fatherhood! Well!
In chronological order, Broni was into the forty days and I’d decided this was it so we came up with all sorts of wonderfully colourful names such as Moonbeast Bumflap Snot Nose but settled with Bubka Blue, Bubka being a member of that great band Deep Turtle, though I thought we’d better find out if the name Bubka had a meaning (like it could mean ‘man who milks cows’, not much of a name for a girl!)
Broni was in particularly nasty moods and I acted with little patience on occasion but how easy I forget. Her cousin Piers was traversing cross country in search of garments for his trip to Pakistan though he had no luck! He popped in for an overnight stay and we took him to the Piccolo Mondo for our favourite pizza and then to the movies.
While in the bar pre-hand Broni took off to the toilets and I chatted with Piers about jazz music – his forte! At last, someone who could advise me on jazz. When Broni came back we headed towards celluloid screens and she told me she’d started bleeding. Hmm.
We watched the film, Mrs Doubtfire, utter crap American trash, unconvincing performances and story with dubious moral ending (what bollocks thought I) and set off home where I talked to Piers with Broni quiet and pondering. Piers went out to pick up his sleeping kit from his car and me and my baby had a misunderstanding which led to tears. She told me this could be her period or worse still, a miscarriage. I had neglected her in favour of looking after our guest and did feel upset. She retired as I put Piers to bed with some John Zorn which I don’t think he was too keen on!
When I eventually came upstairs I found Bronwyn in tears and we comforted each other but I could not stem the flow and I had to let go too feeling the unbelievable sadness emanating from her soul. But I felt that this wasn’t a miscarriage and that she was late due to stress at work and from moving house. On the Monday we went to the doctor who indicated that this was more likely. I hope so too. I’m comforted in the fact that I could be prepared for the birth and raising of my children someday (soon).
On the Monday afternoon, we watched a great movie called Fried Green Tomatoes which I must confess brought a tear to my eye (and many to Broni’s). Tuesday, Broni dropped me in Poole on her way to work in Swanage, (with renewed ideas about causing herself less stress – how many times have I told her to cut down on her workload!) where I waited for the library to open.
With horrible coffee and sandwich I watched the world on its way to work and when in library looked at every single book before settling down to read the first part of Vanity of Doulouz (Kerouac again, friends!), what a great story it was too, dealing with his teenage years and commenting, even back then, on the horrendous advancement of car and it’s associated industry, plus noticing how people seem to saunter everywhere in no particular hurry (ie on their way to the car). It was like the car had transformed everyone into strangely different people without them knowing and just accepting it. There is much debate these days on the future of transport and despite cars doubling on the roads every few years, it looks to be a wasted industry. How I wish we could do away with them. I have been walking to and from Poole all week and it is such a good feeling but then I have the time at the moment. Most normal days I would not, such a trap.
Well, after that I went to the physio at the hospital, a nice young lady, name of Kate, who prodded by bones, pulled and twisted, unsure of my problem. I sat seven minutes on a machine that buzzed electricity into me, supposedly to confuse my brain that there was no pain there. However, that afternoon was the most painful it had been!
Evening passed quiet but I had a fitful sleep complaining of stomach ache and sure enough, I puked up a mouthful in the morning after Broni went to work. I went back to sleep and was awoke by Broni’s phone call at around 10. Straight after I puked up the rest of last night’s tea, grape skins and all! Feeling better I went back to bed and was next awake at twenty to two! I watched a Jacke Chan movie with John and went back to bed again so tired was I.
Broni cared for me the rest of the evening and we soon fell asleep. Long gone are the days of wakeness til two in the morning playing with each other under silky sheets, we work so hard and relax little at this stage but I’m eager to tidy things up here for a big relax in Oz when I get there. I hope my baby can stand it.
And finally, today, Broni once again dropped me into Poole after the most ridiculous argument we had about slices of bread! I have to tell you, dear reader, here and now I talk of arguments often but our life together is not so, we live in bliss and in love and our affection grows stronger every day. Each argument is a lesson – but sometimes us pupils are unwilling to learn.
In the book I’m reading, Bukowski tells he enjoys a women’s company at first but soon finds her eccentricities annoying and becomes tired of her but he has little hope of lasting relationships and is unable to deal with problems rationally. We know we can and our real care for each other will overcome any problems that may arise, never once have I considered walking away from the beautiful woman with whom I now share my life, not for anyone else, not for anything else, what possible reason could there be?
I waited around Poole before my physio appointment drinking that shitty coffee again, this time reading Neal Cassady’s autobiography, more good reading. Physio advised I may have a problem in one joint which leads to all the other problems so sent me to pick up a brace from upstairs. On my way out I met long ago buddy Jeremy, whose pictures me and Broni were looking at only last week! Last time I saw him was about five years ago and I didn’t really want to talk to him and I felt a bit uncomfortable today. I told him of my plans but he didn’t seem particularly interested so I let him talk about himself. He’s been married and divorced after three months, has a child with Vanessa H (from old school days even I remember, short blonde hair) but is living with another girl from Colehill who he was with, arm a-bandaged. And his story depressed me for we were such good friends and now he seems to have a madness that seems to affect so many people. He told of fights and people coming to his house with baseball bats (this is how her arm was broke!) in search of his blood! Surely this is madness? Or mere childishness and oneupmanship. “I’m better than you”.
I feel like I have grown up but not grown old, these people seem to want to recreate their past unhappiness from childhood or teenage years, are they doomed, will they ever see their glory? Life is so rich and varied, yet it is easy to get bogged down in it all. I hope one day to look back on these words and be happy that I got myself out of that bog and stayed out of it!
Jeremy still spoke with the humour of old and I liked that but I think he lost his way with women somewhere, showing none of them much respect that I could see. I wonder if he felt self-conscious telling me all this? I think maybe when we were friends he looked up to me and often took my advice on things and telling me all this he could sense my disapproval? It was a strange encounter and to be honest I’d prefer not to meet him again. When I talk about the madness, I wonder what it is that gets into people. Everyone seems to bitter and resentful. Jeremy’s smiles were unconvincing of happiness. Old Mark B has the same madness, aimless in life and hateful towards women and often others, for no reason what so ever. Don’t they understand that respect has to be earned, both ways? Maybe their lives would be happier with that kind of knowledge but with increasing age seems to come a closing of mind. Fatty I think too, is affected by it. Maybe I’m resented for being optimistic and hopeful for my future, I wish (I really do) that everyone could too.
Well, all this thought got put on paper, I’m glad. Now I think I’ll walk out somewhere and write some poetry, it is a beautiful sunny day and my mind is alive once again with a million zillion thoughts.