Sunday 6 January 2013

TRANSITIONAL CRY OF PANIC 2012/2013 2/2



another year gone then, weekends and sudden days rolled pinging into a rubber-band ball and binned in an anxious desk wipe.  and of course i think fucks sake! and jesus balls! and all that - a wailing that’s rising like snakes and flapping like beached tuna. another Christmas slides into the bin – no mistletoe at the nurses stations again.

where’s it go?
wot age am i?
fuuuuuuuuck . . !

still i feel like i blinked in 1980 and appeared in the future tumultuous as any time but grim now with repetition and a learning curve straightened and flat-lined to a dead endless bleep.

the panic bursts like stars on the medicine wall and there’s no beautiful booze any longer to fuel the longing and the holes and the eclipse inside - so i sit in my writing cave where the cables twist like the tube map and the washing dries and smells almost fresh and the cat pays infrequent visit to his scratching pole, pins me insignificant with wide green eyes, and took stock in words; i wandered the year chewing a pen lid and called it


I PUT A NUMBER IN MY PHONE 

wet summer night
in a wedge-shape London pub of peers hot fruit and wild words
where
in California shades Buckowski’s friend was drunk on the cab corner in pitch dark rain. 
i spoke to her. 
she’s too drunk to ever remember and her factory husband was too dull.
i encountered my elusive publisher travelling on trains holding an old-time case with books to sell stacked against the patterns inside. 
like a snake oil peddler out of a western
but
with true goods bound in beige. 
and
the happiest artist i ever met drew covers for the geisha reading aloud on the small corner stage. 
the artist knows secrets that twitch her lips to small smiles
and sat calm and composed
still as Buddha like i want to.
and
i had a coffee shop liaison with a deep-cover Hungarian spy. 
i infiltrated a secret society in a church side-room. 
i passed as one of them said all the right words
and took secrets out of there and put a new number in my phone.
and
i ran to Bambi's sick bed with lattes whenever i could and took strength from the strength i felt in there
with the funny dark truths and the famous babies
and all the alarms ringing for heaven were ignored.
her head smooth as chocolate and soft as bunnies. 
her model cheeks sharp sculpted like Vulcan razors.
and i put her new number in my phone.
and
i endured black times in a lighter light. 
rode its white-noise dragon over the empty mountains of nothing
and blew lettuce smoke out over its shadows as ritual that’s mine.  
i called the hiding nights just that.
and
i ate chestnuts with a roast in a happy house of carnival girls where Christmas was Christmas and new memories welcome. 
i smelt everyone’s wine in the glass like it was the perfume of life.
and
the black princess in the humble crown confided her troubles to me in careful tones and deliberate words.  
my heart swelled with pride.  
i fed her ice and gum and in-tray fruit.
and
i consumed Italian noir and Chester’s Harlem series and hallucinatory pulp and developed discalculus with calendars and easy sums.
i started meek meditation and did 25 pull ups in selective black dawns while my short term memory
failed
and failed
and failed. 
and
i ran the cold tide of madness out in the drizzle of the night park mud.
and
i covered the mirrors in a feng shui disguise sure i didn’t know who was in there anyway
and i watched like a detective for the signs of collusion and crime in my tight accelerator mind.
i learnt about story writing in a class of four by the sea. 
i wrote half a good story
and
i put a number in my phone.
i SAW a future and i remember that i did on all the days i can’t. 
i had crazy earth girth awareness like acid connections
and bottomed out in earthy depths of voodoo
to climb back into myself in the distant daylight of lunch.
and
i SHARED in therapy groups and looked in all the bright eyes seeing the dust in the creases and the ants in the minds. 
we became a family then we all went away.
and
i took seminars on stress in the summer parks warm grass and paths by rebuilt Dutch cottages
and i wrote about the troubled and drugged and needing faces in the hot evening crowd.
i met a singer auditioning at the opera house. 
she hates housework like hell has wit sharper than mine
and i missed getting her number for my phone.
and
i stayed consistent with the meds and curfew and abstinence
and
became inconsistent with the pain killers and the dishes and the dusting.
i ate in the quiet cafe that filled with crims with big houses on the hill with big blank panes of huge glass for the marsh estuary views.
they eat fried eggs and swear on phones while Barbie wives tot in and out to the black Chelsea tractors and football muddy pedestal children.
and
i held the pet’s small feet. 
they grew in importance till he stopped living on the unit tops and strode round the bungalow like a decadent king.
and
i could only write in jagged opus 
my voice lost with the bottle i re-learnt in hiccups and hot farts and stumble stops and starts with long and often breaks for cheese and damiana.
and
in the hospital smokers rat run  
an era ended
and i found i couldn’t cry when i had to say a goodbye . . .


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