Today I took to the ocean

Today I took to the ocean.
Some days I suck
There is no flow & everything is more effort than I can find
Yesterday was that day.
I wanted to put the board back on shore
And say for the hundredth time,
I am not a surfer
But that is not true.
I’m just a learner.

Today I took to the ocean.
I lay on the sand with my lover
He listened as I told him of something sad that sits in my bones
Old tales of love and loss
Pains that still niggle at my heart
The ways I wish the world could be different
And then
I paddled out
With him as my guide
To wash it all off.

Today I took to the ocean.
And I caught my best wave yet
Full and fast and deep
Mid ride, as I guided the board left
And bounced along its face
A guy bobbing in the ocean put out his hand
And high-fived me

Today I took to the ocean and received my very first on-wave, mid-ride, high five
And it reminded me
How beautifully full the world is
How endless the opportunities can be
And how many times I want to be a learner
Even on the days when I don’t think I could learn a single new thing.
Because there will be days you form new scars as you get rolled and scraped along the sand
And then there are days where strangers will high five you just for having a go.
And that’s more than enough for me.

Tomorrow, I will take to the ocean.

The Courage to treat me like a Woman

Since moving to the beautiful Emerald Isle, many things have become clear to me. Irish people are overwhelmingly friendly and helpful. They will point you in the right direction where they can, wish you luck and give out to you for moving to Ireland from sunny Australia (Note: I am writing this on my deck that is currently doused in summer sun). They will all ask you during the course of a day whether you can sing. If you say yes, a song will be demanded of you. You can get an excellent bottle of red wine for 7 Euros and they have a range of gluten free food that a girl like me could only have dreamt of. It’s no secret they love a drink, they love a dance and Irish Pub trad music sessions are as quintessentially Irish as any tourist or traveller could ever imagine or hope for.
All positive things.

To be honest, I am very much smitten with my new home. I’m even hearing certain idioms pop out of my mouth unannounced – I’ve said “That’ll be grand” more in the last month than in my whole life. And whilst all of these things are whimsical and lovely and certainly shouldn’t go unnoticed, it is also clear that the Irish are a political people. Telling you that Ireland is ‘great craic’ and that the music here is rife, as are the stories of Leprechauns and Faeries, shouldn’t come as a surprise to most. But telling you that today the country has a vote to change the Referendum over the issue of Abortion might. That today, the country that voted in favour of Gay Marriage first and was applauded for its ‘forwardness’, is at the tolling booths arguing over the right for women to have determination over their own sexual reproduction.

I didn’t initially plan on making any comments on this. I can’t vote here. My opinion is very strongly set in one way and if you’ve spent any time in Ireland over the last few months, you will know that the pamphleting and protesting has been unavoidable. But in reality, I figured enough people had opinions floating out there without mine being added to the mix.

I take strong issue to certain behaviours of one side of the vote. I am horrified at the propaganda and misinformation that has been allowed to be given to the public and I am worried about the impact that will have on the less educated members of the Irish public who may believe these posters to be true through no fault of their own.

To say I have a strong view here is an understatement and to say that I have had multiple, almost daily, conversations over the last month with people about it would be the truth. But to say it isn’t a complicated issue would also be remiss of me.

But still I wasn’t going to comment. Not my country, not my Constitution. But then last night on my way home, the day before the vote, the city was alive with people discussing it, handing out pamphlets, badges and having conversations. And the need to comment struck me.

For those of you who may not be across the issue, in a nutshell it is as follows. In 1983, a 67% vote by the Irish people (a Catholic nation) made abortion illegal within Ireland except within the most extreme cases. In saying that, I am as yet unconvinced that any situation would be considered extreme enough for it to be allowed. When I say it is illegal, I mean properly illegal.

Not a slap on the wrist illegal.

Jail-time illegal.

Up to 14 years imprisonment illegal.

Today, the vote is to repeal this section of the Constitution – to repeal the 8th Amendment to allow abortion within Ireland. To allow women to have abortions under medical advice, with proper counseling and support, within the confines of their own country.

Currently women are forced to travel over to the United Kingdom for this right. The term “she’s had to go to England” is now part of Irish vernacular.

At the crux of this legal position, women’s rights and an unborn child’s rights are the same. Equal. Meaning not only have women had to fight for equal rights to men for hundreds of years, now they are having to fight for their own rights against something or someone that doesn’t even exist and couldn’t exist alone outside of the womb yet. AGAIN, women aren’t being trusted with their bodies, their opinions or their lives. Again, people are arguing that abortions will just become rife through society should women be allowed to legally abort a baby at an appropriate time of a pregnancy. Looking at studies of other countries that have brought in legal abortion, such as Switzerland, we simply know this not to be true. In fact, studies have shown that women in Ireland still undergo more abortions each year than many countries who have legal abortion.

Moreso than this, is the horrifying reality that should you, as a woman, be raped and fall pregnant, there are no options for you within Ireland. Should you fall pregnant to a baby that the medical profession knows will live for no longer than a few breaths, you have no recourse but to carry that baby to full term. Similarly, should you be in a position of a birth that becomes medically complicated, saving your life over that of the fetus is legally complicated for the medical profession.

From my time in the the field of Law, it is commonly understood that the laws we hold in our society are designed to protect and provide for all members of society. May I repeat, all members of society.

So the 14 year old girl in country Ireland who has been raped by an older man must now have the baby she did not choose or she somehow has to find the funds to fly herself over to England to have an expensive medical procedure without any of the familiarities of her life? And that is her being ‘protected’ by the Irish constitution? One that was so passionately fought for. A constitution for a free state that people died for.

Look, abortion is never ideal. I think we can all agree on that. Unwanted pregnancies are never ideal. Abortion should never be taken lightly. But a pregnancy should also never be forced onto someone who cannot undertake the responsibility of a new life.

However in truth, none of that is my point today. Today I wanted to say how heartened I was by my new home. Last night as I rode through the city, I watched groups of people, young and old gathering with their ‘Repeal’ jumpers on and their badges ready to hand out. I saw young girls who would otherwise be apathetic to politics, standing with firm opinions outside government buildings with flyers. But most heartwarmingly, I saw young men, old men, fathers and brothers out on the streets having conversations about voting Yes today to repeal the 8th Amendment.

Whether I am a feminist by the terminology is of no interest or importance to me. Often I have heard people say that men shouldn’t have an opinion on issues such as this but as fathers and potential fathers, I don’t believe it would be right to strip them of a voice here. But I do know that change most effectively starts at home. It starts with men standing up for women. Not standing up for what they believe women should do. But for women to have the right to a voice. The right to their own bodies. The right to self-determination that most men have had for their entire lives, if not also the lives of their fathers and grandfathers.

Last night, I felt grateful for the men willing to be out on the streets campaigning for their sisters’ and mothers’ and daughters’ rights. For their neighbours’ rights. Their lecturers’ rights and their nurses’ rights and the rights of their friends. It is a wonderful world, albeit one that should always have made sense, where women have the right to have a single set of rights in their own body and to have dominion over those rights. And last night, I was proud of the passion for freedom and the love of womankind that was shown.

At the end of the day, I hope Ireland votes with how it feels. Truly. Whatever the outcome. I hope people get out there and have their say. But I do sincerely hope that women in this country feel empowered by the process they have just undertaken and I hope the men who I saw in the streets last night partitioning for the Yes vote go home to houses tonight where they feel appreciated for doing what’s right in standing up for the rights of women.

It is easy to be apathetic. It is easy to not want to make yourself a target when people are telling you “no uterus, no opinion”. And it is hard, even for myself, to understand how much of a man’s opinion on this topic I am able to swallow.

But what I will stand up and applaud is men who love women fiercely enough to defend their rights. Because as someone who is, for all intents and purposes, a feminist, I adore men. Good men. Strong men. Brave men. Men who honour and adore and fight for the women they love and live with and admire. And in the words of my very favourite Anais Nin, “I, with a deeper instinct, choose a man who compels my strength, who makes enormous demands on me, who does not doubt my courage or my toughness, who does not believe me naive or innocent, who has the courage to treat me like a woman”. I hope Ireland now has the courage to treat women like women, because women are wildly and outrageously wonderful.

The Moon as Our Witness


It’s midnight.
Only the moon is up.
And us.
Screaming at each other, with hurt that tastes like venom masked as paint
Throwing it across the walls in violent splashes of colour

A splash of blood red
You say I’ve changed

A splash of deep bruised purple
I say you dented and damaged me and then blamed me for looking for bumpy

A splash of despairing grey
You say you’re being calm

A splash of empty navy
I say just because you aren’t yelling doesn’t mean your coldness is kindness

A splash more
You say your toes are sore from all the tiptoeing you do around me

A splash more
I say that mine look like a ballerina in a career of point shoes

A splash more
You say to keep it down.
The neighbours must hate us.
Our signatures at the bottom corner of this awful piece of art.

What aren’t we saying when we think, here in the darkness, we are saying it all…

I am not saying my truth
A splash of baby, unfiltered pink
“Please love me more and kiss the parts that hurt”

You are not saying your truth
A splash of sandy yellow to match our sunkissed hair
“My darling girl, why won’t you let me. I can’t bear the thought that I did this to you”

Somehow our tired souls end up back here, staring at the ceiling.
But

We are holding hands.
Holding on to each other’s bloody, paint splattered bodies.
And we promise one another to be better
We promise that our tracks don’t stop here, this train isn’t pulling into the station yet
Because we can paint the walls with all our magic thoughts too

You say I am the most beautiful woman your lips have ever touched and blood red becomes the flame of a flamingo dancer’s dress

I say every night when you get into bed my heart still races and the cold blue turns the turquoise of the ocean.

You say there is no other woman you have thought you could be with since we met and the sad grey turns piercing white

I say that I couldn’t stop loving you even if I wanted to and the blotched magenta turns to the purple of Royals

And every time I roll over and place my head on your chest, you squeeze my hand, kiss my forehead
And I know that passion can look just like Monet’s gardens and lilies – or it can look like a crime scene

Just as a sunset can look like an explosion

We both only have the desire to hang in the Louvre
We both want to see the colours as the sun goes down.

Tequila & New Beginnings

The first time I saw the whole of you, we stood beneath running waters
I was worried I was too tall
You were nervous but it never showed
You kissed me, with tequila on our breath and all the hope of new beginnings

The first time I understood how serious you were, we walked laps of a lake in secret
Kissing behind tiny houses while you proclaimed that everyone should know
We held hands in gloves and I was dizzy with the stillness of the lake and the whirling of my heart

The first time I understood what was developing – that we were more than simply magnetic bodies, we were in a cabin in Venice
I understood because our lips were locked only just less intensely than our eyes were

The first time I understood that you would make me do brave silly things we stood atop a water tower and ran right off the edge, hands clenched together…for my sake, not yours
The indigo water washed us clean as our veins coursed with thick, Greek coffee
It was then I realised how scared I could be that any harm could ever come to you. And how you weren’t scared at all

The first time I truly realised none of it would be as sweet if it wasn’t with you was at the Point where two oceans wrapped around our little hut home and every afternoon you drew me out onto the surf board when I wasn’t sure that I could move another muscle and you heralded my wins like they were your own, in wetsuits that felt thicker than our skin

First thing this morning, you rolled over and lay your arm out so that I could move in close
You always smell like the perfect mix of salt and sunscreen to me and I always look like I’ve tumbled straight from the ocean
Sand in our bed and firsts left to be shared, somewhere nearest this kind of blue.

If you wake and curl around my body…

If you wake and curl around my body
kiss my back or house your arm beneath the niche of my neck;

If you wake and bring me coffee
strong and dark
sweet and bitter
as my first taste of the day;

If I wake and caress your lips, your eyelids, your lips again
While you pretend to be asleep and we both drowsily smile
as I rouse and trace your skin, your hands;

If we rise and laugh; you call me by a name only the two of us know and ask if I slept well, if I’ve been naughty, if I had too much to dream;

If, when I ask, ‘where is our next adventure?’ you declare ‘Darling, wherever would you like to go next?’;

If you cook me unflawed eggs for my rumbling belly and always source out avocados;
and if you talk to me, booze in hand as I prepare us vegetables and dishes of pasta each night to make Ms Loren proud;

If you enter the room and proclaim that for your 34th birthday, we’ll go to Canada and for our wedding we will have a Celebration that resists the rising of the sun;

If you let me fall asleep on the sofa in your arms, or on your strong lap on airplanes;
If you wake me in the morning and hold me with desire

The love I will give to you will be
Strong as Italian coffee
Juicy as my Spanish morning strawberries
Wild as the Atlantic Way
And as wide and bold as the road is long,
As salty or sweaty or sweet as it comes.

I’m ready for my close up…

My darling girl,

Please keep your beauty and his idea of your beauty in different cupboards, different drawers
Damn it, different houses
Do not keep them in the same box
Maybe not even under the same roof

A lot of men love one thing more than beautiful women
A beautiful woman they haven’t seen before
A more distant beauty

If you start searching through those cupboards and drawers and your ideas of beauty are too close to each other
starting to intertwine
heaven forbid they are in bed together
separate them immediately
ban them to opposite corners
a stern time-out

If you don’t,
then you will have lost something
without even realising it
and that is the most painful loss of all

Your beauty will, from then on, need his eyes to see it
and you will have lost something
you will have lost the ability to see yourself
in all your familiar feminine fascination
in all your exquisite forms and moods and shapes

you won’t be able to remember that your olive skin is the softest unless His hands are touching it
or that your breasts are plump and supple even if He had never or never again were to notice them
or that your mocha eyes are sparkly when you’re in the throws of your unique, melodic and sometimes cackled laughter

you will have forgotten that you smell sweet in the mornings and like red wine in the evenings and that the red dress that makes you feel like a Spanish Senorita makes you look just as beautiful as one

You will no longer be able to notice the eyes of every person in a room who turn to watch you because perhaps He no longer does

all the while never becoming any less beautiful
never less heavenly
never less new
more beautiful in fact
for having loved
and stronger still for now knowing where your beauty must be kept

close to your chest

and behind your eyes

and belonging just to you

only to be generously shared but never given away.

I am taking a vow of abstinence…

I laugh too often at things I don’t find funny
I laugh so that other people don’t feel uncomfortable, so they feel heard or important
Or just to save from awkward silence
but when I think of how many times I do it, daily, with strangers or mere acquaintances
it costs me so much energy
every smile is at least 17 muscles clenching in my face
for what? A moment of a strangers ego?
It’s exhausting

I’m exhausted from laughing at your story that went on far too long,
or your meanness or the sentence that I’m not quite sure I heard correctly
I’m exhausted from laughing at the unimpressive quirkiness of an opinion you have given to me, a stranger, that I never asked for

It’s too often, too draining, too repetitive, too boring

Because I’m so ready to laugh at things that are funny
I want to giggle
I don’t want to dilute the experience anymore

Laughter is much too delightful, the experience of a belly laugh is far too delicious
for me to keep wasting or misrepresenting or faking
I am tired of protecting egos over being truthful to my everyday experience

I have no desire to be rude
But I am tired. And I never signed up to your expectation of me
I don’t want to pretend to laugh at the joke you make about my new haircut, or the way I should expect attention because I wore active wear today
I don’t want to laugh at the story you have told me 3 times today because you think your stories are so important and your brain so uninspired that you don’t recall already telling it
I don’t want you taking up anymore of my time with forced laughter because me being a young woman makes you think your opinion is valuable to me

I live with a man who makes me laugh
daily
A man who makes me giggle in the morning and who makes me funnier in return
Like a loving humour transaction of frivolity and delight
It’s got to be one of the greatest earthly delights

Love + sex + red wine

So what am I doing throwing it around in a way that feelings like something is being taken away from me?

I am taking a vow of abstinence

If you want a laugh, earn it
with wit or humour or genuine quirkiness
Or learn what makes me tick and then you’ll get the giggle

But until then,
I will laugh only when it stirs and escapes from within me

And when you hear it, it will be so much sweeter

What a great word...


I think words are delicious.

There are some that so adequately express themselves that I could just devour them.

Some with such onomatopoeia that I would know exactly their flavour.

I love sensual words.

And obvious words.

And words that cut through all bullshit.

I love that moment in conversation when exactly the perfect word is chosen in a sentence.

That moment where I feel like I completely understand;

like no other word could have fit there

As though life was a script that had a few spaces left to be filled in and the actor got the improvisation so bang on, that you would never have guessed it wasn’t written right there in front of them.

Words like Sensation.

Coffee.

Fuck.

Adore.

Natural.

Sorrow.

Delight.

Tingly.

Words that sound magical, or imbued with meaning or potential.

Words that do not mince their truths.

In a Yoga class one day, my Teacher was trying to get the class to tense an exact muscle in our abdominals. That one muscle not obvious in every day life. One that you perhaps don’t even know the name of.

And so she used a sentence so specific, so unmistakable, that we all knew where to follow her to.

She told us to imagine we were holding a carrot in our vaginas with the straightest face imaginable. Like there was simply no other way to explain it.

Apart from a few men who were befuddled and one woman who was horrified, having misheard the word “Parrot” in the place of “Carrot”, everyone knew exactly what she meant.

Exactly where and what to feel.

I still have no idea what that muscle is called, but because of that class I have certainly I’ve felt it.

This morning in asking my French housemate about his tropical holiday, he purely said with his proud accent, “it was a Pleasure”. He didn’t try to explain any further or dilute its meaning with more words. We knew exactly what he meant. The words rolling from his mouth…. It had been a pleasure. What a word! Pleasure.

There is something so delightful to me about people expressing the fullness of their sentences, feelings, joys or grievances. About being brave enough or confident enough or honest enough to use real words to encapsulate real meanings infused with real emotions. About using words that are true to their origin, yummy in our mouths and musical to our ears. I recall an old friend once referring to me in conversation as effervescent and I think it might be one of my favourite descriptions of all time. What a word to describe someone. What a compliment!

As such, I am endeavouring to wax lyrical more often than not in my life these days. To choose words based on how accurate they are to my expression. How honest they are.

No doubt, I will still answer shop assistants with “I’m fine thanks” rather than my life story but maybe amongst friends…my bosom buddies, I might start throwing onomatopoeia like confetti.

Confetti… what a great word.

Changing Rooms

I moved to Italy at 21.

Bologna, to be exact

Fresh faced

Bright eyed

A little scared

Ok, a lot scared.

But ready to fall deeper in love with a country I’d had such a lust for, for as long as I could remember

I learnt a thousand things that year

How to order a coffee properly

What deep loneliness felt like

What a true depth of friendship looked like

I learnt how big the world could be

How much I loved limoncello

& how to play the guitar

I learnt about history

And art

And the joyful slowness of the Italian way

About the ways of Italian families

The stress of Italian football

And the ever-appropriateness of gelato

But most of all

I learnt that the way I had seen my body

My entire life

Was wrong

And mean to myself

And so narrow sighted

I learnt the way I had been brought up by my culture to see my female form was

So

Absurd

There is no other word.

There is no other word for the way I had been taught that I must strive for perfection, before I even knew what that perfect must look like

all by a society of adults imposing the same beliefs on themselves

– – – – 

I remember the first time we wandered into the gym changing rooms

Into a flurry of Italian women of every shape, size, curve, slant, sexuality

Naked

Fully naked

Could not have been more naked.

Doing their hair

Changing their clothes

Discussing their families

Moisturising their skin

Walking to the showers

Laughing amongst themselves

We, fully clothed from the Italian wintery weather, were the odd women out.

You know that saying when people are nervous to publicly speak? ‘Just imagine everyone naked’

That was the world we had entered, unbeknownst to us, in all its literal sense

It was startling, unusual, uncomfortable

Over the weeks that followed, we became accustomed to it

Of course one notices a naked body.

But the Italian women didn’t fuss about it.

It didn’t faze them.

They weren’t exactly revelling in it, but they also weren’t awkwardly and embarrassingly racing for their towels at the sight of a breast.

Or a bush.

It just wasn’t an issue.

Over the months that followed, so many parts of my understanding of sexuality and sensuality and sexiness and femininity reached a brand new clarity.

These women were fabulous and expected to be treated as such.

And out on the streets, the men stared.

They stared because the women exuded an unrivalled confidence.

A confidence that demanded attention.

And I learnt that these women were expecting to be stared at.

(not in a leery way of course)

But stared at because they were so full of vibrancy and passion that you couldn’t look away.

And because they weren’t afraid of their bodies in a mirror.

– – – –

When you see a thousand different body types a week, yours seems to blend into the crowd.

It’s liberating

Every Body is different

Right there in front of your eyes

And you can’t help but realise how stunning women are when they trust their bodies to be beautiful

By the end of my year, my body had been naked in a room of women more times than I could count.

I had sat in saunas with dear friends and discussed our lives, all the while forgetting that we were more than emotionally exposed

I had learnt to walk tall in a room, incidentally where no one was looking at me, without fearing that I would be judged or critiqued or considered anything other than another woman.

That year gave me the keys to a freedom and acceptance I had never known

A peep into how your body could be a home for you

A safe place

A loved place

A place that deserved to be seen.

I have lived around the world now. I’ve met hundreds of women, many young and anxious about their place in it all.

And I wish that every time I hear her scorn her skin or bastardise her body… every time I do the same to my own…that I could plonk us both back into that changing room. To sit, or stand, in our awkwardness and fear until it released us.

Because it does release you.

The same way the physiotherapist presses on your tight muscles so hard they hurt, until all of a sudden, they don’t anymore.

– – – – 

There are so many parts of my life that have the residue of that year all over them.

My love of Limoncello remains

Bologna feels like a secret world that keeps a part of my heart always

I still fiddle with a guitar now and then and can still talk of Italian art and history.

The friend who taught me the depth of a friend’s love and swiftness of a deep connection is still a dear dear confidante of mine.

But more than anything else that I can articulate, Italy made me a woman.

It was my own coming of age story.

In the changing rooms.

Of an Italian gym.

At 21.

so sad, so freeing, so beautifully profound…

We sat on the grass in Herbert Park in the afternoon sun
It certainly wasn’t warm
This is spring in Ireland after all
But it was cozy and sitting opposite you is warming

As summer rolled around
As our new beginnings had come around again
As I watched you interact with the world
And noticed the way that I was doing the same
I had been thinking

And so I asked you
The question swirling around often and repetitively
I asked you whether you ever felt self-conscious
About your body, your looks, the way you presented to the world
Whether you ever felt repressed, reserved, subdued because of the body you are in
I couldn’t fathom that you would, but I didn’t want to presume

I might as well have asked you if I’d sprouted a new arm
That question might have made more sense to you
Or perhaps if I’d asked you the temperature in Timbuktu

You calmly, confidently and casually responded,

“No
I don’t think about it”

And then with the sweetest simplicity, something dawned on you
Your forehead creased
Your eyebrows raised

“Why?”

pause

confusion

“Do you?”

pause

bemusement

“But you’re beautiful”

You said it like it was the most natural thing in the world,
The most obvious of responses.

It was in that moment of your complete innocence that I realised
As an adult, it had never dawned on you to be self-conscious in a way that made you feel like you weren’t deserving
And it had never dawned on you that I might ever feel that way
The countless moments I had looked at my body with criticism that I had imposed through your eyes – it simply wasn’t there…
That my day included so many minutes making up hours of thinking I couldn’t do things until…
Until what?

Until I looked more like myself? Less like myself? Until what?

And the realisation that you had infinitely more time in your days because those minutes were being used for fruitful thoughts and furtive action
The fact that you couldn’t fathom that I would see myself as anything other than beautiful was shattering
and so sad
and so freeing
and so beautifully profound

And so
sitting on the grass in Herbert Park in the afternoon sun
I sat wide eyed, shaken and annoyed that I had wasted so much time in some sort of civil war
when there is simply no time to waste
believing myself to be anything other than free and beautifully profound

‘Shall we?’


This way of life sped past me and at the last second, it opened its doors as though it were sticking out its open palm
Like I was waiting on a platform and the Conductor hung on the outside with his brimmed hat and white gloves
As the wind hadn’t quite yet dissipated
the inertia in action
It looked just like an invitation… or maybe it was just a high five
The Conductor didn’t whisper “come along” as I grabbed on.
He just raised an eyebrow.
It wasn’t as clear at that moment.
But I’d met someone else standing on the platform.
And He did.
He held out his hand.
“Shall we?”
And that life felt like my own the second I said yes
Yes, I will come along
Yes, I will get on that plane
Yes, I will learn this language
Yes, I will glue my eyes to this map
The moment I said, yes I’ll fall in love with you
And yes, let’s keep moving
And yes, I’ll walk these streets in awe over and over again
And for the first time in a long time, I felt l had stepped onto a moving train at exactly the right speed
Like the perfect equation of my toes to train floor
Perhaps that’s why I find it hard to be at home
Not home as in a concept
Though maybe I find that a challenge too
But home as in the place
What if that train doesn’t come back this way?
What if the next time it does, it’s going just a little too fast for me to get my grip?
Somehow since I stepped off the train with my bags and souvenirs the decision to ever stay anywhere too long is so much more confusing than to go
And even though the faces waiting on the platform are those of the people one adores, you know the platform isn’t everyday life
And I know when people hear these thoughts, they always think of someone running away
Someone who thinks the grass is always greener
But the truth is, I love that train
The buzz, the noises, the smells
The other passengers and even squeezing your luggage between your knees as it rocks side to side
Apologising when you bump the person next to you
But it is possible to get on a train in the wrong direction too.
A train without seats for you.
One that’s too hot or too fast or an express past your stop.
And I have to remember that.
Not every train is better than no train.
And so I trust
That when our train comes next
We will be ready
With our language and our maps and our vague plan for where to eat and drink and dance and lay our heads
And the conductor will slow as he sees us and say, “ahh, we knew we’d see you again”
And my partner in it all will raise his eyebrow and say those two little words
Maybe my favourites
“Shall we?”

Don’t Shush Me

How funny my two Degrees make you bemused

the position of women now,

its all over the news

I’m sorry my credentials make you feel ‘funny’

and that you don’t like me because you know you can’t fuck me

I’m sorry when I speak you don’t know what to say

that my differing views might get in your way

I’m sorry your finger so heavily lifted

to shush me,

showed how little you’ve shifted

But really, the problem for you is quite real

see, I’m not sorry at all for the way that you feel

I’m a woman, not someone who can’t think for themselves

in fact, that is something that I do quite well

and when in the workplace, even if its outdoors

please don’t speak to me as though I do your chores

The world is a-changing and you’ll be left behind

I’m could be more capable than you, you might find

If you opened your eyes and got over yourself

You might realise that my knowledge could be of some help

Now, in times gone by perhaps your ‘shush’ would have worked

for a while at least while I evaluated my worth

but now all it does is show where true colours lie

I expect you thought as a woman i’d cry

Instead i’ll speak up, to the powers that be

and your poor attitude might see you job-free!

And perhaps you might think for some seconds a few

that you could listen every now and then too.