Monday, 29 September 2014

The ex-Marine.



They had a three week eastern patrol over towards the Algerian border.
We've all seen the documentaries.
The relentless, blinding heat.  Wind that strips skin and turns bone to something beautiful and hypnotic.
But the way Eddy told it to me made all of this hellish exotica sound painfully ordinary.
Eddy was my age then.  Only I was twenty two and he was twenty two going on one hundred.
We were drinking champagne that someone had stolen from out the back of a restaurant.  Taking long and careless swigs straight from the bottle.
He thought it'd be fun to join the French Foreign Legion.
So he joined
and found out it was not fun.
Eddy found himself  squadding with former mercenaries, ex-regulars disenchanted by the peacable efforts of their respective sovereign armies, active heroin users, cuckolded husbands and jilted lovers and spiritually crippled alcoholics who would scream in the night at the insects trying to eat them alive- imagined or otherwise.
Three weeks of endless heat, sand and toxic, shimmering horizons.
He even saw a large scorpion one afternoon.  A big and fearless black one that scuttle-charged foolishly at a former Chinese People's Army 'adviser' who had developed an insatiable taste for all things lost cause. The guy just stepped on the fucking thing until it stopped moving which wasn't as long as some people might think.
All that marching.  All that sun.  All that wind and sand must really takes its toll on the body because midway into the final week, they were marching two abreast (seriously Algerian separatists??? Not. A. Fucking. Chance. We'd. Catch. Sight. Of. One. In. Butt. Fuck. North. Africa.)
And they're marching and the afternoon had rolled around and not too far ahead there's a sudden halt in the line.
This giant of a man - an ex-Marine - had collapsed.  Mid forties, face like a bat's folded wing.  All floppy and vein and bone from years of alcohol, sixty Ducados a day and an irrational hatred of boredom on civvy street.
He collapsed and started lazily flopping there on the side of an endless dune.  Eddy made his way through all that brutal and unloved soldiery.  All the different languages.  All the different skin tones.  All the competing ideological rivalries.  All the non-comprehending or simply uncaring looks.
Eddy knelt beside this man and moved his ear down to a mouth that moved up and down mechanically, fish-like.
And this giant, this veteran of foreign wars and grand and futile adventures whispered through cyanotic lips, "Cigarette.  Fucking cigarette."
Eddy fumbled.  Lit one.  Shoved it in the guy's mouth and ten minutes later they were back on patrol, for all the world like nothing had happened.
One man's poison etc etc.
After that there was nothing to say so we just stared out at the sun setting over Juan-Les-Pins passing that bottle back and forth.

Swan Swan H

Sunday, 28 September 2014

Maria and Billy.





I'll forever be begging your forgiveness for my laziness but prior to starting this blog, I used to put my little ramblings on Facebook.  Here's one from a couple of years back...

Lived on the ledge of a cliff beneath the ancient, ruined fort along the eastern edge of Cassis.
I stayed with them for a week. Maybe more.
Billy was an army deserter. He'd been stationed in Northern Ireland.
On patrol with his squad one day somewhere up there (I knew nothing of the six counties then, much less now), a kid ran at him throwing rocks. Someone from his unit fired and ripped half the kid's neck out. As Billy put it, they were the longest seconds of his life as the boy died - blood flowing like a river - in his arms. Questions written all over his dying face. First leave he got, Billy took the ferry to Boulogne and never looked back. Except for the nightmares.
One day we lifted some items from the small hyper-marche up the back of Cassis. I hid a large bottle of Johnny Walker under my greatcoat, which I wore in spite of the Mediterranean heat. That night we drank but Maria was very sick, through lack of decent food. Practically everything we ate back then was scavenged from the large skip bins out the back of the markets. Sometimes, we'd return like the proud, stupid savages we were with an octopus that we'd manage to grab from the tidal pools on the rocky shoreline. Billy would cook it all up with a small buried stove he'd dug into the soil and rock. A trick he'd learned in the army. It gave little or no smoke.
Maria was shivering through the nights, in spite of the mild high summer weather. I'd given her my tattered greatcoat but it didn't seem to help - although for some reason, it made her revise her opinion of me. Billy said she just didn't trust strangers but I knew better. A lot of women didn't like me back then. A lot of men didn't like me back then, either. Who'd go back to being twenty one?
Don't know why I mention it all.
But Billy and Maria, if you two lovebirds are still under that fort, grimy and mad with hunger, alcohol and mistrust, know that this madman is sitting, drinking a civilised cup of coffee half a world away and thinking fondly of you now.


Thursday, 25 September 2014

Up and in in Surry Hills.



Yesterday as I emerged from an audition in Surry Hills, I had one of those go-slo moments.

 A woman on Marlborough Street walked past me (and I past her now that I meditate upon it) and I couldn't take my eyes off her.  Looking every inch of her many and hard years (she must easily have been in her mid seventies and still full of breast) I was gobsmacked by her garb; a soaked through grey ACDC t-shirt and billowing, shapeless skirt.  In truth, a Spring downpour helped leave nothing to the imagination regarding her ample balcon.  But it was her smile that did it for me.  It nailed something. An epoch. A lifetime. A war filled with memory. A triumph.  A rare win after too many knockouts. A "Yes it may not be a wonderful life but it's a lovely moment" nuclear second.
  That fucking smile.  Not beatific.  Not anything that makes one want to reach for a dictionary, in fact.  Just... Complete.
  Thank you, m'lady, for reminding me that even failing has its moments.

Another Girl Another Planet


Monday, 22 September 2014

An open letter to the universe.



Dear Universe,
I'm giving you a couple of options.  Either cover next week's rent AND give me a regular paying job that covers all the crucial needs of life, leaving evenings and weekends free to explore nothing in particular because I'm really not that adventurous OR pay me a cool twenty six mil up front and have shut of my incessant whining.
Think real fucking carefully before you get back to me.
m

Born under punches

Saturday, 20 September 2014

Incidentally...

I'm not sure if I've plugged my produce with y'all as yet but here are some links to other things that are egocentrically me:

My songs can be found at:

Reverb Nation

Soundcloud

Bandcamp

And of course there is always...

Facebook

Aaaannnnndddd...

Twitter

And I personally thank you for reading all of this guff.

Buy my stuff.  It's excellent.

:P

Sydney - Hi life and lo.


Forgive me my laziness but I've copied the following from my Facebook update last night.  I think it's worth retelling here...

A quick story my brother-in-law recently related to me that perhaps perfectly describes this city of Sydney.
My sister and her partner went to Town Hall to see their son perform in a prestigious choir. The recital went off beautifully and everyone had come from far and wide decked out in their finest satins and penguin suits. Praises were heaped on the young singers and reverent tones were used in the hallowed chambers of this most august venue.
After the last soothing voices had trailed off, the appreciative crowd started slowly moving out onto the steps of George Street with self-conscious reserve and studied dignity, milling and still talking excitedly about what the future holds for their talented progeny at the top of the steps.
But in short order, an arguing couple at the base of the steps started getting the better of the frockery and finery brigade. Their grating, drunken scream and rising volume soon drowned out the more tempered and virtuous dialogues on any Missa Solemnis or Mass #2 in E Minor. And when her McWilliams Sherry-fueled haranguing and when his scathing, vituperative outbursts failed to get through to each other, he stood right there on the footpath in the very beating heart of my beloved Sydney and said, "Oh yeah? Well take THIS, you fucking moll! " Whereby he undid the bit of rope holding his worn and soiled trousers up, allowing them to fall to his unwashed ankles and let rip a steaming and (from what I was told) altogether noisy and fat shit right there on the path! In front of her. In front of the the proud parents and guardians. In front of the children with the voices of angels. In front of the shoppers at Woolies across the road. Essentially, in front of a possible crowd of thousands on what may arguably be the busiest intersection on the east coast of Australia.
This, then, is a near-perfect portrait of the city that has offered me and millions of others succour and desperation by equal measures throughout most of my life.

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

The frying pan.



There wasn't a single, solitary time when he didn't feel as though he'd missed something.

 Every time he would look around the room, occasionally scouring the other rooms too, in search of an errant cup or small plate with a teaspoon on it. Only once did he find a teacup in the bedroom.  He liked the fact that neither of them drank their tea or coffee in the bedroom.  Or if they did, they had the good grace to bring the crockery out after themselves.  Not that either of them were particularly neat but nonetheless this was definitely one concession to cleanliness that they both adhered to.

  Today everything was laid off to the left hand side.  Teaspoons used over and over again and left lying about for the past three days.  The two plates from last night's dinner.  Two small plates with streaks of dried sauce from which they'd eaten pies the day before. A small porcelain bowl that still had an olive pip which he tipped into the plastic bag that served as a bin.  The breadboard used last night to cut the onion and garlic for the salad they ate. Five mugs.  Which was odd because no one had visited over the previous days and he was inclined to use the same over-sized mug, much to the scarcely concealed,  mild disgust of visitors. Two saucepans that had boiled the potatoes and snow peas - the latter of which were something of a luxury given that they were both unemployed. But it's acknowledged the world over that the odd small luxury can alleviate the stresses and uncertainties of simply dragging oneself out of bed some days. Look at the cigarette.  But since neither of them smoked anymore, occasional treats such as snow peas made up for the barely perceptible blanket of emptiness that chased their days.

  And then, of course, there was the cast iron frying pan.

  Plugs, discoloured through overuse, into both sinks and the delicate balance of very hot water in first one, then the other. The discount dish washing liquid in the larger of the two followed by the dirty cutlery and then the plates and olive pit bowl. Water still slightly too hot. But he preferred it that way.  Tap off and gingerly plunge hands into the sudsy water, in search of the murder knives - the two large knives they'd use to peel and chop the vegetables. Lifting one out, he slightly enjoyed the fact that his hands were already reddened by the almost scalding water but decided to run a bit more cold water. No point in getting stupid about it all. He carefully cleaned the gleaming knives and set them in the tray, out of harm's way as it were. The spud masher, which had been rinsed reasonably thoroughly anyway so there was little starchy residue at the base. After a quick rinse in the second sink, it too was set in the tray off to one side.  The bread board quickly followed. Rigidity was a moot point here on out.

  The knives, forks, spoons, a spud peeler and the two hand-made pewter salad spoons all received much the same treatment.  These last needed an extra bit of work to get the dried basil off the hilt. All but the pewter spoons fitted neatly in the front area of the rack.  These were laid upon the murder knives. They called them the murder knives because they were big and sharp and the name just seemed apt.

  And now the cups and mugs and a glass he'd almost missed, that had been sitting on the opposite sideboard.  She'd taken a soluble aspirin the night before to get rid of a nagging headache. He took care to clean the mugs with great attention.  By this stage, a Kinks song was running through his head.  He liked the Kinks.  Most, if not all, sixties music for that matter. He realised that he was now at the point of a strange happiness, not necessarily brought on by ritual - that would come shortly - but by the certainty with which this thing, this chore or task, should be approached. And while it wasn't a thing he enjoyed, as such, he could almost feel the serotonin release from the necessary informality of it all. The terror of outstanding bills and coming rent was mitigated somewhat and he knew it was in part due to this simple act.

  That was that.

  Except for the frying pan.

  He reached in and pulled the plug from first the main sink and then the now sudsed up rinse sink. He took this brief moment to enjoy the water draining away before turning on the tap again and scouring both sinks to get rid of the small amount of scummy residue.  A murderous bullet of a thought, "Three hundred dollars outstanding -" And now, almost as a defense mechanism, an early Runaways song, 'Hollywood' started earworming through his thoughts. And he let it. The bills would be there later. The worries too.  The doubt.  The mild, constant sadness from a year's unemployment from any steady job.  These and every other enemy of good cheer and joy would still be there.  But for now, they could go to hell.

  The frying pan was heavy in his hand.  It strained the muscles on his forearm every time.  Made of dark cast iron with a strong and solid wooden handle, they had  both long since developed a love/hate relationship with it.  Given to her by her mother, with the express agreement that it only be cleaned and rinsed in hot water, it had almost single-handedly cooked countless meals to perfection. He scoffed at this edict when she first mentioned it to him, thinking that it must surely be an old wives' tale but a quick check on Google had confirmed her mother's sage advice.  The idea being that the dish washing liquid was too efficient and that the pan should be left with a steadily increasing amount of barely perceptible detritus from each previous dish cooked in it.  So hot water and a careful scouring were the order every time

  This thing that had begun in tedium then, had become one of his many moments of satisfaction during these long months of unemployment. The frying pan through no virtue of its own had become something of a sand and rock garden to him, to be savoured and lovingly cultivated.  He was aware of all of this today, as he swirled the hot water around and around.  Now looking for something he may have missed, now gently scouring.  Until finally he was satisfied.

  But this was not the end. He could leave the other - the lesser - accoutrements to sit and dry in the rack and be put away at leisure but this frying pan demanded more care.  He sought one of the clean tea towels hanging off the back of the chair and awkwardly (for there was no other way to describe handling this heavy thing) dried every millimeter of the saucepan, paying particular attention to the inner base.  He even surreptitiously checked through the door to make sure she was engrossed in her work at the computer before holding it up to the light at the window to make sure he had done his best.

  He placed it down on the stove top with an unmistakable single clunk and reached for the bottle of olive oil, slightly greasy on the outside from so much use. The jukebox-in-his-head had decided to play an old, obscure Paul McCartney song and again, he did not object in the least, even going so far as to softly sing along. "Weeell, when I walk, when I walk.  Walk my horse up by the hill...", before trailing off to silence, not wishing to disturb the superior version in his head.  Unscrewing the cap, he poured a little of the olive oil onto the frying pan and resealed the bottle. With both hands, he swished the oil slowly around the pan before tearing off some paper towels and spreading the oil evenly all over the inside.

  At last the song finished and he was satisfied in a supremely ordinary way.

  And he was grateful that she had shown him the way.

Days


Monday, 8 September 2014

The fight.



Some days you want to lash out.
Hurting in small ways that defy description.  Near-invisible, uninvited insects crawling under your skin.
Not many of them.  Just enough to make you want to lash out.
You want to lash out with envy at the tip of your knuckles. With terrible injustice at the tip of your tongue.
You want to lash out at every empty boast you've ever made. At every deception you yourself have exposed.
Every exaggeration and every idle lie. Through all time. From every quarter.
You are the protagonist with no name in Hunger, wobbling through a Kristiania of your own sealed and crippled and darkest thoughts.
You wanted something more and maybe it came. And maybe it went. And will be no more. Or will be too far off to be worth anything.
You want to lash out for every toy, trinket or heart you never possessed.  Or every one you did and squandered.
You want to cry "Why me?!" because it is something you've never cried before.  You want to scream it in a public place to make a fool of yourself in a way that you have not yet made a fool of yourself.
You want an answer and you do not want an answer.
You want cash.  Not much.  Just enough to get the bills and the rent and the outstanding loans paid down a little. And though they don't amount to much in the eyes of the not-understanding others (very much like your crawling insect woes), these worries are yours nonetheless.  Yours to resolve or not.  Yours to meditate upon or ignore.
But remember my attentive friend, if you ignore them, they'll return with the coming of darkness. When all the help desks are shut down.  When all the drunks have taken everything from the ATMs. When only the creditors seek to be your phone friends.
Some days you want to lash out for all that should be yours but the voice in the back of your head and the sloppy depths of your heart keeps repeating, "You are not worthy.  I was lying.  I was trying to deceive you and I succeeded with flying colours.  I did it as a testimony to life's ways. To the ways of others.  The ways of humans and animals and fungi whose sole purpose is to infect you so that it can go on.
And you cannot. I was only trying to instruct you."
You want to lash out and land one solidly in your own solar plexus so fucking hard that sleep may result from the wounding.
But you will tire.  As you've tired before. And will again in times to come.
For we are good at that.  Us people.  We are good at shadow boxing and grinding ourselves down. On indifference.  On consuming.  On knowledge that is no knowledge at all.  Occasionally on hate (but not too much).  On joyous, celebratory  altruism (but far too little). On talk, on work and on finding work.
Do we grind ourselves down on love?
I don't know.
I suspect that love is the respite between battles but I've seen too much evidence to the contrary.
And now I must apologise for lashing out at you.

Not drowning. Assessing.