Followers

Wednesday 30 June 2021

Our Hibernation is over

 Our Hibernation is over

By Carol Blackburn


From floating,

Flowing,

Soaking.

Drenching,

Immersing,

Momentarily drowning.

Then gulping for air

Our friendships

are sailing,

back.

They are loved.

 

Observing Mother nature.

Her gestures,

beckoning,

reviving,

inhabiting

with new life.

She is loved.

 

 

The touch of the Sun.

He’s kissing,

Caressing,

Clasping my hand.

Accompanying us,

From Dawning,

warming,

tanning,

shadowing,

to Gloaming.

He is Loved.

 

Our world,

is waking,

evolving,

longing,

resolving in our arms.

To welcome,

To gather,

To befriend.

Scooping us to

Connect,

back again.

 

Being, Human,

You and I,

We are loved.

 

 

April 2021   CAB.

 

Monday 12th April 2021 in England we reopened from the 3rd Lockdown due to Covid 19 virus.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday 29 June 2021

NOW AND THEN

 NOW AND THEN

By Rosemary Clarke


Sasha is asleep at the moment, her beautiful brown eyes closed as she luxuriates in the sun's warmth...full circle?  I suppose so, it's how my life started.

The house I was born in was what you'd call very well - to - do; at six every morning we’d have breakfast and playtime just to stretch our legs, setting us up for the day.  Someone would come in to comb and brush our hair, see that our nails were cut, nothing wrong with our teeth then work.

The couple that owned us made sure, along with the kennel maids, that we sat or stood when we were told and walking to heel was rewarded by tidbits or a toy so everyone tried their hardest.  I was only small then and days stretched forever in golden bliss.

I still don't know how it happened.  We were show dogs, a group of Burmese Shepherds known for our gentle ways and intelligence both of which were my downfall for the next two years; I think it was two...how can you tell when someone, somehow takes you far away from green fields, kind hands and good food in a dirty white truck.

I was treated quite well at first, meals were un-nourishing and bland, but there were meals.  I was tied outside a dirty caravan, children in grubby clothes with faces that didn't see a flannel very often running around in the dirt; sometimes a small hand would grab my hair gently, using me as something with which to stand, until a wobble would have the child back on its bottom, sad at having failed in their task.  Then the newspapers arrived, pictures of me spread on pages; lost show dog I should imagine not reading your writing.  I can understand you, you can't have everything.

The person who had taken me was growing tense, I felt it, and once more I was pushed into the dirty van.  Our journey was long and, as he stopped and let me out I could see trees..home?
No, roughly I was tied to a post near a yard.  The man spoke to a tall man in a bright yellow jacket who handed him what I had seen was payment.  Someone paid for me so I should be treated well!  How wrong I was!

A few moments after the van had driven off I was untied and led into a yard where rusty cars piled on one another; a graveyard of metal.  Lights hanging limply from their fronts or doors rusted and permanently open as though they had ceased to hope, the end of life. 

Seeing the metal cage before me, only big enough for me and situated in a grimy corner I started to understand their feelings: this was where dogs ended their lives too. 

For once I fought back, trying hard to pull away from my steel prison, knowing that once inside I would have no hope too. I twisted and struggled, pulling hard and growling until a sharp kick with a steel tipped boot made my legs buckle and my back tingle and ache nastily.  He and another man also in the bright yellow jacket dragged Me towards the cage and now I had no way to fight, only gaze as the inevitable slid ever nearer.

I lived on scraps.  After a while, my back healed but I still had trouble walking, not that I had far to walk.  By pushing against the side I could just sit down and kept one corner, the farthest from me, for my toilet.

If people came I caught pieces of burger, chips, and the odd piece of fish.  I was oily and filthy, my beautiful hair matted and black; why didn't they just kill me, why hate me that much?Xd

Then, one day, a couple arrived in a red van; they were dressed in boots and jeans like the rest but the woman, tall and with dark hair came near, her hands were gentle as they stroked my nose and ears through the harsh metal.  Later on, she unwrapped meals she had bought just for me, pasties and meat pies, a whole fish fried in batter!  Not the best food but hot, and it certainly made me feel better as it settled in my aching stomach.

I don't know if I was sold or they took me but one night the cage was quietly opened and she led me out on a piece of string into the back of the petrol-smelling red van.  I was driven away: no one followed, no one came.  I felt sure that she wouldn't let any harm come to me.

Suddenly, after a long while, we turned down a bumpy, dusty road; where was I to go now?  The van stopped and she led me out tying me once again to a metal pole but this time under lots of clothes hanging on a line.  The woman walked away, was I sold to someone else?

I decided to explore as much as the rope would allow me; I could at least sit or lie down and the garden was calm and forgiving, trees waving in the gentle breeze as if in time to the clothes.  It was quiet here, I had time to think and feel.  I sat down on the grass, as well as I could with my painful legs; these people, whoever they were, were not the kind to use steel boots, iron bars or any other metal things.  A voice nearby made me look up from my musings. another dog?  How long had it been since I'd heard that!  I answered in a squeaky yip, forgetting in my zeal that I hadn't used my voice for many years; would it come back?

I heard an engine, not a van too smooth then I could see it, a bright gleaming silver car!  A woman, older than my one, was walking down the path joined by two more, a man with unruly grey hair and a tall gangly girl, rather like one of the kennel maids in my puppy days.
"Why's someone tied next door's dog to the line?". The girl said looking puzzled, the woman, also grey haired, stood looking at me; she reminded me of my woman, were they a family?
She put out her hand.
"Bobby?"
This is what my woman called me and I yipped at the name.  The woman smiled.
"This is Bobby; she said she'd get him.  He needs a wash, he's all oily."

A dish of meat was put before me but, because my jaw had been smashed, my teeth wouldn't reach the bowl.  I sat there looking at it.  The woman watched me then walked away returning with a flat tray; I cowered, waiting for the crack as it hit me but no, she pushed the meat onto it from the bowl.  I could eat this, jellied as it was easier.
I was then taken, in the back of the clean smelling car, to a concrete yard and there...now what?  Two young women, one tall with long red hair one small dark and chubby walked over.  I liked their smell and willingly went with them through a counter to a room. 

Shampoo, warm water, and a glistening gleaming cleanly groomed coat; I was sand and black once again, my true self.  I strutted out, my head raised in sheer joy, no longer bedraggled and dark, a real show dog!

My days were now spent in walks and food and play,  my favourite time being early morning when the older woman would awake, having slept on a chair near me to keep me company and boil the kettle for a cup of tea.  We would sit down before anyone else was awake and munch our digestive biscuits; a little rest before the day ahead.

Well, I loved it there playing with the family but I grew too strong.  My woman and the girl took me to training classes but when I didn't do as I was told my woman's boyfriend tried to kick me, telling me that that was what they did to trouble makers in London.  I don't know, it didn't sound very nice, perhaps I had been in London all those years.  Also, my woman and her boyfriend were tired of walking me, leaving it to the older woman and the girl, all were working but one day, when I needed to go to the toilet, I pulled the woman and hurt her arm very badly, having it wrapped up in a bandage with her not able to use it.  She was threatened and pulled by my woman's boyfriend, who I suspected had something to do with the men and the cage, and kept away from him just in case.

It was then that the older woman spoke to my one who said she had a friend and would see what she could do.

And here I am!  I still have some of my old toys with me, my children play with them now but I do occasionally throw one in the air when no one's looking.

Sasha is beside me now and it's dinner time.  Here comes my new man, he used to be a farmer and knows how to treat dogs.  You see, a dog's life can be a good thing in the end.

Copyright Rosemary Clarke

Monday 28 June 2021

SUSIE

 SUSIE

by Richard Banks 

It was ten pm when we decided that something must be up. She was due home at nine, and by half past we were already on edge. It was so unlike her. She had never been this late before and, worse still, we didn’t have a clue where she was. She had left the house in a rush saying something about visiting a friend. By the time we thought to ask her ‘who and where’ she was through the door and away.

         We decided to phone her friends. They were all at home, mostly in their beds, as Susie should have been. Nobody had seen her or had any idea where she was. At eleven thirty we phoned the police.

         “Perhaps she went into Barchester and got delayed coming back,” they said. “Could she be staying overnight with a friend?”

         “No, no,” I told them, “that’s not like Susie. Besides she would have phoned us on her mobile.”

         Eventually, the police agreed to circulate her description to their patrol cars in the area. “Try not to worry,” they said, “she’ll turn up. They usually do.”

         Try not to worry, I thought, you must be joking. I could bear it no longer. “I’m going out to look for her,” I said to the wife. “Stay by the phone in case she calls.” I pulled on my overcoat and hurried out into the night.

         I decided to start with the cafe in the High Street where Susie sometimes hung out with her friends, but it was closed and the shutters down. On the other side of the road the neon lights in the George flickered off. I was alone, not a soul in sight. A grey mist was beginning to roll in from the river.

         I kind of panicked at that point. The thought of Susie being out this late, on her own, with no one to look out for her was more than I could stand. I sat down on the cafe steps and took in a deep breath of cold air.

         “Get a grip on yourself,” I said out loud. “What use are you to Susie like this?” The roar of a car was quickly followed by the glare of headlights as it accelerated past me. “Get up you fool, they’ll probably think you’re drunk. Get up and look for Susie.”

         I staggered off down a side street towards the bus station which was as dark and deserted as everywhere else. It was the same story at the war memorial where local youngsters sometimes gathered. After that, I wandered about for ages just hoping I would see Susie or someone who might know where she was.

         I was on the point of returning home when I thought of the kids’ playground. Susie seldom went there now she was thirteen, but it was worth a try. It was only a few minutes walk. At first, I didn’t see the young couple standing by the swings. As I drew nearer the woman turned towards me.

         “Hello there,” I shouted, I was still some way off, “have you seen a young girl, fair hair, red jacket, jeans?”

         “No, I haven’t, she said, but not to me. She turned towards the young man. “No I haven’t forgiven myself and I don’t think I ever will.”

         “But it’s been five years,” interposed the young man, “and anyway you weren’t to blame.”

         “Of course I was! If only I had phoned, it would never have happened. Dad should never have been out that night, not with his bad heart. Goodness knows how long he lay there before he died.” Tears filled her eyes and I wanted to wipe them away like I had done so many times before.

         “Susie!” I shouted. She was a young woman now, but still my Susie. “Susie, dear, it’s me! Don’t blame yourself. Everything’s fine, it’s OK. You’re safe. That’s all that matters.”

         She neither saw me or heard what I said, but somehow she understood, her eyes and face an open book. She smiled as the young man wiped away her tears. I smiled too. They hugged, then kissed, and all was well with them, and me.

         As they left the playground, hand in hand, a familiar figure came into view wearing his trademark Kannex and cloth cap. He strode purposefully towards me, choosing to walk through, rather than around, the children’s roundabout. He was in one of his moods. As he drew closer the barrage began. “Well, you found her then, about bloody time too.”

         “Dad! What are you doing here?”

         “What am I doing?” he repeated, fuming with rage. Well, I’m not walking the dog, that’s for sure. You daft loon, I’m here for you, and not for the first time I might add.”

         “What do you mean?”

         “I mean I was here before when you had your heart attack. What a fiasco that was. I came down in a beam, all welcoming like, and you went rushing off without seeing me. ‘Come back,’ I yelled. ‘I’m over here.’ Come back? did you heck.”

         “Why didn’t you stop me?”

         “How could I? You were like a headless chicken. There was only one thing on your mind - find Susie. Nothing else existed for you. Anyhow, I only had the beam for an hour. After that, we thought it best to wait until you calmed down a bit. Trouble was you never did. You just kept on looking, night after night, scurrying up and down the same old streets.”

         “And then I saw Susie.”

         “And then you saw Susie. Thank the Lord for that. Come on, son, it’s moving day. Let’s be off.”

Copyright Richard Banks

Sunday 27 June 2021

A few haiku

 

A few haiku from me

By Robert Kingston

still water dusk

the rivers dregs

at the sluice gate

 

Poem of the week June 7-11~2021 The Japan society

 


geometry class

a blackbird

takes flight

 

The Mainiche (Japanese daily newspaper) 26.6.21

 

Copyright Rob Kingston

 

Saturday 26 June 2021

OUCH!

 OUCH!

By Rosemary Clarke


By Rosemary Clarke
They bite you here
They bite you there
They bite most blessed anywhere.
The itching almost
Drives you bats
Of course I'm talking about gnats.
And when you're
happy and asleep
Dreaming of those jumping sheep
From near your ear
A little sound
A whine that tells you they're around.
Then you leap up
Turn on the light
But little gnats stay out of sight
Until you sleep
You hear the drone
And wonder if you should leave home.
But Citronella
Candles call
Gnats do not like that stuff at all
So joss sticks, candles
All alight
And little gnats
Will all take fright
Leaving you
To hit the hay
Knowing gnats will stay away.

Copyright Rosemary Clarke

Friday 25 June 2021

PETER’S RANT

 PETER’S RANT

By Peter Woodgate

I had a dream the other day

That I was in another land

It wasn’t very far away

And love, it drained like coloured sand

Through time.

Wealth, it seemed, was paramount

And gained without the thought for care

It would be stacked too high to count

Without a single plan to share,

Is this a crime?

We were told “this is the way”

To a better life, a future plan

And slogans showed that this would sway

The minds of sheep dressed up as man.

No time to whine.

This land, it chose to isolate

No need for others, it is great

And ruled by one with golden hair

Who lies yet thinks he’s debonair,

Oh mate.

I woke up from this nightmare dream

Sweat on my brow, for it would seem

I was already in this land

Where everything was fine and grand,

But the one with hair like a toilet brush

Will find statistics, with a rush,

Do not match up to those he gave

Then brushed aside with a casual wave.

It appears we accept politicians lies

Forgive them as they rule our lives

With damned deceit and guarded truth

The fact is they are just uncouth.

If only I could trust someone

To tell the truth treat all as one,

But reluctantly know that won’t be

Corruption is the game you see.

And power is the ultimate

We’re damned and we know our fate.

Votes are planned and aimed at those

Who just don’t look beyond their nose

So keep them happy, feed and plot

Don’t worry about the other lot.

I doubt it ever will be fair,

Nor will we find Utopia.

 

So there it is, I’ve had my say

Thank God for that, I hear you say.

 

Copyright Peter Woodgate   

Thursday 24 June 2021

Stop!

 Stop!

By Len Morgan


   On Good Friday 6th April 2007 at 3:15pm, I was driving home from work, through Coryton in Essex.  I'd agreed to work that morning because If I don’t work I don’t get paid; I'd been temping at the oil refinery for nearly three years.  So, there I was, at the tail end of a ten-hour shift, heading home to my wife and a hot home-cooked meal.  And to get some real work done, for my sins I’m a writer.  Not a successful one, not a well-published one, but a writer nonetheless.

  I was multi-tasking, as I drove down a quiet country lane, at thirty miles an hour. Listening to the annual Easter service on Radio 4, and mulling over the plot of a short story that had been marinating in my mind for several days.  It was a sunny but bracing spring afternoon, as I approached a small group of cottages on my left.  I glanced in my rear-view mirror and noticed a white van, rapidly narrowing the gap between us. 

  A full choir of voices, bass, tenor, baritone, and soprano’s escaped through the speakers of my car stereo.  The choral voices soared to a crescendo angelic and harmonious.  Beautiful

  “Stop!” 

  My foot hit the brake.  There was a screech of tyres as the van skidded into the back of me, shaking my car as it slammed into my rear bumper.  At that precise moment, three young children ran out, from a concealed alley, giggling and shouting. They ran straight into the road in front of my stationary car.  Their looks of horror were replaced with surprise, as they realized, I was not going to run them down.

 The voice that had boomed from my radio, so commanding and insistent, had saved their young lives, and they would never even know it.   The music continued unabated and it occurred to me that had I not stopped I would have passed the spot an instant before the kids appeared.

  The van driver came up to my half-open window. He looked dazed.  “Thanks to your quick thinking, those kids are still alive,” he said.  “If you’d driven by I would have been unable to stop.  They would be lying in the road now, badly injured or dying.  I don’t know what to say,” he shook my hand vigorously; “I’ve never seen reflexes like that.”   His emotions played on his face, for all to see, as the kids ran back into the alley.  Somebody behind the van leaned impatiently on his horn.  We both ignored it.  I got out of my car to inspect my rear end. “No real damage!” I said straightening the bent bumper. “Let’s put it down to our mutual good fortune eh?”  I patted him on the back and smiled reassuringly before getting back into my car and carefully driving off.

.-…-. 

  Half an hour later, I was at home.  I switched on my laptop and booted up the internet.  www.bbc.co.uk and reprised the concert I’d been listening to in the car.  I waited expectantly, but there was no shout, nothing!   I played it again and again.  

“Not your usual music repertoire,” said June.

   I told her what had happened.  She pondered for a while.  “Maybe you heard somebody in the alley. Maybe they realized the kids might be in danger and called to warn them?”

  “You’re probably right,” I said, turning back to my laptop, “we can’t expect two miracles in one day.”

  She smiled, “something tells me I shouldn’t be asking...”

  “The boss agreed to pay me time-and-a-half for working today since its Good Friday,” I said.

  “Don’t get too embroiled with that blog of yours Len, dinner is almost ready…”

  

Copyright Len Morgan