Cardigans and the liberation of a sexy raincoat

Welcome to April, perfect month for cardigans! Warm, comforting sunshine and cool wind make for ideal layering weather, provided of course that you sit at exactly the right angle and rotate every half hour or so. Gotta get that combination just right.

Cosied up in my cardigan, I am most disappointed to discover that International Cardigan Day is not celebrated until November 13th; something to do with Fred Rogers apparently, and wholesomeness, or something like that … or maybe it was kindness – yep, it must have been kindness. Well, they got that very wrong – in November, in Scotland, a cardigan is far from wholesome, and much more akin to cruelty than kindness. But in April, just about anywhere, a cardigan is perfect.

I do think cardigans deserve appreciation, despite their denigration by one of Scotland’s most renowned sons, Sir Billy Connolly. (Just google ‘billy connolly cardigans’ and give yourself a treat. The man is the world’s best raconteur, as well as hands-down hilarious.)

In addition to his eloquence regarding many notable topics besides cardigans, Sir Billy has been courageously outspoken about Parkinson’s disease, a condition that he has been living with for over a decade. Sir Billy, I must say that I don’t agree with you about cardigans; but I really do appreciate your candour about Parkinson’s, and I know my mum did too. She died almost one year ago – secondary cause of death: Parkinson’s. So, today, on World Parkinson’s Day, I would like to speak out in my own small way, in memory of her.

You don’t die of Parkinson’s; you die with it. That’s the mantra you learn, right at the very start, right when you receive the jarring diagnosis. When will it kill me? – you ask, shell-shocked. The neurologist smiles kindly: oh no, no no, you misunderstand, Parkinson’s doesn’t kill you. Goodness gracious, please don’t be alarmed! Although, just to be clear, I ought to tell you, because after all you need to know … it does tend to shorten your lifespan a little … but it doesn’t kill you … what happens is, you live with Parkinson’s, do you understand? Then, one day, you die with it, not of it – do you understand?

Still overwhelmed with the enormity of it all, you nod unconvincingly. You try to use the remainder of your appointment judiciously, you ask the most relevant questions you can think of; but soon, it’s time to leave, to go home, to adjust, to carry on, to adjust again, to plan, to share, to adjust yet again, to cope, to keep adjusting, to battle, to live. The ensuing years whizz past – that is, except for those excruciating times, when your body freezes and your muscles refuse to listen to your brain screaming at them. You live, and love, and laugh – trying harder every day to laugh, to laugh in the face of the insidious disease you have been forced to accept as your bedfellow. But; every day, it takes a little more away from you, and then a little more, and a little more – fraction by tiny fraction. And, every day, illnesses creep into the spaces that it leaves behind.

The next part is appallingly sudden. Mortality confronts you, and your body simply can’t last another round in the arena of illnesses. Your energy is waning faster now, and Parkinson’s smirks behind your back as it sneakily tips you, with the gentlest but most decisive of nudges, past that stage that the doctors euphemistically call the point of no return. It doesn’t seem fair, and it never was.

At last, then; here you are, and here it is: the dying part. And this is where it gets really cruel. It’s also the part that nobody warns you about. Since the time that I bore witness to it, it’s been tormenting me. Maybe writing about it will help me. Or maybe it will help someone. Or maybe it will do neither. But I can’t keep it locked away.

Nineteen days passed between the date of Mum’s fatal prognosis and her death. She had been in hospital for two weeks prior to that, fighting a battle against the illness that turned out to be her primary cause of death. In retrospect, it was evident she was losing. The day that the doctor uttered the grim words, ‘point of no return’, was just a couple of weeks before Mum’s birthday. Some birthday present.

During those nineteen days, Mum was often conscious, and also often lucid. She often wanted to communicate, but almost always lacked the strength. She often wanted to eat or drink, but weakness prevented that too. She had been robbed of the most basic functions – crucially, she had lost the ability to swallow, which meant that even the most painstaking dribble of water was a choking hazard that could kill her. Inevitably, she suffered brutal thirst and starvation. To death. I know this. Beyond any shadow of a doubt. Because, every day, I swabbed her poor, parched mouth, and moistened her brittle, cracked lips. And, worst of all, because one of the very last words that I heard my mum utter was, “Famished.”

God, that was painful to write. But that’s nothing, compared to her pain. At some point, during the fog of those days, I remember thinking, she must be in terrible pain. Because thirst and starvation are painful, right? And she knows what is happening to her, which must be terrifying, right? I asked the doctors, the nurses, everyone: please, can you give her pain relief? And please, can you give her something to calm the fear she must be feeling? Over and over again, the answer was: no, clinical guidelines don’t allow it. Morphine and Midazolam can kill a person as frail as your mum*. We can’t administer any relief unless there is clear communication from her that she is in pain or distress†. Over and over again, I held Mum’s hand as I talked to her gently, trying to detect the slightest finger twitch or eyelid flutter. I swung between raging determination and apathetic hopelessness. Who knows where she was, for those nineteen days? They say that, when people die, they slip away. But Mum didn’t slip away – she was marooned. It must have felt like an eternity.

Above all, I think Mum just wanted to be human – but Parkinson’s robs you of your humanity at the end. It incarcerates you – you linger within your body’s hollow frame as, beyond any imaginable cruelty, it tortures you, bit by tiny bit, out of your lingering existence††.

You don’t die of Parkinson’s, you die with it.

But – here’s the thing: you also live with it. This year, on my first motherless Mother’s Day, I went with my husband to visit his mother, who was diagnosed a few years ago with … 

… Parkinson’s. 

And I realised that, in the preceding days, I had been so absorbed by memories and sadness, that I had forgotten there can be a certain, incongruous joy in the wider Parkinson’s journey. You laugh much more, and take many more things far less seriously. You actively enjoy your easier moments, finding ways to fill them with happiness and meaning. You take boundless joy in the ones you love, and you take nothing for granted. And what greater achievement can anyone hope for than that?

For all of us, in one shape or another, there is a storm coming. But not all of us learn how to face it. If Parkinson’s teaches us one thing, it is how to face the inevitable, and enjoy the enjoyable. Or, as Sir Billy once put it: grab yourself a sexy raincoat, and live a little!

* But she’s dying anyway! – is what I wanted to scream.

† Unlike cancer, which is known to cause pain at the end of life, Parkinson’s is much more of a clinical grey area. Albeit anecdotally and with no medical expertise, I beg to differ.

†† If you have made it all the way through this admittedly depressing read, you may be thinking that I am an apologist for assisted dying, a very much – ahem – live debate in the UK at the moment. But, although I once may have been, I am not now. The only thing I feel now is gut-wrenching uncertainty. And heartbreak that won’t heal.

Drug seeker?

Welcome to March 2025. It’s not the same as any other March: it is a new month, a new day, a new moment in the forward-spinning journey of our lives. But it is still Endometriosis Action Month.

I’ve been blogging here for five years, and loving it. My starting point for this blog was my endometriosis (aka endo) diagnosis – I wasn’t loving that so much. But I was feeling all kinds of emotions because of it, and wanted to channel them in the most positive way I could.

In that time, I’ve travelled from one end of my forties to the other. And, together with eight billion other people, I’ve travelled from the start of the twenties to the halfway point. What a time of upheaval it has been.

For me, endo-wise, it has been just over two years since I underwent a total hysterectomy with bilateral salpingectomy and oophorectomy (translation*: everything out). Early post-menopause has taken a great deal of adjustment; however, the control and predictability of HRT has given me two years of glorious relief from all but the mildest of my symptoms. Just to be clear though: hysterectomy does not cure endometriosis**. For me, it was a calculated risk and a drastic step that paid invaluable dividends. I fervently hope that my luck continues to hold. 

More recently, I experienced the drawn-out, agonising loss of my mother. My focus strayed away from endo, and my blogging slowed almost to a halt.

Now, I am trying to stand up again. I’m thinking I might stick with a broader focus from now on; so I’ve refreshed the look of my blog a little and, in a slightly-too-Muskish move, changed my site title to Œ.

Be that as it may: there are still eighty million people in the world with endometriosis and, as I mentioned at the start of today’s blog, March is Endometriosis Action Month. Today, therefore, I ‘d like to keep talking about endo and tell you about an experience that made me reflect on a very unpleasant stereotype, often thrust upon endo warriors: that of the drug seeker. 

One early morning, several years ago, endo was causing me such extreme pain that I woke myself up by screaming in my sleep. Feeling the urge to vomit, but determined not to do it on the bed or the carpet, I rolled on to the floor and dragged myself by my elbows along the floor to the bathroom. A couple of tense phone calls later, my husband helped the paramedics get me off the floor and into the ambulance, where I was given some kind of gas. All I remember is that it was OK going in, but tasted like mouldy fruit when I burped it back up, and it didn’t do much for the pain.

What I categorically do remember is this: you can’t fake that level of pain. It is so intense and so present that you can’t think or speak, sit or lie, move or stay still. I couldn’t even piss or shit. There were flashes of fear that I was about to die. I could hardly articulate “Bye” to the paramedic. That’s the level of pain when they pump morphine into you, no questions asked. On admission to A & E, they did pump morphine into me. Then, when the first dose didn’t work, they pumped in a second dose a few minutes later.

At some point, I was transferred to the ward, where I began my spin on the Oramorph-DHC-Paracetamol roundabout. The first day passed in a haze of painkillers, vomiting and fitful sleeping. On the second day, a doctor kindly but firmly told me that I needed move around to prevent my pain worsening. I did what I was told, but it was tough. Thankfully, the painkillers kept coming.

By day three, I began to have less pain. When Oramorph was offered, I refused it – I just didn’t want to feel the nausea anymore. I began to have more sleep; but, that afternoon, a sudden cacophony woke every patient in the ward, as a skinny, angry-looking, young woman was wheeled in by harassed-looking staff. Sitting poker-straight on the trolley, she loudly and continually demanded morphine, until a doctor was found to assess her. The outcome of the doctor’s assessment was, however, not to her satisfaction.

The unfolding exchange was fascinating to observe, as both doctor and patient did an excellent job of advocating for their respective positions. The doctor told the patient that she was viewing her objectively, and making her decision based on the patient’s responses to pain stimuli. Not to be outmanoeuvred, the patient hesitated ever so slightly before retorting, “I was keeping my composure.” This was better than TV – at this point, I was fully invested in hearing what came next.

The next salvo followed quickly: “They were literally about to give me fucking morphine in A and E and now you’re telling me you won’t give me any because you’re viewing me objectively – how is that objective?” 

Ah, I thought, that’s where your argument falls down. If you are able to formulate an argument about needing morphine for pain, then your pain doesn’t need morphine.

A mobile phone call interrupted the flow at this point, and doctor was given ‘talk to the hand’ treatment. There was further shouting and swearing, first on the phone, then at the staff, before the patient furiously announced that she was discharging herself, stood up, and left. 

As the dust settled, I reflected: either she was in no pain and needing to feed an addiction†, or she was in genuine pain and distress. Alternatively, there was a third possibility: she was in some pain, perhaps even a lot of pain, and was demanding morphine because experience had taught her that other painkillers don’t always work.

 Like any number of endo warriors, I’ve been in that third situation – pain up at level 7 or 8, unable to converse normally, needing relief, feeling like I was being judged. And morphine is not something anyone takes lightly, because it is very hard to shake off. 

For me, it felt like glue in my intestines. When I was back home and finally able to relieve the terrible constipation, I had the sensation of a plug being pulled somewhere up in my spinal cord. Immediately, a second wave of morphine hit me like a train. I spent several hours hallucinating and fearful that I couldn’t breathe. I had a night of very broken sleep in which the pictures on the bedroom wall seemed to morph into molten metal shapes and threatened to splurge out of the wall and suffocate me. I spent the following day feeling very restless, anxious and edgy. I wanted to rest but was afraid to stop moving. I went for a walk, then another, then another, then I turned back and walked again. The trees danced and the air swayed. Sounds were amplified and distant, but at least I was breathing in the blessed fresh air.

When you have that magic endo diagnosis, the world of healthcare opens up differently. But for some, it takes many years of Level 7 or 8 (and worse) episodes, just to get on to a waiting list for diagnosis. Waiting times are longer now than ever before and, in the meantime, lives are being irreversibly damaged by gaslighting, lack of understanding, and suffering. Concurrently, medical professionals are facing the impossible, daily task of applying objective means to measuring pain, a subjective phenomenon, the cause of which cannot be explicitly determined.

An accessible and reliable method for diagnosing endometriosis is urgently needed. Recent progress†† is encouraging, but still far too distant. Today’s media landscape is increasingly crowded and noisy, and the voices of those who need to be heard are becoming fainter. All the more reason, then, this March, to take action.†††

* Stolen from my earlier post: https://ownendo.com/2021/10/17/number-23/

** There is no cure for endometriosis: not laparoscopy, hysterectomy, oophorectomy, salpingectomy, any other kind of ectomy, not pregnancy, drugs, hormones, yoga, pilates, giving up gluten, the FODMAP diet, not veganism, castor oil, herbal tea, ginger, turmeric, exercise, reiki, meditation, or Santa. Many of these things can help ease the suffering caused by endo, and each endo warrior inevitably finds their own unique pathway to optimum management of their symptoms. If they’re really lucky, there can be years of relief. But, show me a cure for endo and I’ll show you Santa. In live concert, with Queen, Buddy Holly, and the Beatles. At the Colosseum. Fully refurbished. By Brunelleschi. On a hoverboard. You get the picture.

† Like all stereotypes, the ‘drug seeker’ stereotype has its basis in reality.

†† https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cm28mp8yzyko

††† There are many easy, small but meaningful ways to take action – for some suggestions, visit https://www.endometriosis-uk.org/endometriosis-action-month-2025

Chillicothe Eyes

She is six weeks old in the first photograph; nineteen years old in the last. There are many photographs in between; many memories. Across the years that span her long* and rich life, there is one constant: her eyes. In each photograph, they project her raw power, every bit as much as her delicate prettiness. She knew she had me, my precious little cat, my beautiful girl.

Opposite her now hangs a new picture; a dormouse, all the way from Chillicothe, Ohio, USA. It has been stunningly rendered in needled felt, by a very talented friend of mine, and I can feel it watching me tremulously from its wispy dandelion bed, as I type. Again, the eyes have it. The fragile little soul of that dormouse is in those eyes.

Ah, the eyes. They are so insubstantial, but they capture and project a universe of substance. And yet, they barely change. See for yourself: look at photographs of a person in childhood and adulthood – the eyes are always the same. It doesn’t matter if the body is young or old, the skin firm or wrinkled: aged seven or seventy, that person’s eyes will be unmistakable, even in photographs. It is only when life departs** that the eyes change. Suddenly, photographs and pictures are all you have left. To me, it’s unfathomable that pictures of eyes can project more meaning in that moment, than the eyes of the actual, real, physical person. Even though you can still touch that person and see them, they are gone, gone, gone.

Time now for something more light-hearted: I am glad to say that I can now correctly pronounce Chillicothe†. If, as I used to, you read the name above with three syllables, then allow me to correct you: it has four. So: the ‘-cothe’ is pronounced with two syllables, and it sounds a bit like ‘coffee’††. As opposed to sounding like ‘coat’, which is how my inner voice has been mangling it for ages.  Hence, the whole word does not sound, as I had thought, like ‘Chilly Coat’ (as in; it’s chilly, so put on your coat’); but like ‘Chilly Cothee’ (which is more like; it’s chilly, so let’s have a coffee’).

I really like the sound of four-syllable pronunciation; it’s got a musicality to it, somehow. And it’s not at all strange that I now need to listen to Kim Carnes on repeat, for the rest of the day. At least; not in my eyes.

* for a cat!

** as I recently learned, when I watched my beloved mother die.

† thanks to my friend’s lovely parents (whose eyes have not changed a bit!).

†† OK, at a stretch. If you pronounced ‘coffee’ with the wrong consonants, and a lisp.

O

Cheyne, Stokes,

Cheyne, Stokes,

-????????-

CHEYNE! 

stokes

Cheyne, Stokes,

-?????????????????-

CHEYNE!!! … stokes

Cheyne, Stokes,

cheynestokesss,

che-eyne,

sto-oke-ss-ss,

Che-e-eyne, Sto-o-okes,

Che-e-eyne, Sto-o-okes,

Che-e-eyne, 

Sto-o-okes,

Che-e-eyne, Sto-o-okes,

Che-e-eyne, Sto-o-okes,

-zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz-

Che-e-e-e-e-eyyne, Sto-o-o-o-o-okes,

Che-e-e-e-e-eyyne, Sto-o-o-o-o-okes,

Che-e-e-e-e-eyyne, Sto-o-o-o-o-okes,

Che-e-e-e-e-eyyne, Sto-o-o-o-o-okes,

Che-e-e-e-e-eyyne,

Sto-o-o-o-o-okes,

che-e-e-e-e-eyyne

-?????????????????-

sto-o-o-o-o-okes

che-e-e-e-e-eyyne

-?????????????????-

sto-o-o-o-o-okes

che-e-e-e-e-eyyne …

.

Bring me a glass of wine

Socks. You either have too many of them, or too few. Typically, when weather is cold and the sales hit, you buy a few pairs of socks from your favourite retailer – savvy and responsible consumerism, you think; can’t beat it. You enjoy the next few days of cosy feet, and a warm feeling of satisfaction, at a job well done. Until, that is, you are cleaning out your wardrobe a few days later and find the exact same socks you bought last year, still with their tags on.

I am currently in the fortunate position of having too many socks. But that’s OK, because it’s March*, and I have poor circulation – so; one pair of socks is never enough. I prefer to wrap up my feet in so many pairs of socks that they start to look like giant, multicoloured puffballs. And even then, my toes are still cold (a fact that my husband never tires of hearing).

Nonetheless, there are marital advantages to this conundrum – to wit, I have received several rather lovely pairs of socks as gifts over the years. Works well for both of us, I like to think. One year, I even got two pairs** in different colours†, both with the same amusing message on the soles: ‘IF YOU CAN READ THIS’, says one sole, ‘BRING ME A GLASS OF WINE’, says the other. 

I absolutely love those socks. Firstly: they are incredibly warm and comfortable*** – essential criteria for socks, in my opinion. Secondly, they are hilarious***, not to mention wonderfully witty, because, whichever way round you wear them, the message still works. And thirdly: because the message actually does work – I donned the socks, put my feet up and, hey presto, he brought me a glass of wine***. Result.

Today, though, I have sad news to report. Both pairs of socks are most definitely on their last legs††. One of the blue socks has worn away completely at the heel, and one of the grey socks has lost its battle with my longest toe. And, since the holes were letting the cold in, I had to bid them a reluctant farewell. I gave each one a dignified send-off, then paired the bereft socks with each other. No sense in them going to waste. Especially if I can still use them to order glasses of wine.

And that’s when the tragedy really hit home. With rising distress and a sense of dread, I checked the socks I had just paired together: sure enough, the message now says ‘IF YOU CAN READ THIS’, ‘IF YOU CAN READ THIS’†††. Woe is me – I now have nonsensical socks. Worse still; if I want a glass of wine, my socks can no longer advocate for me – I will have to advocate for myself. 

Ah well, as an endo warrior, at least I’ve had plenty of practice at being my own advocate. Which is actually a far more woeful state of affairs than having to ask for a glass of wine, or mourning the loss of my beloved socks.

Still … maybe, one day, socks will last forever, or glasses of wine will pour themselves. Or – how about some real blue sky thinking? – maybe, one day, endo warriors won’t have to battle for healthcare. I wonder which of those things will happen first?

* March is Endometriosis Awareness Month. Which is why I started blogging in the first place. This blog post just happens to be about socks.

** I must have been really good that year. Or (more likely), I must have been complaining more than usual.

† One blue pair, one grey pair.

*** Yup, I am (very) middle aged. And loving it.

†† Or feet.

††† Not even ‘BRING ME A GLASS OF WINE’, ‘BRING ME A GLASS OF WINE’ – which at least would still have had the desired effect.

Truth, justice, and an ice-cold can of cider!

It’s been a ‘Stop the Clocks’ kinda week. You know, like that poem, the one that goes something like; stop the clocks, cut off the phone, stop the dog barking by giving it a bone, and let the planes flying overhead write on the sky that he is … … … …

… … … 

… … … he is … … … 

… … … you know.

I still can’t say that word; not about him, not yet. There has never been, and never will be, a kinder, or more vital, human being than A. Almost a week later, I am still being choked by grief, and shocked by its strength.

Strength. That’s a good word for A. And selflessness, and fairness, and honesty, and humour, and courage. That’s five more. There are so many. So many. You know when people write, ‘There are no words’? Well, there are. There definitely are. In fact, there are countless words. But that fact is itself the problem: suddenly, every word, everywhere in the whole world, is inadequate. The jaws of the universe open, and swallow up all of the words, and all that is left is the void.

Cancer took him. Fast. His wonderful wife now stands, reeling, in its wake. There are not enough hugs, or thoughts, or words, for her. Lord knows, she deserves them and more; I wish I could give her them, give her help, give her something. But nothing – nothing – will bring him back.

Yesterday, in the queue at the supermarket, for a fleeting moment, out of the corner of my eye, I caught sight of A. Then, the moment was gone. And I paid for my groceries, and carried on living my life. Because that’s what it’s for.*

Today, F, who cares** for my ailing mother, turns 65. I wished her a heartfelt ‘Happy Birthday,’ and then, in the next breath, like a selfish git, I panicked that she could be about to retire! We could be losing her help very soon! What would we do without her? It turns out that I can breathe an egocentric sigh of relief: F has one more year to work before she reaches her statutory retirement age. Disaster averted – for now. As F said, however; it’s amazing how quickly the time passes.

Despite this universal truth, those of us who do not die young (as only the good do, it’s said) are now living longer. This has turned out to be rather inconvenient for most governments. Hence why F can only retire at 66; or why my retirement age (so I believe, anyway) will be 68. Hence also why governments, now more than ever before, want us to save. After all; legalised asset stripping is a far more palatable alternative than admitting that inequality has become an economic runaway train, and stopping it in its tracks.

Speaking for myself (a mostly reliable perspective), the cosy fantasy of saving for a comfortable and enjoyable retirement has very little appeal. I know, beyond any doubt, that riser-recliner chairs, no matter how expensive, do not stop pain, or restore mobility. I also know, and have seen many times, what remains of human beings, rich or poor, after death.

That world cruise you have been saving for? Maybe you will be able to take it. Feel better yet? Or; maybe, you won’t be able to take it. In which case, that ship might as well depart from another planet.

That charity bequest you are planning? That will become a teeny, tiny droplet in the ocean of inequality, the swirling vortex of numbers on screens the world over, the river of imaginary ones and zeros that eventually, helplessly, hopelessly, trickles and dribbles back into the cesspool of collective self-delusion we call ‘the economy’. Cash is king, they say? Cash is nothing.

The truth of the latter statement is, in my view, borne out by two facts: firstly; nobody injects puréed tenners as an analgesic; and, secondly, nobody wants a hug from a computer screen when they know they are dying.

There. That’s what I think. Make of it what you will, if you have chosen to read this far.

I do now know one thing though. Thanks to A, that wonderful, irretrievable, human being whom I was privileged to call my friend, I now know: what you want most, when the end is near, is an ice-cold can of cider. And kindness.

On that note; I hope you all have a very happy birthday (whenever it comes), and a life surrounded by love. Live your life, love your life, and share your love. And, if you have a moment and would be so kind, please raise a glass to A.

* Thank you, Aunty L, for this advice. Your words really reached me.

** And I do mean cares. She cares for Mum in every way, plus a few more. We are incredibly lucky to have her in our lives.

Megiddo

Huddling close in the wide-eyed wood,

Shivering and sniffing; each lonely, stood 

Rabbit and Hedgehog,

Lamenting Megiddo, and all that was good.

Paths all around them, ways without ends!

Yet they conquered the hills, navigated the bends!

Twitchy and Spiky;

Though never as one, they journeyed as friends.

Spring turned to summer; soon restless they grew,

Time came to discover the green and the new;

Fie Nature! Fie Nurture!

Solo, by Solomon’s grace, each one flew!

But Nurture entraps, and Nature is cruel;

The Day, growing old and the Night, growing full,

See Rabbit and Hedgehog 

Grounded; each tangled in weeds she can’t pull.

Megiddo! It calls, it ravels, it binds,

Be ye Rabbit or Hedgehog,

It seeks and it finds.

It catches the limbs; it imprisons the minds.

Then Rabbit departed. The one that was left

Alone in Megiddo, vulnerable, bereft,

Was Hedgehog.

Curled into her pain, she waited and wept.

Aftermath

Close your eyes and remember.

The angelic blue of her eyes as she stares at the ceiling, wondering

The soft scrabble of her searching fingers on my face

The lingering life beneath my helpless hands

The love that has no equal.

Close your eyes and hold it, grip it, seize it, keep it, lock it in.

Others have shown me this path, wandered the long grass bordering the abyss

Guiding, abiding, drifting, caught in the eternal cycle of love and loss.

Crept through every one of the excruciating, fleeting moments

Railed and smiled and wept and slept.

It won’t be long now – treasure it. Close your eyes – rest.

Her Majesty

Alexa play music from 1982.

Under Pressure.

No fucking way.

Timeless artist, immortal song,

Freddie, you cunt ,you died much too young.

What would you make of today?

Would you love me, your Mary,

Your celibate wife?

Would you cherish me through my decay?

Is it the cats? The drink? Are you bored?

Do I stink?

Death comes to us all, as they say.

We are stardust,

You are golden.

I grow wise,

I’m emboldened.

You glitter,

I wither away.

Lacuna

A memory resurfaces. I am standing in a blue-curtained booth in A&E. A young nurse or doctor walks in and asks me where the patient is. I am the patient. I am here.

I am leaning on something. Probably medical equipment – it’s got wires and bits sticking out of it. There is nowhere to lie down and it hurts to sit. She asks me to describe my pain. Is it stabbing? Radiating? Is it dull? Acute?

I am struggling to think, and I tell her: if I were made of Lego, I would ask you to remove this section. She is patient and kind: OK, so the pain is there, but what is it like?

A longish pause. I perspire slightly while I fight the nausea. Then: if I were made of Lego, I would ask you to remove this section. I don’t know what else I can tell her.

I don’t know the right words for the pain. It’s just there. It just is. Please take it away.

The memory recedes. That was at least two years and one surgery ago.

I am here. I am now. I perspire slightly while I fight the nausea. Endo is never gone; it only sleeps. Or whatever the word is.

I am surfing Wikipedia to distract my mind. I learn what a lexical gap is. It also called a lacuna.

God, I could do with an effing lacuna right now. Right there, right where the pain is, right there.

If I were made of Lego, I would ask you to remove this section.