Category: Uncategorized

  • quiet paragraph: you’re gone

    quiet paragraph: you’re gone

    you’re gone.
    it was my last day.
    i walked past you, and you didn’t let go—
    you held on for a second
    and told me i was a beautiful soul.

    i was about to cross oceans,
    but you measured distance in heartbeats,
    not miles.

    we said our goodbyes—
    ephemerally.
    forever.

    you found yours,
    and i lost mine.
    because—
    you didn’t find me,
    but i lost you.

  • quiet paragraph: don’t you like it?

    quiet paragraph: don’t you like it?

    the brass door handle is stone cold. it begins to melt as you grab it and squeeze it tight. as the handle turns, tiny wool threads brush your wrist to remind you they’re here to keep you warm. you open the door just enough for you to slip in and leave the crips, cold air behind.

    don’t you like it though?

    don’t you like when your cheeks start to loosen up? and when you shut the door and stillness soaked in warmth surrounds you?

  • part 3: the call

    part 3: the call

    My dad?

    I hadn’t seen him, or talked to him, in a good while. In fact, I didn’t remember the last time. I knew what he looked like because sometimes I’d be flipping through family photo albums and his face would pop up here and there—and these pictures dubbed up as memories. I liked his smile but I didn’t know what it felt like when he smiled at me. I heard him laughing through the pictures, but I couldn’t work out what it sounded like. We had spent time together, and I just couldn’t, for the life of me, remember how it felt to have him close to me. Next to me. With me.

    “Do you want to talk to him? He’d like to ask you about something…”

    “Okay.” I took the phone and put it to my ear and waited, holding my breath.

    “Say something, baby.” Mum’s encouragement was sweet. I just wished I had no eyes on me.

    “Hello…?” I said, my voice shaking a little.

    “Hey, buddy! So nice to hear you! How’s my little champ doing? Do you remember me? Gee, we haven’t seen each other in a while… I have been really busy, you know? I was going to phone you sooner but things kept coming up, would you believe that? But hey, we’re talking now, right!?”

    “Yeah…” was all I could say.

    Then there was silence. It lasted eternity. It felt longer than the 11 years I had been alive for.

    “So anyway… I would like to come and see you! I’m coming down in a couple of weeks with Margo and Monica, do you remember them? I’m sure you do! They’d love to see you too! Mon is so excited to see her older brother, she doesn’t talk about anything else!”

    I was just nodding along, forgetting that such gesture serves no purpose in a phone conversation.

    “I thought I could come by your house and we could spend the day together. We’ll go round Auntie Jane’s, everyone’s going to be there! What do you think? Would you like that?”

    I opened my mouth but the words wouldn’t come out.

    I didn’t know if I’d have liked that. I didn’t know what I thought.

    “You still there?” The impatient tone underlined his words.

    “Yeah…okay!” I said hurriedly.
    “Oh yeah? So you up for it?”
    “Yeah! Bye!”

    I handed the phone back to Mum and ran away to my bedroom.

    Was this phone call my fault? Was I being punished for listening in?

    Maybe if I hadn’t picked up the phone, he wouldn’t have asked me if I wanted to see him.

    There was a comic book lying closed on my bedroom floor. I sat down to find the page I’d left off. Was it page 14? Or 22? 27? Did it matter? I opened it randomly and stared at the drawings, but I couldn’t focus. Maybe if I hadn’t listened in, it wouldn’t have been him phoning.

    The cartoon paperback felt like a safe escape, but every time I opened it, fragments of this story—old and new—were echoing like my dad’s voice on the phone. Familiar, yet distant.

    Should I start from the beginning?
    Maybe if I hadn’t picked it up, I wouldn’t feel so uncomfortable now.

    I flipped back to page one.

    I wasn’t sure how this story was going to unfold. It felt recycled, like I’d been through this before. I wasn’t sure if I wanted to read it again, but a flicker of excitement pulled me forward, even as my stomach churned with dread, and I knew I’d have to.

  • quiet paragraph: a wholesome surprise

    quiet paragraph: a wholesome surprise

    You don’t expect it—and it makes your heart smile.
    Memories flash in front of your eyes in a split second, and a current of emotion runs through your body.

    The name on the screen feels like an entity from another world, yet somehow it fills you with familiarity—like a book you forgot you loved. Your breath catches for a moment as you realize: it is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.

    It’s been a minute.
    No calls. No messages.
    Life happens, and before you know it, years have flown past. The silence settled into the corners of your memory like dust.

    And yet, here it is.
    A message. Simple. Unassuming.
    A wholesome surprise, coated in nostalgia.

  • part 2: familiar voices

    part 2: familiar voices

    So when the phone rang on one cold December morning, I was in my bedroom. Mum answered it in the kitchen, and I casually made my way into the living room. I made sure my brother was too busy building an army of little plastic soldiers and Dad was cooking, TV on at the same time. Perfect. I sat down next to the phone and masterfully followed step two and three.

    “…coming down over the holidays,” said the strangely familiar male voice on the other side of the line.

    Who was this? Definitely a grown man, of which I knew a few—mostly friends of Mum’s and Dad’s. Or family. Had I seen him before? Maybe he visited us when I wasn’t home?

    “Okay,” Mum stated dryly.
    “Can I come and see him?”
    “Sure you can!”
    “I thought I could maybe take him round to Jane’s and make a day out of it, if that’s cool?”
    “Well, why don’t you ask him? He’s old enough to tell you if he wants to.”
    “Yeah…sure…”

    There was a hesitation in his voice.

    “Janny, sweetie! Come over here!”

    Called Mum out loud whilst holding the phone away from her.

    I froze.

    This wasn’t one of those nine-times-out-of-ten conversations. They were talking about me. This man wanted to come see me, take me to Jane’s and make a day out of it. Someone’s planning on making an appearance soon and my presence is apparently required.

    I’m in the spotlight and I don’t like it.

    Anxious all of a sudden, I still managed step five impeccably.

    “Where is he? Janny! Someone’s on the phone for you!”

    I wasn’t sure if I wanted to speak to this man, but for some reason he wanted to speak to me. Why though? To say Merry Christmas? Happy New Year? My birthday was coming up soon so maybe he wanted to get in super early to wish me all the best. Maybe school? What if it was one of my friend’s dads? I had a hard time matching the voice with a face. Yet, it didn’t feel completely new.

    “Where’s the boy?! He was here a second ago. JANNY!”

    Mum was relentless. They usually are.

    “Mum…”
    “There you are! Someone is asking for you.”
    It’s your dad.

  • quiet paragraph: inner distant galaxies

    quiet paragraph: inner distant galaxies

    Each night, as we drift off to sleep dreaming of distant galaxies, we journey through personal constellations—fragments of memories, unanswered questions, moments of joy—floating among them like stars. This voyage carries us inward, guiding us gently through our subconscious galaxies. As we sink deeper into our sheets, feeling the soft cool cotton hug our skin, the boundless depth of our thoughts, feelings, and memories begins to mirror the endless expanse of space. With each breath slowing down, we drift effortlessly through this inner cosmos.

  • part 1: the art of listening in

    part 1: the art of listening in

    The phone rang in the kitchen and the living room. It was a dual line—pretty cool, because you could listen to other people’s conversations. As an 11-year-old, I found that both naughty and fun. I didn’t care for the actual conversations; it was rather the act of doing something I didn’t think I was meant to that felt exciting.

    Step one: Quickly check everyone’s whereabouts. You don’t want anyone walking in on you. If your brother’s napping, make sure he’s fully out. (Note: DON’T put a pillow over his head or anything silly like that.) If your dad is watching the TV, great—if it’s Formula 1 or Forrest Gump, even better. Then calm down, take a deep breath and…

    Step two: Pick up the phone. Ideally you’d pick it up at the same time as the person for whom the call is meant. That’s easier said than done. Catching the exact moment is rare because you, as a young man, have all kinds of other mischief to get up to rather than sitting about waiting for the phone to ring. That’s why you’d usually come into a full-blown conversation, which makes a seamless and noiseless pick-up a necessity. You learn through trial and error.

    This means you might be confronted, from time to time, about whether or not you picked up the phone while Mum was talking to her friend about an upcoming trip to IKEA. If your intention is improvement, it’s in your best interest to deny it—and you might need to do so several times.

    Step three: Cover the microphone. Essential, if you’re planning on staying incognito. Holding your breath only doesn’t work—I learned that the hard way (confrontation followed by denial). The microphone picks up any noise that’s loud enough in your environment. Examples of those could be the microwave signaling the cheese has melted on your nachos, your dog telling you off for eavesdropping, or the other parent asking what the heck you’re doing with that phone.

    The latter means you failed step one.

    In any case, use the juicy part of the palm of your hand to firmly press against the built-in mic. It works. Nothing goes through.

    Step four: Listen carefully—to the conversation and to your surroundings. Know when to put the phone down without getting caught. Nine times out of ten, the conversations are dull—no secrets, no sensations, no juice. Just everyday shite. I suppose I might have started listening in out of being nosy, but I quickly realized there was no thrill in knowing what other people say or do when you’re not with them.

    Yet, I would pick up the phone time and time again.

  • part 4: collapse and clarity

    part 4: collapse and clarity

    “Do you want to punch me?” he asked with a surprising confidence.

    “Huh?”

    “Do you want to punch me? Will that make you feel better? Do you need to let it out?”

    “NO, I DON’T WANT TO FUCKING PUNCH YOU! WHAT ARE YOU? NUTS?”

    “COME ON, punch me! I won’t do anything, I won’t fight back—it’ll all be good,” he insisted.

    I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. He wanted me to punch him. I’d never punched anyone before. Should I? 

    Would it make me feel better?
    What if I started and didn’t stop?
    What if he did fight back?

    But I didn’t want to fight—verbally or physically. I just wanted to talk. He was so drunk. Most people, when they’re that drunk, spill their guts without much of a push. Not this guy. He was unreachable. And maybe he didn’t think there was a conversation to be had. 

    All of a sudden, it felt like some sad, bitter bartender inside me had just mixed together the cocktail of the night.
    A splash of grief.
    A shot of fury.
    A dash of pride.
    And he was serving it straight.

    “I’m not punching you,” I said. My voice cracked.

    I knew this wasn’t going anywhere. I just wanted to run. Anywhere but here.

    “GROW A PAIR OF BALLS AND DO IT! I CAN FUCKING TAKE IT!”

    “GO FUCK YOURSELF!” I shouted.

    “NOW WE’RE TALKING! COME ON! DO IT!” he kept yelling, pushing.

    But I didn’t want this. I wanted my dad. I wanted someone who would love me without me having to make a scene. Someone who wanted me around without me begging for attention. Someone I didn’t have to physically hurt to feel seen. Relationships are hard, but this?
    This was beyond me. And so, while he stood there, squaring up and waiting for the punch, I simply said:

    “Go fuck yourself.” And I turned around.

    I walked away—fast, focused, not looking back. He stood there, swaying, yelling after me.

    “DON’T WALK AWAY! DON’T YOU BE WALKING AWAY FROM ME, SON!”

    But I did. Even as my legs trembled. Even as my heart pounded.
    I didn’t stop. And when I turned the corner, I ran.

    Was this it?
    Was this the conversation?

    My heart was racing, but not from running—I’d only made it a few steps. I stopped at the edge of the pavement, letting cars pass. Their headlights were too bright, too intense, like beams slicing straight through me. I felt exposed. I tried to breathe. Tried to count. Made it to three, maybe, and then my thoughts took over. My legs tingled. My body stiffened. Everything felt too loud and too far away. Yet it was like wearing earplugs and drowning in a thick, hazy fog. My breath came in short, shallow gasps—as if I was breathing through a straw.

    In.
    And out.
    In.
    And out.

    Drops of sweat rolled down my spine. One after another.

    In.
    And out.

    My eyes started to water. I couldn’t see the cars anymore—but I could hear them. I crouched down on the pavement, wrapping my arms around myself tightly. 

    Fighting the noise.
    Fighting the everything.

    I started counting again.

    One. Just focus on the breath.
    Two. What’s going on?
    Three. In. And out.
    Four. Did he follow me?
    Five. Fully in. Let it all out.
    Six. I think he’s behind me.
    Seven. Inhale. Exhale with a sigh.
    Eight. I’m alright, I think.
    Nine. Is he behind me?
    Ten. I inhale—and hold.

    Then slowly…it dissolved. The noise. The panic. A cloud of silence fell over everything. 

    And in that silence, I felt still. Exhale. The storm had passed. But the residue lingered. The quiet felt heavier than all the shouting. In that moment, I felt alone. More than I’d ever felt, even when he was standing right next to me. When I finally turned to look behind me, he wasn’t there.

    Truth is, he hasn’t been there for some time now.

  • part 3: breaking point

    part 3: breaking point

    And so, even though I felt cornered, I tried a couple more times to steer the conversation back to what mattered. But it was like shouting into the wind. No one listened. No one cared.

    I didn’t know what to think. Was I meant to feel outnumbered? Intimidated?

    Did he ask his family to show up? And if so, why? To shut me up? Did he feel like he needed backup?

    My mind was chaos. Every possible theory colliding with the next. And in the middle of it all, it hit me—it’s not happening. With a face full of bitter realization, I slapped some money on the table, stood up, said goodbye, and left.

    I walked up the few stairs toward the exit, the stale pub air clinging to my skin. I felt the weight of drunken eyes piercing my back. It made me stop for a moment.

    Should I…?

    What if…?

    I hesitated, but only briefly. Then I pulled the door handle, stepped out, and left that uninviting space behind me.

    Fresh air.

    But I couldn’t feel it. I only saw the shape of my breath, too frequent and too heavy. I was shaking—but not from the cold. I’d only made it a few steps when I heard him shouting behind me:

    “DON’T DO THIS TO ME!”

    I couldn’t believe my ears. The streetlight buzzed faintly overhead, swallowing his voice in fog. Everything around us felt too still, too indifferent—like the world itself was conspiring to let him keep disappointing me.

    “Don’t do what?” I called back.

    “DON’T YOU WALK OUT ON ME!”

    That was it. I couldn’t hold it anymore.

    “WHAT WAS I MEANT TO DO, HUH? I CAME TO TALK TO YOU. TO YOU ONLY. ABOUT US. YOU KNEW THIS. AND YOU KEPT IGNORING ME—YOU BROUGHT ALL THESE PEOPLE. WHAT WAS I MEANT TO DO?”

    We argued. Our gestures cast warped shadows across the building façade—just as dramatic as our words. No one cared. People passed by with their heads down, watching their own shadows instead.

    “Why are you like this?” I asked.

    “Like what? I care about you,” he slurred.

    I could see it now—he was drunk. Obviously. I felt desperate. Like nothing I said mattered, like no words could reach him.

    “You don’t! And I don’t want you to tell me, I want you to show me. You make it so difficult!”

    I was trembling all over. My palms were sweaty. My mouth, bone dry.

    “Did your mum put you up to this?” he said, completely out of the blue.

    “WHAT THE FUCK? Why would you bring her into this? She’s got nothing to do with this. It’s you and me, and that’s it!”

    “Look, I never hurt your mum. It wasn’t always butterflies and sunny days between us, but I always treated her well. I just want you to know that.”

    His eyes were watering.

    “Leave her out of this,” I said firmly.

    “Okay, let’s talk then.”

    “Finally! What the fuck took you so long?”

    “You wanted to talk, so here it is! You didn’t even recognize me.”

    “WHAT? What do you mean I didn’t recognize you?”

    But I knew what he meant.

    “I bumped into you a few months ago. You didn’t even say hello—you blanked me.”

    A wave of anger swept through me.

    “Are you fucking kidding me? Do you really want to go there? Alright. Yeah—we didn’t exactly ‘bump into each other,’ did we? You were out with a bunch of people, off your face drunk. They dragged you across the whole town square to say hello. And you could barely stand. I did speak to you. But of course you don’t remember that, do you? No fucking wonder. Imagine your dad—who you hardly ever see—is in your hometown and doesn’t even bother to get in touch. And then you play the blame game? Fuck right off, mate.”

    We stood there in silence. It was eerie. Everything else faded—just the two of us suspended in a scene that felt both too loud and too quiet. My heart was racing. My legs were jelly. It took everything not to collapse. His legs seemed like jelly too—but for very different reasons.

    “Do you want to punch me?” he asked with a surprising confidence.

  • part 2: table for three

    part 2: table for three

    I spotted him sitting in the corner. And he wasn’t alone. I knew it. I just knew it. 

    With a deep sigh, I made my way across the room. He sat there with his dad—my grandpa. I liked my grandpa. He was the kind of guy who radiated happiness. Or at least that’s how I remember him. He seemed like a kind person, always laughing and cracking jokes. Most of his teeth were missing, but that never stopped him from flashing a grin.

    He was a proper boozer. From what I know, he drank a lot his whole life. Spirits, beer, wine—whatever was going. He loved his coffee too, but only if it came with a splash of rum. Sometimes more rum than coffee. And if rum wasn’t on hand? Anything over 40%. My dad? Same story. Beer and spirits, mostly—but I doubt he’d ever say no to anything else.

    Could alcoholism be genetic? Some say so. I don’t know.

    So there they were, sitting in the corner. Grandpa waved at me with his usual grin, of course. He was happy to see me—and, to be fair, I was happy to see him too. I just wished it were under different circumstances. This was the first time I’d seen him in a pub. Actually, the first time I’d seen him anywhere other than his house. It was strangely refreshing.

    I sat down with Grandpa on my left, my dad right across from me. I ordered wine and lit a cigarette. Something didn’t feel right. Suddenly these two had so much to talk about. One of those domino-effect conversations where you fall down memory lane and every story unlocks another. At first, I went with the flow. I laughed. I added the odd comment. I tried.

    “So how long has he had his shop there? That must be well over 30 years now—I remember going there as a kid,” said my dad, eyes lit with nostalgia.

    “Oh yes,” Grandpa nodded. “He opened it a few years before you were born. We went every morning to get fresh bread. The whole place was there—it was the only shop. And he knew everyone.”

    “I remember drinking apple juice in his shop…”

    Grandpa laughed. “Old Wilder had a bit of a drinking problem. He’d have a little half with most of us every morning. ‘To start the day right,’ he’d say. He didn’t want you to feel left out, so apple juice it was. But this juice… let me tell you—it sat on the shelves for years. No one would buy it.”

    “I can’t stand apple juice now,” said my dad flatly.

    “No wonder! That juice had a proper kick. You always made a funny face.”

    “How much booze did he go through?”

    “A bottle each morning, I’d say.”

    “To start the day right,” they said in unison, chuckling and shaking their heads.

    As time went on, my dad showed no sign of wanting to cut to the chase. I felt the frustration building. I tried to jump in. We broke the ice—so why not now? I thought I had the right. We’d agreed to meet to talk about us. But he had a different game plan. One I didn’t understand. He’d either ignore me or dismiss whatever I said.

    “Your mother used to grow strawberries in the back garden. They were shit. Every year I told her to move them to the front—more sun there. But she never did,” Grandpa said.

    “The strawberry dumplings she used to make! And she’d get mad when we ate the strawberries on their own!”

    “Yeah, because those were from the market—expensive and bloody good.”

    “Yeah… those were bloody good,” my dad echoed after a pause.

    The strawberry talk ended, and all three of us sat quietly.

    “Look, I know it’s been rough lately,” I blurted out, awkwardly. “I just want to know what’s going on with us?”

    No answer. Grandpa was still wandering through his strawberry patch. Dad was staring into the ashtray like it had something important to say.

    “You know… we hardly see each other,” I added. “We don’t call each other… that much… anymore.”

    Grandpa seemed to snap out of it. Dad kept searching the ashtray for meaning.

    It felt so unfair. Grandpa had no idea what this meeting was supposed to be. He’d just been dragged along. He probably thought the family was getting together. I couldn’t blame him. And I didn’t. I felt sorry for him.

    But I was angry with my dad—for using him as a shield. A distraction. And for giving that ashtray more attention than his own son.

    “Jesus! Can we talk?” I said, my patience fraying.

    “Not now, alright?” my dad mumbled without looking up. “I need a piss.” And he left the table.

    I sat there for over an hour without getting a real chance to say anything. My dad kept dodging eye contact. I could smell the guilt on him. He knew what this was about. He knew damn well. But maybe he just couldn’t face it?

    “…aaah, we always had hens, but you have to keep an eye on them,” Grandpa said suddenly. “They can be pretty cheeky. And they shit everywhere.”

    “So when?!” I cut him off.

    “When what?” my dad asked.

    “When can we talk?”

    “We’ll talk later,” he said quickly, scanning our glasses. “Same again?” he asked, gesturing toward the bar.

    Later. When later? He couldn’t even answer a simple question without deflecting. It was like talking to a wall. A wall that poured drinks to shut you up. The air felt thick and strange, like I was suffocating on my own frustration.

    And then it got worse.

    The pub doors burst open and footsteps echoed through the room. With profound heaviness, I looked up. There they were—his wife and his daughter. My sister.

    Is this for real? I asked him to come on his own—and he brings the whole family? I was angry. So angry. But I didn’t want to shout. I didn’t want to fight. There was no aggression in me. I just wanted to cry. I felt helpless. I couldn’t stand it. I realized how silly I’d been—expecting to have a few drinks with my old man and actually talk things through.

    For a second, I even considered flipping the page—letting it go, having fun instead. After all, this was my family. I looked around the table—Grandpa grinning, Dad clinging to his pint and staring into its depths. His wife was laughing loudly, ordering a gin and tonic. And then… there was my sister. I loved her dearly. But I wasn’t happy to see her—not right there, not right then.