Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Describe Your Home

My home, you could say, is broken.
The sense of belonging is still there, as it should be in most homes, but it’s been disturbed by the many sad memories that have attached themselves to the walls of my home.
 
From the outside, it’s almost a dream home, large and tall, standing proudly beside the many small homes in my lane. But open the door and you’re in for a very different image. The faded paintings that hang from the tattered walls that haven’t been admired in years.
The carpet that’s been eaten away by years of hoovering and walking. The stairs that creak when you run up them.

Then there are the photographs, old and dusty, bringing back memories of when life was once happy. Most importantly my dad's face stands out, the only piece of him left here. He still seems to be here. When you open the door of his old bedroom, a million memories hit you smack in the face. The tears that were wept here, the blood spilt, the voices raised as they argued and me and my brother hid under our duvet covers, like baby mice snuggled up trying to keep away from the cold air.
 
The many things that turn a house from just a building to a special place where you can hide, be safe and where you grew up.
My house has the things that make a house a home - the photographs, the ornaments that aren’t just there for show, but were collected lovingly from every country my mum and dad visited.

A home cannot ever lose its memories. Moving house is one experience I have never had, but it must be very sad. Because you are not losing just some walls, doors and ceilings, but your address, your memories, your neighbours. The place where you realised who you were, cried over the first crack in your heart, laughed with your friends, had your first masterpiece idea of becoming famous. These experiences cannot be replaced.

My home has a sense of fear in the air. After being broken into, stolen from and windows smashed you are waiting for the next tragic event to occur.

Sometimes I just want to get away from my home. The spare room that’s been filled up with rubbish, and the odd toy from our childhood. The old heavy cupboard that holds a million more memories, our birth certificates, my first letter to the tooth fairy, old birthday and Christmas cards, mum and dad’s divorce papers.

If a stranger was to come across these pieces of paper, he’d throw them away, unaware of the pain or happiness they’ve caused, the deep meaning they have.

The spare room is the worst room of the house - because of the junk that’s there; it clogs up your mind, you lose things in there, it’s a jungle of memories. Memories and rubbish mixed together, trying to hide the fact that my dad’s not there any longer.

Our broken home, where we argue cry and hug. The dusty unclean surfaces and the bare eaten away carpets. If it’s not my worst place in the world it’s also my favourite.

The smell of homemade food, wafting up the stairs, the cards that make you smile when you read them, my bedroom filled with pieces of me all, all mine.
The lounge - cosy and comfortable. All the things that make homes what they are can be found in my home, the memories, pictures and items.  

In a way, I’m glad my home is no showroom to a family that have moved so much they don’t belong anywhere, who can’t remember what address they were at when their eldest daughter lost her first tooth, their son passed his exams.

The house is small and well kept, organised with no dust or fluff anywhere. Sometimes I long for this home, not a big grand dream home with a Jacuzzi and swimming pool, but an ordinary home where each room is filled with the right amount of furniture, the computer doesn’t break, there aren’t books piled on every free surface area. But then I think of my home, with a never ending list of chores and something always not working, an item always lost in the rubble. But it’s still my home, my road, familiar and friendly, it may be dusty, old and have a billion sad memories clinging to it, but it is, after all, my home.

Home

Home is the place
Where families are formed
A newly-wed couple
A baby is born

Home is the place
Where you run and hide
Cry into your pillow
Cause' it's on your side

Home is the place
Where memories are made
They shine so brightly
That they'll never fade

Home is the place
Where you grow
House your certificates
Trophies and cups

Home is the place
Where secrets are stored
Scribbled down quickly 
And left to be ignored

Home is the place
Where you belong, for real
And if it was ruined
How would you feel?

Because homes are precious
They make us who we are
And if we didn't have them
We wouldn't go far.

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Special Delivery

I can feel the paper being wrapped over me
It is red and gold with a father Christmas figure
Next I am placed in a post-box
Shiny and red
Drop to the bottom, to greet the hundreds of Christmas cards
A few birthday ones too, 17, 18, 21
On my journey
Through car, plane and postman
I can see the world flashing by
And then the best moment
I am opened in flash
On the morn of December the twenty-fifth
The child screams with delight
And jumps up and down
Saying “Dad’s sent his present from Iraq
Mummy smiles and says “I told you he would”
As I know he’s out there
Fighting for out country
I am shaken and prodded
Cuddled and cherished
After all I’m a teddy
And that is my use
To make children smile
When they’re angry or abused
My journey is over
My wish complete
And now I’ll lay on his bed
As he is softly asleep

My Prom Day 2011

Stood in my pink dress
Hair curly and up in a twisted elegant work of art
Face carefully painted with smooth make up
Eyelashes long and dark
My pointy high heels
And my beaded necklace
Match my sparkly tiara
And my encrusted bracelet
I’ve never felt so beautiful
And shall never look it again

Until maybe my wedding day

Great Britain

I love Britain

Like a mother loves a child
Or a princess loves a pearl
Vain green countryside
Emerald green hills

Beautiful blue skies (in a good summer)
Roast dinners, fish and chips
I love Britain
The cold gloomy winters
And rarely hot blue sky summers
I love Britain

Not just for its chips.

My Dream Day

My dream day
Starts with a bar of chocolate
Ends with a cup of cocoa

I shall travel the world
Tour the places, cities and towns
Read a hundred books
And write a dozen poems

I’ll watch a few films
Listen to some songs
This is my perfect day
Nothing can go wrong

I want to save some lives
Defeat poverty
Extinguish racism
Execute homophobia

I’ll say this now
My dream day
Includes kissing a few girls
Coz I’m gay.

Food Glorious Food

C hocolate!
H eaven on earth
O r a bowl of steaming chips
C arefully plucked strawberries
O mlettes oozing cheese
L uscious apricot yoghurt
A nd sugary sticky donuts
T ango oranges
E xcellent Easter eggs

I maginatively created smoothies
S oft creamy chocolate mousse

Y earn for a packet of
U nbelievably salty crisps
M akes the day better
M ore bearable when I eat some
Y ummy chocolate!

My Heart

Your beautiful sweet face
I miss so much
Your lips, soft and sweet
A perfect magic treat

Your touch made me swoon
My heart beat like a drum
From the first kiss
I knew you were the one

Now you want time to think
Well I’ll give you just that
Ponder all you like
But don’t forget me, remember that

You gave me the best night of my life
But I left something at your house
You want to know
Come find me

It’s my heart.

Crushes and Campus Confessions

The car is driving at a fast speed. I almost want it to slow down. I want to turn back time and rewind. Back to months ago, years ago, to when I was a child. Back to when university was just a place that old people went, old old people, girls that had weird bumps on their chest for some reason that I didn't understand, and boys that had prickly faces. When money was just something I won in Monopoly or asked Mum for when I wanted to buy an ice-cream from the ice-cream van.
How did I get this far?
It seems like yesterday I was eight, and now I am eighteen and about to embark on one of the most scariest adventures of my life.
It is September 29th and I am starting university.
I glance in front and see the back of my parent’s heads. Dad’s is balding with patches of grey hair, and Mum’s is bright blonde and her hair hangs in wavy cascades down her back. Next to me is my little sister, Rosa, she is finding today very exciting, she’s only nine, and I know it will hit her that I am not going to be there to plaster her knee when she falls over and give her jelly babies when she is feeling ill. Today is just an exciting day. It is not until this evening when she is snuggled up in bed, with her lemon yellow hair in strands around her, cuddling her stuffed elephant, waiting for me to come and read her a bedtime story that a tear will dribble down her milky white face and she will cry out for ‘mummy’.

I watch the streets go by, the houses and shops, my rational side trying to remember the route and work out what shops will be useful in the coming weeks, months and years, but my mind is turning to jelly, a wobbly mess of nerves and adrenaline.
Suddenly my heart skips a beat as the sign for: TANBRIDGE CITY UNIVERSITY.
I’m almost there.

The car is packed full to the brim. Next to me is my guitar, and beside that one of my five bags stuffed with my belongings. Mum has stocked up on food for me for the first week or so, so that I don’t starve to death as I’ve paid for self-catered.
We drive into the campus car park and swiftly park the car. I feel a stab of guilt for never actually learning to drive.

My family start to evacuate the car, but I just sit there, glued to the seat, terrified to move. Five minutes or so goes by and then Mum opens the car door and pops her head in and says “Love, are you alright”?
I’m about to whisper “Yes” but instead a flurry of tears gush down my face.
Mum leans in and pulls me close to her, I can smell her strong lavender perfume, and although I hate the fragrance it just makes more tears spark in my eyes, because I know I will miss it.

I clamber out of the car and smooth down my top, I have dressed casual in skinny jeans and a short sleeved green t-shirt. Mum went mad at me, telling me to wear some more clothes, or I’ll freeze to death, but I’m boiling with nerves. 

The Hopes Of 2013

2013 is my year
The biggest one of my life
I’ll start university
And maybe meet my future wife

I leave college, goodbye sixth form
Wave au reviour to family and friends
Drive off to campus to my dorm

Whatever life throws at me
Be it happiness, sadness or glee
I will take in my stride
And learn to survive

So bring on 2013
With all its prosperity
I’ll be diving into adulthood
Turning 18, that’ll be good!

I hope it lives up to its promises
A family holiday to Greece
And all my hard work pays off
And so begins the next piece

The next piece of my life
Chapter, story page
I’ll roll with the dice of life
And roar, like a lion in a cage

Let me loose at the world
Let me free to be myself
Let me start to live

I’ve got so much to give.

The Inevitable Ending

It was going to end
It always is
From the beginning
To the very last kiss
Born as a baby
Small and pink
A feisty toddler
A teenager on drink
30 and flirty
Not settled down
Forty and married
With kids
In a town
Fifty and grey
Teenage children shout
Chloe’s a monster
Natalie doesn't half pout
Sixty, seventy
Getting on my dear
At eighty it ends

You disappear 

The Butter Elves

The green leaves were dripping with the wet rain.
The golden sand seemed to go on forever, miles and miles of hot warm grains stretching even further than the eye can see.
The sky is a deep blue, and twinkling with the dazzling glow of the moons.
They are directly next to each other and both full, one of them appears to have a smiley faced almost carved into it, and the other has a frown, and a tear dribbling down, dripping into the sky and down to the ground.
The dog pads along, its paws thudding on the soft grass, the hot sun beats down on it and a sheen of swear forms on its furry back.

The sound of the butter elves can be heard from a thousand miles away, loud and piercing, they are crying, desperate for a response. But the dog is blissfully unaware. 

Father Figures

So, Dad, what can I say?
I have loved you, till this very day
You heart me, you hug me
You give me joy and pain
But without a dad, what could I gain?

We have many memories
Like that wonderful day
When you bought me the guinea pigs
And a hutch filled up with hay

We argue, we bicker, we fight and we row
I call you a monster, you call me a cow
But after all that, I still love you so
Because you are my dad, and I love you, don’t you know?

Being Accepted

I sit here
Staring in
At the place
Where I don’t fit in

They all laugh
Smile and cheer
While I cry
Sitting here

They have boyfriends
Guys and dates
But I’m different
Or maybe I’m late

A late developer
Who can’t seem to find
Who she is
I’m just hiding behind

Behind the popular girls
 With their long blonde hair
Six inches of make up
Act like they don’t care

I get my heart broken
Yet again
I don’t learn from my mistakes
 I just fall for them

The girls who glare
Hiss and tease
They laugh at me
Help me please

Why me?
What have I done?
Can’t I be normal?
I’m the only one

I don’t fit in
I never will
I’ll be lost
That’s what’s real

I’m still hoping
That they’ll leave me alone
I’ve given up being strong
Instead I just groan

Because being accepted
Isn’t easy at all
So I’ll give up now

And stand defeated and small

You’re the first person to open my eyes

When I first saw you
You were nothing to me
Two years later
You’re everything

I’m up in the clouds
Away with the fairies
Sinking into a dream
Before it’s begun

And I’m scared of the dark clouds
The teardrops and pain
Wishing them away
Like a droplet of rain

Really I’m hoping
For some friendship and love
Because for me
It doesn’t fall from above

I’ve had such bad luck
Yet great things happen too
But now I’m hoping

This gem is you!

Confused

At twelve I fell in love
With another girl
Kept it a secret
She was my world

At thirteen it happened again
Only this time she was straight
She broke my heart, crushed my mind
And made me wait and wait

Then I told my friends
About my sexuality
They seemed ok with it
But secretly denied me

I told my parents
About how I felt
How my life was going
My mum was fine, really sweet
But my dad just said “You’re growing”.

Then I came out to my year group
The bullying and harsh words begun
I got teased and picked on
What had I done?

I got a girlfriend
We weren’t the perfect match
Then she dumped me for another girl
I’d been tricked, there was no catch

I fell in love with a bisexual girl
Who lead me to believe she liked me back
But then she dropped me, said she liked someone else
My life was empty, bleak and black

So I trudged on and gave up on love
After all I’d only had luck that was bad
I felt lonely, sick of life
And very very sad

I had a few crushes
Along the way
But none that exciting
I can recall today

Then in the summer
I met a boy
I fell in love with him
And I felt like a toy

Stringed along, used
For so long
It was time to put a stop to it
And keep holding on

So I told this boy I liked him
And he said he wanted to meet up
So now we are kinda dating
And I hope I get good luck

Coz my luck has been awful
Cruel harsh and cold
Now I might have a boyfriend
As I’m fifteen now, quite old

So if he kisses me
And I don’t like it
I might be a lesbian still
But I could be bisexual
That’s the question

That’s the deal

A funny little thing called life

One day I was walking down the street
Puffing hair out of my eyes
In the boiling heat
When I fell flat on my face and grazed my legs and my knees

Life is a game
Just roll the dice
It can give you luck
Or a headache
How nice

Bad things
Happen to good people
And good things happen to the bad
I’m afraid that is life
It’s very very sad

Life is unfair
A game of lottery
There is no meaning to it
No secret
That’s the key

Take what you’re given
Work for what you’re not
Stop complaining when it’s raining
And scowling when it’s hot

Life is sometimes awful
You want to curl up and die
But also so wonderful
You want to fly through the sky

A hug
A kiss
A smile
A wish that came true
Millions of feelings
That make you, you!

Life is only temporary
So don’t waste it worrying and sad
Live it to the full, laugh and smile
Forget the gloom that you’ve had
Tomorrow might never come
So don’t wish away today
And don’t worry about the past
It’s gone, an old day!

Life is a gift
The lucky ones make it through
They wade through the dark
Into the light
And live to ninety two

You may feel
Like it’s all going wrong
But look at someone who’s dying
As they struggle along

They’d love to be you
Happy and healthy
So it doesn’t matter
If you’re rich and wealthy

The rich can buy items
Watches, jewels and rings
But they too can die
They’re not immortal with their bling

So it does not care
If you’re old, small or young
Death will consume us all
One by one

We can’t stop it at all
It’ll catch us when we fall
It’ll tear us apart
And rip out our hearts

But don’t think about death
Right now you’ve got life
So live it I tell you
Enjoy it I tell you
Don’t wait for death to come

In it’s hood with its knife