Monday, 24 November 2014

NOT A NANOWRIMO! Stream of Consciousness Exercise: 'How my physical sense of space influences my sense of belonging'



November 23rd. NanowrimoMalta 15. Four newbies meet at The Palace Hotel in Sliema and one hallowed, established and published regular. The event has been cancelled, but we only get to know of this once we have already turned up. At first there is just a Malteser and a young Greek woman. We have no idea on how to proceed. We are total strangers, so we talk about our unbirthed 'novels' and share who we are, our background and the language we write in. Again, we are novices in the art of (novel writing), and there is no-one to direct or discipline our chatter.
Because we have just met, we decide we will work together and not separately on our respective 'novels'.
Therefore we decide upon a theme: 'BELONGING'. I suggest and Mara (Marw?)warms up to this theme immediately, waving away any further proposals.

We draw a spider web of free associations radiating out from the word 'belonging' an encircled nucleus in the centre of the page:
Arrows point to other circles which point to family, lovers, friends, country, nationality, ideology, belief, religion, attitude, profession, community, culture, language, lifestyle, be-longing, the longing to 'be', yearning, and of course Greek mythology (you can't take either one out of each other..the Greek or the myth). Zeus throwing the thunderbolt of separation and creating dualism and the 'other'. The unrequited yearning for the mythic whole, the separation from bliss and the garden of Eden.  U-topia:  U meaning 'No' and topos-place. So 'no-place'. Not in this reality. Striving towards the unachievable. (Digression here to Mara's thesis and the economies of scale of eco-villages).We discuss how each person represents part of the jigsaw puzzle, whilst we are busy piecing it together. Maybe that we are all inherently polygamous, how one lover cannot give you that sense of wholeness, the utopian love, and the only person who can give it to you, is yourself. So eventually we return 'home' to ourselves after losing oneself, a process we have to go through before we can truly belong to ourselves, the only fragmented belonging we can hold to (lots of 'selves' here, we out 'self' ourselves). We talk about possession and monogamy. How monogamy as a cultural 'modus-vivendi' only came into being because of property and the ownership of territory, both metaphorical and physical. We talk until the cows come home, but we are here to write.

Then we decide to write a dialogue.
Questions and answers: I ask, she replies. I type. She talks. Spontaneously
Who are you?
I am a man
Where do you come from?
Greece
Why are you here?
I came to work
On another island?
The Mediterranean, feels closer to home, more familiar. Malta is unique. You can meet so many people here. Even the Maltese are like foreigners in their own country.
Why?
Because you were dominated by so many cultures. You are a mixture of the European, particularly the Sicilian, the English and the Arabic. 
Do you feel you can belong here?
No I don’t. Malta is place where people come and go. You belong to where you start a family of your own. It depends on your memories. You try and delete your memories and re-start. When you leave your home, you will never find it anywhere else.  Not just your family and friends. It is the memory of place that makes you feel at home. Smells like home, for example the whiff of a spice, food that takes you back............

We stop
Others join. 
More coffee and wine. More discussion and sharing, where do you come from? why are you here? what do you do? Everyone is in transition. One of us, a Sardinian, is an architect. We listen to why she is living on Malta. We hone in. We decide to marry architecture and place to the theme at hand. A hush descends on our corner of the cafe and we scribble and thump away at the keyboard. A five minute break. Nibbles arrive and fuel the free-associative exercise. Hard to halt the conversation. Back to work. We write some more. Imbibe some more. Stop and share our offings. Then we depart. Happy Sunday afternoon.

This is my 30 minute stream:

How My Physical Sense of Space Defines my Sense of Belonging.

The sea contains me. The horizon defines me. This is my territory as far as the eye can see, 360 degrees, all around. It is enough to crane my neck and my nostrils dilate. Salt is in my blood. I crave salt, the way other people crave coffee. Salt on my lips. Salt on the sea breeze. Salty sun dried tomatoes rubbed in olive oil and smeared onto fresh crusty Maltese bread. 
Metallic salt, the taste of spilt blood. I bite my tongue with regret, a faux-pas uttered before thought kicks in to restrain it too late.  Violence, war, territorial greed, the stench of stale sweat under boiling armour in August midday heat.. Blood spilt in defence. Blood flowing in possession. Salt everywhere. Terraced fields of encrusted diamonds in a basin of limestone. Worth your weight in salt. The currency of a thousand conquests. In winter, these incised rectangles mirror the blue sky above in their sea water below. The world is upside down. Sifting salt pans.

On a train ride from New Delhi to Diu, I smell the salt in the carriage air, an hour or so before we approach the coast. I start squirming in my seat, suddenly full of excitement, of nostalgia, of opportunity. My Australian carriage-mates look at me quizzically. The sea has always brought promise of potential, of the outside world, the other beyond the horizon, adventure, sustenance, hope and trade. Spices from the orient, foreign tongue and escape. The sea is also a threat. A double-sided sword. My forebears shaded their brows, screwing their eyeballs, crow-lines furrowed by fear and sun, ever scanning what the waves my bring. Friend or foe.  Food, fish or fire and brimstone. Pirates to carry off cotton growers into captivity forever, marauders to raze and haze, pillage and rape maidens in their first blush. 

Run to the citadel, run. Shut yourself up in yellow walls, yellow dust. Always dust.  Choking with enclosure. Nostrils now full of stone, but safety in the stone too and damp. Seeping winters, never feeling warm enough. Wet rising, sfilata/strata upon sfilata/strata. Mould in my nostrils now. The fungus of history, choked by history. Rooted by the past, sinking lethewards bound, rising above it, straining to unloosen the noose.

Yellow. Yellow and blue. The colours that encircle me. Green is the holy grail. Green in spring. Green of the rains. Much needed and prayed for. Crosses made of stone. Jagged garique, etching guilt into my psyche. Fortress strength eroded by guilt and the salt of tears, generations of waterfalls of salt and salt, gurgling through novenas and latticed hearts, bleeding salty wounds. Monthly menstruations and the warriors that seek to destroy those that birthed them. I am the belly button of the Mediterranean. I’m the land of honey. Sweetness flows out with me and bile from me too. My gift is bittersweet. All reality is bittersweet, like the memory of my children who have departed from me.  My soil is dry and brittle and the wind ravages me. Some days more violently, more completely than the days before.  My womb is fertile but my milk, despite the abundance of sweet fennel that grows on my shallow soil, runs dry quickly. Many hungry bellies must seek their fortunes elsewhere. They always return. An islander always does. It is the magnetic pull of sea and moon. The memory of the trail of midnight phosphorescence, on a carpet of deep indigo that stretches forever into destiny.

My spawn think they are the centre of the earth. How can they not. The Mediterranean whirls in their thoughts, the sound of waves crashing in their ear drums, the foam of history lapping at the sides of their mouths. Mare Nostrum - our sea. Middle earth and this archipelago straddling the ley-lines of history. Acupuncture points on tracts of land.  All roads lead to Rome, but first they must pass through Malta. The mouth of the fish, its fins. Its harbours, cradling, refuge from the storm. Exposed and welcoming.  Safety for the sick.  Hospitality and hopitalliers. The brothel of Europe, way before Amsterdam claimed the throne. The Jews of the Mediterranean. Marlowe’s moniker. Who am I? Arab, European, Englishman, Italian?


Always looking towards the horizon line, the horizon, smelling of thyme and salt, honeyed words and sweat.  Forever this longing to be, this longing for the other. Whatever is other is better. In the centre and incomplete. And abroad, turreted by mountains and acres of trees, yards of green, cities of money, libraries offering the known.  Yearning for home, the unknown the horizon brings. I come home to my land, to myself, and I need the horizon line, the promise of the unsaid.

Sunday, 13 July 2014

Displaced Bowels


Tragi-Comic Scenario..coz u always have to see the funny side. Frantic drive from ferry to Mater-Dei  to visit concussed brother..it is 12am and he is obviously befuddled...he tells me doctors say he might have to be operated on because of a 'detached rectum', I am perplexed..go to find nurses who stare at me as if I am crazy...after eons and getting lost in the bowels of a very not very securitized hospital, I find myself retracing my steps back to Emergency, whilst googling 'detached rectums' and totally puzzled how something like this can happen in the first place (major evacuation?) only to find out that all along they were talking about 'detached retinas'!!!...anyway luckily he doesn't need op.

I Want To Recall You

I WANT TO RECALL YOU


Once you were 
and now you're not

In the space that surrounds me

you are vague and intangible

filtered light through slatted shutters

dust motes hovering over plumped out pillows

on the vacant armchair

where you used to slump

Once you were warm

and soft in my arms

Now I screw my eyes

and I try to conjure you
out of afternoon shadows

on the streets we used to tread

but you remain insubstantial

an elusive dream

a wisp of memory

I cannot recall

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Weird things happen after a yoga class



So seriously chilled, I am driving down across from Wembleys in Paceville, coming to a halt in traffic and mulling over the 101 list of things to catch up with on my ever unrolling to do list later that evening. I am brought down to earth and to the here and now by loud banging on my passenger window. Distractedly I lower the windscreen as I can't see anything out of it..it is dark + sand courtesy of Libya and an ineffectual drizzle, streaks the window pane. This woman is frantically beckoning me. I can't place her but in stature, appearance and non -verbals looks very much like a friend of mine who happened to dye and cut her blonde locks last week. She can't have regrown her hair that fast. However this woman is already opening my door and plops herself on my seat with a giant Mary Poppins handbag. My muzzy mind is bemused and is slow to register that I don't know this heavily made up woman in my car seat at all. I'm still hung up on the hair thing..maybe it is a wig. She is an actress after all (my friend that is) or maybe she had second thoughts about her haircut and is grieving for her shorn locks or just in shock. Women get that way about a bad haircut or an inch shorter. I don't have hair and shave what I have left. I haven't visited a hairdresser/barber for over a decade and I can't empathise.


Anyway this total stranger (for it begins to dawn on me - wig or no wig, I haven't got the foggiest idea who she is) asks me if I am going to Sliema. I am, so it is perfectly natural that I nod in the affirmative. She says something about not having enough money to catch the bus and not feeling like walking because she has had a bad day. At this point this is Malta, I am going to Sliema anyway and there is no reason why I should not oblige a tourist. I mean I am not going to carry her on my back all the way and why not. I can't very well ask her to get out of my car, what if she said no? am I gonna drag her out..anyway I have acquiesced and the hoot of a car behind me, urging me to get a move on decides me. Suddenly this stranger launches into a five minute rant, that makes me instantly regret my decision.
"I Vant to party! I vant REVENGE, my boyfriend left me today for another woman, I HATE him!! went to Paceville to REVENGE myself and drink da Vodka..but only young men in Paceville, young drunk men. I bored, I don't want to go home..you party with me, you come with me yes, we go nice place, we revenge, we have fun, KUM with me what you say, hey what you do tonight? come with ME!" she stabs the air with each exclamation, she sounds like herr comrade from some communist sit com and though pretty enough, her face is caked in make up - so hard to really tell- plus she stinks of BO...err I reply "Actually I have to go home and work and organize this party" I say honestly, but wrong word really. "Ahh party, party, party you come with me, forget your work we make reall party, come to my house I live in Sliema, I have lots of Vodka, we party, party at my house,,,what you say, tonight forget your work, tonight I show you party we REVENGE tooo"...the revenge bit gives me the creeps...everytime her voice crescendos I begin to lazily panic, how am I gonna get rid of this nutter and what is she doing in my car?, how did this happen?...I start firing questions, where is she from (Poland), what is she doing here (studying English), how long had she been going out with her boyfriend (she doesn't want to talk about him)..Insomma, I ask her how she knows she can trust me, isn't she taking a risk, I mean we don't know each other and yes Malta is relatively safe but I could have been a seriously bad ass basket case outta one of those criminal CSI episodes. "Oh no, you are good man, I know it", she replies. "But how do you know it, shouldn't you respect yourself more?" I patronisingly retort. "AHHH I study the psychology, the philosophy, the history, I know peoples. I feel it, so you want to party with me say?". Quite calmly I tell her though the offer is very tempting, I'm going to decline, I really have to work, even though an evening of mayhem does fleetingly sound indeed tempting (though not with this revenge bent rebounder), but that is simply the procrastinator demon in me. Suddenly she points to a bus stop. "You can stop me here she says, grabbing her enormous hand bag and turning to open the door.". Thank you and she is out in an instant. I tell her to take good care of herself. "You too" she says and strides across the street, not looking either to the left or to the right. Was she a hooker?...no..she did have EC English grammar bks on her, was she drunk?..maybe she had had one drink too many, but she wasn't pissed outta her mind either.


Last week a fellow yoga attendee got forcibly hugged by a stranger after a yoga lesson who just wanted hugs...maybe it's the vibes. Yoga in Paceville can be dangerous lol.