Friday, 24 April 2020

Pebbles

I had quite a good start to the race. I had been well fed and watered, and I had been given everything I needed to have a strong chance in this run. With that alone, I know, I had a head start compared to many. I don't want to underestimate the privilege of a good start.

But then, someone started putting pebbles in my shoes - and I couldn't figure out how to remove them by myself. They whispered that the pebbles were my fault, that I mustn't speak of them, that no-one would believe me anyway.

At first, I thought it was normal that you'd race with pebbles in your shoes, that everyone had them in one form or another, and I tried to keep up with my peers.  But after a while it became clear that I simply couldn't keep going. I needed more rests, and sometimes the pain made me cry.

I had been paying attention in school, and we had learnt about pebbles - I knew therefore that pebbles had one very specific shape and size, different from the ones in my shoes... maybe I didn't have pebbles, maybe I just had knobbly soles?

Some people noticed that I had lost pace, and tried to come up with helpful solutions:  Maybe go to bed earlier, maybe a change in diet or perhaps work harder in school.  I tried to tell them that I had pebbles in my shoes, but I learnt quickly that one does not talk of pebbles!

No!  Pebbles only exist in the imagination of naughty children, pebbles are an excuse for a poor work ethic, and anyway, there is no such thing as "pebbles in your shoes putters" in this village, no, this is a respectable village where people are strong runners!

Was the issue perhaps that I just wasn't sporty enough?  There's no shame in being a slow runner they said, no shame at all.  But pebbles...who'd ever heard such nonsense!

Years later, signs of the strain on my feet started to show, and some people started to whisper that perhaps, there was a peb...no!  It could not be! Still, the pebble removal agency showed up.  Finally! I thought.  They will be able to help me get my shoe off and..."We hear you have been falling behind in the race? That you are no good at running?  How very disappointing indeed, we always thought you the troublesome sort."

Years later, a different pebble removal agency untied my laces... and there they were!  All of them!  More than I had even known myself.  Some of them I had buried so deep into the shoe leather, I had forgotten they even existed.

The pebble removal agency was very good at their job of removing pebbles.  Efficient.  Professional.  I will be forever grateful to them.  But it was not their job to fix my shredded socks, to inspect my broken skin or to assess the infection in my foot. No-one pointed out that my posture and gait might have suffered from my unbalanced walk, that I might need physio, that my scars might need help with healing. The pebbles were out, and all was well. Ta-DAA!

  Because I'd had pebbles in my shoes for so long, they felt that I shouldn't be involved in discussions on what would happen to me next, or where the pebbles would be taken, if anyone would be asked about their provenance. They decided that - now that the pebbles were gone - pebbles never really existed.  No-one was asked why I had spent my Teenage years limping, no-one had to justify their actions, no-one had to be ashamed and silenced, no-one but me.

Least said, soonest mended, what the eyes don't see, the heart doesn't grief over, forgive and forget...what pebbles?

Even though the pebbles are gone, the wounds still remind me, want me to know and understand why they are there, and so they bleed into my dreams and drain my brain and pump my heart furiously at words or smells or sounds...

I did try to hit the ground running - but I had lost so much ground!  I was so far behind, I had to file tax returns whilst doing stretches, because wouldn't that be funny, someone of my age running at toddler speed in toddler style...what are you, thick?  Or just a slacking runner? I tried to compete and warm up and improve at the same time, and of course I failed.

Sometimes, if someone asked why I was running in the wrong category, I'd try and tell them about the pebbles.  I thought, if they understood the festering wounds in my shoes, they might not judge me if I need to have another break, or if I slow down yet again, if I cried at the sight of gravel.

But there's a funny thing about the scars from pebbles: They are only a blemish on the one who carried them.   
"Let's not talk of the past, you have a race to focus on."
 "I know many people who've had pebbles, and they've all invented the cure for foot-and-mouth, so maybe focus on how you could be an asset?"

I stopped talking. It's just easier.  Let people think you're just a lazy runner.  Let them pat you on the head with washed out wisdom about managing your breathing and the benefits of warming up, and listen to them as they tell you that once, they kept running despite a twisted ankle. And I kept favouring the other leg, and sometimes I almost forgot why I walked with a limp.

But the infection in my foot, the raw, chafed, broken skin, they did not go away just because I didn't mention them.  So 20 years later, when my legs would not carry me anymore, I called a podiatrist.

The podiatrist was very efficient. Professional. Her specialty is Athlete's Foot , and she knew my problem from the tone of my voice. "It must be Athlete's Foot, because people with AF have trouble with their feet! I will give you an ointment and refer you to a back massage."  Why a back massage? "Because that is where we have free appointments"  I suggested that I didn't think that I had AF, nor did I need a massage of any kind.  I was told that I was refusing treatment, the most definite and worrying symptom of AF. I tried to explain about the pebbles and the broken skin and the limp and the infection and the strain on my bones... but she was very efficient indeed.

Luckily, someone noticed my funny walk.  She took off my shoes, peeled the shredded socks away carefully, and squinted at the inflamed boils, the festering scars, the bruised toes.  It hurt and stank and bled, and we cried, but she did not turn away. She did not look for a socially acceptable way of making this my fault.

She told me that it was OK to cry when people asked me why I never took part in skipping competitions - my feet were too damaged, this would simply never be an option for me. And that, she said, is an OK reason to sometimes feel sad when you have to watch from the sidelines.  As long as you keep cheering them on, it's OK to feel the weight on your heart. Just don't let it stop you from cheering them on. Never let it stop you from cheering others on.

"Sometimes", she said, "sometimes we need to acknowledge that pebbles happened.  Not to dwell on the pebbles, but to deal with the damaged they have done.  Rugby players don't resent rugby if it breaks their nose, but they still have to get it straightened before they can fully rejoin the game. Sometimes it's OK to sit and recover for a while, as long as we don't drop out of the race.  Maybe make the runners closest to you aware, that you might need occasional breaks, that you won't always to run at full speed, and that they might need to remind you to check on your bandages regularly...you will find, many others will understand all too well."

It was a scary thought.  I had gotten used to wearing thick socks and tying my shoes tightly, so that I might not accidentally end up bleeding onto someone else's path. "The infection can only heal if exposed to fresh air and sunshine, hiding this stuff in the dark only protects the bacteria causing it. You will need people to lean on for stretches of this course...there's no other way you'll be able to keep running."

And so I tried.  I looked around at my fellow runners, and tried to talk.  First I'd only tell them that I had blisters, you know, to warm them up, to gage, to figure out how to explain that I carried a bloody mess in my trainers.

I knew it would be hard for them - what do you say?  How do you react? What do you do?  I wouldn't know either...

So I collected responses like pebbles in my pockets, and here's the selection.  Perhaps, if anyone tells you about their scars, pick out the one that feels right:

"But why did you not ask for help?  Why not just remove them?  Why were  you not wiser/stronger/faster/braver?"

"Surely your blisters only hurt because you haven't forgiven the shoe manufacturer.  If you had truly forgiven, the blisters would not hurt you and they most definitely would not have become infected."

"I once had a friend who had AF, and the cream really helped.... I know you think you don't have AF, but foot problems are a clear sign of..."

"Maybe don' talk about your blisters?  They hurt less if you don't mention them. Just keep walking quietly, stop making a fuss."

"And you are sure you didn't accidentally put these in your shoes yourself? It sounds very attention-seeking, is all I'm saying.  Not judging, just observing."

"Maybe don't mention that again - it could upset others.."

"I hear you - blisters, stony things...now let me tell you about that time where I nearly tripped, it's kind of the same thing except my story actually matters."

"If you will speak of pebbles, I will have to stop you there.  Pebbles are too close to home - maybe just right now, or maybe it's something that I'll never be able to hear. But I can kind of guess, so I'll fall in step with you so you don't have to walk alone."

"I don't know what to say - I've never seen an infection like this.  Maybe I could just sit with you when you need to rest your foot?"

"This is sooooo..... Fucking Shit! (Don't look at me - I'm quoting!) And it's not your fault. I don't know how to make it better for you. But I still love you, smelly feet and all"

"Do you want to talk about it?  Do you want me to ask about it?"

"Just popped round because I know for you to run to mine may be hard right now.  Here's some cake."

"I'm no Doctor, but looking at your wounds and hearing you describe your pain, it looks like there's a bit of a journey ahead.  I'll keep checking in - but you need to tell me when you want to talk."

"Want to look at kittens?" 

Honesty,  is what I found, tends to give the best answers; that when we are honest and don't pretend to know the answer or how this is best fixed or even pretend that we can fathom the unimaginable, when we recognise that the best we can do is just to sit with someone whilst they rest their feet, perhaps that is when we are most truly carrying.

 I'm not talking because I want anyone to fix this - I've built a new path from the rabble.  I'm just trying to explain my funny walk, and hope that people will so be able to understand my stumbles and limps and coming up last.

I know I'm not the only one, but I am one with a voice, one that now has ointments. I have got some amazing runners around me, but not everyone does.  And not everyone believes that pebbles still happen.  So I will talk about them - not because it's fun.  But because someone somewhere might see a little runner, trying to keep up, but falling behind - and might understand that they don't need to be told how to run faster.  They need to be asked about what's holding them back.  Don't tell them pebbles can't possibly be happening.  Support them on their way to the removal agency, and make sure someone takes those shoes off and looks properly. And don't let them out of sight until they've seen a podiatrist.

Plus - if anyone can - I'm of course always grateful for an extended hand on the stony parts of the path, we can all help each other overcome our boulders.


Thank you Liz Hall for letting me use your beautiful painting - and for the extended hand.

























Saturday, 14 March 2020

Return journey

I see her from where I' standing - I know where to look.  Her palor barely contrasted with the whitewashed walls behind her, and her skinny knees tremble against her chest.  The blue, flowery pyjamas don't do anything to take away the feeling that I'm looking at a child rather than the 16 year old I know her to be.

Dry eyes stare unblinking at the phone beside her, but her restless hands kept pulling at the spikes of brown hair that had started to grow back in angry tufts. I can't see from where I'm standing, but I know she's biting the inside of her lip.  Hard enough to hurt, but stopping just short of breaking the skin.  My tongue finds the patch of scarred skin behind my front teeth - a tangible reminder for the times when she forgot to stop herself from biting too hard.

Suddenly she springs into life, jolts from the sofa and sprints towards the window, cowering so she cannot be seen from the outside.  I feel the relief washing over her when it's an unknown car pulling up outside the block of flats.  But it reminds her that she has to think quickly - if she gets caught outside her room, then... then what?  What would it be today?  The beatings no longer affect her too badly, and she thinks that's why they have been getting less frequent.  Would she lose her right to her weekly shower for another week?  Lose the blanket at night?  Despite the hot climate, the nights can get freezing and sleep is a luxury on the  best of days.

More likely that her daily bowl of boiled vegetables would be denied.  She chews her lip in a frenzy now, she knows she has to get back because she won't be able to go without food for another day without begging.  And she really doesn't want to beg.

Her eyes move back to the phone, the reason she is taking the risk.  The hands settle on her knees.  The dim gleam of fight fades from her eyes.  She gets up without touching the phone - should she go via the kitchen and see if she can grab a handful of uncooked rice from the pot, the only uncounted food in the house? No, she feels too weak to deal with the pains it gave her last time she tried.

With slumped shoulders she limps back across the tiled floor.  Why is she limping?  Had the nerve in my left leg already been damaged at this point?  No, that was later... it must be a remnant from another unmemorable kick.  One last look back at the phone... I feel her thoughts.  "One person.  There must be one person I could call.  One person in the whole wide world that would answer me when I need help.  How can this be that I cannot think of one person I can call.  One person who would help.  Just one person... There is no-one."

Not one person to call.

The sound of another car approaching makes her speed up her steps. Silently, she closed the door to the small box room behind her without looking through the bars on her window.  She doesn't want to see life going on outside - she has no part in it. Her body collapses onto the white metal framed bed.  The tears still don't come as she picks up the rough fabric and wraps around her ankles - first her left, then tighten the loop until it hurts to allow the fabric to stretch enough to get her right one through the other shackle.  Then pull both loops until the tension is even... she no longer has to think about it, her limbs know how to get themselves in the position they were before the Stepmother left - as always, without saying how long for. 

The cheerfully red, flowery fabric strips, that used to be a dress before... a long time ago, are now wrapped around her wrists, slightly suspending them from the pillow-less mattress. She can already sense the loss of feeling in the tips of her fingers - she should wriggle them, but why bother.

A quick mental check... did she touch anything, move anything, leave anything in a different position?  No, she only sat on the sofa.  She didn't even touch the phone - there was no-one to call.

No-one to call.

Suddenly a loud voice slices through the painful silence:" still remain seated whilst your tutors will go back to their rooms to get ready.  YEAR 8s!  You know that you should be waiting in silence until you are dismissed!"

My knees are locked, I can't move, but I must move.  There is no air in the big hall, no time to think, and I know I can't rely on the handrail for support, it's loose and noisy.  One step.  One step.  One step.  Head up.  I bite the inside of my lip the way I learnt too many years ago to stop the tears.  One step.  One step. Neck, shoulders, back, up, up, one step, and one step.

As soon as the door falls shut behind me, I feel a physical push, my vision blurs, and my lungs protest. One step, think, where can you go.  Toilets? No, there are people.  Only the secluded corner behind a book self where I can hide - quick.  Kneeling down I bite my knuckles.  Must not make a sound, else I be found.  For a minute I give in to the feelings - later I would be asked which feelings.  All of them, all of them like an avalanche, the fear of her coming home as if it was happening right now, the pain in my legs that shadows me every day, the anger for being so weak, the frustration of not being able to fix it, the dread because I know what she didn't know:  that it would be years before it would change, and that it would get much worse before it would get even slightly better.  But mainly the sadness, the burning, searing sadness of staring at a phone without anyone to call.

Not one person to call.

The squeak of the door hurls me back into the library - I turn onto my knees and pretend to be absorbed in the search of a hidden title on the bookshelf as if my life depended on it.  It depended on it. Wipe your face, click your neck, bite your lip and smile. 

Smile as you walk through the front door, let it slam behind you, walk to the car, no key needed, and don't think, just run, just go, go, go.  If there is no-body to call, there will be no-body to notice.

But just as I see the front door, so ready to run, I see them spilling out of the hall:  The shy boy with the wise eyes and dreams of becoming a marine biologist.  The friendly smile of our elected kindness monitor as she waves to me, off to her least favourite lesson.  The cheeky glint in the eyes of my two front row trouble makers as they try to hide a packet of gum from my view. The secret hand signal I share with a student who is too anxious to use words for sharing when he's not OK.

I smile up at a curly haired Teenager who suddenly appears in front of me, surprised at how much he seems to have grown over night, too late to realise that my eyes are still brimming with tears.  "Why you cry, Miss?  I make you sad?"  "No, you make me very proud, I was just thinking of your test and how well you did.  But if you are ever sad, and if you think there is not one person you could tell, remember you could tell me."

He raises one eyebrow, and smirks.  "Yeah, I know.  Then you tell me not be sad and read Romeo with Juliet."

"Go on then, smart-arse - get your book out then, if you already know."  I feel my phone vibrate in my pocket, it will be my husband, just saying hi, saying that he's there.

I couldn't run then because of bars and keys and ties.  Now, I don't need to run (probably couldn't if I tried)- I may be walking this hell again, but this time, I know that there's a happy ending.




 


Saturday, 25 January 2020

Rules

I've learnt to follow the rules early;
I followed the rules of not coming home late, not even a minute
and the rule of finishing my meal.
I followed the rule of reading your expressions
and making sure to not be in your way
I followed the rules because not following them came at a price - 
a bloody nose, a bruised back, hair yanked out.

I followed the rules at school;
I followed the rule of not speaking up, not even when I knew,
and the rule of letting you copy.
I followed the rule of laughing at myself
alongside everyone else.
I followed the rules because not following them came at a price -
being called fat, being left out, sitting alone.

I followed the rules when you died;
I followed the rule of not being dramatic, not dropping my grades,
and the rule of keeping us all in line in public. 
I followed the rule of papering over the cracks,
and not asking for help.
I followed the rules because not following them came at a price - 
being the gossip, being to blame, being the cursed.

I followed the rules when she moved in;
I followed the rule of not using the toilet, especially at night,
and the rule of sleeping standing up.
I followed the rule of going without food,
and keeping my mouth shut. 
I followed these rules because not following them came at a price - 
being locked out, being cold, having to eat sick.


(Not poetic sick - the bitter, still warm, bitty stomach juices your body produces when having to eat cold pasta three times a day, whilst being tired, whilst standing up, whilst hearing your siblings cry.  If only I'd followed the rules better.) 


I followed the rules when questions were raised;
I followed the rule of being polite, and pretending I believed people really didn't know,
and the rule of not embarrassing those with blind eyes.
I followed the rule of pretending I liked sitting in the cold,
and of assuring neighbours that nothing was amiss.
I followed these rules because not following them came at a price - 
I never asked what the price would be, I was assured it would be bad. 

I followed the rules when I left;
I followed the rule of not complaining about pain, drag myself of the floor instead,
and the rule of being a good girl for the boys. (I mean, I'm fat - I should be grateful!)
I followed the rule of taking the drugs and treatments without question,
and of accepting that the door should be locked.
I followed these rules because not following them came at a price - 
more beatings, less food... you'd already shaved off my hair, so there was nothing left to yank.

I followed the rules when hearts reached out;
I followed the rule of saying it was OK, that I really had a tumour / AIDS/ Lupus...
and the rule of wearing my face mask so people wouldn't approach.
I followed the rule of praising you for your kindness in public,
and never mentioning being tied to the bed every day.
I followed these rules because not following them came at a price - 
weekly showers cancelled, bedpan removed, and definitely no change of clothes.

I followed the rules when they came to get us out;
I followed the rule of smiling and thanking and fitting around everyone else,
and the rule of pretending that I believed that no-one ever knew.
I followed the rule of absolving everyone of any guilt, 
don't worry, there was nothing anyone could have done.
I followed these rules because not following them came at a price - 
well, you never told us, you ungrateful child, we would have helped if you'd helped yourself!

I followed the rules when we returned;
The rule of accepting that I was the one too much and having to go,
and the rule of not mentioning the past.
I followed the rule of not asking too much,
and not questioning the people who got paid for keeping children safe.
I followed these rules because...
well, because I was tired, and I was still scared of sitting alone.

I followed the rules of social norms,
I followed the rule of not questioning other people's rights, not demanding my own,
and the rule of not rocking the boat.
I followed the rule of not taking up space,
standing hunched over, hiding, being small.
I followed the rules because I didn't even notice they were rules,
just a way of not sitting alone.

I've been following the rules into adulthood,
I've followed the rule of putting others first, loving others more,
and ever apologising for being in the way.
I've followed the rule of giving more than I had without expecting change,
until I had nothing left to give. 
When I couldn't follow the rules, I suddenly realised,
I had been sitting alone all along. 

I guess it's time for new rules.