Wednesday, 18 December 2013

legacy of half nose and cups - lesson for the future?

Looking out from the saluting Battery in Valetta, Malta there is an amazing view and it is a lovely place to examine the oldest part of the city across the harbour.  I spent the day walking around the ramparts examining statues.  By definition they are there as a kind of legacy.  Erected in memory of an event/person/triumph.  However keeping one’s legacy is a tricky business.  Often history is reviewed and re-written the heroes turn out to be villains and vice versa.  Having a big ass statue you’d think would lend itself to a kind of immortality solid against the barrage of the passage of time.  But when revolutions happen statues are often the first to be hauled down.



So these structures embody more than we may at first sight think.  The public is a fickle beast bowing down to leaders and then in a flash hauling their images into the mud. 

There are degrees of course to such things.  Apart from political expressions/regime change etc there is also the sheer stupid vandalism of the ignorant.  I include, in that bracket, the destruction of The Buddhas of Bamiyan.  These were two monumental statues carved into the side of a cliff in central Afghanistan at an altitude of 2,500 meters (8,202 ft). Built roughly 1500 years ago they were dynamited and destroyed in March 2001 by the Taliban after the government declared that they were idols.  You have to just hold your head and groan at times!



In Malta the vandalism is small scale and vaguely amusing at times.  Note this impressive statue has a MacDonald’s cup carefully positioned.


Nearby the statue of another prone figure has been more abused with the statues nose half removed and his head marked with black pen graffiti.


I suspect we erect such things to claim a legacy and those who damage them are trying to make their own cheap mark in history.  A similar but more extreme mindset is found in those who assassinate the famous to earn their place in Wikipedia.  It has ever been so, small minds with aspirations of greatness.  In their ignorance they often leave behind a legacy of their own mindless destructive urges.  As if the world needs more visual reminders of those both high and low that have nothing to celebrate but the violation of person and place. 

The statues that are worth building are the ones that remind us of the loss of life that war brings or those that highlight persecution and real injustice.  They remind us of just how diabolical we humans can be.  A valuable lesson from history that should fuel our desire for a better future.

Friday, 13 December 2013

Unusual sunbathers

Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives

I spotted the two on the rocks near the shore
Concerned because they were so still
Roasting in the mid day sun
Skin parboiled like red cabbage
Drunk tourists recovering from a heavy night
Spending the dark hours poisoning their major organs
Now intent on barbequing their largest organ too
Holidays the freedom and time to
Abuse yourself as you see fit,
Sheer fun for one and all


Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives

My happy cousin timed her meticulous suntan to the minute
Fifteen minutes on front and then back
Even her sides got their blasting
As she perched like soda bread on the griddle



Arms uplifted to let the sun get hidden crevices
“How can something that feels so good be bad for you?”
She’d grin and laugh. Freckled and happy from the sun.

Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives

Sunbathing, I reckon is the closest
Most people get to meditating
Trapped by the sun’s rays
Made limp by the heat
They close their eyes and are silent for once
Feeling nature work its magic on each pore
Exfoliated by sand, massaged by salty sea water
The fresh air pumps into lungs
Usually office bound
And for that second they are in the moment



Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives














When a child I would build sand cars
As the tide came in I’d reinforce my bonnet,
Flatten off my front seat
Place shells for speedometers
The feeling of ownership
And pride in construction
Then, I’d sit while the tide came in
Wearing down my sand defences
There was that delightful moment
When the tide encircled
My car became an exquisite boat
Followed by disaster and destruction
Never made any easier by repetition
My sorrow intense
As my creation washed away

Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives

These refugees risk everything
For a chance
Setting to sea
Paying a fortune
A shot at freedom
Fleeing war, poverty, pain or fear
They set out against the elements
And all sense
On tiny ships ill equipped
Children clasped
The fragrance of hope and salt on their lips
This Mediterranean has become a graveyard
For people who had no choice
But to take a chance
Their bodies washed up on sandy beaches
Weeks later
Bloated symbols of what has been lost



Unusual sunbathers
Prone on the sand
Searching an escape from their lives


Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Do you ever get sick of yourself?


Do you ever get sick of yourself?
I mean really weary and fed up.
When, if it were anyone else you’d just walk way?
But that’s it, isn’t it.
When it is yourself, there is no escape!

In ancient Greece a young girl committed suicide and suddenly there was an epidemic of copycat suicides among girls her age in the city.  It reached such a pitch that the senate needed to act.  So one elderly senator introduced a law, which stopped the loss of life immediately. 

What was the law?

They introduced a law that if a young woman committed suicide her naked body would be carried through the market place for all to see.  This stopped the dreadful avalanche of death.  Evidently, fear of shame was a fate worse than death. 

So, for dire situations we need effective strategies.  When life takes a deep plunge into despair I have my own technique.  You can tell I am a pessimist from the constant cheery refrain I am prone to reassure myself with, at such times

“However awful life appears, it can always get worse!”

In other words, whatever calamity we face usually there is another one possible that makes the present one seem like a picnic.  For some reason, that calms and soothes my spirit.  Things seem suddenly not so bad at all.

Another positive take is however awful I may be, whatever dreadful deed I may have done/omitted I have a few minutes, hours, months to alter and to make amends.  Making things right is not achieved by silent contemplation of my navel.  No, my worth is probably measured on what my contribution to this world has been, in real terms.

So, being heartily sick of oneself can be a really good thing.  It is the diagnosis of a skilled physician who sees the problem and then seeks the remedy.  Too often we get hung up on the first step.  That honest introspection needs to be followed by action and deeds.

The world is weary of words
We want to see our life mean something

That change we seek within ourselves
Will always be linked with the change
Our lives bring to others.


Perhaps that is why we are still here!

Saturday, 7 December 2013

Meetings - the good ones and the rest!


So lovely to watch Charlie meeting my mum and my mum seeing her first great grandson.  He, a matter of months and she with eight decades under her belt.  I know it is because I love them both that I find it all magical on so many levels.  A meeting of souls that transverses age.  Eye to eye, blood of mine, the look that says hello and recognises the wonder of this moment.  In life we have so many meetings, some great, a few sour, occasionally gut wrenching we often lose count of faces and facts.  There are those, who in the words of a famous comedian, in hindsight one should have greeted with

“I spurn you as I would a rabid dog!”

There are others that should have had us on our knees pleading

“I am so grateful for the privilege of knowing you, of being influenced for the better by you”

And others who fall in between, that one could have truly said in that first meeting

“Hello, I’d like to thank you in advance for all the tests, pain and agro you will bring into my life.  Because of it, I grew to know how much sweeter life can be when we learn exactly how to cope with upnoxious, hurtful and disturbed individuals such as yourself!”

That said no one can really know when we first meet anyone what lies ahead.  We cannot guess how damaging or nourishing contact with them will bring us.  We can only recognise that a life of tranquil solitude will teach us little.  We will emerge from the drawer of life like a glove completely unused, brand spanking new.  It is in the wearing and use, the engagement with other souls we truly learn the lessons of life.  We will be stretched beyond our limits, pulled out of shape, moulded anew but we will be forced to adapt and grow in that process.

We are changed by each other every single day.  Those changes are even inherited by our children and grandchildren[1].  These alterations in us are either enjoyed or endured by all who meet us.  So make haste to transform and to be transformed.  Practice makes perfect.