Thursday 29 November 2012

The Priory

(The Priory became the only sanctuary from the persecution of my own thoughts. Could not imagine life on the outside. And yet, here I am, well and getting better. Looking in at that place from the outside is nice.)

(Remembering Gary, Hilary, Matt, Danielle, Lana, Toby, Becca, Beth, George, Richard, Caitlin. And Caio, Bhavna, Nicola, Christos and Harry.)

I remember that place
where I walked with those others.
Rough carpets and blank ceilings,
bland pictures that said nothing,
nothing that could reject or invite
or allow belonging.
And us others passing through this place,
mothers and children, addicts and saints,
stories flowing into stoic walls.

Curtains of ivy framing sash windows,
consultants ensconced in warm academic rooms
upstairs, at the tap trickling drugs that blunted our demons
while we raged and wept on the lower floors.

The garden with the border of red tulips,
defiant buggers that demanded we look.
Deflated balls lying around
for us to kick and ruminate over
while we talked and walked,
bared and covered.

The cold corridors with doors along it
like a tedious metaphor.
I stalked and sweated there.
Once I opened a door and looked in
on a child woman's tormented mind -
raped, addicted, judged, ashamed.
I ran back down that calm, cold corridor
and through my own unremarkable door.
Demented hermits we were behind the doors.

In my room I lay still, watching TV
day after day, escaping my thoughts.
They came with food and drink and care
and too loud voices and too bright lights
and made me wake, shower, eat and step out some.

There was love and philosophy and some simple things
pragmatic grit and resolute hope.
A little bit of everything went
into the making of my new peace.

On my last day, I was alone a lot in the garden.
The tree strewing pink blossoms
effortlessly, impartially,
on whose bed I sat and stared
for an hour at air.
A perfect circle of time,
broken perfectly by my child's embrace.

Outside in the disjointed world
I remember that sanctuary.
We others are among everyone.
No one hears our gnashing teeth
through the chatter of rambling days.
I'm learning it all again, how to be
a mother, a wife, God's loved child,
How to just be.

3 comments:

  1. Beautiful, how articulate. Thanks for sharing because it helped me and I am sure it'll help anyone who reads it - I wish I had that kind of gift. And while it's so meaningful to others to read this, I am sorry you were/are going through a tough time and pround of you for getting help and plowing through the tough times. I have no words of course other than to suggest volunteering for the needy? When I am down in the dumps, as condasceding as this sounds, I give myself to the soup kitchen and, the physical work is exhausting, mentally it's gratifying but also I've heard being grateful is the opposite of regrets and sometimes it helps. I reached here after a couple of attempts - for ex. I tried volunteering at the cancer centre for kids but realized I am too much of a wuss. Volunteering at the school is actually a part-time job, etc.

    Lots of love to Ashwin and Malcolm, and especially you!

    Jayanthi

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  2. Thanks for your very kind comments Jayanthi. Yes I too came to the conclusion that I must give out to others as an antidote to depression. Sorry to hear you feel low occasionally too. Good luck.

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