Thursday, 1 August 2013

All about the boy


The boy.

The boy had been beaten.  He had been abused. On a sustained and remorseless basis, he had suffered every kind of degradation.  He had been imprisoned in a room with the door knobs removed.  Sometimes the door remained closed for days and the pain in his stomach eventually forced him to defecate in his own bed covers, themselves already filthy, lying on the stained mattress that formed the only furniture in his box room.  Deliberately starved, he had had to resort to scavenging for food from the left over fast food boxes, wrappers and cartons that liberally scattered the filthy house.  The layers of dirt and grease that covered everything causing him no hesitation.  The boy had emptied the contents from dustbins and rubbish bags in the hope of finding something, anything, to suppress the agonising twists in his stomach.  All this without drawing attention to himself.  He had learned long ago not to make a noise, because that earned a beating.  He had learned not to be seen, because that earned a beating, or worse.   He had once asked for water and for three days he had been force-fed salt.  How could he have been so stupid?  To draw attention to himself over something he could get so easily.  Water came out of the taps and even the grown ups couldn’t stop that.  On the rare occasions when his door was open and the grown ups were awake, he had been able to get water from the toilet, rather than risk being caught running the taps.  He had learnt that it was better to remain a ghost, silent, hidden, creeping around the periphery, unheard and unseen. He operated in the darkness, when the grown ups were incapacitated by their needles and bottles and pills and drinks.  He operated in the twilight, before the sun rose and as it set, because that was when the grown ups were least active, most incapacitated, and he allowed himself, for however fleeting a moment, the sensation that this was not how things were supposed to be.

It wasn’t the way things were supposed to be.  The burnt man proved that.  From the moment the boy had taken the hand of the burnt man, he had not been afraid.  He had not been scared and he had not been hurt.  Hand in hand, the burnt man had taken him to a large house, halfway down a wide, tree-lined road, where each house was set back from the road, within its own gardens, enclosed by high fences, hedges and walls, offering solitude, privacy and security.  The house was black and white on the outside, with the largest windows the boy had ever seen.  Inside, the house itself seemed full of light and wood.  Heavy dark furniture, thick carpets and curtains in every room.  It was as far removed from the world he knew as he could imagine. The burnt man had shown him a room with what seemed like the largest bed in the world, with sheets, and pillows and then left him.  The burnt man had left the door wide open, as if inviting the boy to leave, but the boy didn’t want to leave.  The boy peeled off his damp shirt and stained trousers, revealing a thin, white skeletal body, covered in bruises, scars, burns and fresh scabs.  He climbed up onto the soft bed, feeling the gentle give of the thick mattress.  The boy lay spreadeagled on the bed, feeling, for the first time in his short harrowing life, completely free.  Without hesitation, without considering if by doing so he would earn a beating, the boy pulled the soft, white sheets up over himself, enjoying the feeling as they sliped smoothly up his legs and across his stomach.  The cold, clean linen on his body as alien a sensation as the lack of fear for the consequences of the action itself.  Within moments the boy was asleep.  He was asleep, and he slept the sleep of the dead.

He had eventually woken on the big bed and stretched, lying there until the gnawing in his stomach forced him to move.  It was dark in the room, but only because at some point while he slept, someone had drawn the thick dark curtains across the double bay window that stood in the centre of the wall opposite the bed he lay on.  It was not dark outside though, because a sliver of light was streaming through a small gap where the anonymous individual had failed to bring the curtains fully together.  The boy could see tiny dust motes swirling in the bright sun, tracing random patterns.  As he slid off the bed he saw his filthy clothes, abandoned who knew how many hours before, had also gone while he slept. With nothing to replace them, the boy walked naked through the door onto the landing outside. As he walked, his small, white feet slapped noisily on the cool wooden floors, and he briefly considered walking on tiptoes to reduce the noise, but the remainder of the house remained silent. He walked on, looking in through open doors, seeing no-one, but his eyes darted back and forward, constantly alert, flicking over the walls, doors, corridors, ever-vigilant, searching for signs of a grown up, the burnt man, anyone.  As he reached the top of the wide wooden staircase a thick blue carpet replaced the brown wooden floorboards and his movements grew silent again as the slapping of his feet ceased.  Looking down from the iron-railed landing that overlooked an octagonal, black and white tiled entrance hall, the boy saw the burnt man, standing silently, watching, just as he had that first morning.  The burnt mans implacable face remained devoid of all emotion as he raised his right arm up from his side, indicating a door on the far side of the lobby.  The boy descended the stairs silently, catching sight of himself in a large ornate gold edged mirror, but feeling no shame, no desire to cover himself.  As he reached the bottom of the stairs, the boys eyes glanced left at the large blue door, with two narrow vertical windows through which they had originally entered the house. Through the frosted windows he could make out the colours and blurred shape of the path leading out towards the gate through which they had entered the previous day and he paused, hesitating, wrestling with the choice of opening the main door to the outside world or following the twisted pointing fingers of the burnt man into the interior of the house.  The burnt man watched on.  The boy moved his gaze from the front door and the visible but indistinct environment beyond it to the indicated door and its invisible, unknown contents, before settling back on the burnt man, staring intently at his twisted face.  The burnt man knew that the boy was considering which door to choose, and both of them complicitly knew the significance of that decision.  They stood, silent.  Neither speaking.   Finally, sighing imperceptibly, the boy tore his gaze from the burnt man, glanced once more at the front door and started moving, away from the sunlight and the world he knew.  Away from the path leading back to the world and its pain and instead moved deeper into the heart of the house.

In pushing the door open the boy knew, with absolute certainty that a threshold had been crossed.  Despite the unshakeable feeling that something life-changing had just happened, the room beyond was nothing more than a kitchen.  As the boy entered, the door swung shut behind him and although he did not glance back, the boy knew that the burnt man had not followed him in.  To his surprise what lay beyond appeared to be a kitchen.  Impossibly large as far as the boy, with his limited experience, could comprehend, but nothing other than a kitchen nonetheless.  White and clean and clear, it smelled of lemons and the air was both fresh and cool.  What most attracted the attention of the boy was the large round wooden table with food piled on a blue rimmed plate, a clear, glass tumbler of water sitting beside it.  The boy moved to the table and began to eat the first proper meal he could and would remember.

The Angel and the boy.

The next few weeks were the happiest the boy had ever experienced.  The boy quickly discovered that he was entirely free to go wherever he liked in the house and the gardens.  He spent hours inside the house, enjoying the freedom to go where he pleased, without wondering when he would be punished.  He found himself drawn again and again to the library, with its high walls lined with books of every size and shape and the smell of dust, its open fireplace, with the smell of soot.  It was in the library that the boy found the one locked door in the house.  The boy knew, from walking the perimeter of the building, that the locked door led to a few rooms, but these were all firmly shuttered or curtained and no matter how often he looked, he could not catch a glimpse of anything that lay inside.  The mystery of the locked rooms aside,  the boy found he most loved to wander in the gardens, feeling the wind, smelling the grass and listening to the leaves on the lush green trees as they rustled in the breeze. 

Since their initial conversation on the grass outside his house, the boy and the burnt man had not uttered a single word.  The boy would occasionally see the burnt man, either in the house or gardens, but they did not speak.  Sometimes the burnt man would not be around for days, then would appear, watching the boy as he walked or observing him as he played. Always at a distance, never interfering.  After that first day, there were always clean clothes for the boy, although sometimes odd sizes, as if the buyer were not sure of the right size for a young boy.  There were shoes.  The kitchen was always stocked and there were toys, games and funny magazines with pictures.  The boy never seemed to want for anything, but apart from the burnt man, the boy saw nobody.  The boy saw nobody and he was content.

Once, the boy had followed the long path from the front door of the house.  Enjoying the crunch of the gravel underfoot, he had suddenly, but not unexpectedly, found himself at the wide green wooden gate that would lead outside the enclave of the house and its gardens and out onto the street beyond.  Although the boy had never seen or heard a car in the grounds, these gates were obviously designed to allow a vehicle in or out. To their left, stood a similarly green pedestrian door.  Fearing what he might discover, the boy placed his hand on the handle of the gate.  Though he could not see, he could hear an occasional car drive past on the other side. With his heart thumping hard in his chest, the boy twisted the handle, unsure how he would react when the expected resistance confirmed he was, whatever the appearance, as much a prisoner as he had always been.  To his surprise, the handle turned easily, without as much as a creak from the obviously well-oiled mechanism. Pushing the door, the boy found himself on the tree-lined street he remembered from his first day.  A middle-aged woman in a flowery-patterned, yellow dress, walked briskly past, smiling at the boy, bare foot, spindly legs sticking out of his checked shorts with a too big long-sleeved T-Shirt.  The boy smiled back.  He was free.  Truly free.  Still smiling, the boy looked up and down the street, before turning, moving back into the garden and shutting the door, leaving the lady and the outside word behind him.  As he walked back up the gravel path, the boy instinctively knew he was being watched.  He looked up, and there, in the big bay window of his room, the boy could see the burnt man.  Although he could not see him clearly enough, the boy knew. He knew the burnt man was smiling.

The Angel and the boy.

The Angel removed his hat and coat, placing them neatly on a hook and poured the contents of the container over himself, dousing himself thoroughly, before pouring the remainder over the boy.  The sweet smell of petrol was instantly recognisable and the boy knew, in this quantity it would quickly anaesthetise his olfactory nerves and induce a mild state of euphoria.  The boy shook his head, trying to clear it.  He did not want his senses dulled, he did not want to experience anything other than true emotion.

The Angel took a lighter out of his pocket and looked into the eyes of the boy, pausing, absorbing every detail. Remembering everything.

On this, their last day together, like their first, the boy spoke first.

“I’m scared”.

With a wry smile, echoing the memory of that first day, The Angel replied.

“So am I”

“I will wait for you” said the Angel, a tear pooling in the corner of his eye before running down the scarred cheek.

”I won’t forget” whispered the boy, his voice shaking with emotion. “I will miss you when you are gone”

The Angel lit the lighter, holding it steady in his hand as he wrapped both arms tenderly around the boy, before pulling him in close, embracing him tightly as the fire engulfed them both and there weren’t enough tears in the world to extinguish the flames.

Thursday, 27 September 2012

Thank-you James. That will be all.


Are you aching for the grave?
Hoping to make the cut.
Is there a wound you cannot stave?
Wishing you were anywhere but.

Is that a tear in the corner of your pain?
Cascading through this eternal nightmare
Lifes' blood spills, leaving an indelible stain
Covering a gap that wasn't really there

If you measure a man by the depth of his lies.
Then watch as we kneel before the final crown
This unfathomable soul thus meet its demise
Its highs just serve to bring me down

With hope lost, I'm blind to living
Funereal flowers and the stench of decay
A world full of victims no thanksgiving
The convulsions of life have made me this way

I've been getting away with it.

Saturday, 8 September 2012

Windmills of my mind

It's long past midnight.  I have nothing to say.  Nothing to write.  I want to, but I can't.  The frustration is almost physical.  There's nothing there.  If there is, I can't find it.  My mind is turning furiously, feverishly searching for something to write about.  Whirring, spinning, churning.

Round.


You know how sometimes a song resonates exactly with the way you are thinking?  You listen and the lyrics express precisely the ideas, emotions or feelings you are experiencing in a way you never could.  The words capturing perfectly, unequivocably, your state of mind.


Like a circle in a spiral

Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning
On an ever spinning reel

I have been struggling to think of something to write, bogged down in a swamp of failure.  I get so frustrated, because I can feel the words inside my head, struggling to escape, lurking below the surface, rising, only to get sucked back down again.  I can see them, floundering, their shape so close yet indistinct and impossible to make out. I feel there must be something to be written if only I could find the time.  Capture a moment.  But time passes. 


Like a clock whose hands are sweeping

Past the minutes of its face
And the world is like an apple
Whirling silently in space

I get anxious, the anxiety surrendering to despondency, desolation and finally desperation.  I know it's there, lurking, hidden.  The fear of failure drives me on, drives me down into the dark places, where secrets lie hidden, waiting to be disturbed.

Like a tunnel that you follow

To a tunnel of its own
Down a hollow to a cavern
Where the sun has never shone,
Like a door that keeps revolving
In a half forgotten dream,
Or the ripples from a pebble
Someone tosses in a stream

The ideas sweep around inside in my head, words spinning, spiralling out of control.  Jumbled incoherent phrases. A maelstrom of fancies, theories, concepts.  Chaotic, turbulent notions, cast about carelessly, randomly, offering glimpses of a tale to be told, a story to write.  My consciousness wants to scream, but the sound is drowned out by the noise of  my unconscious.  Reasoning, regard and sanity are squashed by the anarchic disorder, too powerful to permit logic. 


Keys that jingle in your pocket
Words that jangle in your head
Why did summer go so quickly?
Was it something that you said?
Lovers walk along a shore
And leave their footprints in the sand

Is the sound of distant drumming 
Just the fingers of your hand?
Pictures hanging in a hallway
And the fragment of this song
Half remembered names and faces
But to whom do they belong?

I'm trapped on this carousel.  Endlessly turning, always moving, never achieving.

Like a circle in a spiral
Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning
On an ever spinning reel

As the images unwind
Like the circles
That you find
In the windmills of your mind!

I have nothing to say.  So it starts again.


Round.

Saturday, 1 September 2012

Staying in lane.


It is estimated that there are 245,000 miles of road in the UK.  To put that in perspective, you could drive to the moon and still not get to the end of the road, if you'll pardon the pun.  Interestingly, if you wait long enough you might get to the end of the road, because the total distance of tarmac in the UK (not including new build) gets shorter every year. Scientifically, it gets shorter because the accuracy of our measurement gets better, but sub-consciously I can't help liking the idea that somewhere, somehow, some roads are getting shorter. The smarter among you will have noticed I prefaced my first fact with "estimated" (that's why I like you, you're smart). The total distance is estimated, because, well, we just don't know where all the roads are.  I'm not talking about missing roads, like the M7, M10 or even more carelessly missing, all the Ms from 12 to 17 inclusive. I'm sure we will find them one day.  I'm talking about the ones we know about, like the one outside my front door.  We know it's there, we just don't really know where it starts and ends, so we don't know what we are measuring.  Don't think about it too much.  It makes your head hurt.

As I lead you merrily down this garden path, and we jump inside my Honda CRV, before pulling out into the aforementioned very busy road, you would be forgiven for wondering where I am taking you.  Well, not far. I just want to show you something. It's the M27 specifically, but Motorways generally.  Motorways only account for 0.9% of UK roads, but that's still 2205 miles of M.  I feel as if I have driven most of them this school holiday.  I admit I haven't seen much of them because most of the time I have spent contorting myself from the waist up, screaming at the children to keep quiet, and if I'm not screaming at the kids, I'm screaming at everyone else.  That's because I have proven my theory that people see the Motorway as a sub-conscious but precise reflection of their character.  The lane we drive in, correlates directly to the sort of person we are.  That's why no-one drives in the inside lane.  The slow lane.  No-one wants to admit publicly to the world that they are slow.  No-one willingly admits they slavishly follow the laws of the land.  Unless they do.  That's why the inside lane is full of sensible, courteous people demonstrating decency, caution and consideration.  And old people. And trucks.

Likewise, no-one drives in the outside lane, the overtaking lane.  The fast lane.  No-one willingly admits they can't wait and don't give a damn about the law.  Unless they can't and don't.  That's why the outside lane is full of people who drive too fast and too close, avoiding rational behaviour and staking too much on the forlorn and misguided belief that they have the reaction time of a fast-jet pilot.  And pricks (admittedly and possibly, also the occasional fast-jet pilot but the two, in my experience are not mutually exclusive).

Not wanting to be one of the minority, the majority end up in the middle lane.  The people in the middle lane aren't slow or old. They don't mind breaking the law.  A bit. Every now and then they will pop into the fast lane, just to demonstrate they have that dangerous, edgy side, but ease comfortably back into their lane once they have manoeuvred past someone else in the middle lane, exuding that strange, smug, self-satisfaction that they are, still, able to pass others in life, even if it's just metaphorically. Just as, occasionally, they will drop down into the slow lane, just for a while, until frustrated with following someone else's pace, and having demonstrated the perceived, requisite respect for the law, others and the appearance of respectability, they accelerate back into the middle lane. Where they feel comfortable.

That's why the middle lane is full of people like me. And you.  Normal people with real lives.  People who can't do everything according to the rules, because if we travel at the right speeds and stay in the right lane, we just won't get anywhere.  We can't wait for everyone else, but we don't want to annoy them.  We look one way, at the inside lane, marvelling at how anyone can have the time and patience to calmly sit there, idly wending their way through life without constantly being late. We rant at their complete and utter indifference to the realities of life, the blindingly obvious lack of baggage occupying every inch of their otherwise empty car, whilst jealously wishing we had that luxury.  We look the other way, at the outside lane, at those who overtake us, surreptitiously eyeing up their bigger, faster car, the two-seater sporty one with no room for child seats, let alone luggage.  We mouth the platitude that they won't get there any faster.  But we know they will.  Because they don't care.  And why should they?  Statistically, Motorways are the safest roads to drive on.

I was on the M25 last week.  There are four lanes. I predict the breakdown of society.

Friday, 31 August 2012

The Rule of Law

Kabul, 2011.

We had another briefing today on the rule of law.  It's quite big out here. The law of armed conflict, international law, criminal law.  In a country where the judicial system is riddled with apathy and corruption and the political system is twisted by patronage and nepotism that may seem more than a little ironic.  That said, I don't think any of us with more than a passing knowledge of Afghanistan will be that surprised by the inherent contradiction.    I think the point is, that by setting an example, the Afghans can be inspired, coerced and (probably) forced to accept some sort of minimum base line.  I will watch that development with great interest...As if that's not enough of a Sisyphean task, persuading the Taliban to acknowledge any set of laws will be a bigger challenge.  Despite a self-professed prohibition on the use of women and children as combatants, we have seen a marked increase in their use.  Yesterday we had an incident where an 8 year old girl was given a parcel and told to take it to the policemen.  As she complied, the taliban then remotely detonated the explosives contained within, killing the girl but no-one else.  

This comes in swift succession to other incidents using women and children as both unwitting and witting accomplices, last week, Afghan police revealed 4 boys, all under the age of 13 who had been recruited in Pakistan for suicide bombings.  Meanwhile, a woman was one of two suicide bombers (the other being her husband) who carried out an attack on Saturday.  Stopping a suicide bomber is hard enough.  Identifying women and children as potential bombers is practically impossible.  This is an example of another law.  The law of unintended consequences.   In much the same way as the insurgents switched from open combat to IED emplacement as they suffered losses and defeats, they have again switched tactics.  As ISAF make some, limited, but genuine progress in establishing security it becomes increasingly more difficult for the insurgents to attack coalition forces, hence they switch targets to civilians, as demonstrated by the attack on the Intercontinental Hotel this morning and Logar hospital at the weekend.  As it becomes harder for groups of fighting age males to actively engage ISAF troops in conventional, mujahadeen-style, attacks, they start to use proxies such as small children, as demonstrated yesterday.  So whilst we, quite rightly, attempt to prosecute this war according to a set of laws, not everyone out here is bound by such conventions.  

As well as the statute laws, what makes matters worse, is that we appear to are governed by a whole host of other laws.  I am not talking about those ethereal made up laws - like Boyles Law, Ohms Law or Keynes Law.  I am talking about the ones that affect us on a day to day basis.  Like Sod's law, Finagles Law and Sturgeons Law.  We all know Sods Law, the big brother to Murphys Law, which states whatever can go wrong, will go wrong - and I am not just talking about dropped toast landing buttered side down.  This being Afghanistan, we have Finagles Law, whatever can go wrong, will go wrong - at the worst possible time.   It's like running out of ammo, just as you get back to base, only to find out you are in the middle of a suicide attack.  Typical.  Here in Kabul there are three laws in particular I would like to draw your attention to.  Those of Messrs Sturgeon, Parkinson and Rothbard are particularly apposite.  Sturgeon's Law states 90% of everything is crap, Parkinson's Law states that work expands to fill the available time and Rothbard's that everyone specialises in their own area of weakness.  

If ever there were a set of laws that should be applied to Afghanistan, that's them

Thursday, 30 August 2012

War of the Worlds

I haven't finished talking about the reunion yet.

Do you ever feel like you don't belong?  Not simply a stranger in a foreign land, where things are different but recognisable, but an alien in another world, surrounded by new, unimaginable things.  Do you look at things that have meaning and worth to their owners, but seem ridiculously irrelevant to you, or worse, do those same objects appear bright and shiny?  Do you covet them?   Do you feel as if you did not originate from the same place as everyone around you and you are there, at best, under sufferance, at worst as an invasive species. Like Wells'  Martians - at once vital, intense, inhuman, crippled and monstrous.  That's how I felt.  For a long time.  

I'm still not sure where I do belong.  As I get older, more and more, I feel that gulf of space.  Over time it seems to widen.  Imperceptibly, but absolutely.  Moving further and further apart from a time and place where I did belong.  Watching it slowly disappear.  Spying on the lives of my childhood friends through the medium of Facebook, I empathised with those aforementioned aliens rather than with my friends.  Their minds may not have had as little meaning to me as those of the beasts that perish, but their lives fascinated me, drawing me in, and with my "intellect, vast and cool and unsympathetic I regarded their earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew my plans against them".  Like the beings in War of the Worlds, across the gulf of Space, I watched them, believing their stories of fame and fortune and glory.  Two decades ago I knew these people, laughed with them, cried with them.  I loved them and hated them. Then and now.  I knew them as children and I knew them as people. I wanted their world.  So I went.

But over the course of the evening my curiosity waned, my jealousy evaporated.  They were the same.  We were the same.  Older.  Fatter. Richer.  No wiser.  No happier.  In reality, most were miserable about some facet of their lives.  Regardless of geographical proximity, it seemed they all envied something others appeared to have.  We all had our red weed and our black smoke.  The stars we had seen as children had turned out to be way too high.  Like Wells' books, this story too has an epilogue.  When I look back on the significance of my personal invasion, I too have an "abiding sense of doubt and insecurity".  My invasion did not result in the creation of my own utopian world, where I could truly belong.  It left me empty and confused.  I also think I can feel a cold coming on...

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

The Nature of the Beast


Others.  They move among us,  yet we do not see them.  

They wade through this sea of swarming humanity.  Waters which, ebbing and flowing, part miraculously,  finding another course. No spoken command, simply an unconscious recognition that the merest lapping contact would pollute irrevocably.  Yet we do not see them.

Their faces, featureless, blurred and indistinct, pass unnoticed and instantly forgotten, leaving nothing but an inexplicable feeling of disquiet.   Their eyes, missing souls, seek out the dark corners of ours, recognising the darkness within, enviously watching the brief but bright fire within us, whilst they burn, long and cold leaving nothing but ash. Yet still we do not see.

They have seen the ends of days and the valley they walk through has no shadows, only death. They are dark angels and they know no fear.  Where they tread, addiction and betrayal grow, despair and chaos thrive.  Bridging the gap between their world and ours, they touch lives, leaving no marks, but initiating a slow spiral descent towards an inevitable, apocalyptic end.  Yet still we do not see them.

In isolation, they prey on the weak, feeding on misery like carrion. Offering neither salvation nor redemption, they exsanguinate life.  Recognising their destructive power they avoid contact with their own.  Attracted by the stench of addiction and betrayal, they come.  Unable to resist,  they congregate, gorging on a feast of manipulation and exploitation. 

That is the nature of the beast.  I see them.