Posts Tagged ‘sea’

RE-OPENING MY NOTEBOOK

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

My last entry on Open Notebooks was on 30 July when I was waiting to give birth. In between then and now the worst thing that has ever happened to me happened: after a healthy pregnancy of 41 weeks I went in to a long labour that lasted for nearly five days all in all. It wasn’t until the morning of 7 August that the midwives picked up an irregularity in the baby’s heartbeat and I was rushed in to theatre for an emergency Caesarian. Unfortunately, the surgery was unsuccessful and after a long fight for life, our son Otto’s heart and lungs gave out. He was a first and a much longed-for child.

The rest of August is a blur of shock and grief. I think the body literally puts you into physical shock so you can cope with the spiritual and emotional turmoil. I didn’t know whether I would write or not, but as it turned out, it felt quite natural to open my notebook, start a journal and write poems about the experience.

shells-notebooks

A Parcel from Helen

The next question was whether I would share that process here. In many ways it was something I wanted to do: surely this was the point of Open Notebooks? The death itself had been necessarily public: pregnancy is a time of expectation and many of the physical changes in the body are obvious. Friends, family and colleagues await news. Yet the intensity and depth of grief felt inherently private. My Twitter, Facebook, online blogging and browsing were all abruptly halted. Even connecting to the internet to check email was something I was slow to do. I needed the quiet of trees and birds, to look at the sea not the screen.

The Beach at Cassis

The Beach at Cassis

A huge wave of support washed in from everyone we knew. The buzzer would sound and packages arrived. The parcels, notes of condolence, cards and flowers were a comfort, and something I came to enjoy, despite their provenance.

thepoetreclining

Abiye Sends Me 'The Poet Reclining' and Some Shades. There's a beautiful synchronicity to this package's arrival. All week I'd been working on a poem - in my mind was a long walk in the Luberon earlier in the summer I wanted to compare to a painting by Chagall, with a horse, green fields and a bruised-looking sky. There was something very particular about the colours and the atmosphere I wanted to catch but I couldn't quite conjure up the image. Abiye's gift came with a postcard of Chagall's The Poet Reclining - the very same image.

Abiye's Dad's Vintage Sunglasses from Nigeria

The Shades Were Hot Too

I began also to venture back online.  One day I clicked through to fellow poet Miriam Nash’s blog post about her creative letter writing workshops which explore the letter as a form. I loved this idea. I left a comment and also started to think about how I’d enjoyed the snail mail letters I’d received and how this experience related to the idea behind Open Notebooks.

With this in mind, Miriam and I met earlier this week and she’s going to be guest blogging on the site with me over the next few weeks.

Notebooks at the Ready

Notebooks at the Ready

We’ll be sending each other snail mail letters, responding to the contents and using the correspondence to generate poems.

The Book of Stamps

The Book of Stamps

I gave Miriam a book of stamps. She seemed very pleased with them. Now I need to write my first letter…

In the meantime…

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

…I’m waiting for two things: one for the baby to arrive – today is my due date, and two, to work out how to upload my feet at dawn video entry that contains lots of stop frame feet images shot at dawn.

In the meantime I’m sorting through old notebooks and trying to find a stashed away but accessible place for them…I found this rough note along the way that I thought I might work more on.


The dark was so dark it had hands that pinned me to the flattened mattress and stuck a knee in my solar plexus. Outside starlight stiffened me like a starfish chucked in a bucket on a tumbledown pier. I did not struggle. A whole night where I tried not to tug at the edge of the madness. The Irish guy who had stayed an extra five days and still could not sleep at night. Days haunted by a purple cartoon of a motorbike accident, pages whipping open on it in the wind as sand blew round our ears and overtly muscular cats clawed at fish bones at our feet and spat hunger at each other.

Then this note from Anne Sexton:


‘Sometimes my doctors tell me I understand something in a poem that I haven’t integrated into my life . In fact I may be concealing it from myself, while revealing it to the readers.’

The feet at dawn and perhaps an incident in the dark, possibly connected. Meanwhile, I wait for the baby to make the journey from light to dark to light again.

Monkey 3

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The monkey that bursts from my torso
burns toast and blisters thumbs.
It swings on bone asymmetric bars,
palms strapped in waxed cotton.

A doll-sized heel kicks in a balloon
bomb of raspberry leaves
while the monkey slides from rib to spine,
fast and strong as a drum,

slips from my grip, rattles
on my ribcage, forces an escape
to an English hillside
grey with rocks and a tupperware sky.

An old soul licks its lips,
swallows salt water, savours the taste
of roasted buffalo
flesh between teeth, wet with juice and blood.

Gulls tannoy traffic, wail
for sea when I wake in the morning,
listening for a heartbeat
under the screech of green lorakeets.

All roads lead to the sea and a list

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

It’s late. I’m 9 months pregnant and I just did a 14 hour day so I could clear a little desk space to spend some time on the big LOVE project – ie Notebooks. Wanted to upload some pics, but short on time and energy. This is a bit like when someone’s in a workshop and makes all these excuses for their draft before reading it. JUST GET ON WITH IT. (This is also the sort of NOTE I write in my Notebook, but going straight to screen here. Making amendments as I go – edit is on. No touch scratch of pen, paper. Sense of audience is stronger whether that is mythical or not.)

1. Woke clutching the long sausage pillow that alleviates aches due to drum stomach big as an old, creaky schooner, full of mercury, saline and child.

2. Delivered a hard disk full of words and words and words about beds. Frames. Timber. Mattresses. Editorial signs. Camden. No ocean: just canal. Water though. Keeps me afloat.

3. Business lunch Savile Row. Never walked down it before. Stuffed sardines rolled with a bread and cucumber salad. Cuttle fish kebab with Sicilian prawns. Sent back the cuttlefish to get it heat blasted.

4. Walked up Regent Street in the sloshing rain. Didn’t want to go underground but couldn’t find the bus-stop. Scared of waters breaking in the tunnel, flooding the whole Underground system in one, mighty gush!

5. Took tube to Brixton. Lost my mineral water somewhere en route. Must have left it in Z’s office in the cobbled yard where W used to keep two horses. Sniffer dog sniffed me: black labrador.

6. Had half a mind to slope to the Lido to swim. Wanted to swim in the rain. In the heavy rain. The urine-soaked chlorinated water. Blue and grey. What colour is rain? Almost empty. Opted for desk that is made of glass – the colour of rain.

7. Ordered Singapore fried rice, egg fried rice, pok choy. No more prawns. Ignored tuna maki. Watched S bite into the back of a soft shell crab.

Karen McCarthy Woolf

karenreddressfull Karen McCarthy Woolf was born in London to an English mother and Jamaican father. Her poetry pamphlet The Worshipful Company of Pomegranate Slicers was selected as a New Statesman Book of the Year. She is also an editor. Check her website for more.

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