Sunday, October 4, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 15

 I'm out! Look it was a palaver (not the officials' fault - they were amazing). The parents drove into the city to pick me up, we figured a sunny Sunday afternoon would be a stress-free time. Obviously, the faithful car of 13 years decided to just cut engine around the corner from the hotel. Bit of an inglorious end to the stay, hanging around waiting for the auto services by a park. But Sydney weather is treating me ridiculously well (too well - mum said she didn't want to do laundry today because it was "too hot" which is an alien concept to someone who has been struggling for outdoor drying sun in the UK for the last seven years. But alls well that ends well and the next chapter is truly in motion, for better or worse. 

Friday, October 2, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 13

 So I spent all day yesterday in bed. Bought myself yumcha and basically lay around all day feeling pretty sorry for myself. Not quite sure what happened but my whole body - chest down - went on strike. I was rolling around on the floor trying to stretch my hip out, and then lying in bed on one side then the other, trying to make my obliques LET GO. My calves wouldn't even let me crouch down to pick some papers up. I mean, nothing was going to kill me, and nothing like covid-symptom muscle ache. This was no deep immune response. It was just my body saying no to PE. If the fitness was begun primarily in order to facilitate better mental health (all that endorphin, blood pressure, hormone stuff), then I guess the body decided it needed to remind me that other people live here too and should get a say. This morning I've woken up with a bit of a niggle in my right hip but otherwise feeling much more human and capable of basic human movement, so I guess a day in bed is all the doctor ordered? Either that or all the dumplings.

The nurses and police are supposed to come by at some point today to give me the all clear to leave. They keep mentioning a "certificate" and I am super (but not realistically) excited that it will be an actual piece of paper with like, some gold embossed stamp on it. I will frame that thing if so. I understand the validity will last only until I leave the foyer tomorrow morning, but considering there isn't actually any community transmission of the virus here at the moment, I think I should be safe? It's going to be strange getting onto public transport again, and heading inside crowded shopping malls. But intellectually I know this is orders of magnitude safer than any kind of similar situation back at home in the UK.

Home. I'm into that foggy liminal space of not knowing what I am calling "home". It'll be different with different people. And if you buy into that idea that home is where your people are, I'm still torn because my heart is far off across the seas. I've left it there very purposefully, but with no specific plan to get it back. I wonder if the thread will snap at some point without me actively cutting it. That will hurt, I think. But I watched the Freeman documentary last night and I recall my first sojourn out into the English countryside and really getting a ghostlike insight into the idea of belonging to a country. My mind dreams in ochre and yellow and eucalypt colours. Part of my being belongs to this place, and in that sense I am glad to be back to this island home. 

Thursday, October 1, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 12

 I am glad I didn't start this off with a countdown. I mean, I kept a list of the days and numbers to tick off (like in prison, as my dad pointed out, although it should have been scratched into a wall rather than written out on hotel paper), but it was a list TO 14, not downwards. A count up, rather than down, to steal a phrase that was intended to lessen exam anxiety for kids. But now it's so very close to the end, and I am making necessary plans for how I am leaving and what I need to do afterwards, that countdown feeling is inching its way into my brain. Simultaneously excited and also apprehensive, I know that I should be busying myself with logistical details, but there is still so much actual time and I am finding it harder and harder to convince myself not to order massive banquets to the hotel room (yolo, right?) and lay around glorying in this enforced 5-star hotel stay. 

It is possible I have slightly overdone the fitness workouts. My joints are mildly unhappy with me, and it doesn't help, I suppose, that they don't have the regular but incremental lubrication of incidental walking around to get to things. Its absolute stillness (how much movement does needlework take?) and then extreme arms-waving, body-rolling, high-kicking, squat-repping, high-intensity action for an hour and a half. I may be getting too old for this...

The excitement of planning things and treating myself to chimney cake last night has given way to the realisation this morning that there are still two, maybe three, more days of this soft-humming existence. I miss the sound of birdcall (and Aussie bird call in particular - none of that super sweet and vaguely polite British stuff), and the door slamming and engine revving of the suburbs. It's not silent here, and I can't decide if that would be better or worse. There is a neverending mechanical hum of machinery emanating from the city, the whoosh of occasional planes or trucks, and the sounds of the hotel - extractor fans, aircon, vacuums. But it all sounds distant and unrelated to me. There's nothing I can do to affect any of those noises. I can't even get away from them. Uh-oh, is this my lady in the wallpaper moment?

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 11

 The end is so near I can smell it. Which is obviously a good sign, symptoms-wise. I think I may suffer some attachment issues when I get out - flashes in my most anxious moments (and there will definitely be some of those considering all the wedding duties I have apparently just been assigned) and longing for the safety and numbness I felt whilst inside. I wonder if there is some kind of badge all of us quarantine-completers. There should be one. Like a little lapel pin we can flash each other when we meet at cafes and stand much further away from each other than all the other Sydneysiders. 

But I am so looking forward to sitting on grass again and wandering around trees and moving water and feeling a breeze. As an exercise in encouraging gratitude, this experience has definitely worked on me. Never will I take that stuff for granted ever again, but I've just planned out my 4 days of freedom before the festival of sister's wedding commences and I am going to have to scrape for my nature time in amongst all the other normal-life chores. It'll be worth it though. To be back and safe and participating and with family is a bigger deal than past me would have ever been able to recognise. So that's a change. 

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 10

 Realised how dependent my body is becoming on this routine I have set up. Dinner was over an hour late - I say "late", but the paperwork at the start did say that all meals would be delivered to our rooms within a 2 hour window each time, it's just that they have been so punctual that I had gotten used to eating at 1815 on the dot. My stomach was growling, I was getting hangry, snapping at people over the chat and generally feeling displeased and even more frustrated because there was nothing I could do about it. I had a few leftover jelly beans and plenty of tea, but they weren't ever going to hit the spot. And I started looking around on deliveroo, just to see what my options were, but none of them were going to get here imminently, and then I could foresee the daft nuisance of any deliveroo I ordered coming exactly at the same time as the provided hotel food and me feeling like a piggish twit having to eat it all at once. So I sat and stewed and then nachos and chilli arrived, with a can of what I am deciding to interpret as "apology pepsi" (because it is the first fizzy pop I have had since coming in here). Which I proceeded to skull and immediately regretted it. All those bubbles. All that sugar. But alls well that ends well and all ends well if I don't get a hanger-inspired takeaway. 

Today is day 10. Second swab day! Which means I get to see some actual humans for the first time in a long time. The mental health calls everyday are helping to remind me about how to talk to strangers, which is an important skill I was at risk of losing, and I did once see a man walk briefly through an office in one of the tower blocks opposite me (I don't usually because of a combination of lack of direct sunlight and quite darkly tinted windows all around me, but this once I managed it because it was just getting dark and he had his light on and I didn't yet). I think I am facing a lot of back offices, because I've only seen someone inside any of them that one time, and then there was the time a man came out to have smoke on the creepily empty balconies off another block. 

Hopefully this swab is also negative, I don't get any calls until day 13, and then I get the all-clear and go-ahead to arrange to be picked up by actual family. I don't know if I'm allowed to hug them still. I mean we will be living together and I have been given an all clear after two tests, and there aren't any community cases in Sydney, so it's not like they will have it (and they're OLD, so unlikely to be asymptomatic carriers, one hopes). But the rules are so against any kind of common sense that I don't want to make any assumptions. Elbow bumps for the fam it is. 


Monday, September 28, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 9

 I think I'm running out of things to day. Last night as I was staring up at the ceiling I think I was running out of things to think. Which is ridiculous because there is so much that I'm going to need to rush to do when I get out of here that it would be in my own interest to figure out the most efficient way of ticking all those boxes, which requires thinking time now. But it's all a bit like travelling through molasses at the moment. There is a sweetness, and a bitter-sweetness to this time, its luxury, its emptiness, its safety. But there is a goal I need to get to, and things I want to do, and this time is slowing me down and holding me back. But it's getting closer to the end with every passing moment, so at least I can see it coming. 

Excellent meal for dinner yesterday - I am inspired to try it when I get out of here. It'll be a nostalgia eat for me ever after. Salmon fillet (I did think it could be trout for a minute) with creme fraiche, mustard, dill and caper sauce. And kipfler potatoes, which I am a big big fan of. How on earth will I cope with regular mum-meals when I have gotten used to lovely little cakes at the end of each meal? I suppose I'll be the one making them once my shipping container arrives with all the baking supplies. 

It will be so strange to go back to having deadlines and cutoffs to getting things done. Here, if I don't wipe down the tables immediately, it's not a big deal at all. Not even a tiny deal. If I don't get up by 7am (which is the arbitrary time I've set for myself), no one will even notice. There won't be any consequences at all - no washing to have hung, no dishes to have done, nowhere to have been late to, no one to get annoyed at my missing something. I fear it will chafe when all that comes back into force. But at least I have a baptism of fire ready and waiting for me. 3 days after I get out it is time to head inland and do ALL the sister wedding things, and I'll be scrapping for time to do daily yoga, let alone sitting and staring at a wall time. All the boxes I had dismantled in my mind, what with the no real teaching/work, no socialising, and the lovely emotionally open home situation in the last 6 months, will need to get built up and organised again pronto just so I can cope without bursting into tears every 10 minutes. But I will cope. Because that's what I do. 

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 8

 Aaaaaand we're into the second half of this "experience". I took a couple deep breaths when I realised that halfway was a wonderful milestone, but that it also meant I had to do all of the last week again. It's not been difficult, it has just required mental discipline. I suppose, I could have just veg-ed out for the whole time, but I feel like it could have made the time seem much longer, and I would have been in atrocious physical condition by the end. As it is, I'm hopeful I have lost that unnecessary 5 kilos or so, and my flexibility, while it hasn't got noticeably better, has definitely not got worse. My left calf-hammy-achilles is still not right, but that will be a task to resolve once I can test it out on a walk further than one end of my hotel room to the other. 

I've got to rearrange my morning ritual. Sitting up in bed and reading the news might be a good way to slowly come to the reality of being alive in the world, but the state of the news at the moment means it is also making me cranky, depressed and frustrated. Between the virus and the second wave spikes around the world, the state of the (non-)leadership of the government affecting my mates back in the UK, and the ongoing and escalating nonsense sounds coming out of the US, returning the world does not fill me with excitement or glee. There must be cases of people really struggling to readjust after having lived for such a while in such a bubble in quarantine. 

Very oddly, I am finding the positive affirmations and self-care slogans being recommended on my instagram account (I blame liking the yogawithadriene account) being quite helpful. The old cynic in me sees the calming fonts and background colours and reflexively wants to scoff, but in my old age (ha!) I am seeing the wisdom in some of these sayings and fripperies. Perhaps it is emotional growth, or maybe a recognition that this stuff takes effort and matters, but I read, consider and integrate now, which I'm sure my 15 year old self would be up in arms about. 

Saturday, September 26, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 7

I think it is the lack of external stimulation that is the problem. I can watch telly, or listen to the radio, or carry on with my chores in here, but they are all initiated and accounted for by me. There's no conflict other than my diligence v. my laziness and it turns out I miss it. Having said that, I am slightly nervous about how I am going to manage the expectations of others when I'm out. It will chafe, I'm sure, to have to work to someone else's timetable, and that timetable will definitely have a much shorter scale than anything I'm setting for myself in here. Inside, I'm trying to elongate every chore to take up time. 

I worry about others, and then worry that that is simply my arrogance at play - thinking that my fretting is of any value. God knows there is nothing practical I can actually do to help. The world is still spinning out there, but I can't really interact with it. I do miss mucking in, getting involved and emotionally messy. Which is an odd thing for the frigid compartmentaliser that is me, but I was learning how to do it, and now it's yet another skill lying dormant. These skills I paid so dearly to learn, and I hope that, like a bicycle, I will be able to use them again when the situation calls. 

Clean linens and towels came yesterday, which was a fun distraction. And I collected even more hotel soap thingies, which can go straight into mum's collection in the laundry. I really wouldn't mind some new chores right about now. 

Friday, September 25, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 6

 I cannot believe how much life admin I still have to do. It's been 6 days, and I have scheduled myself two full hours in the morning to sit at the computer and work my way through correspondence, and getting my online life in order, and I am still adding things to my to-do list. There are addresses to change over, email subscriptions to cancel, life bureaucracy to research (turns out everything is dependent on me making an in-person visit to the RTA and print out many, many forms), and if I ever feel a lull, I can always catch up on the news. Was there always so much news in the world? It seems like everyday is some life-altering decree or data that sends life on another tangent. 

I feel like I must be losing some of this lockdown weight. I know too many people who have what they call "unhealthy relationships with food" and some kind of body dysmorphia, to feel entirely comfortable discussing weight and food, but the simple fact is I ate far too much and too richly over the last 6 months, with the completely viable excuse that it was one of the only ways I could get any kind of endorphin rush, and now I am the heaviest I have ever been in my life. I do not want to be "thin" and realistically know that even "fit" is too much for me to maintain with my lack of interest in all things active, but I would like to lose a bit of this wobbly spare tyre that has taken up residence. Between the controlled meals, lack of snacking, boredom drinking (of water!) and discipline in my exercise (which started off as a mental health pursuit, really) I am hoping to get down to at least pre-corona levels by the time I finish my 14 days in here. One can hope!

Film review time: The Devil All the Time. First, the good folks at Netflix Party ought to prioritise being able to share videos across different types of devices. Not everyone is using a laptop. Next, the film. It was a long time before the trailer stars appeared in the show, which wasn't bad or good, just, noticeable. Plenty of Peter tingles and admiring Tom Holland's profile/silhouette, and R. Pat would make an excellent Randall Flagg if he had just a little more glower in him. The ending was a bit meh. 3 stars. 


Thursday, September 24, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 5

 It is a strange thing to go a day without any real external stimuli. I have become aware of the natural fluctuations in my mood - which beforetimes would never have affected me very much (too many things to do according to a schedule that involved others, so I am held accountable). If I felt a bit low, so what? The washing machine just beeped and it needs to be hung out, so I would have to go outside and breathe some fresh air, and see the sun, and move my arms around stretching to get the washing in the right configuration and bending over to pick up fallen pegs. All of which would have solved the low mood issue. Now, I feel low for a brief moment and my thinking mind latches on to it and catastrophises to the point where I end up like "Sadness" in Inside Out and cheek down, arms beside me lying on the floor. 

I miss the hoover. I'm too much of a crumby, long-haired soul to be OK with living on this carpet for two weeks without being able to pick it all up off the floor. Lack of yoga mat means any kind of chaturanga ends up with me becoming hyper aware of the bits on the carpet. 

Meantime, the food is becoming the highlight of the days. Breakfasts are consistent and simple, but with something sweet that I've been saving for after as my morning tea (such an important meal of the day!). Granola and assorted cereals are reminding me of the boring but reliable porridges I was eating whilst working (god, that seems like such a long time ago now). Lunches are a bit of a mixed bag. I'm preferring the assorted salads, and I am terribly glad I am not a fussy eater or have any allergies. Dinners are the most exciting - there have been a few duds, which makes a good hot meal even more of a treat. And somebody knows the importance of pudding because there is always some exquisite little cake (well, I'm sure it starts off exquisite - they tend to smush against the walls of the little containers they are packed in, and goodbye carefully piped cream garnishes). All in all I feel like I am eating recommended portions of things, which is a novelty for me. Fingers crossed that between that and the jumping around I can get myself to a size I'm happier with - this spare tyre needs to go!


Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 4

 Subtitle: flowers and breakfast cereals.


Blah day yesterday. I think the excitement about being able to move my body in multiple directions of my choice (which probably explains all the dance and exercise enthusiasm) has worn off a bit. My glutes have got lockdown soreness - combination of overexertion in a short space of time followed by hours upon hours of sitting down. 

Flowers arrived yesterday, and the hotel was good enough to send up a vase, even though the lady on reception had to double check I was allowed. The smell is reminding me that smells exist, and the natural world is still out there somewhere, seeing as how I can no longer access any evidence of this. Also reassures me that I haven't got that anosmia symptom. I did get a little paranoid that I had a little cough yesterday, but when I think about it now, I coughed maybe 5 times and then turned the aircon to a higher temperature and put some socks on and I was fine. Being stuck in my own head is a strange way to force me to get to know myself better. 

I need to be careful to choose my entertainment carefully as well. BBC's the Repair Shop is definitely a good idea, as was the ABC's version of Back in Time for Dinner. Family-based positive kindness with a historical slant, and a focus on the tangible evidence of the resiliency of the human spirit is absolutely what I'm needing, even in the background, at the moment. Netflix art-house-style films by Charlie Kaufman not so much. I'm Thinking of Ending Things is not the weirdest or most depressing film I have ever watched, but because of the situation I find myself in, it left me profoundly disconcerted and pondering existential reality and that is So Not What I Need right now. Leave that for rainy days boozing it up with a bunch of friends over a board game, or sunny days lounging around on picnic tables at the beach. NOT when I'm stuck seeing no human faces for an extended, mandatory period of time. 

Then there was the aforementioned aircon war I had with myself. I don't know if it is because my own body temperature fluctuates during the day, which sounds plausible, or because I am so bored I need to pick a fight with machines, but I CANNOT seem to get the aircon to a comfortable temperature. I go from wearing PE kit to needing socks and a blanket and I am trying to manage the temperature depending on my activities but failing miserably. It feels like I am starting to miss fresh air and sight/feel of grass. Even whilst in full lockdown in the UK, with my lack of balcony or outdoor space, I could still open my windows and dangle my feet outside. I was still watering my little herb windowsill and still could complain when it was too hot/too windy/too rainy. This hermetically sealed room gives me the tiniest insight into, I don't know, submarine or ISS living or something. 

Well, that was dramatic. I'm blaming quarantine. 


Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 3.

 I sorted a VPN and BAKEOFF! And more importantly, BAKEOFF CHAT! Getting up at 5am was no biggie (I think I've got some lingering jetlag that I am using to my benefit while it lasts), and then it was nice to do something normal. Admittedly it was all prefaced with the distinctly ab-normal PM's address, from which I took the message that it was all our fault that the virus was still hanging around, and Johnson was a bit fed up with the whole situation and here are some new rules for us plebs. The show was everything we need and the "bubble" that the production organised means that hugs and tastings are as they were in pre-covid times, which is amazing.

Had my first-of-two swab tests yesterday and can attest that the stories I have heard are all true and it is very quickly done, but distinctly uncomfortable. I thought the lady was trying to access my eyeball via my nostril. Hopefully I get no call, which is the all-clear. 

I am enjoying the lack of decisions to make. The lockdown followed by quarantine (which is an escalation of all lockdown rules) seems to have bestowed upon me a pleasant sense of learned helplessness, which I know should be a terrible thing, but fighting it at this point seems not just inefficient, but counterproductive. Who am I going to fight about it? It frees the mind a bit. I guess I could use the freedom to do something more creative, but wallowing in a metaphorical mental bath of nothingness is super comfortable. 

Racing to get pants on after the knock yesterday, I had the excitement of both catching my food delivery lady in the act, as well as saying hello to the swab nurses. Those may be the only 3 people I see until day 10. I was accused of swotting up on the names of all the bakeoff contestants (usually we use incidental nicknames until about halfway through the season), but I think my lack of human interaction recently means that my monkeysphere has vacancies and my tv friends are just slotting into them. Going to the wedding in 3 weeks may be actually overwhelming. 

The theme of yesterday was "bureaucracy". I have about 3 errands that can only be run in person at an RTA (or whatever they're calling them now) in order to get my life restarted here. I feel unproductive, but not for a lack of trying! 

Monday, September 21, 2020

Quarantine diaries: day 2

I've now done a full 24 hours in quarantine. Jetlag kicked in at about 3pm yesterday - put my head down "just for a second" and woke up 2 hours later. But aside from that I am being very virtuous - waking up early, doing two sessions of fitness so I am moving around vigorously for a little while, trying to maintain the different zones in the room (and thanking all that is good in the world constantly for the size of the room I was given), and eating all my allocated food. I don't know if they have been overseen by any kind of nutritionist (I think not based on the fact the only vegetables I got all day yesterday was some very strangely spiced mushy peas with my potato pie for lunch), but I'm willing to give it another day or two before I resort to an emergency grocery shop for, like, a bag of lettuce. 

Granola for breakfasts will hopefully help with operation: lose weight before the sister's wedding. I am craving snacks, but I know this is not a valuable or necessary impulse and so I am putting that feeling in a box, like I do so well, with the knowledge that mum still has a snacks pantry cupboard that will be All Mine when I get out of here. 

I am reassured by the earnestness of the mental health call I got yesterday. The questions were relevant and they said I'll get a check-in call everyday. I've realised that I have no sight of any humans out of my window (weird and unfortunate combination of overlooking next door's roof, and a jumble of buildings at just the wrong angles, combined with tinted windows that also seem like the back sides of neighbouring high rises, means I saw zero humans yesterday). Whoever is delivering the food outside my hotel door is also some kind of knock and run champion, because no matter how fast I move I have yet to catch sight of them. 

It doesn't feel like I am properly in Australia yet. I'm hearing the accent on the radio and TV but it's hardly something I'm interacting with. I haven't felt the weather, or even the sun on my face (again, the unfortunate angle of my room and the building around me). More than even when I was in lockdown in my little flat in England, I'm feeling like I'm in a bubble. At least then I had to go out for groceries once a week, did my (sometimes) daily walks, was able to look out the window and see people on their walks, and had daily news that had a direct impact on what I was doing myself. Here, I go nowhere and see no one. I have no say or prior warning about what I'm eating (I realise how much time I spent planning, cooking and eating meals before), and don't even have the option of opening a window to see what the weather is like. It is all very odd. 


Sunday, September 20, 2020

Legs nos 3 and 4: get in the van

 There were even fewer people on SQ288 out of Changi. The plane was for Brisbane via Sydney (which is a denial of geographical logic, but I'm sure has some cost-benefit). I hit jackpot and got a middle row of 3 seats to myself, so no films this time and straight out SLEEPING. I had no issues sleeping with the mask, which confirms everything I had been told and knew in my head about masks not actually restricting airflow - the mild panic I had at the end of the Heathrow-Changi flight was clearly psychological (but no less traumatic for that!). 

Landing and shepherded through Kingsford-Smith like I herd kids around at school (although we were much better behaved, probably due to the moral and sheer physical authority of the border force, state police, ADF, nurses, and airport staff that were doing the shepherding). I got congratulated on having a non-fever temperature and then onto the coach. As we pulled away in the Sunday night darkness the driver popped the radio on and we drove through Sydney city to the nostalgic refrain of Killing Heidi's "Weir". Proper year 7 memories.

The rumour was Sydney Harbour Marriott and it was all true. No view to speak of, unless I am really into cranes (some things don't change in 7 years) but all the staff were efficient and friendly, and the first two meals I've had are convincing me that if I remain good and don't go UberEating all over the place, I will come out of this healthier than going in. I am constantly grateful for the massive room and excellent bathroom amenities. I intend to be good and "make the most of my indoor time" (as the Marriott handout suggests) - set an alarm, do yoga and fitness videos, read and cross stitch, annoy my friends via social media, write the blog, eat all my foods, and not watch too much telly (although my next order of business is to figure out the best way to access UK Bakeoff when it starts in a couple of days). 

there are right angles
and empty windows
the cranes go up and down without passengers.
I have taken no souvenirs
except the love of my fellows
and thankful for my constitution
I pace the shapes in the carpet
and listen to the strine to get acclimated
imagining the outside air.
I control the hot and cold and stretch to accept all the feelings they raise
I eat out of boxes
the lucky dip of these four walls for 
the good of 
my love for
my fellows. 

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Leg no. 2: 13 hours in a mask

 Singapore airlines SQ317 is 3-3-3 seat configuration so they have left that middle one free in each case. Which means my dreams of lying across a whole row are right out. Got ourselves a little covid kit and and the loos are pristine the 7 times i go because i nervous drink apparently. Between the more regular cleaning and less people on the whole flight, this is definitely a bonus. 

Arrival in changi ahead of time and into the transit passenger pen. A stackful of overly eager ground staff - morning shift-itis? I think i have a mask related headache - beside the warm airflow, my glasses sit weird over the top of the nosebridge - and all i'd like to do is suck in  cold fresh air, but this sounds a luxury i will  not get for another 2 weeks. Lord only know how i will force myself onto the next 8hr flight. Blergh. 


Friday, September 18, 2020

Leg no. 1: straight outta swindon

 So here is the blog as promised of my travels (travails?) back to Oz. It should have been a document of a round the world backpack trip through eastern europe, russia and across asia by train and bus and no planes. Instead it is to be coach, the interminable plane trip to the other side of the world, then get in the van to 2 week hotel quarantine. 

We begin in Swindon, the bus station, which was the first thing i ever saw of the town. It is overcast and blowy but a pleasant temperature for speedwalking across town centre. Goodbye terrifyingly new and shiny metro bank, goodbye all those free ATMs (have they sorted that out in Sydney? I will find out soon), goodbye bus station. 

The lady across the row from me in the bus decided mask wearing should only occur after she made a 10 minute phone call. People are the worst. 

A-vert my eyes from the rising sun
The east greets strangers running
We miss touch and sight of smiles
An intake of breath, smell of memory. 

Monday, March 30, 2020

This time



This time I listened and I proposed the outing -
Nevermind that outings were outlawed -
My hand was held and the tears accepted
We strolled in sunlight,
Alone,
With our thoughts.

But staying the requisite distance from the world
Was somehow compatible with the intertwining of those fates:
The one mired in future hopes and past paths; the other unfurling into myriad forks.

We feared everything
But not each other.
And that, in this time, was more than we could have asked.

I sang, and blazed, and hid nothing
All the time listening to the ticking and watching the sun draw its unending circles.
You stood at the fire and kept me from any abyss -
No blinking in the darkness, nor temptation to bliss.
Should I have asked it of you? We stepped out together.