Tuesday 27 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (13)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (13)


'Had 'e?' asked the Priestess as she wielded brand new tweezers, as she plucked another insect from her arm.

'It's a shame to die intestate but I say the good and the great would do well to pen their obit. What's the harm?'

I said: 'he was silent on the subject, and, I felt I couldn't object; it's a difficult and dreadful thing to do. For the most part, one is wary to consider death. It's scary.

'But, it's something I rely on to get through.'

'Yes, of course,' replied the Priestess. 

'In a world of meritocracy and something like democracy, I can see I haven't really fared that well. . . '

'Indeed,' she nodded.

'Fate and Bad Luck called the shots. It was they who chose my lot.

'As for headstones, I'd say: Damn It, Gone To Hell.'

Sunday 25 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (12)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (12)


'It was after kicking cairns that we confronted our mortality. . .

'So, I said to my companion, have you written an obituary?

'Have you thought how you would like to be remembered when you pass?

'Do you have a snappy title for your gravestone epitaph?'

Tuesday 20 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (11)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (11)


'Ah-ha,' mused the Priestess, extracting a tick. 'So conceptual these days that it just makes me sick. Did you make something pretty or was it just smart? (How I long for some simple pictorial art.)'

'Well.

'We made pictures of vistas without any sky, and horses in kiosks (though, don't ask my why)

'We wrote short lists of words using sans-serif font, like:

'Equality

'Liberty

'&c

'Enfant.

'We drew circles of mud and trod lines in the grass. We kicked down all the cairns that we found on our path  . . .

'A form of neo-brutalism, then? How interesting.'


Sunday 18 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (10)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (10)


'The thing about walking; you can't keep on talking, especially when going up hill. We wandered in silence, our bodies in balance, our minds quite untroubled and still.

'But, the thing about speaking; it don't mean you're thinking. Ascents gave us time to reflect. 4000 feet high, with the sun in the sky, re-engaged with my dulled intellect.'

The Priestess yawned and mumbled some truism about the recuperative powers of meditation.

'It was then we began to make art,' I added.

Friday 16 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (9)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (9)


'So . . .

'We made our pledge (as he clung to his hedge).

'We'd cherish the union we'd found.

'We promised to stick to each other's side and walk ourselves into the ground.'

'Til death do you part,' said the Priestess as she mixed a Bloody Mary. 'At any time at all did it feel a bit scary?'

'No.

'And, I'll tell you why.

'As I walked by his side I forgot all anxiety. Dispatched of my sadness and fear.  I felt very strong (my stride was so long). I saw life with a bright clarity.

'It sounds sort of cheesy, I have to confess, but I felt only happy: remarkably blessed.'


Tuesday 6 May 2014

Stepping In The Salad (8)


STEPPING IN THE SALAD (8)



'As he hung on the gorse I, too, felt some remorse. After all, it was he who had saved me. 

'So what was I doing considering death? It was he who had given me life when bereft. It was he who had shown me where happiness lay. (And, it was after all, such a beautiful day . . . )

'I said, "why not let go of that tree?".'

'Did he?' asked the Priestess.

'Yes.

'And, then as we sat on the cliff and ate lunch I put to him what, in effect, was a hunch. I said, "all would be well if we just kept on walking; just doing our thing" (which is moving and talking) . . .

"Consider the facts and, then, let's make a pact. There's no need for this Deep Misery. The joy we have found is both hallowed and sound; let's keep going, just you and just me".'

'As we did,' mused the old hag.

'Somewhat different, I think,' I replied.