There were only a few seats next to a plug in the stolen coffee shop.
My laptop is a pile of shit junk machine, donated from my brother; it
doesn’t survive on battery power alone. Therefore, I had to wonder
desperately around, trying to balance a tray and not drop anything. I
found a seat opposite a Western man wearing a Hawaiian shirt. We gave
each other the Western salute, an eyeball and half a smile. Behind the
Western man hung a poster for some American movie. The slogan read
‘Nothing perfect lasts forever. Except in our memories’. If you choose
to read further, you may think that is what inspired me, but it’s not.
What
inspired me was a date, the fifth of September, and an exploding table.
The poster is just sheer coincidence. If such a thing exists. Tell me.
Is it normal for a table to just explode, without prompt, without
warning? One moment it is there. The next it has shattered into one
thousand glass shards, scattered across the floor. How can you make
sense of it? What was an ordinary, solid piece of household furniture is
now a carpet of broken glass. Each piece has taken its own form, each
went in its own direction, each broke a little differently. Why does
glass shatter that way? There is no logic. There is no path. It just
explodes without rules or regulation. Why did one piece just fall next
to my feet? The other made it all the way to the bedroom door. Why are
some pieces so small that they’re invisible until they stab you in the
toe, when others have made clear cut shapes and can be picked up with
two hands? There is no why. I assure you. It just did it. There is no
explanation.
The physicists out there may be able to provide me
with a long list of reasons and whys. There was a laptop on the table, a
laptop which overheats because someone’s dodgy brother broke the
battery. Maybe this caused the explosion. Maybe there was an earthquake,
too small to be recognised by the human mind, but just enough to send a
slab of glass shattering into pieces. As for the explosion, I am sure
there is a scientific reason as to why things blow up in such a way.
Like the explosion of the universe, which scattered billions of stars
and planets across a spectrum so huge, we still don’t know its size. We
can identify some planets and stars, we can give them names and
descriptions. Each is distinguishable from the other in such a dramatic
way. That’s why there’s life on Earth, and not on Mars. Or as far as we
know.
Yet, as intelligent the scientist may be, he has not
completely solved the riddle. He has not provided me with the why, but
more the how. It did it, this way, due to these scientific laws. How is a
riddle much easier to solve than why. According to science, it is not
yet possible to travel through time. Not under the physical meaning of
travel. Yet I travel through time every day. It is one of the unsolved
mysteries of the mind. I see the future, so clearly, in a billion pixels
of what will and what may be. I visit it daily. It’s a beautiful place.
I sail over galaxies and stars to get there, and it keeps on expanding,
I never reach the end. Even more frequently, I visit the past. It is a
concept described as ‘travelling back in time’. But I can assure you,
it’s not a journey backwards. It’s more of a collection. I collect the
broken pieces of glass and I admire them. The sparkling ones that shine
in the light. The tiny ones I almost forgot about, until I stumble over
them one day and they pierce my skin. I even admire the sharp and fatal
ones, the ones which cut me and scarred me. They’re all part of the
explosion, my universe. If you can believe it, if you can believe that
the scientists have got it all wrong, if you can believe that you can
collect time and see it as clear as day, if you believe that a table can
just explode, if you can believe that there is no why, then I can show
you the how. I can take you time collecting.
*****
September
4th 2010. It was raining men. Hallelujah. In fact, it was a typhoon.
Okay, so it was fucking raining. And raining and raining and raining. If
this wasn’t a typhoon then I didn’t know what was. It hadn’t been
declared on the news, but I was pretty bloody sure. I had just made an
attempt to go to Carrefour and there was floating sewage up to my knee
caps. And I’d never been so happy about it.
The day before, I’d
discovered this really hot monkey at work. I only worked at this branch
on Fridays so he had kind of gone unnoticed. Until I saw him, in the
corner, legs propped up on a chair, he was reading a book. There’s
nothing sexier than a guy reading a book. He looked like a monkey but
in a hot sort of way. I think it was his hair. It was almost as big as
mine. We could have been huge-hair buddies. One big tangled mess of
hair.
Anyway, I had been half way to Carrefour, stood in the
middle of the road, frozen like the Statue of Liberty. In my right hand
was the skeleton of an umbrella held up to the air. The material had
blown off somewhere in the gale force winds. I wasn’t wearing my yellow
raincoat because Panjita mistook it for a bin bag and filled it with
used toilet roll. I was stuck in a moment. Did I give up and turn back,
or did I continue my quest for razors and toothpaste? My legs were
pretty hairy. Then I saw the Taiwanese security guard from the
apartment block waving at me furiously. His arms screamed,"‘Run! Get
inside! Get inside while there’s still time!"
Vehicles were
pulling over at the side of the road. Yellow water was floating all
around me. I ran. "No, go outside." I stood in reception. It was quite a
run across our garden to the lift. This was what I got for not
listening to Canadia. She told me it was raining too heavily before I
left. But I don’t think you realise how hairy I was. Like a tarantula.
In fact, I’d ran out of space on my two legs to grow hair, I might have
started sprouting new ones until I had eight of the black furry beasts.
Typhoon, on my day off. It hit all the other cities on the working days
of the weeks. But oh my gosh, halle-fucking-lujah.
In that grey,
soggy typhoon cloud sat an amazing package. A bunch of gift-wrapped
sopping wet delicious men and they’d just been dropped on my doorstep.
It was about time. I was on the verge of announcing a draught. I walked
into the apartment and repeated to Canadia the wise words of our
security guard. "No go outside."
"What the hell?" She laughed as
she eyed me up and down. I must have looked pretty fucking stupid but I
was too excited to describe my romantic encounter to care. Following me
into reception had been the delicious gentleman whom we shall name GOD.
Okay, that’s a bit dramatic. We shall just refer to him as the
handsome, Canadian/Polish blue-shirt guy from the coffee shop. The kind
of face you see, when you’re stood soaking in the middle of a flooded
road in Taiwan, a country which doesn’t have a very good sewage system,
and you smile. He’s the kind of guy who is one hundred percent
guaranteed to have a girlfriend or be gay. You pray he’s not gay. You
know you have more chance of winning the lottery. But you don’t care.
You are thankful for his face. It’s enough. You are even more thankful
he lives in your building. You can count on at least two dripping wet
encounters in the lift per year. That’s like two Christmases a year.
"Po, you literally love every handsome guy that you meet!"
"I don’t care. I love him."
"You said that about the monkey guy who works at your branch."
"Yes, so. I love him too."
"Well, I have never said that I loved a guy," proclaimed Canadia.
"Yes you have, don’t lie, what about the Adam’s Apple guy?"
"I didn’t love him," she replied sheepishly, burying her head in her laptop.
"You
said it took you five years to get over him. If you don’t think that’s
love Canadia, then what the hell is?" I said excitedly.
"Hmm, okay, I guess it was love then." I think she just agreed for the sake of agreeing. "So I’ve been in love once."
"Canadia,"
I cried. "Every guy you ever even liked. That was love." She raised an
eyebrow. "I bet when you were in school, you had a pencil case, and you
wrote that you loved James Brown from orchestra practice all over it in
white tippex."
"Well," she thought for a second. "It didn’t say James Brown..."
"Well
mine did. It was in Year Seven. I bumped into his sister in the
corridor once. She was in Year Eleven. I didn’t know he had a sister
until she picked up my pencil case and said, 'So, you love my brother do
you?'"
"What did you do?" Canadia screeched. "I grabbed the
pencil case and ran. I ran a lot fucking faster than I just did in that
rain!" Well, the conversation shifted back to the rain and we realised
that Panjita wasn’t home from her Mandarin lesson. She too could have
been striking a Statue of Liberty shaped pose, stranded in a flood
somewhere. We text her to make sure she hadn’t drowned. She replied to
inform us she had taken refuge in a cake shop, we needn’t worry. Once
she got home, we’d make a vow to go out and get completely pissed. Which
we did.
September 6th 2008. I was trying to boil water for a
cup of coffee. We didn’t have a kettle, so I was reverting back to
caveman standards – boiling in a pan over a hot stove. Although it
wasn’t a hot stove, more like an electric hot plate that was on the
verge of breaking and took thirty minutes to heat up. I’ll never forget
the smell of that kitchen, the stench of rotting life. I shared the
kitchen with middle-aged alcoholics and a few depressed emo teenagers
who were playing their first game of independent life. It was around my
fourth attempt, and I’d lived in some shit holes before, but this one
topped them all.
I’d just dried my clothes with a hairdryer. We
had a laundrette in the homeless shelter. But it was France, and the
French liked to make things difficult, just for the sake of things. For
the machines to work, you needed a jeton, a little blue token you had to
buy from reception, which was only manned between 8 and 9 am. It was a
shitty system; they were perfectly capable of accepting money, but I
think they were worried about drunks breaking in to steal a euro for a
bottle of wine. Instead they just broke in and stole the jetons, which
became the currency on our floor.
I left my laundry until it was
absolutely vital. When I had worn every single item of clothing twice,
which took around 9 days because I had very little to my name, I made
sure I woke up early and frantically caught the hard-faced bitch of
reception to sell me two jetons. One for the washing machine, one for
the dryer. This was a rookie mistake. Never just buy two jetons. It was
around 10pm and I had washed my clothes fine. It was the dryer that ate
my second jeton. It just consumed it, without drying anything. I tried
kicking the machine a few times, but it attracted the attention of a
Thai guy living on the first floor. He came out, looked at me and shook
his head, as if to say, "Bloody French alcoholics." I frantically
knocked on each door of the building, speaking the world’s worst French
and trying to bribe pissed old farts with cigarettes into handing over
their jetons. But I don’t think that’s what they thought I was offering.
When I’d first moved in I’d left a note in the hall, trying to make
friends. In English, "If you would like a friend, my door is always
open, come visit me," is a perfectly normal sentence. But translated
directly into French, you turn into a prostitute. On the bright side, I
believe I interrupted one guy mid-suicide and I think the prospect of
being able to now trade jetons for sex may have talked him out of it.
Even
so, I’d spent an evening on my bedroom floor, drying my clothes with
the hairdryer and ironing them with the straighteners. A bizarre
humidity had formed in my cell. It was the size of a box and two hours
blasting heat out of a hairdryer created the ambience of a
wash-powder-flavoured gas chamber. I opened the window to let some fresh
air in and looked out over the rural Breton landscape. It was truly
beautiful, but I couldn’t help thinking to myself, what the fuck am I
doing here?
*****
8th September 2006. I was too young to get
married, everybody said that, and those who didn’t say it, thought it.
But they didn’t take a whole day painting their living room walls mint
green, they didn’t circle all the second-hand refrigerators in the
newspaper in red pen, they didn’t spend hours cutting up potatoes in the
exact shape their fiancé liked, waiting for him to come home for his
dinner. They weren’t trapped in a world, trapped in fear, trapped in a
home. The barriers weren’t physical, they weren’t erected by a person as
such, but by my own mind. I had created an impossibility to step
outside. The mint green walls were all I knew. But like everything,
which is something I still didn’t understand back then, the walls came
crashing down.
One day they exploded and I could no longer cut
potatoes the right way. Somebody else could. A fifteen year old girl who
worked in a fish factory. I discovered her on September 8th, a Friday
night when I got home early from work. She had been sleeping in the bed
that I made, strands of her hair were hidden in the covers that I chose,
and I wanted to strangle her. I wanted to take her with my bare hands
and squeeze every last bit of life out of her. But I resisted, she was
just a fifteen year old girl. At eighteen, I may have been too young to
get married or to understand the complex structure of the universe, but I
understood that at fifteen, most things aren’t you fault. So, instead,
I just sat in the wreckage, for what seemed like an eternity. I didn’t
want to leave my mint green living room, so I just sat. For over a day I
didn’t eat or sleep. I drank a coffee and I vomited. My fiancĂ©, the
Mole, just pottered around the house. Making a cup of tea, doing the
hoovering and, for once, making his own fucking potatoes.
*****
Some
time in September, 2003. I don’t know where I was in September 2003, in
fact, I don’t think anybody really did. I can guarantee, if you ask my
mother, she won’t be able to tell you. Oh, she would have liked to have
known. "Where the fucking hell have you been?" But I was beyond the
point of telling her, that was even if I knew the answer myself. Some
mornings I would stare in the mirror and ask myself that same question.
"Where the fucking hell have I been?" Some days I just didn’t know.
Pushed
against a wall in some back alley somewhere, having sex with one guy or
another. I went places. I saw people. I saw a shrink, at school. We
talked about hows and whys but never really had an honest conversation
about either of them. I was perfectly honest about all the disgusting
things I did. How I stole other girls’ lunch money to buy cider. How I
gave my friend’s boyfriend a blow job on her kitchen floor while her
parents were in Costa Del Sol. These stories slid off my tongue, so
easily at my disposal. I loved seeing the shocked look on my shrink’s
face. But I never mentioned the unspeakable.
Like how one day my
mother started to wake up in the morning and say on a day to day basis
at the breakfast table that she wanted to die. That one day they would
all wake up and she wouldn’t be there anymore because she would have
killed herself and that’s when they’d all realise what life would be
like without her in it.
Like how that morning I had walked into
the kitchen, my hair stuck static in the air on one side of my head. I
had let my blue velvet dolphin blanket, which I’d had for as long as I
could remember, traipse through the pile of dust on the lino. As I had
peered through the masses of frizzy ginger hair, slotting the bread into
the toaster, I’d realised it was one of those mornings. It was one of
those mornings when my mum sobbed into her mug of tea, when she smelt a
bit ‘off’ because she hadn’t been in the bath for a few days, when I
planned ahead that I would stay ‘somewhere’. Either that, or there’d be a
big row anyway, a row for which I couldn’t fathom an origin and would
result in me stuffing my belongings into a carrier bag, my body shaking
with distress and tears rolling down my cheeks, and heading absolutely
nowhere. Once I’d been so desperate to get out, I hadn’t even bothered
putting on shoes.
No, these were the unspoken. My shrink would find the blow job stories much more entertaining.
*****
September
5th 2009. I was waiting, on the rainy steps of Frankfurt-Hahn airport
in Germany. Now I don’t know if you have ever been to Frankfurt-Hahn
airport, but it’s situated miles from the city of Frankfurt itself,
somewhere out in no-man’s land, in the country, surrounded by nothing
but fields.
In my memory I can see nothing but grey grass and
rain. Oh, and a hot-dog van, some steps, and one little cow-themed hotel
a ten minute taxi ride away. I sat there, in my little brain, and I
said goodbye to life as I knew it. The gay karaoke bar where I got drunk
on cheap Sekt and serenaded my friends with Lionel Ritchie every
Tuesday. The sunny afternoons by the river drinking carton wine and
listening to a man with one leg play the accordion. The daily emails I
sent to the gay guy in our Berlin office, confessing all my dirtiest
secrets. We’d never actually met, but I guess he knew more about my life
than myself. Then just before I left, I realised in Berlin there was
one mailbox. I guess he wasn’t the only one I was sharing my deepest and
darkest with. There was also Marion, and old lady with grey hair who
was on the verge of retiring, a creepy translator called Uwe and several
other interns.
Of course, there was also a man involved, a major
factor in life being so, well, perfect. Yet I must not kid myself into
believing he was the only factor. It was a combination of the summer,
friendship and a life that I had established for myself that was mine. I
had built it for myself, like a carpenter carves his own piece of
furniture and places it proudly in his living room. Now I was being
asked to move, and I had to leave my masterpiece behind. "Don’t make me
go back," I had posted as my status on Facebook a few days earlier. But
to whom was I pleading? No-one was forcing me to do anything. Just the
universe. The universe decided that the summer would leave me,
eventually so would the man, and my friends, well, some of them had
already left.
On the 4th of September I was sat in the office in
Berlin, drinking coffee with Marion before I caught my flight back to
Frankfurt-Hahn, and there was no gay Tom. He’d already caught his own
flight back to London, and had said goodbyes of his own. And then there
were mine, goodbye to Rebekki who had accompanied me on the Berlin trip,
and a few goodbyes said to a certain handsome man in a cow themed hotel
just a ten minute drive away from Frankfurt-Hahn airport. I had a five
hour wait between the moment I was left alone and my flight back to the
UK. I sat on the steps and smoked around twenty cigarettes, just
watching the rain over the never ending landscape of fields. I
questioned the universe. Why the fuck do you have to do this? Why, when
we sometimes just get it right, can we just not keep it? I knew that it
had been stolen. All that I had been left with was a blank canvas. A
black hole. I made a deal with universe. I would go home, accept my
defeat. I would put up with this shit for a year. I would complete my
degree and just get on with life, and understand that I’d had my time of
perfection, it was somebody else’s turn. I would leave Frankfurt and
the people in it without a fuss . I would just disappear. I was doing
the right thing, wasn’t I? So the deal with the universe was that it
would show me a sign. Any sort of sign, just to let me know that I was
doing the right thing. I sat on the steps and waited for hours. A phone
call? A text? Something falling from the sky? Nada. Nothing ever came,
but I went ahead and got on the plane anyway.
Between September
5th 2009 and September 4th 2010, I lived through numerous significant
events. I ran a marathon across Manchester. I backpacked up and down the
eastern coast of Australia. I drank so much I fell asleep on the top of
a Biffa bin in the middle of the university campus. I graduated
(surprisingly). I had many encounters with men. I built friendships and I
conquered inner demons. I didn’t just tolerate life like I had agreed, I
lived it. Then, as agreed, the universe sent me a sign. Life exploded
before me. A glass table. Thousands of pieces of broken glass. I sat in
a pile of broken glass and I admired the wreckage. It was my story. A
story of how when all you are left with is broken glass, you can start
to build again. This was my sign. This was my collection of time.
- THE END -
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