It was one such demonstration called to show support for the Catalan political prisoners and for their release that prompted the following poem. It is not however political.
As I have now been to a number of political demonstrations I am wise in the ways of them. I have found that there is a great deal of standing up and waiting, so I now brin with me a collapsable chair so that when I and my friends have found our 'spot' I am able to participate while saving my legs and feet!
Coming back from the demonstration by train I end up in Gràcia metro station to get my train to Castelldefels, where my bike is waiting for me in the bicibox which will get me home.
Grácia is an unpleasant metro stop where the amount of walking between platforms is inordinate. And when you get to the platform you need you find there are no seats but only a metal pole on which to rest your weary bottom.
When I finally got to the platform I needed it was packed and I was lucky to find a seat - well, a bit of the pole on which to wait.
It was then that I realize that the person next to me was eating crisps. Metro stations are full of hard surfaces, hard curved surfaces that can amplify certain noises. Like eating crisps.
I think I share with my father a general dislike of watching poeple eat, and certainly of hearing them. I am not paranoid about it, but I notice that I am sometimes disturbed.
This poem is a response to the experience.
Misophonia
If she’d been
opposite,
two sets of
silent metro tracks away
and leaning on
the rail that
stands for seats
on Gràcia,
I could have
looked and liked
what I’d have seen.
Her dinky boots
and sprayed on
jeans;
her long dark
hair and
elegantly tended
nails; her full
red mouth
lipsticked to
just this side
of slut, and
slim & tall.
I grabbed the
first (and only) space
I found to rest
my bum.
And she was next
to me.
And she was
eating crisps.
Each one.
Apart.
And in that
sullen silence
crowded strangers
keep while
waiting for a
train,
each crisp’s demise
became
a cut through
quiet, like
a blackboard’s
finger’s nail’s decent
on my raw soul.
Each solitary
crisp -
sought out by
fingers’ pince -
observed, a
moment;
placed and
crunched
excruciatingly.
I thought to
move but
reasoned that to
stay and suffer
would ennoble
more.
And stay I did.
And fought the
urge to slap
her bag, and hands,
and face.
She made the
packet last
until her train
drew in.
She left,
and rumbled off.
There was a
silence in that sound
that resonated
deep within,
and I, if not
exactly happy,
was content to
wait,
a little longer,
for my train.
No comments:
Post a Comment