Friday, January 22, 2016

Nature study today


Rose
 
When the time comes to trim the climbing rose
One see’s her other face,
The strength behind the delicate flower;
Delicate my eye! 

The straggly little root that was planted
Deceived big time.
One year later pretty rose fulfils her promise
Of fragile beauty,
As like an alien invader her roots grow strong
Under the earth. 

She takes hold, takes nourishment, digs deep her base
As we turn a blind eye.
The second spring see’s her spectacular growth
A proper little madam
Lapping up admiration for her youthful beauty
Budding precociously
Bursting into flamboyant flower in every direction
Rose shows her best side. 

One can only marvel at her grace and elegant style
Once seen, you’re lost
Musing as to how something so fragile and delicate
Has such force.
Rose bewitches all who pass by her, her perfume
It fills the air,
Her heavy hypnotic, seductive fragrance envelopes
We submit joyfully.

Try to pass her by without stopping to compliment
And Rose will clasp you back.
She spreads her limbs, demanding total domination
Throughout summer.
Then, as the air grows cooler and the days shorten
Her radiance fades.
Her adoring public suffer too as Rose sheds her leaves
Come summers end.
 
She will fight with the last of her power to stay strong
Against the secateurs;
Grasping, clawing, as offending pruning surgery comes
To her last season gasps
Sweet Rose gone now, as she cruelly draws first blood
Rose Virago will fight again.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Carer


Care, Carer, Caring, Cared

Recently a friend asked me how I had coped during the twenty four years of living in the same house as my now departed, Mother in Law. All I can truthfully say is that I did just about cope, barely. It was only the last few years that got difficult, and then a couple of years that got progressively more difficult to the point in the last eighteen months, that it was very close indeed, to unbearable. The person enquiring was newly placed in the position of taking care of a close relative after the death of their marital partner and this only brought about then, because the surviving parent had then suffered a stroke, making them completely dependant on a ‘From this day onward’ basis.

A family has to make their own choice as to whether they will continue to look after their elderly relatives themselves or  firmly, and maybe wisely, stand back a step and support them as they are taken into a home. It seems the sensible thing to do when you have a very busy professional life yourself, because let there be no doubt, it is a life changing commitment taking on that carer role yourself.

When you watch the parent going into a home for the elderly, you can be assured that they will be correctly cared for, with all the daily needs attended to. They will be given regular meals, washed, waited on and medically overseen professionally. They will get everything they need, everything that is, except love. They will get kindness, but not love.

My own mother came to stay with us for a couple of months after my father died but quite quickly wanted to get back to her own home, even though we had made it clear that she was welcome. Being an outspoken person, she said that she didn’t like our meal times, she didn’t like our food; it was too fancy and we didn’t cook the vegetables how she liked them. We went to bed too early and we got up far too early. She missed her sisters in her home town of Worthing and her friends and neighbours. She did not feel comfortable and wanted to go home.

She was not a well woman, but could still walk on her own and straight as a poker at that. There was no arguing with my mum, she stood straight and she spoke straighter. After settling her back in her house, she told me that it would be enough if I went over to check on her and do her shopping, pick up washing and any jobs that she could not manage, just a couple of times a week. Of course it was a bit harder for me, even though she only lived eight miles away, because of the time going back an forth but it worked reasonably well until she was taken in to hospital with renal failure toward the end. In my opinion, she helped that to progress, by not drinking any where near enough, because then, she would have another trip to the toilet. That was her story anyway, and a lot of old people fall foul with that problem, due to cutting down on trips to the loo. The painful truth was she would be happy to see her husband, my dear old dad, again as soon as possible.  She survived him by just eighteen months.

What ever you try to do, it will still be painful and nothing will run smooth. All I can say is that I cared as best I could for our elderly family members. Having had, it’s true, a very unpleasant time of it as their health went slowly down hill.

 It became a full time effort just keeping up with soiled washing and the mess of accidents on the way to the bathroom, that are, without doubt, so humiliating for the poor soul suffering them, without them feeling doubly horrible because somebody has to deal with it. It is quite shocking and at those times you do sometimes wish you had taken the nursing home option, and then feel mean because you even thought that.

However;  a year and a bit after my mother in law died at the age of ninety four, after a quite short stay in hospital. I am beginning to feel better and I am getting over the guilt I suffered for a while because I felt that I was not always as patient as I could have been. What I know now is, that I did my best beyond what was my ‘Duty’ if you like, and gave my time and I gave her companionship and love.

Caring for an elderly relative should not be taken on lightly. It takes courage and patience and a big block out of your life. We must all make our own decision bearing in mind how it affects the rest of the family.

The following poem was written during the last six months of caring for my mother in law. I don’t think it shows me in a flattering light, but it does show the degree of stress I felt. I do thank our cousin Sally, who would come to visit and chat with her aunt, whilst I had a couple of hour’s peace, generally taken in the grounds and gardens of Arundel Castle a few miles away from home, scribbling in my note book and enjoying the quiet and beauty of the surroundings. 

Going Dark 

If one is not a natural nurse type
Then it can get hard.
It can get very wearing.
It can get to the point where,
 It is almost impossible,
For the one who sadly, feels stuck
In a situation forced upon them.
Who feels, rightly or wrongly,
And I doubt that it is wrong,
That their own life
Is constantly,
Day by day being pressed
Closer and closer into a hold pattern;
The press ganged carer.
And without even the King’s shilling!
There is no reward,
Only an exceptionally high cost.
Unpaid forced into service.
Staff,
For that is what they have become,
Will feel unavoidably resentful.
The resentful feeling will increase
Exponentially.
Out of control.
They are trying desperately
To hold on to a life of their own
But are being made
to feel guilty for that.
Constantly made to feel
That they are wrong.
Wrong for trying not to be
Totally trampled underfoot.
Anything that is done
Simply for needs of their own,
Is held up for examination,
As if, they are the selfish one.
When the compulsory carer
Needs to take a break,
It is treated as though
It is an unforgivable sin
To the invalid, and by the invalid.

The only way
To make the one who is cared for
Totally happy is
Is to completely submit to their will
Thereby giving up any hope
Of maintaining an independent life
Giving up any intention
Of keeping a free will. 

For this reason it is essential
That regular breaks be taken
Complete breaks.
Totally out of contact breaks.
‘Going Dark’
As the crime writers put it.
And for long enough amounts of time
For the dictator invalid
To get the message.
Though that will not happen.
The message also needs to be
Accepted as necessary
By the press ganged carer,
Without any feelings of guilt.
Mmm! That won’t happen either.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Spirit, Heart and Strength of Will


Spirit, Heart and Strength of Will
Versus Logic, Caution and Common sense 

Common sense means what to you?
Carefully weighing up what to do
Playing life safe and not making waves
How the practical person behaves
Wishing and hoping and carefully saves
Or clawing out of our respective caves
Searching inside for our spirit’s aim
Not settling for a life so ordered and tame 

An every day schedule from nine to five
Sinking into the shadow or coming alive
Grasping the nettle and feeling the sting
Take heart to search for a road with some zing
Striving with real effort at everything
Teeth gritting for a better tomorrow to bring
That little pump working as hard as it can
Not to end back exactly where you began 

Summoning up deepest strength of will  
To start again each day is too bitter a pill
Never believe that you cannot do better
Following the safe school word to the letter
From fear of becoming a loaded debtor
Struggle and work to be a go getter
Speak loud enough to be audible
Performing to a standard more laudable 

Proceed with caution but not with fear
Keep the principles you hold most dear
Never stop when the going gets tough
Push on relentlessly as the path gets rough
Dig deep when you stand at the edge of a bluff
When as hard as you try it’s never enough
Live goes on well past that first high peak
Your own strength built to the goal you seek

Monday, January 18, 2016

The Bells


Tinnitus 

It’s like it’s not true
Because whatever you say or do
Nobody else can hear
This endless, relentless din
Can’t turn it off or down, can’t win
Only I, am here to hear
The cruelty of the level
Of ringing noise from the devil
Me alone to bear and hear
It seems that nothing can be done
My invisible torturer seems to have won
Everlasting, on my own I hear
Even my husband, gentle as a foal
Hasn’t a clue how it plagues my soul
S’a miracle I can hear over what I hear
There isn’t any actual pain
A constant irritant will still remain
In here,
So near
Sheer noise
I hear

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Arun and the Shingle Banks


This is my own personal slightly mad theory about the wicked intentions of the spirit of the River Arun in Littlehampton where it meets the sea. The river has been diverted umpteen times over a very long period of time, centuries actually. The most outrageous of these, seems to have been to have the river past in front of Arundel Castle at the whim of an earlier Duke of Norfolk. I stress that that is just, as I see it, and only delving into records would prove or disprove this idea worrying, pecking, itching in my fanciful brain.

A few years ago, after a prolonged series of winter storms, a new shingle bank appeared just a little way off the beach just about half a mile east of the point where the river meets the sea. Later on several lesser shingle banks have arrived at points in the direction of Worthing further to the east.
These banks are now well settled. They are very interesting to explore and at low tide on a nice day are much fun to dog walkers and kiddies. The banks seem to disappear from sight almost entirely at full tide. There is this wrap around effect that I very much enjoy watching when you study the incoming tide on a rough day. The water swells up and passes either side of this ever growing barrier, first from the west and then from the east before crashing down on the beach. To my mind, the  water seems to be ending further and further up the beach towards the promenade and Sea Road beyond.

Well, there you have it, the latest ramblings of an imaginative old bat. The poem on the subject written some time ago follows here.

Coming of Rage 

The River Arun has long been prone to flooding
Thru past centuries Arun fought against being fought
Unruly child of nature; a vandal in the budding
Long since held his own reins sending spurs clubbing
A whole history of lords and dukes who thought
They could bring him to heel though gain was naught 

The same head banging mistaken work repeated
Diverting the course wrought by flow now defeated
A rivers irritating curves gentleman farmers cut
To suit whim and pocket trimmed where banks jut
Each submission with arrogant air was greeted
The rich men lodging in homes next to the river abut 

Brought down to the sea by a more convenient route
Every spiteful cut, a simple line, flow now money serves
The powerful gloat and at nature cock a snoot
Greed becomes a spiteful, fearless, insatiable brute
The graceful snaking river slakes off luscious curves
Turned into an obedient, servile service chute 

Now again rebellion rises when abuse becomes too cruel
Resentment starts to boil within the independent heart
Distant memory of past times of original current own rule
So summon up medieval skills formed inside dark art
The temporarily tamed spirit calmed from centuries school 
Longs to return to follow it’s since hidden ancient chart  

Enough of changed direction and industrial domination
Slow returning to his one time impetuous youthful rage
Call upon the eddies and undercurrent tools to swage
Recalling from swirling rapids clutch where he came of age
Tear free from what they made by force an ignorant mutation
Deepest anger simmering slowly through violent gestation 

So many natural curves hacked away who can answer why
Greatham Bridge, Houghton, Offham, Burpham, to Arundel haven
Piers built at the mouth to snap the great sand bar once so high
The tidal water separated so from the sea cut that sea river array
Lashed away from it know pattern spitefully and deliberately graven
Twitching riffles deep power surges form the roiling rivers cry 

Biding time to turn back the clock drifting into new age silting
Work the currents strength and mesh into elaborate quilting
Empowering the undercurrent long enslaved and wilting
Rebuild the shingle bar piece by piece to reform old ways
Rise up into the light old glory days again to praise
Patience of centuries cast of like old reptile skin flays 

Then shall the River Arun at long last from servitude rise
To greedily reclaim all the his stolen canals and ditches
Where once he gracefully flowed now to flooding he switches
Again to create his own artistic work and sing his own reprise
Without warning stealthily usurps his old wealth, his prize
Useless resistance swept away like gnat bite twitches 

Only then shall the River Arun once more make peace
Where once a regal river did glide tranquilly the valley through
Will be the calm waters of Lake Arun thus anguish release
Gratefully in freedom of the watery habitat white swans who
Declare new safe nesting sites, man and river wars cease
Nature standing on the winning side on this occasion, smiles