Tag Archives: life

Hurry, don’t be late, I can hardly wait, I said to myself when we’re old


Pow, pow, pow! These are meant to be fireworks and they once were. Bang, bang, bang! A spectacular entrance for the drugged and inebriated. A beautiful girl on each arm. A kiss on both cheeks. Forceful hands down my boxers. A handsome young guy who is the shit of the whole world. Suck my dick  because you want to. A showman, a gigolo, a fucking dickhead. I am desirable. I do no fucking wrong.  I ask the two girls if they have a brother that I can shag. Say yes and make me happy. Everything I ever wanted… high… so bloody high… soaring… looking down… eagle of the dance floor… hawk of wonder and disappointment. Pow, pow, pow!.. shattered dreams… shattered lives. Thirty years bye bye. Lonely, penniless, fucking old, a closed roller shutter and a damp empty building. Is this the right place? A shit full of memories. Cry for me and I’ll join you.

One of the most important things I’ve learned is to ignore what people say


Bleak January. A place that is appropriately called a Winter Garden. Full of absent people. I come and sit here everyday while I drink my takeaway coffee. I always take the lid off because drinking it through that tiny slot takes forever and makes coffee dribble down my chin.

‘Red socks’, sits on the bench opposite and looks handsome from a distance. But why is he wearing red socks? He’s deep in conversation with a Chinese girl who looks bored and takes sips from a bottle of Pepsi Max Lime that will be  warm by the time she finishes it. I wonder what he’s saying to make her look so listless. Occasionally she looks over as if to say, “please swap places with me.”

Between us, a mouse keeps running between flower beds. Backwards and forwards it goes and nobody takes any notice. This is a brave mouse that likes living under exotic leaves but can’t decide which is the best. I hope that the Chinese girl might notice the mouse and scream loud enough to stop ‘‘Red Socks’ talking for a moment. But she fails to see it because she is on the verge of falling asleep.

A well-dressed black boy comes over and asks if he can sit beside me. I tell him that I don’t own the bench and make room. He introduces himself and I immediately forget his name because he is from Nigeria and it sounds strange. “This is a cool place,” he says, and I suspect that he might be trying to pick me up.

I ask him what he is doing in this country and he says he came to study. I wait for him to say that he is a wealthy Nigerian prince and that he wants to give me ten thousand pounds if I give him my bank details. Instead, he says that he is doing a thesis on his country. “What do I know about Nigeria?” I disappoint him and say that I’m the wrong person to ask because I’m half-witted. He gets up and leaves and I realise that I could have said that I thought that everyone in Nigeria was a prince who wanted to give money away to people who provided their bank details.

A young guy walks by with someone who I presume to be his girlfriend. He’s devilishly attractive and I instantly dislike her. I consider getting rid of her by being the first person to commit a murder inside this winter garden with an impatient mouse, a guy who wears red socks, the bored Chinese girl, and a Nigerian who could have been a prince but wasn’t. 

When they pass, two scruffy fellows follow. One of them is explaining about a giant palm tree that almost touches the glass roof. About how the leaves die and form protection around the trunk. I find myself looking at the tree and speculate what will happen if it grows any higher because there isn’t much room left. The other guy looks uninterested like the Chinese girl did, and then I realise that she has disappeared with ‘Red Socks’ because their bench is empty.

A lad with blue tints in his hair comes and sits beside me. I look at all the empty benches and wonder why he’s chosen to sit on the same one as me. Once again, I think that someone might be trying to pick me up. He has a bad cough, as bad as the blue streaks in his hair. He notices me looking, says “Hi,” and I think that he will be good looking once he’s got rid of the blue streaks. The mouse runs across the floor again.

The lad makes conversation and sounds like a nutter because he says that he likes to choose a person walking in the street, any person, a random person, and follow them to see what they do and where they go. He’s not a stalker, he says, and I make my excuses and say that I must be going back to work. 

You’ve got some nerve . The evil eye of entitlement means nothing to me

Photograph by Cole Fawcett

I will not look at you in case you think I’m being inappropriate. I will not make eye contact because that might be construed as threatening behaviour. I cannot talk to you in case I say something that might upset you. But that is what you want me to do. You’re hoping that I will offend you. And then you can say bad things about me on social media and get thousands of likes. 

Stolen Words / Posting through the thirst trap

“The cruel reality is that maybe improving my physical appearance is just as fundamental to my success as developing my art practice itself. It’s also frustrating to feel myself internalising this idea that I have to get sexier and show ass online if I want to play the game.” – Dylan, painter, New York 

A secret place in full view of everybody

Metropolitan Arts Centre, Belfast


Conor dragged me up the stairs and led me to a sofa. “This is my secret space,” he said. “When it is cold outside, and my friends have better things to do, I sit and read and drink expensive coffee. I’ve read complete books sitting on this sofa. I am on show to everyone, and yet, I’m also invisible.”

Perfect people aren’t real and real people aren’t perfect


When you love someone so much, and you think that everything about them is perfect. Step back, and you will see that they are not perfect at all.

Boys with dark hair and shy smiles who smell good / Nothing brings to life again a memory like fragrance


Musk. What does musk smell like? I don’t know. It’s a bit animalic. But I like to think that you smell musky. I smell muskiness in your absence. 

They can sing whatever they want. Sometimes it’ll suck, sometimes it’ll be great.


The pretty boy in the blue striped t-shirt had a delicate tattoo of a knife on his arm that was erotically threatening. But he called himself Queenie, and could not sing, and murdered Sabrina Carpenter’s Espresso on karaoke. He wished me Happy Birthday, and I told him that my birthday was in April and that he had a terrible  memory. But at least I am pretty, he said, and asked if I liked his singing. I looked into his olive eyes and told him that he was perfect but didn’t need to sing to impress. 

He is experiencing a need to be liked that’s more than just wanting acceptance


There is something wrong with him. I get the feeling that something is missing up there. A few brain cells that are missing or have become warped. The pretence that he is somebody that he isn’t. The more he boasts about money and his wonderful life, the more I sympathise with him. He has the desire to be liked but cannot see that his way won’t work. 

“I am Father Time. And whether you like it or not you are coming with me.”