There is an upside to having suffered with nightmares
all my life, the terror that has had me screaming out
at four in the morning as the feeling of cramp
sets in and the heart jolts me awake in some antique form
of Hypnic Jerk and the pain is compounded
by the
sweat of salted tears that kiss my lips and
run down past my nose,
gliding as if on a mountain range,
a single skier running over every pore but
with no tricks up its sleeve.
The upside is my expectations of life have always been low,
I have lived each day as if it was my very last
and on many occasions I have come close to
understanding that sense of completion and half celebrated feat
but something always pulled me back, something
I couldn’t comprehend, as if I knew
that life in all its absurdity wasn’t quite done with me yet,
it still needed the target, that I had to realise
fully that some days you have to suffer the social embarrassment
of allowing
the Chihuahua to hump your ankle to get the Rottweiler off your balls.
I miss the past as if it was some golden age of exploration,
no rudder or misguided and incorrectly set
compass pointing the way, just minute
to minute choice of where to go and what to do
only placed into the bigger picture
of where to be in one year’s time,
the problem with the grander scale picture,
it doesn’t allow for the compass pointing west
when east was always the way you should have gone
and a walked out of party saw the slow decline
of fortune and the bullet preferable to the noose.
Nightmares, at least they show I’m still breathing,
and I would rather suffer them forever
if it meant that your dream came true,
yet I win in a way for my nightmares constantly change,
evolve and progress, not stunted by completion;
once your dream comes true, your childhood fantasy,
poured over in great detail, all the colours painted
into the scenic background and realised,
just how do you get that Rottweiler off your balls
when the Chihuahua finds another
ankle to hump.
Ian D. Hall 2015.