we all rely on the good souls who forgive us.

this line, or variations thereof, goes on to recur 23 more times in the poem, but this is its first outing. however, it was actually first written at the end of january 2024 in the form:

the stress of january can lead to bad decisions:
we all rely on the good souls that forgive us

january is always a stressful month for me. lots going on. not much sunlight. always working at the laptop, dark outside, wallet sore from christmas. all heading towards some nasty deadlines at the end of the month. not much time to think things through. anyway. in the midst of this chaos, someone made a snap decision that i disagreed with.

i thought – we can disagree, but we don’t need to fall out. i didn’t raise it again. it wasn’t my decision to make, and it barely affected me.

and i’m not saying i am the good soul here. my thought was more: i make mistakes, and i don’t think fair people would hold that against me. and further: to forgive is a great thing. we are the products of our circumstances. we all live in two worlds, the mental and the material, and we all have completely different experiences.

i am reminded of the old joke: don’t judge someone until you have walked a mile in their shoes. as then they will be a mile away, and barefoot.

anyway, those who carry grudges are the ones who are most harmed by them, and have the most to gain from forgiveness.

woke is a post colonial attitude that assuages my white guiltmade in china by terracotta serfs:

it is good to be woke. i am in favour of recognising people’s struggles, but sometimes it seems in society that the only political agency we have to back up this wokeness is to consume x type of product rather than y.

i do try and research brands that are ethical. but i am no saint. not at all. i am selectively blind to the suffering i (indirectly?) endorse by buying products from producers unknown, in circumstances i choose to be ignorant over.

and even if i do manage to only buy ethical products, what does that say of the many people who can’t afford to do this? a few well meaning middle class people buying organic soya milk doesn’t stop the amazon being deforested for palm oil.

so sometimes it feels like our options are to try and be good, achieve nothing, and live with cognitive dissonance. or to choose ignorance and have a shot of being happy.

from the overhung underpass on green holds, in one

i used to be in a band when i was in high school. mostly fell out of touch with the guys after we all embarked on our journeys into adulthood. but over the last year, i got into a good routine with my old pal, our former bassist, bouldering most weeks at 7ish am. we were both having transitional years. making plans for the future. navigating new relationships. he has now gone up north to be a rugged mountainman. i miss him and i’m looking forward to visiting in the spring.

a felled tree blocked our path—round we went in the mud

i seemed to have a big thing for m-dashes in the poem’s early days. this line is super literal. i was walking with a few friends on a trail near kelburn castle and came to a point blocked by great big tree. so we got our shoes all muddy and carried on our way. a fun day enjoyed by all. i went to john lewis to look at mattresses later that day, then watched sport on tv. one of the all time great days.

domsing bad, wee butt tender, hungrier than a mothered flincher

i think this was just a whatsapp message i sent and then thought ah well that’ll do for poetry today. and then at some point later i thought, ‘maybe i should change the incestuous swearword to something more (and less) family friendly.’ it probably isn’t going to be remembered as one of the all time best lines in the english language. i guess this is all a very elaborate way of telling the world that in early january of 2024, my butt hurt from deadlifts