When I was ill – think death’s door to ramp up the drama, dear reader – I had numerous sleepless nights and chunks of these solitary hours were taken up by writing poems. Although I talked a lot about what was going on with my weakling heart, there was still a lot left unsaid. You can’t burden people with everything that’s going on in your head, can you?
As I began to get better and slept more, I sort of forgot about these poems. Some were repeatedly drafted, others clearly unfinished; snapshots of how I was feeling. Some were in a notebook, while others were scribbled down onto random bits of paper retrieved from our ‘drawing cupboard’ which still somehow exists, despite both kids being way beyond sitting at the table drawing. All were collected up and thrown together with the vow that I’d revisit them when the time was right. I took a picture of this one complete with scribbling, arrows, asterisks and late night handwriting. Quite a bit to decipher some months later!

This poem is a bit of a rant, to say the least and the more I read it back, the more I’m convinced I was channeling my inner John Cooper Clarke, yet without his gift for words.
'Simple as that.' This heart of yours is having a laugh; it's as simple as that. The sole aim of the holiday was just to relax but your body wouldn't even allow that and instead you collapse at the airport, then practically pass out on a promenade bench in the heat, before having to call for help weeks later, when giving out paper became a bit too much for your health. False hope in the hospital once again ended when they then decided that your heart is need of being mended and you're treated to an operation surely designed for pensioners that you cannot help but keep on mentioning as you're put on a ward with people 30 years older than you and a crazed Slovakian, who laughs in his sleep and howls at the moon. Consolation is thin on the ground, unlike the tea and the biscuits that shouldn't really be allowed, you another have scar that is ugly and crap and in truth your chest is beginning to resemble and Ordinance Survey Map. Back home you discover a penchant for pyjamas that was never there before style, much like your dignity has now been slung across the floor and any remaining semblance of cool has been traded in, there's no doubt about that, without so much as a crossed word, let alone a fight and now, my friend, you look like a twat. On top of this, you cannot leave the house without a hat to keep you warm, cannot get to sleep until it's almost dawn, cannot wash properly, cannot tie your own fucking laces, cannot walk down the street with anything other than shuffling paces, you cannot run, you cannot dress yourself, cannot rant, cannot rave and now you look like a tramp because you cannot shave meaning that, as December looms with its festive banter, your surprisingly white beard has you turning into Santa and as life is forced down this prematurely ageing path, this heart of your is having a fucking laugh.
So clearly I was a bit on the angry side then! And it’s easy to look back now and smile about it all, but believe me it was a horrible time in my life. Around 4 months of being stuck either in hospital or at home, feeling a bit sorry for myself, fending off peoples’ best wishes and enquiries and bein unable to do very much at all. And even before that, we were unable to enjoy a holiday because I collapsed in the airport. I suppose it’s all there in the poem! Apologies for the swearing if that’s offensive, by the way. Just words to me and words that had to be in there in order to capture my feelings, but I know some people don’t like that kind of thing.
I rarely bother with rhyme but in this poem I’ve made a conscious effort to use it. I was determined though that it wouldn’t be a simple rhyming poem. Instead, I opted for mixing up the rhyme so that while for large parts of the poem it’s quite traditional, occasionally I threw in a bit of internal rhyme just to mess with the structure. I wanted to do this just to try and reflect the disorder in my life at the time. I mean, for quite a while I never knew when I was going to simply fall asleep – often in the middle of a conversation – so it was hard to enjoy an ordered, planned day!
I wanted to present the poem as a bit of a rant and so there aren’t many end stops in there. Believe me though, when you’re sat on your own, wide awake at 3am, you can become prone to a bit of a rant, even if they have to be quiet ones!
As ever then, I hope you enjoyed the poem. Feel free to let me know what you thought!
What an emotive poem, you can really get a sense of how you were feeling in that time through it and I think it’s great that you leant into poetry when you were so ill, I bet it was a cathartic outlet x
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Cheers! It felt quite cathartic at the time…then just a bit embarrassing when I read it months later! I think I like it now though!
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The power of poetry to channel what we experience is an amazing gift; I used mine, which I share on my blog too, to explore the complex feelings I had during my husband’s illness (also a fight for his life). Thank you for sharing this; I could feel the emotions behind it and it was very moving. Wishing you well and continued healing (physically and emotionally).
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Thanks Molly. Hope all is well now.
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Your emotions come across beautifully in the poem, glad you are feeling better and did share it. I can defo relate with the 3am rants, thank you. Simple as that! x
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Cheers!
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You can really tell your inner monologue with this poem. Totally understandable and yes – a bit of swearing is only natural.
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Writing is one of the best ways to order your thoughts, this is a really emotive poem…and swearing is never offensive
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Thanks Sarah. I’m really quite sweary in real life, but you never can tell how others might get about it!
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I think it’s an excellent poem which accurately describes those experiences, swearing and all!
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Thanks Rachel. I wasn’t keen when I first read it back, but I have to admit I like it now!
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Incredible poem and even more incredible explanation behind it. So many emotions portrayed in both. Thank you for sharing.
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Thanks, that’s lovely! Glad you enjoyed it.
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Very powerful. Thanks for sharing.
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