Open Poetry #48 |
All on my Own |
OwlSA Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347Durban, South Africa |
ALL ON MY OWN 18 January 2013 (There is no prize, except my undying admiration and utter surprise, for anyone who wades through every word of this, though you may need to spend a birthday or two or three in the process.) From the whispers of my first breath in years long faded, except, of course, for my best friend God, (though I am not sure in what later years He became my best friend), I did it all on my own; in hospital after my birth; I don’t remember what I was told was wrong with me then and I really don’t care; whatever it was didn’t recur otherwise I would have known; in learning to read before I went to pre-school, my mother being a teacher, with a big, though non-agressive, THE on the back of my bedroom door because that was the word I struggled with then, and it must have worked because I can read THE now, all on my own; in the dolls only fit for being taught because I didn’t know about children and babies and family love, but they were the best-educated dolls I ever met in all my pre-school experience; on my tricycle racing around the garden; in the red racing car of Peter my five-year old next door neighbour, first behind him, then – oh joy! behind the steering wheel all on my own! with my beloved Woofie given away so soon because my father didn’t like animals and so he left me all on my own; wearing that beige heart-shaped stone, lucky-packet ring that Bennie another neighbour gave me also when I was about five – it was such a pretty ring and oh how I loved it; I wonder when my mother threw it away; I never would have; though perhaps I was persuaded to give it away amongst the toys I was taught to donate once a year “to the poor children” though I am wondering now if that was really the destination of my gifts though I am probably just being cynical as it probably was where they went as we took a few children from the local children’s home to the beach one day every year; in the ballet competition for five-year olds that I didn’t practise for (though my best friend worked at it every day while her mother played on their grand piano); and the pianist asked me what music she should play and I said anything because the music would tell me what to do and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Child’s Garden of Verses that I won and have still (though the cover is a little loose) and all of its pages have been read and loved more times probably than you have taken breath; in the mango tree with the branch for me to sit on and that short broken one for my feet - I can see it now and would give my back teeth - does anyone want my back teeth? to swing down from that foot branch as I did every day so many, many years ago all on my own; in my made-up ball games with rules I adhered to with law-abiding determination all on my own; in my imagined adventures that nobody ever knew about, some I spent sitting in a large cardboard box with milk and biscuits and exciting dreams in the front garden all on my own; even in games of my imagination with friends from time to time, and though whoever it was entered into it whole-heartedly, I doubt they saw what I was seeing - like swimming through a field of long golden grass on a chicken farm with a little black girl who probably had never seen a swimming pool or the sea; and the friend whose wooden gate we rode our horses wild and free, though I think she just swang her half-gate horse open and closed in fun co-operation; and so, in essence I was always and still, playing all on my own; in the poetry my mother and father read to me - ah yes, I have that - and I thank them both for that and their different favourites, though I can’t believe I wouldn’t have met and fallen in love with poetry at some or other stage, but it was good to be impassioned by it so early and I still hear my father’s voice reading Hiawatha and my mother’s reading Sea Fever; here where I sit all on my own; though it would have been nice if my mother hadn’t turned her nose up at what I wrote years later; which would have suppressed my poetry if it hadn’t refused to be suppressed and it flowed all these years from my pen all on my own; and it would also have been nice if my father had wanted at least one child especially as I was all on my own; in seven years of marriage for at least one of which I practised my French on my husband but he didn’t know as he didn’t listen and so I was essentially all on my own; in my beloved children who grew up and left the nest and my daughter who hasn’t spoken a non-poisoned word to me in about twenty years (except for two sentences in an email about three years ago on my birthday); and my son whom I see once a week and sometimes a little extra when I need something fixed, has his own family now, and is very busy giving very passionately to various communities and I am proud of him though wish I had more time to commune with him and not be all on my own; so, except for my dog and my cat and a renter in the outside rooms whom I hardly ever see, and my forest which I adore and my horse and other cat and other dog in Heaven, I live all on my own; in long nights of reading poetry to cats and dogs who hang on my every word and let me know that with them I am not all on my own; in dark midnights on the piano with doors and windows closed, with Beethoven and Dvorak and Grieg and my beloved Chopin and others, in broken music playing as well as I could all on my own; in nature reserves with my favourite companion, me, so that I can wander at my leisure, drinking it all in, and loving it all and stop to wonder at and commune with, whenever I want, a leaf or a rock or an insect or a flower or a giraffe or a mongoose or the panoramic-horizoned richness of an eco-habitat, that God displays wide-skied, all on my own; in learning which friends and acquaintances are real and which are fake; and weaning myself away from those who would blur my vision and stunt my growth and threaten my spirit; but in all of this I became my own best friend (after God) and I know my worth, my weaknesses and my strengths, the good in me, and the bad; I have few friends and very little family but the real ones of both are valued as drops of rain in a scorched gasping desert, though even of these, few know me at all, though many think they do, and nobody knows me as well as I do; and as shocked as you may be to hear this, I like me all on my own in every sense of that. Owl (For anyone who got this far, you have determination, well done!) |
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© Copyright 2013 Diana van den Berg - All Rights Reserved | |||
RedStoneEB Senior Member
since 2003-06-08
Posts 772uk |
it was like reading the life story from start to yet unfinished for life is still of you but i can understand the whole remembering part, looking back on all these events that defined some part of you that make you, well you. I always thought the whole scene of been a poet and been told that our pieces of art weren't really upto standard always worked towards a driving poet but been told by your mother it didn't really meet much of her apporval wasn't really a way to uplift the arts of someone wanting acceptance on some level. I'm guessing the family pet for a short time was a dog by the name woofie, but least you got an experience of it, sometimes people say they like been alone but I guess thats because like you say we are the understanding person of ourselves that have done the critics on us through-out our lifes, it was a nice read. RS |
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OwlSA Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347Durban, South Africa |
Thank you, RS for having ploughed through the whole of this and of having understood it so well. Yes, Woofie was a dogalog, a fox terrier. All I have left of him now is one photo of him on my tricycle with his paws on the handlebars. Until my parents’ divorce, I had to make do with much-loved cuddly toy animals. After my parents’ divorce, the first thing my mother did, was to give me a kitten for my birthday (whom I called Socks), and since that day, I haven’t gone without animals, except for short aching times, between one going to Heaven and finding another one or more. Owl |
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latearrival Member Ascendant
since 2003-03-21
Posts 5499Florida |
Owl, as I have been sharing computer time with my son of late I have not had the time to finish this post. But tonight or this early morning I finally did. AND I so understand your feeling all alone. I had for many years off and on. Not as long as you have but growing up with an older and a younger brother and mom and dad working I was all alone many times. But it lead me to books and pen pals, paper dolls, journals and scrap books. AND through pen pals I wrote constantly to other young girls and a few boys all the way from age 12 to now. As I count pip and facebook leaning toward the same route of making friends from all over the world through writing. After the family has grown they have to lead their own lives and we are here when needed it seems. I feel the pain for you.You have had a much more lonely life but also have been able to learn who you are as have I. We seem to be steadfast and able to be alone or with others as time permits. best wishes to you , jo |
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secondhanddreampoet Member Ascendant
since 2006-11-07
Posts 6394a 'Universalist' ! |
wow ... what an opus magnum! fine writing (as always) ... --- hopefully, one of those 'friends,' B. |
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OwlSA Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347Durban, South Africa |
Thank you, Martyjo, for your kind reply and for going to lengths to get to the end of the poem. However, my point was that despite being all on my own, and more to the point of the poem, DOING whatever I did mostly on my own, contrary to most people, I LIKE being on my own. I am not and have never essentially felt lonely – except for a very temporary mood (of a few hours at the very most) which has occurred very seldom at one time or another. I have felt intense pain at the break-up of my marriage and at the loss of some (not all) boyfriends (even, in some cases, if I was the one who broke up with him), but not because I am “alone”. There have been times that I would have liked companionship for a short while, and mostly when I have, I have actually done something to find it, but I actually NEED to be on my own most of the time. I normally find companionship a strain and a drain on me, even with people I really like and want to be with - and there are very, very few people with whom I feel entirely comfortable and at ease. I feel very comfortable with my own company and like spending time with me and am very happy to escape other people and get home to my own company, and of course my animals. Granted, I need the constant company of animals and always feel completely comfortable and at ease with animals (mine, anyone else’s, or any animals I meet) right from the first moment of meeting them, and I never feel that they are a strain or a drain. When my late ex-step-mother-in-law, who was one of my most favourite people on earth, and my late father-in-law (of whom I was very fond, and with whom I also got on very well) visited my husband and me for the weekend, before or after the children were born, as pleased as I was to see them arrive and as pleased as I was to spend time with them, I found it exhausting, and I was very, very relieved when they left. I had a next-door neighbour when I was married who was the exact opposite of me. She NEEDED company for at least part of the day. I NEEDED to be alone for at least most of the day. She would pop in at least once or twice a day and it drove me up the wall, until I asked her to visit less often, but for longer visits – she took offence for 2 weeks, and then turned up again and complied with my wishes, but probably felt very hurt for much longer than that, no matter how much I tried to explain. I suppose the essence of it all is that other people don’t understand me - some understand one or other aspect of me to varying degrees – mostly because they share that aspect – some even understand more than one aspect of me, again to varying degrees - but I don’t think there has ever been one person who understands all the aspects of me – or who has even wanted to (and yes, both of those facts make me sad – especially because I believe – but could be wrong – that there have been people whom I have understood totally, or as much as they have allowed me to discover – and I have wanted to) - and I understand me very well indeed, lol! I have never needed to FIND myself, lol. I have been here all the time – and I know me, and always have, from as far back into my childhood as I can remember – the good and the bad equally, and I think that I have as unbiased and as objective a view of me, as anyone can possibly have of oneself. And, whether anyone else does or not, I like me (as almost embarrassing as that is to say). Sorry for the long boring ramble all about me! Thank you, Bruce. Of course you are a friend! [This message has been edited by OwlSA (01-24-2013 02:03 AM).] |
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