Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Writing Snipit


There were days we used to sit at the pier, stretching our legs across the open expanse of blue, watching with utter fascination the tiny ripples shuddering outwards to waves of enormous, once thought unconquerable ripples. It was more an elongated porch than an actual pier, but we'd imagined it be just the same.

We’d vividly paint a picture of bright, autumn coloured balloons, soft pinks and vivid Halloween oranges. He’d try the bottle game and I’d be eating tooth-achingly sweet cotton candy on side, cheering all the while. But it never lasted. All too soon our mothers would be calling, exasperated looks on their faces at our muddy clothes. 

But now I sit here, grown up and feeling so old, when really it wasn’t so long ago that we’d played here carefree and not yet sixteen. It didn’t I was a girl and he, a boy. It hadn’t meant anything that he was four years older, and wiser and smarter.  It hadn’t… But it was as if one day I wasn’t enough. As if our lake and our games and our belly aching laughter wasn’t enough.

So now I sit and reminiscing of a simpler time - a time when my other half had been beside me. A time mother did not sit in a chair and stair into dusty space, eyes gone out like a candle hopelessly waving its ember drawn smoke. Now I sit under a cloudy day, wondering if I it was I who cried or the sky more in the depths of my despair. 

What happened to the years had? The years we called us? He grew out of this small town, but now I have to grow out of us.

But how do you say goodbye to you and me when there feels like there never was an us?