Ablation, Asherman Syndrome, and Me

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I’m not a fan of sharing personal stuff, really. But when it comes to health matters, I’m all for it. Might help someone, after all. So, because health matters, I’m happy to share. Triggers: every expense spared. No punches pulled.

Around a decade ago, I had endometrial ablation surgery – essentially, where the womb lining was burned away to prevent the excruciating periods that were taking over my life —we’re talking two bleeds a month, and pain as bad as labour (the crotchgoblin kind, not the political party, just so we’re clear). And it worked! After an initial, post-surgery bloodrush, I had no periods for ten years…

…until a few weeks ago. Oh, joy.

A sudden onslaught of goo and agony, and I ended up taking myself off to the GP. “You need an urgent ultrasound,” she said, “within nine days.” And what with the NHS being brilliant ’n’ all, they sorted it within two. Cool, huh? Well, not so much. The ablation had caused the front and back walls of the uterus to fuse together, so they were unable to see into the damn thing with either the ultrasound wotsit or an up-the-vazoolah camera (and that thing frickin’ KILLED, I can tell ya, pressing on the ol’ cervix as it did). Soooo… surgical intervention was needed.

“Nothing to worry about, we’ll book you in for a hysteroscopy. We just need to open the womb up and take a look inside. We’ll take a biopsy while we’re there—just a little slice—and if there are any fibroids or polyps, we’ll remove them there and then. See if we can find out why you’re bleeding peri-menopause and post ablation. Want a general anaesthetic?”

“God, no. Can ya just send me away with the fairies?”

“Sure. We’ll take you as kite-high as legally permissible.” (Not strictly verbatim.)

Cut to: me, a couple of weeks later, having sorted the time off from work with my very understanding boss (seriously – so lucky to have a line manager who GETS it, yanno?), and it’s the day before the surgery. Muggins ’ere chooses that moment to read the pre-op guidance. For some women, this procedure can be extremely painful under local anaesthetic, in which case it is likely we would schedule further surgery under general anaesthetic.

WELP. That’s me screwed, then. *Recalls the last time she had surgery under Lidocaine (or whatever it was) and having to be prised off the ceiling with a frickin’ spatula*

So, I opted for the general-knock-out-job after all. This OBVS meant I had to write my Last Will and Testament, coz it’s just how I roll, ’kay? Left a note for Rob, going into great (for ‘great,’ read ‘bizarre’) detail about settling my affairs. Emailed it over, advising him to open it only in the event of snuffage. Named it DEATH RANT. Started it with something like ‘If you are reading this, I have shuffled offa this mortal coil and am trying to look after you all from Beyond the Grave (Booo… **cute ghost noises**)”

Followed this up with: “I DO NAHT want a funeral. No grave, no nuffin’. Direct cremation, cheap as possible.” Included such gems as “Punch a nazi. Punch two. Keep the faith – the good guys win in the end, and love will prevail, as it did for us. But do find love again. You deserve it. I promise not to perv on you from the Spooky Realm as you’re bumping uglies.”

I might—slightly, kinda, sorta— have been a little freaked out by the idea of leaving everyone behind. I’m an unapologetic what-iffer, it has to be said.

Anyway… I digress…ended up in Clatterbridge at 7:30am on the 30th of December. Spoke with the surgeon dude (and he was a dude—I have jeans older than him) who gave me the low-down of the show-down: “We’ll open ya up, and we’re hoping to kick you out the same day. What this procedure won’t do is tell you why you’ve been bleeding. It’s not a diagnostic. You’ll get your biopsy results within four weeks, and your GP will tell you the next steps.”

Okay, then.

“We’ll pump ya full of painkillers and anti-sickness goodies, this’ll all wear off after twenty-four hours, so tomorrow is gonna be the worst day, pain-wise. Keep yourself dosed up.”

Noted.

“Here’s some schmexy support stockings. Keep these on for three days. Take ’em off to shower. When you’re firing on all cylinders again, which we expect to be within three to four days, you can lose ’em. Sound good?”

And that was it. Paper knickers on.

Me: in and out of theatre, them: in and out of me. Biopsy: taken. Aftercare advice: “Monitor your bleeding. If you’re changing your pad more than once an hour—no tampons, only pads, this is important—get to the GP or down to out-of-hours. Let’s check your pad now.”

*Pulls drawers down* “Argh! What’s this brown gunk? Did I—”

“Ah, no, sweetie. You didn’t. It’s just iodine.”

Thank fuck for small mercies, as the saying doesn’t go.

So here’s me now, the day after, bleeding and in pain, dosed up on Co-codamol and Ibuprofen, which means I have to take other, counter-acty drugs, not least due to my beautiful IBS, which means I can’t even tolerate the Ibubastard without Omeprazole. And then there’s the husk I have to take to enable my gut to cope with the Co-codeytwat.

ANYWAY, they showed me the photos. Looked a bit like those eye-close-ups you get at the opticians. Kinda like little pics of planets. But with black spots. Said black spots might just be shadows from the camera, but we’ll find out for sure within the next four weeks.

Might need a hysterectomy, which is what they’d said, ten years ago, I might ultimately need. And I am kinda pinning all my hopes on it. I’ve had chronic problems with both intestine and uterus for thirty-plus years now, and I’m convinced the two are linked. Let’s get rid of that womb, I say. Give me more room in there, and less to contend with. My body does NOT do periods. I’m too old for that shit, I swear. At 51, and after three perfect kids, I’ve done my time, paid my dues. I was supposed to be all peri-menopausal ’n’ stuff, and instead, I’m currently back to painful fortnightly bleeds.

Let’s stop the bleedin’ before I go bleedin’ mad.

DAY TWO: The-day-after-the-day-after…

It’s New Year’s Day. Stayed up ’til midnight on NYE, coz of course I did. What’s weird, though, is that I slept through until about 6:30 – totally unheard of for me. (I usually wake on the hour, every hour, ancient bladders being what they are.) Maybe it’s because I’m still blessed with some of that delightful anaesthetic. NHS advice does state you can be sleepy for days, so that makes sense. But also: OW. The sore throat (from the intra-gobular breathing tube) is worse than it was yesterday, and everything else hurts, too.

Like the day after the day after a fall, or two days after a gruelling gym workout (not that I have any recent examples of that), today is proving rather sucky. Woke with horrid back pain and had to grab the TENS machine and a hot water bottle. Again, the bumph confirms that muscle stiffness and aching can last for several days, post-op. Apparently, it’s worse for folk with pre-existing back pain or conditions such as arthritis, so there’s another tick-in-a-box for me. Yay. And the period pains are back with afuckinvengeance. I’d all but forgotten how shite it felt to be sitting on the loo, just bleeding away, little micro-contractions threatening to take away your sanity.

I don’t know if it’s a good or a bad thing that ‘Your body can take up to a week to completely eliminate the medicines from your system’ — on the plus side, that might mean I’m having a little extra pain relief still coursing through my chassis, right? But on the ol’ flipperoo, what if I’m unable to work tomorrow?

NHS guidelines: avoid work for 48 hours after general anaesthetic, as your judgement may be impaired. Specifically: Do not sign legal documents or make important decisions. This is pretty much the bones and sinew of my day job, so there’s that. Cool.

The 48 hours is up, though. It’s a non-working day today, being New Year ‘n’ all, so I don’t have to worry about it for now. But what of tomorrow? Will I be fit and well, able to move about (I was using a stick yesterday, which I must admit was a great help), and fully compos mentis* when it comes to decision making? I have to worry about this, because ultimately, it’s something I could lose my job over. One sick day ‘too many’ and it’s oral warning time. Let’s face it, though: I’ve been here before. You don’t experience three decades of sickness without understanding how the Managing Attendance process works. And I’ve been all the way through it, culminating in dismissal in early 2016. Somehow, I’d proved myself worthy of a second chance by March 2025, and was doing pretty well… until I wasn’t. Until THE BLEED.

*As if. My brain hasn’t functioned properly since circa 1976. Nutso is the new normal.

Ho hum, right? All a gal can do is suck it up and get on with it, I guess. Maybe I’ll be okay tomorrow, or maybe I’ll need that extra day off. All I know is that today, I won’t be able to prepare the fabulous NYD feast I was planning, and will have to get the kids to muck in. Maybe we’ll have a toned-down table this year, sans trimmings. But one thing I can say for sure is that THERE WILL BE CAKE. Like me, it might even be filled with red goo.

DAY THREE – It Ain’t Ova Until the Fat Lady Slims

Alright, alright, I’m no lady (quiet at the back, there). What I am, though, is an egg. I realised this today, 72 hours post-surgery, when I tried to remove the surgical sockeroos after a(nother) bad night’s sleep, and just could NAHT fold in t’middle. Seriously: ever tried to bend an egg?

Still woozy, still groggy, a little bit foggy, barely able to function, definitely unable to work. I did manage a bit of baking, though, because that’s simps, innit? I do that sort of stuff in me kip, like. Also managed a little bit of eating, too; while that won’t help with the bloating, it’ll certainly help soak up all the damned drugs. I’ve had enough of ’em now, and just want my brain back, thankyouplease.

The eggage should subside soon, I understand. Just as well, really, being that I can’t do me kecks up at the mo (and nobody back at the office wants to see that, I can assure ya. Nothing like a 14-year-old c-section Kanga-pouch to put ya off yer paperwork). Don’t get me wrong, I’m not sitting here moping or anything, or filled with toxic self-loathing (I proudly knocked that poisonous shit off back in 2018 and haven’t looked back), I’m just waxin’. Warts ‘n’ all, yada yada. It is, as they say, what it is. And, like I said, what it is, is an egg. A big, fat egg. Tell a lie: it’s more solid than fat. Imagine, if you will, a panel beater in the market for a wok-former. “Tell me,” he says, “wherever might I find the ideally rotund shape over which to beat this sheet of metal I conveniently have upon my person?”

You just point him in my direction. Tell him I said Hi.

My wonderful husband, of course, has—rather wonderfully—been wonderfully wonderful, and has been on hand for the lifting up of spirits and the lifting-of-the-Denby (the gorgeous-est but HEAVIEST tableware known to humankind) so I’ve had to lift nary a wee finger. Rob and I are carers as well as parentals, so we have other folk to look after when we’re not busy being poorly ourselves or bringing home the Quorn Bacon. With laughter and song, though (and a metric effton of pisstakery), we manage. No—we more than manage. We love. And with love, it’s really quite simple. We might not have much, but we have it all. Life is good. No eggsistential crises here.

(I might be feeling crummy, but despite my being an unabashed wordbotherer, I must say this: I’m rather proud of myself for my pun-avoidance. Those things are just œuful.)

Some eggs I* found earlier. (*Ripley. Believe it Or Not!)

DAY FOUR: The Rolling Stoned

Still an egg. Still weebly: I wobble but I don’t fall down. Can’t see me own bits for the life of me—not that I would want to, y’understand? I had feet, once, too, I believe. Okay, okay, I’m exaggerating. The balloon has burst a little. I can zip my jeans up a millimetre more than I could yesterday, and that’s a win. (As if I’m wearing any kind of outdoor clobber. You KNOW I’m sitting here on my fat arse in plush pyjamas.)

Mr Aitch has popped out for baking supplies because I just CAN. NOT. COPE if I go a few days without creating something beautiful (or horrific). On the menu today: Mac and Cheese (one vegetarian, one vegan), and perhaps a batchacookies. Won’t be me eating ’em, mind; no appetite to speak of unless we’re talkin’ bagged potato slices. The salty ones. I want the crisps and need the crisps and will eat ALL the crisps, gosh darn it.

Stories are happening, too. I’m helping a friend with a book; delving into the corridors of a spooky mansion helps me take myself out of the ol’ self-indulgent whining for a bit. My own stuff is ticking along nicely, too, even if I manage to write only half a paragraph a day (this blog excepted). Progress is progress!

Feeling a little Rear Windowy, though. Being out of action as I am, all I can do is sit ‘ere and observe from the shadows… Muah-ha-ha… can you feel my eyes on you? Can you sense my collection of Liverpool horror stories creeping up behind you? I bet you can’t. I’m notoriously stealthy, despite my current girth.

Might roll myself off the sofa in a sec to grab a brew. No tablets today—must prepare for the great de-fogging of 2026. I’d rather have a touch of pain than not be able to brain, yanno? And braining being what it is, I might stick with the horror, might tackle the feature-length, or venture down the poetry route. Who knows? The words are there for the taking, and take them I shall.

One I made earlier. Like me, it’s blurred.

DAY WHATEVER: Contractual Obligations

It’s the day after the last update, I know that much. I also know I’m pissed off: yesterday was THE WORST. But on the plus side, I’ve been inundated (in the best way) with emails and messages from friends and cohorts. So many folk have reached out; either to wish me well, to thank me for sharing, or to swap stories—gal pals who are still recovering from a hysteroscopy seven, ten days later; fellas whose other halves started out with the ‘scope and ended up having The Lot Out. And it all helps.

My headvoice has been going, “See? It’s not just you,” on repeat, to save me from all the gosh-darned infernal moping while I’ve been contractin’ in the bathroom, apparently trying to pass a giant land animal. Mid-mantra, though, Mum’s been hovering outside the bathroom in a panic, worrying the kids: “She’s crying. She needs to go to A&E.” – Tell me you’ve never had stomach/gynae issues without telling me… One does not simply stew in agony for hours in a fit-to-burstin’ waiting room while experiencing the Baby Elephant Cramps (Mancini missed an opportunity with that one, fo’ sho’). No: one simply sobs, wails the Banshee Blues, then collapses into bed with a fluffy water bottle (full nearly to t’brim with the contents of a kettle and topped up with hot tears).

I’m not embellishing this, either. It really IS like frickin’ labour. It comes in waves… but these contractions, burning my insides out, making a Lin Brûlée of me, come whenever the friggever they like. There’s no timing them, there’s neither rhyme nor reason. And there’s no beautiful baby at the end of it. I wish there was something, though. Something to explain it all; to make it all make sense.

I’ve got myself into the habit of venting on here, though. It’s helping me stay sane. It’s also going to serve as a diary of sorts, even if I am putting the pissed into epistolary. I don’t even care if anyone else reads it—it’s a Dear Lin letter to myself, not least because I have a head like a colander (bigger holes than a sieve). Mind you, I’m pretty sure I won’t be forgetting any of this. It’s being burned into my memory as we speak (or, yanno, type).

DAY 10: LOSING THE WILL TO WHINE

I *think* it’s day ten. Haven’t blogged for a few days – proof of illness: If I ain’t writin’, I ain’t copin’. And I haven’t been. Quite a lot has happened since the last update, including a visit to the GP (“How come you’re here so soon? It’s only been a week, you can be expected to suffer for a couple more weeks, yet.”)

She couldn’t tell me much, as we were still waiting on the biopsy results, but she referred me for a blood test to check if I’m still fertile (i.e. Why the HECK am I Still Bleeding at My Age?). I asked about a hysterectomy, as I’m pretty much dead-set on that, now. It’s what they suggested ten years ago, should the ablation end up failing (which it apparently has). But this is something I’ll have to speak to gynae about.

Had the results call yesterday (Wednesday): negative for the Big C (woo-hoo!) but positive for Polyps (yah boo sucks). They snipped off at least one of the little dickheads in the biposy but can’t confirm if there are any others. I’m waiting for another call with another update… the polyps might have been the cause of the bleeding, but it might be a menstruation-thang—in which case, I am absolutely screwed. Periods and I do not get along, hence my having had the ablation surgery in the first place.

So, I’m signed off work until the 19th of January, but I’m really hoping to be firing on all cylinders long before then—I just want my routine back, yanno? I actually wanna be well!

Yesterday, though, was a bastard of an utter bollock. A big, hairy, sweaty bastard bollock. The worst day so far, by a LONG shot. My body completely failed me; I ended up being rendered completely immobile in the kitchen at 10pm, utterly frozen in place with the pain. Couldn’t move a muscle. And in front of the kids, to boot.

I don’t like hiding things from them, never have. I’ve always advocated being in touch with one’s emotions, and I’m not afraid to cry. Good job, really, or I’d have years and years of backed-up tears. But these kids—oh, man. The little one wanted to stay off school today just to look after his mama. What an angel. I might be in a terrible place right now, but at least while I’m here, I’m surrounded by the BEST people.

Da boi.

To Those of You Nodding Along With Christopher Golden

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I’ve heard some rather ‘interesting’ comments about CG this week, for standin’ up and shoutin’ out. Who does he think he is? He’s virtue signalling, he’s making it about him, he’s playing White *Saviour… *yawn, yawn, fuckin’ yawn*

*Savior, for those of you across the pond.

The scene: come with me, if you will, to a blog post that’s been doing the rounds over the last few days. (It’s here, for ease of ref): https://www.christophergolden.com/post/to-those-of-you-nodding-along-with-tom-monteleone

It’s Golden’s response to the latest rant from the extraordinary (and not in a good way) Tom Monteleone. I’m not going to include a link to TM’s hateful horseshit here, as his own particular brand of blogwank doesn’t deserve any more traffic. And yeah, I use ‘hateful’ on purpose. It’s that quiet, posh, all-singing, all-dancing racism that’s been swept under many a rug for decades. Monteleone has (or had) a black friend, don’t ya know? (Linda Addison is “a very nice, congenial and smart lady I always considered a friend…”) And for that, read: I’d better state how lovely she is, right before I say something racist and douchebaggy, just so I can’t be called a racist douchebag.

That’s racism 101, pal. Black friend, and lovely-person disclaimer. Quiet racism, almost to the point of silence. But here’s the thing: the quieter the racism, the louder we must shout.

Suffice t’say, ol’ Tom has it covered. All of it. Sussed. Not content with being your common-or-garden bigot, he’s really gone to town this time, covering all bases. Rampant misogyny? Check. Homophobia? Check. White Privilege? Check. I think he must be after a frickin’ medal or something, for Most Boxes Ticked in a Single Sesh. Not that he would be in with a chance of winning, though, what with fragile white dudes being, like, so oppressed ‘n’ shit. (Poor loves.)

This is something he makes sure to point out, by the way, in case you were in any doubt. Only two—TWO—straight, white guys were nominated for whatever the fuckever’s got on his tits this time:

‘I think the recent history of the LAA speaks for itself—a definite DEI agenda, which got me excoriated for merely pointing it out in an aside in my nominating letter. Indeed the push lately to nominate three winners in a given year seems to be an obvious effort to balance the scales even a little bit. I know I don’t need to state the obvious, but I will: for the last six years, Straight, White Guys: two; Women: eight; “Writer of Color”: five.  I rest my case.’ (Spoiler alert: does he bollocks rest his case.)

He doubles down, too: according to him, Linda isn’t a writer of horror poetry, but a writer of “horror poetry.” Ah, those scathing quote marks that say so much. About him.

‘Her body of work is mostly poems and a handful of collections, but hardly what any student of the field would deem a lifetime of work that “significantly influenced and contributed to the field.” To me (and lots of others who kept their mouths shut, the selection was somewhat of a surprise)—especially after many mentions of the Addison award prefaced it with the proclamation that she was the first black recipient of the award (as if skin color should be a reason for accomplishment to be recognized).’

Tom, U ok, hun? [insert worry-face emoji here]

(But enough about him. There’s plenty of online commentary out there, should you care to go down that hole of rabbits.)

So what, by contrast, do we have in Christopher Golden? An author, supporting other authors. Shocking!

Supporting friends. HOW DARE!

Supporting the oppressed, the underrepresented, the marginalised. What a terrible person. Sheesh.

‘Linda Addison does not need you to acknowledge her worth to be worthy. She doesn’t need to have been embraced by readers who are not interested in poetry for her contributions to be significant. You don’t need to have felt her influence or even observed it for her to be influential.’ – Christopher Golden.

Standing up for People of Colour does not make you a white saviour. It makes you human. It makes you a decent person. It’s the right thing to do. And I’m kind of at a loss as to why more people aren’t doing it. Allies are precious. Being that it’s usually we white folks doin’ the perpetratin’, isn’t it up to us to call out the bullshit everywhere we smell it?

So, yeah. To those of you nodding along with Christopher Golden, and to the man himself: thank you.

If a Book…

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If a book can drive people to build gold-dripping brick palaces in honour of an imperceptible sky-dweller
Or to melt wax and drape hatred over glistening, Christening altars
Then consider the power of fiction.
If a book can create and nurture mass hysteria for thousands of years, then consider the power of fiction.

If a book can drive people to kill or to keep:
To keep and punish and sacrifice
To sacrifice and ostracise and bully and excommunicate
If a book can invent such fantastic characters that even the inconceivable becomes believable
Then consider the power of fiction.

There, saints on pages say women must be silent
There, invented words would have you devote yourself to destruction
where wives and slaves submit to men
—Men who must not love one another—
Here, sacrifice your children unto this scripture:
And they saw that it was blood.

And still, its readers read—feeding hate
And still, they root for its main character
Through an aperture of death
Death masquerading as life
And still, its readers explain away horror as metaphor

And interpret and manipulate evil into excuses:

Free will and mysterious ways.
So today, embrace the power of fiction.
Embrace the power of fiction and keep writing.
Keep writing your own book
And perhaps one day
Writers shall unwrite The Bible.

You, Myself, and I

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Today, my little grammar muffins (whatever they are), we shall be looking at Me vs I, and when to do the Re-flex-flex-flex-flex. Sort of.

BON

I had this exact ‘do at this exact time. Just so you know.

So, which is it —and me, or —and I?

In accordance with fings-they-lerned-me-at-school and that one electrocution elocution lesson I attended back in the summer of 1986 (the idea of which, if you know me AT ALL, is fucking hilarious), you and I sounds posh. It just does. And if you arbitrarily chuck it in all over the show, no matter the context, it gives the impression that you have a bit of dosh to throw about. THAT’S WHAT THEY TOLD ME.

They were wrong. To prove my point, here’s a pair of toffs off the telly, who’ve volunteered* to help us out with a little exercise. I’m paying them in booze.

*Not strictly true. Pic nicked wholesale from Google.

c4d7b747a4e35e22968a9c0e4056df0a

A pair of toffs off the telly.

Now, Mr. Toff might be inclined to caption the pic thus: “Fuckface and I.” (They’re pictured here at Balmoral’s annual squirrel-tickling festival, FYI.) But he’d be wrong. It’s “Fuckface and me.” Why? Well, you wouldn’t say, “Here’s a photo of I,” would you?

I mean, just listen to how utterly SILLY this is: “Here’s I at the Mountbattens’ monthly frog-rogering contest.” See?

It is, of course, fine to use I in the grammatically correct manner:

“Edgar and I are planning a spiffing party. Would you like to join us?”

Or:

“My husband and I shall be going dogging in New Brighton this evening, if you’re out and about.”

If you bump Edgar off, and do away with the husband, you’re left with: “I am having a dinner party and then I shall be going dogging.” See? Perfect sense.

Disclaimer: the above example is in no way autobiographical. Ahem.

Them-wot-write-songs have a lot to answer for, too; Geri Halliwell’s dreadful Lift me Up springs to mind:

Watch the first light kiss the New World
It’s a wonder, baby; like you and I
All the colours of the rainbow
Going somewhere, baby; like you and I

AAAARRRRRGH! *Shouts “You and ME” at the car radio twenty years ago.*

How to remember the thing about the thing: cover up the “you and” bit. If the sentence still makes sense, you’re good. Using the same vintage spice example as above: “It’s a wonder, baby, like I” sounds shite, whereas “It’s a wonder, baby, like me” still sounds shite. But at least it’s correct.

More food for thinky thoughtstuff: is the title Withnail and I correct? Well, it depends what’s implicit, and what floats your own particular proverbial. If it’s “[Here’s a bunch of shit] Withnail and I [got up to…]” then it makes complete sense. But if it’s “[The story of] Withnail and I,” then it’s incorrect, and should be Withnail and Me. You could argue a case for either, really, if you had enough time and/or the inclination. Which I don’t. But here’s some brain-grub:

Withnail and I went on holiday by mistake.

or:

Withnail and me went on holiday by mistake.

withnail-and-i-robot

Yeah. It’s I. DO NOT MESS WITH THE ‘NAIL.

Speaking of dinner parties, someone once asked me, by text, “Would you like to come to Steve and I’s on Saturday?” I couldn’t answer, what with the BLEEDING EYES ’n’ all. True story.

Now, allow me to introduce… myself.

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Myself/yourself/himself/herself/themselves… yada yada… are all reflexive pronouns; i.e. a pronoun [me/you/him/her/them] that reflects right back at… itself. Like a reflection, really. But not really.

If you’re looking for a swanky explanation, WIKI says: “In general linguistics, a reflexive pronoun, sometimes simply called a reflexive, is an anaphoric pronoun that must be coreferential with another nominal (its antecedent) within the same clause.” Ain’t nobody got time for that (at this point, you might want to refer to the ‘double negatives’ blog I haven’t written yet).

“I don’t like myself” or “I’m going to reward myself for finally finishing that 120,000 word novel after seventeen years” are fine.

Using “Gordon Ramsey and myself are going to cook you a meal” is bollocks. Gordon wouldn’t allow anyone else in his kitchen. Unless, of course, they were conveniently placed just so he could swear at them. But why ELSE is it bollocks?

You wouldn’t say “Myself are going to cook you a meal”, would you? You’d say “I am…” Same as before, folks —same as before. Cover up the first bit and see if it still makes sense.

Office-speak has a lot to answer for, with its “We wrote to yourselves on…” nonsense. You don’t have to use reflexives when referring to a company just because someone tells you that you have to use reflexives when referring to a company.

Alright, alright —I’ll wrap it up. Off y’go. Be sure to tune in to the next instalment: *THE GAPING MAW OF A PLETHORA OF A MYRIAD OF CREATIVE WRITING CLASSES. WITH TENTACLES.

*I might come up with a better title before then.

Let Loose and Lose the Eyebrows

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Further to part one (here: https://liberatetutemet.com/category/eds-blogs/), this is … erm … part two of How to Avoid Dem Pesky Mistakes  —identifying some of the most common wordie whoopsies.

Loose and Lose are first up today —so, what’s the dealio? Well, the word on the street is that —gasp!—they mean different things!

Loose: something wot’s not tight, innit—’tis pronounced in such a way that it rhymes with moose and hoose (admit it— you’re singing it now).

Lose: To misplace something (or even someone)—’tis pronounced LOOZE, to rhyme with snooze/shoes/I demand to have some booze.

See the source image

See?— ’tis a doddle. Of course, there’s also LOOSED, which throws itself rather splendidly into the mix as the past tense of LOOSE, and means … erm … loosed. Not to be confused with LOST, which means lost. Gottit?

“He loosed his grip around her throat” —indicating a deliberate action: second thoughts, perhaps. Remorse, maybe … Bless him.

Vs:

“He lost his grip” —which might indicate either clumsiness or an inability to retain said grip upon, say, a glass (or reality itself, owing to an exaggerated state of inebriation caused by ill-advised imbibement of lighter fluid).

Speaking of which, a friend of mine once had soooo much of the stuff that upon lighting a cigarette, he ignited his face instead, his eyebrows scattering to the floor in ashy despair. This may or may not be true, but it brings me nicely onto the topic of furry facethings. Because GAWD DAMN IT, people.

Perhaps your creative writing class suggested you employ the furrowing of brows to indicate expression, which is no bad thing, if used sparingly. But, dear LAWD —must EVERY single line of dialogue come with a description of what the character’s face is doing? The same applies to nodding, m’dears.

When you over-egg the prose, it sounds like this to me:

“He raised an eyebrow, browishly. It was the only way he could express his emotions, emotionally. There were other adverbs to be had, adverbially, but he would save those for the next paragraph, in which he would explore the exploratory possibilities of nodding, noddingly. Unsurprisingly, he did, indeed, nod once more, which set his damn eyebrows off again. They looked as though they could do with a wee twitch, arch, or furrow —after all, it had been a while. Right on cue, they did an ugly little jig, like Theresa May at a Tory Party conference.”

I challenge you to search for “brow” in your latest WIP. “Nod,” too. Now, there are no hard and fast browcount rules, of course, but please bear in mind that I recently edited a 60,000 word novel wot came with 1,657 brow references and 2,313 nods of one head or another. Yes, really.

It’s just YUK. Stop it.

The Science Bit (maybe):

Here’s why it doesn’t work (aside from standing out like the proverbial thumb): come with me, if you will, to the makings of an anecdote.

You witness an event. Perhaps a car crash, or maybe even a pastie of chavs havin’ a scrap. How do you tell the missus/hubby/whoever about your day?

DO you say:

a) So there was this gaggle of chavs, right, knocking proppa shit out of each other down the pub today;

or:

b) Let me tell you, Ethel —what a day I’ve had. Trying to relax at lunchtime over a pint of mild and a bag of squirrels, I happened upon a group of strangers having a bit of a to-do. I took a swig, furrowed my brow, and began to watch the unfolding drama. With an eyebrow raised, a young woman approached a rather unkempt young man, and glared right at him. He furrowed his brow, and nodded. Then a third person joined the fray, Ethel. A third person! His eyebrows were set in surprise, they were. Like a stone clock. Ten-past-ten, right there on his face.

Catchie mah driftie? Keep it REAL, folks! Please get out of the habit of describing every.single.thing your characters’ faces do. Be descriptive, not prescriptive.

On that note, I’m off. Unlike my eyebrows, which are very much on (I’m a Scouser —it’s the law).

th1K0RNZBG

Bert was surprised to find he actually preferred version B.

It’s *You’re Call —Fixing the Fundamental

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*Your.

(Made ya look.)

Do you have to be gud wiv werds to be a decent writer? Nah —but it certainly helps. If you want to cut down on those rejections, for instance, it’s not a bad thing to up your technical accuracy game. If you wish to master your craft or hone your skills, then you might want to start with the basics.

Here are some of the most common mistakes writers make —and some easy ways to remember the correct usage. I’ll stick with cat/dog/coffee/pizza analogies, because writers (be warned: this might get a little gross and/or sweary, because me).

ITS vs IT’S 

ITS is possessive; that is, we are referring to something belonging to it. So, if we’re talking about a cat who has a propensity for displaying all things posterior, then we might say it had its ‘… tail in the air, flaunting its sticky brown bumhole.’

Just as that which belongs to her is hers, and something belonging to him is his, then that which belongs to it must be its.

IT’S is a contraction of IT and HAS, or IT and IS. A contraction is the abbreviation (shortening) of a phrase or word group, using apostrophes to denote the omission of a letter (or letters). One merely shoves the apostrophe in the space the omitted bit would occupy.

Common contractions include: 

  • Don’t = DO NOT (Don’t tell me how to write.)
  • Haven’t = HAVE NOT (I haven’t written anything today because I’ve been dicking around on Facebook for twelve hours.)
  • Shouldn’t = SHOULD NOT (You shouldn’t put pineapple on pizza. Like EVAH.)
  • She’s = SHE IS (She’s banging on about fucking grammar again, the pedantic bint.)

And the one we’re talking about here: it’s (it has/it is).

Example:  ‘It’s too late…’ (i.e. ‘I was just about to scoff a bunch of soggy, overboiled ramen but it’s too late because the cat’s been sick in the bowl, so I guess I’ll have pizza instead. But with no pineapple. Because ew.’)

PLURALS vs POSSESSIVES

Speaking of apostrophes —those little shits get everywhere. And I mean everywhere. Have a gander:

shop

Sofa’s. The sofa is what? Comfortable? Maybe something belongs to the bed, which is owned by the recliner, which is the property of the chair … AAAARGH!

Assuming the store has more than one sofa/chair/recliner/bed for sale, they should have used plurals here, which, in this case, is as simple as adding ‘s’ to the end of each item.

As for Goodwyns Furniture; assuming Goodwyn is one person, Goodwyn’s Furniture would be correct. I dunno —perhaps signwriters are easily confused these days. Humph.

Here are some photos of a rather splendid bookstore chain. I guess only half of these shops belong to Mr W.

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CONSISTENCY IS EVERYTHING, PEOPLE.

Are you still with me? No? Okay —back to animals, then:

  • The dog’s knackers —a pair of soft, dangly objects between a dog’s legs.
  • The dogs’ knackers —the danglies of more than one canine.
  • The dog’s knackered —the dog is exhausted, probably having tried and failed to catch the cat that spewed in the noodles earlier today.

Recap

Something belonging to one thing: the thing’s thing.

Something belonging to more than one thing: the things’ thing.

It’s easier to nail if you sort out the plural first and then determine the correct possessive:

Cat —>cats —> I wuv cats’ wikkle toebeans (aww).

YOU’RE YOUR OWN WORST ENEMY

You’re writing a nice little story, but you’re just not sure about your grammar. Here’s a quick once-over:

You’re —a contraction of you and are.

Your —something belonging to you (which makes it yours).

So:

Your coffee’s gone cold. You’re just too wrapped up in your novel to remember to drink it (you badass wordsmith, you).

On that note, here endeth the first lesson. Up next: You and Me, Lose and Loose, and Why Eyebrows are Ripe for the Pluckin’.

Beware of the Bull -by CM Franklyn ***extreme content/language/themes***

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guernica-e1570031766276

Guernica – Pablo Picasso

This whole place is white. Eggshell white. There’s not much else to be said about it. Not much else, because it’s just a room —and there is hardly anything in it. Not yet. Far better to start with the absentees in any case; in rooms, life, and everything else, that which is missing can often provide the greater presence.

First, there are no windows here, so we are not privy to the weather conditions. And as there are no windows, there are no blinds, and consequently no slashes of sunlight cast upon the floor. There are four walls, one ceiling, wooden boards underfoot, and a table. The walls keep the ceiling up, and the ceiling keeps the walls down. The floor is there for walking and for the table to rest upon. The table is a device for people to sit around, for this is what shall happen in a short while. And as they come, so shall they bring chairs, for they know their own comfort. And comfort is enough —for now.

Bringing her life along, yet making sure to leave it behind, Sam enters through a doorless space. Hi, Carl, she says, once he has squeezed in after her. Hi, Sam. This is not the most inventive of introductions, and these are not the most engaging of people, it has to be said. But this is how it goes in a place like this. This is how it always goes. And it’s enough.

Dave, next. Like Carl and Sam, he has a monosyllabic name for simplicity. Some of these people, as we shall discover, have monosyllabic brains, too. Hi, Carl. Hi, Dave. Hi, Carl. Hi, Sam.

One-by-one, the seat-bringers surround the table until every space is filled in this, the eggshell room in which they will chat. They all have names, and we will come to learn them; whether these people will learn anything about themselves is largely dependent upon confidence, contemplation, and foible.

Bill is entrant number seven. He gets right up in Sam’s face straight away and yells, LIKE ME! But Sam doesn’t want to like him yet, having only just met the guy.

Even after he shows her his private collection, she finds him hard to like. Especially after he shows her his private collection. Managing a half-polite semi-smile, she ferrets herself away into a corner of photographs: images of cats, food, guns —and guns’ results. The latter doesn’t matter; that sort of stuff only registers with people who care. Ferreting away doesn’t seem to matter, either. Not to Bill. What is he supposed to think? The girl is clearly playing hard-to-rape. Pfft —she obviously wants it.

Girls, man. They want it

ALL.

THE.

TIME.

All of them. Bill knows this, so he backs Sam into a corner and up against a version of herself. She’s fuckable, he thinks. You’re gorgeous, he says, even though he doesn’t know her from Eve. This is not to be considered creepy in the slightest; women are well-accustomed to compliments, and as such, should appreciate every last one. Bear them all with fortitude and a little bit of gratitude, they should, for they might never know another. In any case, there are far worse things to be worrying about than the odd catcall or thirty. Girls should get a grip and worry about serious matters such as the environment or climate change or —wait: strike that. Reverse it. Girls should never worry their pretty little heads about serious matters such as the environment or climate change because those things are not even real issues anyway.

In the next breath, and after a good ol’ cup of covfefe, he mentions his height —it’s a whopper of a number. Huge. In fact, this number of ultimate and almighty bigness means PRAISE MY ENORMOUS PENIS but she (the silly girl) thinks he’s telling her how tall he is. Ha!

Unsure of her options now, being that she has always been taught to welcome attention from men no matter how vulgar they are because it would be rude not to and people would consider her unworthy of a second glance and she must always explain herself and her behaviour and her face and justify her choice to wear make-up on it because everyone knows she looks better without it and she must regularly apologise for her weight and shape and the clothes with which she adorns it and she must respond with kindness and a wink to every comment from Every Man Ever otherwise how else will she find a husband and how else will she ever become a mother or feel any sense of self-worth whatsoever and who would even look at her twice let alone want to mate because look how ugly and inappropriately burdensome she is, she hands him her coerced thumb. It is up, but her eyes are down.

Happy with that for now —but only for now— the man sits his arse down with the girl’s digit held aloft for all to see. He didn’t have this much luck with the previous one, who is not in this room. She was a proper pig. A pig who had refused to praise his celestial diamond-cut throne-dwelling penis of golden gloriousness so he’d made sure to tell her how fat and ugly and worthless she was and said he hadn’t meant it when he’d called her gorgeous, the fatuglyworthlesspig. He’d made sure to drive the point home with sharpened words. He’d made sure the pig knew he considered her A Fat. He’d made sure the pig knew he considered her An Ugly. That was all she was, and that was enough.

Now, the group sit ‘round the table not quite knowing what to say, so, being default-weather-talkers, they discuss the mundane. Anyone notice the rain last night? It was wet. They offer equally dull gusts by way of response, including but not limited to the wind (it blows, man) and the ambient humidity which is frizzing all the female hair (a look which is downright unattractive and puts a man right off no matter how otherwise-fuckable the bearer) before they move on to the next topic: films.

John’s favourite is ___________, and the other men agree. This makes them look cool. It makes them look clever. It makes them look educated. Ann, though (oh, Ann, when will you learn?) says ________ is the best movie ever made. She enjoys it and it brings her happiness. But this makes her look stupid. The others laugh and mock, and mock and laugh. She takes off her face and hands it around for the others to witness the parallel blue streams of her twilight tears.

Seven eighths of the room’s inhabitants enjoy a long-running TV show (no, not that one). The odd man out does not. But, as his opinion is crucial and must be shared with the others, he takes a big brown ice-cream swirl of a dump on their enthusiasm. That’s enough, that’s enough.

Next, their favourite author. Dave really enjoys _________, of whom nobody in this room has ever heard, but who is somebody everybody pretends to know. Lucy, though, has a bit of a thing for ________, and happens to have upon her person, at this table, in this room, a copy of ­­­­the latest novel. She approaches her neighbours in turn and fans the pages in their faces. It smells nice (it’s a book —of course it does). But ________ is considered a joke even though she consistently churns out best-sellers, making money while she sleeps the most enviable slumbers that reek of happy Saturdays and extended middle fingers.

Four people fall to the floor and roll about on it, laughing. The reader is as stupid as the author and they know it, so they want her to know it, too. As she is laughed out of the room, the remainers agree on one thing: no pineapple on pizza. Next, a related topic comes up. Neither John nor Ann would be found eating anything that ever had a face, or that which came from anything that came from anyone who ever had a mother. This is a red flag to the proverbial because plants feel pain, too. But it’s the one about the animals being grateful (as in they should be) that gets on Ann’s tits. This weighs heavily on her everything, and she voices her concerns —silly girl.

Dave can’t be doing with this nonsense. Stupid girl, having an opinion; this place has no time for outsiders. With one click of his fingers, he banishes Ann from the room.

The six insiders are still on the subject, and John holds up a photograph of a piglet. It’s tiny and wearing a onesie. Isn’t it cute, he says, and it is not a question. Bacon, someone else says, which is not only hilarious but entirely original because nobody has ever before had the sheer genius to come up with such a thing. What a wag!

People are stupid. So stupid, in fact, they can no longer sit down, as they no longer have arses, having laughed them off at the side-splitting comment about thinly sliced pigmeat. But John is his own enemy —he goes on to hold up a dripping red foetus even though nobody had asked to see it. And now, there are five.

Sam, who is clearly gagging for it by now, frames her face and shows off her freckles. This time, it’s Carl who’s taken by her fuckability. She must only be doing it for attention, he thinks (and says, to the others). He’s right, they think. You’re right, they say. But there is a thing, and the thing is this: she knows she’s attractive. This is strike one. A real woman should never be aware of her own beauty unless she is describing for men her shaven netherparts or the effect of shower water on her breasts; drips and beads of H2-Oh, I’m so horny. Otherwise, she should consider herself quite the moose.

Strike two: she’s wearing a cosmetic mask. She’d look much better without it, and the chorus tells her so via a bollockful of ugly voices. Strike three: she displays herself in another frame now, but this time her tattoos are on display. Females should not be permitted to darken their bodies with ink, for the sake of utter fuck. Have they learned nothing?

It’s obvious what’s going to happen, too —she’ll be in town, or at the mall, peacocking all around (well, pea-henning, to be more accurate), ugly ink on display for all to see, and she’ll be the one to complain when people prod her! You can’t go around like that and not expect to be touched. You just can’t. Pfft —girls should be happy in their natural skin, and that should be enough.

And sure, she could come up with excuses. Shoddy reasons for wanting to look like an ol’ slapper. But it doesn’t matter that she feels good about herself, finally. It doesn’t matter that she’s escaped years of abuse, finally. And it certainly doesn’t matter that she’s found confidence and embraced self-expression and is now experiencing if not self-love then self not-hate, finally.

But who cares, because tits. Who cares, because lingerie. There are no question marks here because there are no questions, only judgement and condemnation. She is clearly asking for it, having brought it on herself via wardrobe and demeanour, so one of the men gives it to her. It doesn’t matter which one. One is enough.

And now, there are four. The man stays, because he was only doing as nature intended. And, as we all know, boys will be boys will be boys will be boys will BE BOYS BE BOYS BE BOYS BOYS BOYS especially when females encourage and insist upon causing the eruption of their volcanic ballbags. If only the weaker, infinitely useless sex would realise they are there solely for the pleasure of the penis, the world would be a much calmer place. Silly girls. Silly, silly girls. Pfft.

It’s just Carl, Bill, Dave, and the one-girl-left, now. I’ve forgotten her name, because she’s unimportant. She’s just a girl. A girl in a roomful of men. A ballsack of masculinity. A murder of testosterone. A girl with skin unlike their own, and with a sexuality and gender far removed from theirs.

They make a bet to turn her, although they regret not having asked her to do a duet before Sam’s departure. She’s sure to have gone for it, too, lesbianism not even being a real thing in any case. It’s all just play-acting. They love putting on a show for men, they do.

In a way, they kind of pity her. It’s a threefer: she’s worth less than them because she’s a girl. She’s worth nothing to them because she doesn’t like cock. She’s worth less than nothing to them because she has dark chocolate skin. Or is it mocha? Gravy? Caramel, maybe. They aren’t quite sure which foodstuff or drinkthing to use to describe her, so they settle on ______. It’s a word they haven’t been able to say until now, and they sure are pissed about it. Why should _______ be the only ones who can say ______? It’s not fair. It’s just not fair.

It’s fine, though, there’s nothing to see here. No racism here. There can’t be; they each knew somebody who used to work for someone who had a cousin somewhere whose best friend’s paperboy’s uncle’s teacher’s sister’s dog walker’s hair stylist’s boyfriend was a ______. Oh —and they liked that actor in that film. The one who’s always mistaken for the other one because they all look the same. And there’s enough Black performers in any case. And as for them getting their own superhero movie? Pfft —one was enough.

Now, they touch her hair. In turn, each man grasps a strand and pulls it to fuckdom come to see how long it really is. Handsy people have hands and they have the right to use them, gosh darn it. Wow! How does it coil up so tight? It must be difficult to get a comb through. I bet it was a bastard when head lice were doing the rounds. Why do you all smell of coconut oil? Give us a song, I bet you have a great voice. Next, they ask where she’s from, and because she gives a stupid answer like Liverpool or Cape Elizabeth or Manchester or Nova Scotia, and because she is clearly stupid, they have to explain no, originally. And why do you wear sheets on your head? Why do you have an Anglicised name? You’re so exotic. I’ve always wanted to try it with a ______.

As they try to cure her with their insatiable, irresistible handsomeness, they flag up a concerning discovery between her legs. This makes her a fourfer, now. With her quartet of unworthiness, she’s erased from the room. She’s not even worth turning; she’s not even a she, for fuck’s sake. Since when did pink, white, and blue make the colour of a woman?

With her exit comes her replacement. Jane comes in on wheels and with electronically enhanced ears. How do you people manage to have sex? Does everything work? Is it all in proportion? What’s wrong with you? These questions are not spoken but yelled, for she is OBVIOUSLY A BIT DENSE. Her husband must have married her for the cash because they clearly rake it in with disability benefits. Scroungers, the pair of ‘em. Either that, or it’s a case of pity; he cannot love her. Not in the proper way —the only way: between one man and one woman. I mean —look at her. She can’t use her legs. Scrawny little atrophied things, they are. That’s hardly a turn-on in bed, is it? What is even the point of her existence? What is the point of her?

She retreats; she must be too weak to stay.

Another girl takes her place. A knocked-up, beaten-down girl with only antacid for company and seventeen weeks to go. She should have held her legs together, they say. She’s on her third husband and fifth tit-sucking parasite so they’ll be burying her in a Y-shaped coffin they say they say they say they say THEY SAY THEY SAY THEY SAY they tell her what a terrible role model she is —or what a good one she isn’t.

Funny thing is, though, this is the same thing they tell the ones who do keep their legs closed. The same thing they say to Women of Choice. The same thing they tell women, period. Oh, periods —yet another subject on which they have words. And once those words are spoken, being that the female form belongs to them for purposes sexual and legislative, they mutilate their argument via a certain type of explanation reserved only for their gender (someone should totally come up with a catchy term for that).

But yes, girls need everything spelled out and underlined and yelled at them, such is their stupidity. Men, though, men are a blessing to the thickest, most stupid of doom-brained females. It is those men —these men, right here—we should all appreciate. Poor souls, experiencing sexism —nay, sheer hatred all the time. Fucking feminists. I mean —did you catch that Scouse Bint the other day, shaming some guy just because he sent her an innocent message? Those things are private, for Satan’s sake. Did he give his consent for her to take that screenshot and post it for the world to see? Did he bollocks. A simple, innocent request from a complete stranger offering her a role in his movie along with a gaggle of other redheads —she should be flattered.

Poor men. Poor, poor men.

As they contemplate everything they’ve just witnessed, everything they’ve just heard, every ugly girl and every memory of every fat girl they ever had to endure and every lezzer they had to try to cure and every disabled girl they wouldn’t fuck even though they should be grateful because who else would have them and all those not-even-female-girls who dare to call themselves women even though they have a dick and how dare they because there are only two genders which is something everybody knows because nature and science and GOD, they cry as one, holding and hugging and wiping tears away from a breakage of broken faces. But it doesn’t last; they quickly collect themselves and man up. There’ll be none of that, none of that. There are better, worthier girls out there. Girls who will worship at the Altar of the Enormous and Almighty Penis without question.

One of them says let’s have a fight and is immediately met with a flying fist. Much better –a violent bandage to bridge a sappy wound that’s been bleeding estrogen. The trio get into a scuffle, enjoying every punch, hook, and scratch –no, not scratch, too feminine. Strike that. Every Thump!

They fight, and they fight. And then they fight some more. But besides their own collective, there is nobody left to pass thumbs and hearts around, so they can neither seek nor receive the oxygen of validation.

It’s no surprise they’re pissed. Pfft —fucking men-haters, with their refusal to cook a decent meal for their husbands or sweep up after their boyfriends. Bloody lesbians with their anti-men stance. Bloody man-hatin’ feminist lezzers, the lot of ‘em. How do they ever get wet enough for penetration? They’re such a passion-killer, those dykes, they put the dry into misandry. A good helping of cock would cure them. One cock would be enough.

Hearing the red flag of commotion, the proverbial animal bounds into the room. Like a wrecking ball of cartoon meat, he bowls over to the three men and stops still before making any sort of contact. He looks not so much wrong, as unright. It’s as if he’s been written by Picasso or painted by Burroughs.

So fragile are they that a single breath from his ringed nose is enough to floor the brittle trio, who shred into shards and fall down, piece-by-piece. Down to a floor upon which they can no longer roll, laughing. Down to a floor upon which they sit, now, shattered smatterings of bone china so white and so fragile that even a single pfft from a whispering nostril was enough.

Job done, but retaining unspent aggression, the bull begins to back away into the nowhere and the everything outside the room. There, where it is not so contained and not so white, we get a closer look at the anime meat of his fibre. He’s made of a non-exhaustive list of real men, birthed by and bathed in estrogen. Fighters. Champions. Feminists. Gay men. Men assigned female at birth. Black men, brown. Tall men, short. Round and thin and young and old and masculine men and feminine men and …women, holding up the rear. Women, leading from behind. Gretas and Lindas and Catherines and Jessicas and Allegras and Erikas and Sheilas and Angelas and Lisas and Lizas and Emmas and Pixies. Nicola, Peggy and Pippa, Renee, Laura, Brooklynne, Betty, Toni, Sloane and Cate are here. Priya is Jennifer is Shana is Sheri is Tanya is Sarah is Marie is Roberta. They —we— are all made from the same fabric. We are enough.

The bull needs to break something down, and fast, so he selects the fourth wall. The fourth very white, very fragile wall. From there, a tiny voice from a tiny reader: not all men.

Del Toro sees the red flag again. We bound over. There are smashes, shattering, shards. Unfixable, unputbacktogetherable. No words have they; no power, now. We brush the shreds into the eggshell arena where we lean over their fibre and offer a selection of thoughts and prayers.

Now, the sediment of misplaced sentiment rests where once sat a girl —in a room; a white, fragile room. There’s not much else to be said about it. Not much else, because it’s just a room —and there is hardly anything in it. Not yet. Far better to start with the absentees in any case; in rooms, life, and everything else, that which is missing can often provide the greater presence.