In Your House
By Jane Hyphen
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In your house, it’s always night time
You never let the sunshine in
Running on an endless loop
Stale thoughts on ever deepening tracks
Landscapes are distorted
Except for the spot where a fly lands
And a neighbour’s voice muffles through the wall
It’s too thick now to move, too heavy to escape
They walk past, werewolves, clones
And girls with vapour trails, too faint to see
By someone hiding in a wall, watching
Through cracks where mortar shrunk and fell out
They call you something, neither good or bad
Where mould grows on the bricks
And at the window, a shadow in the gap
‘He puts the bins out, I’ll give him that,’
There’s routine inside the hole
A way to pass the time, in long extended steps
This tunnel has rubbed away your edge
I’m not sure now, where you begin and end
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Comments
"I’m not sure now, where you
"I’m not sure now, where you begin and end"
That's a philosophical introspection full of poetic musings. Certainly evocative conjuring interesting images. Maybe our home isn't always a metaphorical castle when you wonder what's going on outside..
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In our house it's always tea
In our house it's always tea time and, it embarrasses me to confess, there are many spots where flies land. We even get the occasional scorpion.
In intriguing and enjoyable poem Jane. Good on you!
Turlough
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Hi Jane,
Hi Jane,
imoving to a new house is stressful enough, which always makes me reluctant to move.
If you don't know the history, or what the people were like before you bought the house. I always believe you should sage a house when moving in, to get rid of all the negativity, I did it for a week when we moved into the house we live in now.
I think once you've been there for some time and put your mark on the house, things will get better, the walls will sense your positive vibes and the warmth will return.
I hope you have many happy memories in your new home, and get to bring your love into its walls.
All the best for the future.
Jenny.
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I sympathise about cold, old
I sympathise about cold, old houses! I am trying to get my act together about moving to a less damp, dark, modern one :0) Wondering if I would miss the gravity of walls half a metre thick. Terrific ominous feeling in this poem, of fear and despair breeding for generations in the shadows
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I hope you feel better soon
I hope you feel better soon about your house - you are right of course, this isn't the best time of year to move - especially an old stone one. On the bright side, and speaking from experience, it will be wonderfully cool in the summer!
I see taking on an old house as a positive thing - whatever layers came before you, you add your own, but it does take time and can be disorienting at first. Sage is a good idea, and it smells wonderful!
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have you looked at the deeds?
have you looked at the deeds? I always find them fascinating (and you can learn a lot)
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you are so right about the
you are so right about the cool cave in Summer! And this might actually be a good time to have moved, because you really do appreciate Spring coming, when so dark inside. And Christmas lights are not a decoration but a necessity for survival :0) I put off all that till as late as allowed, for maximum uplift of spirits for the day.
Your walls can tell you stuff! Not about actual lives moving, but still echoes. Painting and Decorating is exciting, as there might be layers and layers of wallpaper and paint underneath, going back to Victorian times (ours was mostly sludge green, then, I think!)
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