Tried to write a poem for my birthday and was surprised by what happened, but I kinda liked it 😀

Tried to write a poem for my birthday and was surprised by what happened, but I kinda liked it 😀


A song in this vein
Made me think
It is true old men
Wear their hearts on sleeves.
So many regrets
About opportunities missed
Loves sadly lost
Communication so incomplete.
Women on the other hand
Share so much of themselves
Letting others know
About feelings so deep.
Wondering why it is
That men struggle so much
When all they need to do
Is say what they think.
Or more of what they feel
So early this quashed
By those unwilling to acknowledge
The depths that exist.
For men have places
Unseen so often
Faces rarely shown
Ideas that might resonate.
15/8/2020
A vigil of sorts
Waiting for the operation
Trying to reassure
Her thirst unrelenting.
As blood sugar level drops
Confusion more evident
Drifting in and out
Of unsettled sleep.
The hands crocheting
A task no longer possible
Searching for a scissors
To cut an errant thread.
Times of lucidity
Quickly dissolving away
But still worried about me
Time wasted waiting with her.
The time moves on
Passing for me in a blur
Knowing that this may be
My last time with her.
After eight long hours
The advice is received
No operation today
Emergencies took priority.
Happy at last to drink
And eat a small meal
Me hoping that tomorrow
This will not be repeated.
But the phone call came
Explaining the risks ahead
The operation to begin
Uncertainty begins again.
18/8/2020
As the time approaches for our Annual Show (which has been cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns), it is again becoming apparent why we needed to be so cautious. This virus has reared its ugly head in Victoria in a way unimagined, and still denied, by many. It has shown its face in other states and our own with some increase again in restrictions at the time of writing. More evidence is appearing about the devastating after-effects that this virus can have and, while it is particularly vicious for frail elderly people, the ranks are swelling of younger people killed or left with life long health conditions. When a virus crosses from animals to humans our makeup has little resistance. AIDS has demonstrated this to us; a virus for which we still do not have a cure even after so many years since its appearance though, thankfully, treatment has become much more effective. With this background it is up to all of us to ‘keep on keeping on’, but with caution. So it is with the Show Society and many other groups and services in the community, particularly those first line responders for whom we must all be grateful, many of whom have become ill and even died.
I don’t want to minimise the heroic efforts of those in the health and aged care sectors who are facing unprecedented challenges. Good and bad are evident in all communities, though, and this becomes prominent in times of crisis. During bush fires and floods we have those who bravely face the dangers and then those who ignore or even exploit the suffering. This pandemic is no different. Humanity survives due to core values of caring and generosity embraced by the vast majority of people of all cultures and spiritual leanings. Fundamental to this are a plethora of community events that bind us and give us a focus for constructive, sharing activities. Our Show is only one of many events that provide an opportunity for communities to plan and rebuild after crises. From the smallest to the largest, these are all important for they give us the one thing we must never lose, hope.
I started writing this to say that the progress in our infrastructure developments, largely thanks to a major Federal Government Grant, have been proceeding smoothly. I thought that I might acknowledge those who are taking the most active role in the process but realised this was likely to embarrass them and I might leave someone very important out. So, I have decided not to submit what I’ve written to the Yankalilla Regional News, but have written a short poem devoted to all of the quiet achievers out there. Many of us know who they are within our own circles of experience and these people definitely know who they are but probably minimise their contribution. I thank them all and, if you don’t know who they are, when you next attend a public event that you enjoy, spend a moment wondering about this, even enquiring about this, and show that you appreciate these efforts in any way you can.
Quiet Heroes
There are those around
Who in the background work
Embarrassed by acknowledgement
Saying what they do is not unusual.
And this is indeed true
For these folk are rife
Diligent in their roles
Not expecting extra recompense.
But largely faceless they are
Others expecting the things at which they toil
For it has always been so
Damming the water that flows.
Building, creating, repairing, challenging
Focussing on outcomes
Rarely complaining about difficulties
Concentration on the task.
Unsung heroes they are
Providing events we enjoy
Services that we require
Their joy in the doing, regardless of cost.
Brian Matthews
12/8/2020

Close to half of PhD students are contemplating leaving their studies in the next six months. We need to talk about quitting with kindness and …
How NOT to be an academic asshole during Covid.
I found this really powerful, having been through a troubled PhD myself in less troubling times. It would be useful reading for any PhD candidate, supervisor, or friend or family member.
You know you need to ‘get a life’ when you’re inspired by a medical procedure 😀😉
X-rays
Sitting almost naked
Undies and backless gown
Reminiscent of hospitalisation
Though the gown is black.
A little chilly as I wait
Not worried by this
Voices and laughter nearby
Such a tiny room.
Soon in the examination room
Pleasant young woman
Swivels bulky machines with ease
Sliding in overhead tracks.
Directions very precise
Toes together, heels apart
Breathe in, hold still
Roll this way and that.
The procedure over quickly
Satisfying the requirements
The examination complete
Pictures of internal structures.
Results will soon tell
If arthritic or not
The best treatment suggested
Relief hopefully projected.
7/8/2020
Another one I liked
Meaning
The need to be special
Runs so deep,
To see oneself in a way
That validates the inner core.
Fragility part of the condition
We call humanity,
Wanting the acceptance
Of those we value.
We know that by all
We cannot be accepted,
Choosing the important ones
A big part of the exploration.
Seeking of self,
Seeking of meaning,
Dispelling the strong need
To be always correct.
Walking in others’ shoes
Is part of this path,
Without this our feelings echo,
Purely a hollow resounding.
We are all unique,
With commonalities aplenty,
But our own truths exist
Developing as we grow.
Where this will take us
Is not the question to ask,
The journey important
Wherever it may lead.
24/5/2020
Reviewing some recent poems, and liked this one, though mystified as to why sometimes the formatting remains when I copy and paste, and other times not.
Communication, such an important thing, so rarely done well, particularly the listening part…
Sharing Thoughts
Heart on the sleeve
Has problems for all
As observers stand by
Waiting for the fall.
Honesty can be
Weakness and strength
Emotions transparent
Showing the depth
Of feeling shown
Or thoughts stirring
Few barriers up
Emotions showing.
Responding to others
Only when safe
Makes certain sense
That’s for sure.
Letting ideas build
With onlookers nought
Gives that safety
So often sought.
Sharing with others
Has however huge gain
The thoughts in the mind
Do not often remain.
Open to examination
By friends and others
Rarely are remaining
Self reinforcing rumination
It is not though
For those fragile
In danger of comment
Declaring them puerile.
But vulnerability itself
Can be such a strength
Allowing the audience
To leap to defence
Or help to clarify
Thoughts which swirl
And so I think
Best give it a burl.
In the modern era
So easily done
Opinions can flow
Barriers to none.
But casually many sit
On that wide fence
Allowing only others
To contribute their pence
Content though they are
To shoot others down
And make opaque comments
Ensuring others frown.
But many there are
Who have deep thought
But not confident are
To have these outside brought.
To those I say loudly
Your ideas I want to hear
Especially from those
Who to me are dear.
Hide not away
Your deep cogitation
Shout from the tree tops
Inform our nation.
For too often it seems
Shallowness so often heard
Resound through the streets
Like an unformed turd.
4/6/2020
The poem, ‘The Visit’ was written three months ago but captures the essence of most of my once or twice weekly visits, at that time, to my 92 year old mother in her unit at a smallish nursing home community, sponsored by an Italian religious organisation. The facility came highly recommended through Italian connections in my mixed race family (Maltese, German, British, Welsh). Though my Mum paints it that her children put her in care, I went to great lengths to ensure that this was her decision after several falls, the last of which left her dazed and confused on the floor for 14 hours claiming that her call button did not work even though it was clearly operational. The first try at a care situation had her in a large single room with en-suite in a new modern facility that was too hospital like for her at the time, though she now remembers aspects of this much more fondly than she did at the time (rewriting history such a common feature of her thinking now). When the current situation became available, my sister and I were optimistic as it was not too different from her former unit, just one bedroom less and with care on hand 24 hours a day. Having a career in deinstitutionalising people with disabilities I naively assumed that these learnings had transferred to the aged care system but, as time went on, and even before COVID-19 restrictions hit, we started to become aware that the priority was the facility’s needs, not the individuals living in what we assumed were their homes.
Many of Mum’s complaints seemed just an extension of her over-fastidious nature but with increasing cognitive and health decline we witnessed staff ignoring basic preferences that would have been so easily redressed. My message here is that her complaints are not always baseless. But we have found ways to encourage more positive interactional styles during her visits: taking recent photos of great grandchildren as a focus for positive conversations, asking questions about her early life, discussing the latest gossip about the royal family, ensuring that we provide her with the little extras she loves (cream and ice cream for the ‘too dry’ sweet dishes, particular lollies she loves, and other favourite things) as well as print outs of her bank account so that she doesn’t get as confused about where her money is going. The following poem, I hope captures more of a sense of a positive visit.
The Interaction Preferred
The old smile on entering
Interest in things brought
Inevitable complaints dealt with
Briefly, not lingering.
Discussing my own issues
Awaking maternal concern
Description of happenings
Interest shown in these.
Some mention of COVID
Concerns easily put to rest
Photos of great grandchildren
But, not of her blood.
Leading to lengthy reflections
On those nearer to her heart
Asking questions about things
Some known and some not.
The conversation flowing
And ebbing at times
Questions about others
Staff both of us know.
A pleasant experience
For both Mother and Son
An unwillingness to end
Common in all visits.
But better tolerated
Because time allowed
This factored in
Planning the essence.
My Mum continuing
To teach lessons
Even though it might seem
The shoe has changed feet.
6/8/2020