Thursday, January 04, 2018

New Year

I watched a documentary on Christmas day about Morecambe and Wise. They met when they were eleven. Did you know that? And on the day Eric Morecambe died, Ernie Wise, his friend for forty seven years, went on television to talk about how it felt losing him. Did you know that?     

Yesterday I watched a documentary about Joan Didion.
It seems shallow to mention how her face has aged. Her husband died after all. And her daughter died.
I wondered how it must feel to have seen so many endings. So many neat piles of things undone. The autumns and summers and winters and springs strewn across the floor like dress shirts and socks.
But her face, and the skin stretched transparent over her hands, veins like liquorice laces up her arms. She made a sandwich and cut off the crusts. Took small bites at the table in her kitchen.
She weighed seventy five pounds after her husband died. Did you know that?  

She talked about California and about a cave you could only get to when the tide hit at a certain point in the day, and how her and her husband and their young nephews would wait for the swell of the water and the great heave of pressure that would lift them over across the rocks.

The eyes give you away don’t they. Even when you’re sleeping.

Four days ago the internet reminded me that in two thousand and twelve somebody left a note on my car windscreen saying ‘You’re taking up two parking spaces. Fucking cunt.’

I have thought about all of this today, standing at the start of a new year. I don’t believe in time, at least not in the way I used to, and January seems irrelevant somehow now. A train leaving the station.
And yet, I have begun to build a life here that I fit inside of neatly, and this has all reminded me how quickly it will disappear, and how important it is to build it anyway.

People will leave. Walls will come down. The books piled neatly in a fireplace will belong to somebody else, somewhere else. And the giant shush of waves will lift me over and push me on.

Thom Kofoed