Friday 28 August 2009

Waiting


Our poetry group was talking about waiting - not sure why. We definitely thought that waiting was something there was too much of. Here is a picture of some birds waiting for food, or could it be a bus? My effort was written after doing some ironing.



WAITING
Waiting is kneeling before what you want:
the hottest tears jut from your face,
a salty crust might form:
just wait.

Waiting might mean tearing your clothes:
you'll shiver like a monk's turtled loins,
eviscerated by cold;asexual in dark blue limbo
but the only choice is to wait.


Waiting will require greeting
those who do not understand
the famine: like an ox cooing at other oxen
on a simulated TV plain,you'll just shuffle along
nothing doing: simply wait.


Waiting - you'll need bloodlike steel,
a blade cutting through doubt
like an icecream through August mouths,
or an eel chomping through weed
not knowing if that carp child
is really there: just go and wait
for a bit, eschew agnostics,and wait.


Wait - why wait - this is just tin-town chit-chat.
You're not stopped by Auschwitz wire
or the massed armies of evil
glaring across the living-room floor;
you're not a mouse held hostage
in a no-reprieve Midlands lab
or a cat wrapped up for good by flat-cheeked Egyptians.
You won't be damaged forever
if you pick up life like a juicy roast leg
- just leave the bone but remember
its job. Why not decorate your room
with cheerful suns of what is to come,
jump right now in the wide warm sea of your life
and swim to its furthest fun-filled depths?
You turnip: rooted in the muck of your mind
you're frazzled by patience: grow up!
What's that? that thing you're waiting to do
disgusts you. I can read it too:
no worries, yes, it's bad, and
I, I, I, I, I must dash.

Wednesday 26 August 2009

Structure


This new training video demonstrates OUSA's post-Futures structure in a nutshell.

Me - how?


On being told by a cynic that the aim of OUSA Futures was to abolish all dissident units, especially European ones, this distant cousin of OUSA Belgium's most important member said that she found that really hard to believe.

No more theatre


Here is a wide (currently under renovation) plaza in Targu Mures - real 'place for the people' stuff, or at least that was my outsider's feeling. Fluid borders are here: not just in the Hungarian-Romanian dual identity and the clash between Communism and capitalism, but in the border between past and present, men and women and the tourist and its target. Borders are wet, permeable, and always handled by women who are adept with a hose.

Modes of address


Visitors to Conference 2011 found this type of signposting helpful when being assigned to working groups on key policy issues.

Conference fun

Delegates to Conference 2011 were pleased to be met at the station by a special bus, but were not sure whether the idea of Conference being fun instead of business-like needed closer inspection.

Tuesday 25 August 2009

Feline hungry



It was very strange in Apold to see a distant cousin of OUSA Belgium's most important member giving afternoon tea to two copy-cats of the late, great Treacle.

Apold


This place is a 'Saxon' village in Romania. We went here to hunt for one of our biggest friend's roots (I don't mean a fat lady with hair-dying problems) and ended up talking to some Roma and climbing up a church tower to take this picture (it's in arty black and white mode - how louche).
If you click on it to blow the picture up you can see people on bikes!

If it fits....


The OUSA delegation to Romania were impressed by this helpful warning.

Room for the bite



When scouting possible future Conference venues, OUSA reps were duly impressed by the accommodation on offer this bid from Romania, although they were not sure about the vampire lurking between the windows.

Friday 14 August 2009

This old house



AN OLD HOUSE IN SIBIU
Not for nothing does
one layer of brick grow thicker
carrying a need
not to budge at all.


Then another,
small, mouldy
slips into the frame.

The bastards who lived here;
elements - the hydrogen and helium,
iron and uranium of the human soul -
trace tourists' started eyes.



That rather poncey poem was written when I was musing on the relationship between poetry and science as conceived in Eastern Europe, which of course is not a poncey thing to think about at all.
The above house in Sibiu is four hundred years old and probably going to end up as a shop selling amber or mobile phones or something.

I have no doughnuts but I have dumplings

So said the waitress one night in Sinaia. In Sighisoara (hope I've spelt that right) all our dreams came true.

Wednesday 12 August 2009

Sinaia sense of security?



ALPINE HOTEL

You can safely sleep here...
all is made of wood...
those dog-barks are far off.
PS - it's not really the Alps, but Transylvania