Writers' Bloc Journal: Traditions

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WRITERS’ BLOC JOURNAL


Editor’s Note Dear Reader,

Welcome to the second journal of the year!

The standard of writing continues to be higher than ever. Despite it being my job to edit your submissions… I barely needed to edit these pieces! Curse the amazing members of Writers’ Bloc putting me out of work! I have also been having some really successful editing sessions this year. It’s been great getting to know new members and helping your work be the best it possibly can.

I am writing this after our AGM. Congratulations to May Anaokar, our next journal editor! I can’t wait to see what you do with the journal in the future.

May also designed the cover for this term’s journal, and it is stunning. Thanks for your lovely work, May!

Emily


Contents Traditions by Héloïse de Satgé

This is How by Frankie Rhodes

Unwritten Traditions by Amy Larsen

The Not-Dying Chairs by Ruairi White

Suburbia by Oliver Wimbush

Our Tradition by Emily Garratt

Indecision by Anna Walthew

aaji by Mehar Anaokar

Earthly Pleasures by Rob Haslem


Traditions by Héloïse de Satgé Traditions are tattooed onto my arm

And take me to the back of the garden to find fairies in the willow tree

The fairies speak a different language and don’t get our traditions,

But they’re stuck in them anyway

And this one’s a bit like me:

If she doesn’t get attention, she will die

Along with the stories that hold her wings high

That keep her flying

He cut down the willow tree, my uncle

And there’s nothing else to say

Except

We’ve grown out of all this anyway


This is How by Frankie Rhodes This is how he spends his day

Wake at 6:30, no alarm

But the empty ache of the vacant side of the bed.

Read the morning paper, world still spinning

Darling, did you see this story about-

Oh wait.

Darling isn't there.

This is how he gets out of bed

A strong Americano and barely buttered toast

Perhaps the morning crossword before leaving the house.

He finishes it in record time

He's so smart.

You were smarter.

This is how he fills his time

Down to the homeless shelter to discuss the new premises

Residents nod to him as he passes

The old bearded hero.

He seems slower, now

Now that you aren't by his side.

This is how he prepares the dinner

Boiled vegetables and something quick to stick in the microwave

A fillet of fish or chicken Kiev, maybe

It isn't your cooking-

Buttery carrots with gravy

Lamb chops with mint for Easter

But it's food.

This is how he tries to forget.

Stay in bed longer, shorten the days

Talk to the grandkids, get in some laughs

Watch Pointless, try to ignore the fact that your life is


So very much

Without Point

Without You.

This is how he goes to bed

This is how he starts a new day

This is how he carries on.


Unwritten Traditions by Amy Larsen

The stars start to blink softly in the sky, Decorating the darkness in glistening jewels, Each diamond illuminated by the light of the moon. It’s nearly 12am and our eyes are itching, Irritated by the sound of sleep’s distant sigh. Dreams dragging on our lashes, Impatiently pulling them closed, Keen to draw the curtains on this day. And, Dad, forever I will say, God natt, sov godt, Like I’m blessing my Danish blood before bed. Upstairs my feet creak cautiously across the floor, Afraid to disturb the shadows hidden behind each door, And, my sister’s usual whisper washes through the air. “Love you, sleep well, see you in the morning”. This midnight mantra is now worn into the walls. Held tightly within these words, The certainty of tomorrow, And the promise of our love today.


The Not-Dying Chairs by Ruairi White

Content warning: illness/hospitals, implied suicide attempt we have unassigned assigned seats

in the hospital, by the psych doors.

(there’s a charging port.)

we sat in the winter-rush ward and the

doctors ignored us, both times.

we were probably fine, you were

charcoal-mouthed, emptied-out,

only your phone had died; i

tasted hand sanitiser and clung

to my iv stand. keeping it light as we

held hands, an annual tradition of

don't you dare try that again, you fucking idiot, you scared me, said gently.

we take turns playing caregiver and patient as we

space out in the not-dying chairs.

waiting on our test results,

we’d crackle plastic cups and drown the

coughing crowd out, blinded by

hospital white. we were probably fine, i had

fought my fever down from thirty-nine, and

you still kind of want to die, but

who can blame you. when the cannula’s

out of my veins, book the uber back to

our place. i’ll pay next time.


Suburbia by Oliver Wimbush


Our Tradition by Emily Garratt


Indecision by Anna Walthew Flipping a switch ad infinitum

Is tradition to us

On- our circuits touch and then

O- the house goes black

Because we never knew

Which setting to choose

Saying I love you

Then burying it in unconsecrated earth

Is tradition to us

Something so insincere

Burns on holy ground

But that doesn’t stop you saying it again

Writing each other new lives

Each uglier than the last

Is tradition to us

I can feel the nib again and this time

I'll use it to cross out

Every utterance of your name

Concluding our story

And not releasing a sequel

Is not tradition to us

But our lives would be better

If this was the only one we kept


aaji by Mehar Anaokar i wish i could describe the smell of my grandmother’s sari.

her jasmine gazra, the petals sown seamlessly

into nine yards of a deep green weave, a cross stitch

of femininity and strength. origami pleats draped

over her shoulder and down the length

of her legs, her skirt hugging her hip

replacement the way i used to. she smells like a flower

that has been pressed between pages of poetry

for decades and is still in bloom

or like the moment i got shampoo in my eye

and she washed it out. she smells soft

like the way she feels, her skin soft

and white and delicate like film

over a glass of warmed milk, the sai

i’d always refuse to eat. she smells of gold and of silk

and the of hint of turmeric in her recipes.

she smells of the times i’d fall asleep in her lap

after a day of festivities. i wish i could hold the smell

of her, that i could strike a match to this page

and make incense from her memory, a fragrance sweeter

than the scent of the agarbatti settled in her sari.


Earthly Pleasures by Rob Haslem For the umpteenth time, but as if brand new I tell you that the chips we are sharing hail from the isle of Eire.

You don’t stop my rattling because you’re hungry, mouthing an ‘O’ as I bless the late-bus stragglers with my knowledge on the apples of the ground and battered cod. Fried fish, I inform you is no more Fleetwood than Jewish. That Blackpool only stopped voting Tory after Maggie banned Fred from wrapping up our orders in old pages of the Sun.

That as much as I like the man, calling his café an ‘English Chippy’ sounds too colonial like that bastard war criminal... Herbert shrub? Forcing American folk to call them freedom chips all because he started a barney with the French!

Uni’s made you no less of a lightweight you tell meor prat for that matter either,

laughing when I refuse the last morsel on the grounds of culinary injustice, not to the admission of one snakebite too many.

Come morning, my seminar notes have all but been forgotten
 Yawning, I curl beside you hungry, my appetite for cholesterol and the depletion of Atlantic stock has returned and so you tease me when I refuse to picket the fresh parcels you bring home from Taylor’s for dinner.

I tell you that nothing compares to this in that strange city that has no grasp on scraps.

That when you reheat a takeaway after night outs the food tastes stale, never the same.

That we should go tomorrow and the day after and after and before I board the coach back to that place that’s now home.


Listening, you excavate for the ketchup I didn’t manage to pillage from the bottle, eat straight from the paper, smile.




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