Glow

He was searching for a memory, a glowing memory, a memory suffused with a particular glow. Searching was not really the right word, implying as it does, conscious choice, and these memories were like a streaming series, as soon as one finished, another began, irrespective of whether he had pressed Not For Me, Liked or Loved. Not For Me was hardly an option, since all these memories were his in the first place and now his mind was serving them up willy nilly, the good and the bad, for who has not got bad memories, shameful memories, memories of decisions taken, or avoided, that led to unfortunate consequences. “Non, je ne regrette rien” might be a nice and sentimental idea, but truthfully, few people could, in all honesty, fully lay claim to it.

He remembered, age twelve or so, how the onset of Summer heat made the tops of his ears swell, the skin blistering and flaking and he had been given antibiotics which, in those years soon after it’s wartime discovery, still had the cachet of a wonder drug and he had always wondered what they had done for his condition. Hot swollen ears were hardly the kind of glow he was seeking.

Standing in the hot air streaming out of the louvred doors in the funnel of a ship crossing the Tasman Sea on his families return from Australia, back when ship journeys were still cheaper than flying. Riding a storm, clinging hard to a railing having climbed up the ladder marked Access Forbidden, but no passengers or crew were abroad in the wind and squalls of rain, to witness the fourteen year old revelling in the view of the ship plunging through the seas from his perch, kept warm by heat direct from the engine room below – but that wasn’t it either.

The whole trip to Australia had been a roller-coaster of experiences, the journey out round the Cape of Good Hope because the Suez Canal was closed due to the 6 Day War and the view from the top of Table Mountain, the heat of the South African sun ameliorated by the elevation. Crossing the Nullarbor Plain by train, flat and featureless and truly without a single tree, as his father had delighted in pointing out, a man who had learned enough Latin to get into Oxford in a week, as his mother delighted in pointing out whenever his exam results flagged. The only excitement in that two day and a night crossing the Nullarbor – a herd of feral camels left over from building the railway and thriving in that desert. The English Summer strength sunshine on the deserted Australian Winter Bondi Beach, the four thousand mile round trip up to Queensland by car and back south on dirt roads, the opal mines at Lightning Ridge. The throbbing glow of his hands after being caned for insubordination by the Czech, French teacher at Vaucluse High School that had given him temporary hero status amongst his fellow pupils – but that definitely wasn’t the right glow.

He remembered lying naked on the deserted beach in Naxos, on a post-season holiday with Janet, the sun, still with enough strength to burn unless sun protection was applied. That was more like the glow he was seeking – until a local widow dressed in black, walked all the way down the beach to berate the two shameless foreigners and at the same time, perhaps to get a good look at him. Glow dispelled.

The satisfaction of finishing a sign on some shopfront, the fresh gleam of new paint and then handing over the invoice and receiving a cheque – gleam but not glow, except for a few special jobs. The mural of WB Yeats on The Winding Stair Bookshop, named for one of Yeats’ poetry collections – a mural drawing out images from so many poems, studied at school and still redolent with meaning – now that job brought a glow of pride every time he mentioned it to a prospective customer, by way of a calling card, as it were, and it was rare that the customer did not know the mural and equally rare that it didn’t clinch the deal…

And later, after the accident (he managed to swerve away from that memory) when signwriting was no longer a possibility, the turn to teaching – first in the local Primary School. He remembered the expedition down to the beach, teaching the excited youngsters where best to look for the tiny Irish cowrie shells and telling, whilst they searched, them how in the South Pacific, necklaces of cowrie shells were used as currency, including for the purchase of brides – then the general laughter as one young fellow, successfully holding up a tiny shell, quipped “Well you wouldn’t get much of a wife for this now, would you!”. A fond memory but the only glow about it was that of the Summer sunshine on that Sligo shore.

The joy of cradling his new grandsons in his arms, not his blood – Janet and he had no children between them, but these grandchildren from his stepdaughters, were his by upbringing, teaching them the joy of puns, of playing air-guitar to Lou Reed’s “I’m Waiting For My Man” whilst being careful not to explain what the song was about… Plenty of little glowing moments dotting the years before they grew up and left home to pursue their own glowing lives. After that the shared moments were fewer and farther between, but no less glowing. Now he looked forward to their visits with children of their own, finally including a little girl, a great granddaughter after six grandsons – but they were brief and more overwhelming than glowing.

He opened his eyes and took in the single, though spacious and well-appointed room to which his age had reduced him. A constellation of LED’s of various colours shone in the dark – overhead, the steady green light of the smoke detector with its occasional red flash to reassure that the backup battery was functioning. Another red light on the pull-chord for the shower, outside the en suite and again by the bed, in case he needed to summon help. His music centre had a plethora of twinkling lights and white bars of light rising and falling where the equaliser measured the music even though the volume was turned down but not off. Lastly his laptop flashing a small green light that lit up, faintly, the pile of books to be read, beside it. His connection to what friends were left, scattered around the world, and to family, busy about the middle years of their lives. He had once taken a photograph on the Night setting of his phone camera, the constellation of lights scribbled because of the slight tremor in his hands, but the room illuminated nevertheless by the glow of LED luminance. But that wasn’t the glow he sought, either…

When the James, the resident in Room 24 and a favourite amongst staff and residents alike due to his unflagging positivity, failed to appear at breakfast, a nurse was despatched to check on him. She found him, pulseless, staring at the ceiling, the glow of life gone from his eyes…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

This is a short story written for Deadlines – 12 Short stories in 12 Months and since you can’t read it on the site – unless you are a participant – I am posting here for anyone who chances upon it and cares to read…

8th February: Ten Things of Thankful

Ten things for which I give thanks this week…

1 – Although I never know in advance, what I am going to mention here, I am grateful to be of sound, and creative mind and faced with a blank page (screen) I trust that things will come to me.

2 – I was grateful to receive an email from Afshan, an Indian woman who I “met” during the A to Z Challenge 2022 – you can read about her here and I hope she may decide to participate here. Afshan is just one of many lovely people I have met through this blog and keep in touch with…

3 – My Critique Partner Nik shared his 12 in 12 month short story and I have nearly finished my second month’s story to the prompt of “Shuttered” – I will be chatting with Nik later this afternoon (for me) morning in Minneapolis… You cannot read the stories unless you are participating but I can share mine with by posting it here (next post)…

4 – I received a late “Bonus” postcard from lkast July-August Poetry Postcard Festival. Most of the participants are American but they publish a list of all the non-American participants so Americans can send a bonus card to them. So this is my second card from Grant Swados of New York – once on the regular list I was on and again on the bonus list. He has framed the original (postcard-sized) painting I sent him and sent me a reproduction of one of his paintings entitled “The Llama Lisa) a pastiche of the Mona Lisa featuring a llama. Also, he sent a poem about playing darts – a game that makes me think of English pubs, but since he sent the card, rather like when you have bought a new car, I keep seeing dartboards in American TV dramas all the time. Two countries united by a love of tiny missiles…

The postcard I originally sent to Grant…

5 – My Continuous Blood Monitoring experiment is bearing fruit, I am losing weight slowly by keeping my carb count down to an average of 159 grams per day. The drug trial I am participating in, a lower dose of the “weight-loss” drug Semaglutide, might also be helping – I do feel less inclined to snack, am content with smaller meals – but that is not the main point of the study – it is to test whether, at this lower dose, semaglutide helps prevent cardiac events and I have to say that the feeling of queasiness and wind makes me question whether it is worth the price (if it works). I am pretty sure that after the “Randomisation” interview, I am on the real and not the placebo pills – only 4 1/2 years of the study to go – burp!

6 – I have finished “C” in the A to Z and will have time tomorrow to work on “D” which is for Decoration of Fabrics as well as a list of seven fabrics beginning with D

Damask

Dimity

Dobby (see also Piqué)

Double cloth

Double Crepe

Double Georgette

Drill

Duchesse

Dupioni

It is proving to be the most work of any of my A to Z’s so far…

7 – I am a creature of habit and so my washing is in – half already in the dryer and half about to be hung up – Sundays routine is Sunday routine…

8 – Glad to be participating here at TTOT – we had 12 posts last week and as Afshan grat#2 said it inspired her with positivity, I guess its working right!

9 – reminded I have 3 TTOT to visit…

10 – Speaking to my sister in Nova Scotia in an hour…

Have your best possible week y’all…

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Pre-Loved

Second-hand is restyled pre-loved
Second-hand gives way to Charity Shops
Pre-loved is the new height of fashion
Pre-loved is pre-valued…

To the ardent de-clutterer
The professional house-clearer
Disposer of parents’ schmutter
Second-hand is reborn pre-loved

Where once such clearance
Activities gleaned a pittance
High Street donation is now the way
Second-hand gives way to Charity Shops

But for those prepared to make the effort
The internet offers a third commercial vision
And Charity Shops are mined for Vintage
Pre-loved is the new height of fashion

Is a lover to be devalued
Because they have been
In previous relationships?
Pre-loved is pre-valued…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, merrildsmith in Meeting the Bar: Critique and Craft, invites us to write a Cascade poem –
You will use each line from your first stanza in subsequent stanzas. For example, if your first stanza is three lines, your will have four stanzas. The first line of your first stanza becomes the last line of the second stanza. The second line of the first stanza becomes the last line of your second stanza, and so on.

This poem is also written for the Keighley Library [IRL] Group whose prompt for this month is Pre-loved…

1st February: Ten Things of Thankful

Ten things for which I give thanks this week…

1 – The sun is shining!

2 – My daughter, Beverley, is coming round later to do some housework. I say my daughter, but step-daughter, strictly speaking, but after being in her life for 43 years out of 56, I go with daughter. She comes round every Tuesday to spend time with her mother but has gone by the time I get back from work, so I regard this as my time with her and we will sit down to tea and a chat as well as the cleaning…

3 – I can confirm that signs of Spring abound…

These bulbs have been planted for a few years…/
Whereas these ones, and the ones below, were newly planted last Autumn…

And these straggly strugglers, must have self-seeded in a pot of mighty Stargazer Lillies that just get bigger every year…

Shrubs too are preparing their blossom…
And as testament to how little frost we have had (so far – fingers crossed), the Nemetia has survived the Winter outside – which is as well since we have nowhere indoors for them…

4 – I still have a job! Work is calming down – a bit – as I wrestle the details of labelling product under control…

5 – I have stopped beating myself up for not progressing the novel and have decided to stimulate my writing by undertaking the 12 Short Stories in 12 Months challenge. The January prompt was Glow and I uploaded on the prescribed day and have received one positive comment so far. You have to comment on at least 4 stories… My Writing Critique Partner, Nik, in troubled Minnesota (troubled by Trump and not the alleged crime wave) but I haven’t been able to find his story yet amongst the 510 other stories…

6 – This group of supportive people

7 – I have managed to spend some time writing for my April A to Z – I am midway through “C” – who knew there were so many fabrics beginning with “C”…

8 I have been trying out a Continuous Blood Sugar Monitor – a free sample from a company who hope to get me hooked on their product, and indeed, I have ordered a month’s supply to follow on, but at £30/10 days usage, it is too expensive to carry on permanently, and my doctor’s practice refuse to fund it instead of the finger-pricking tests that risk neuropathy of the finger tips at £30/month. So I am trying to learn what I can in a month + and may or may not carry on after that. Here’s what I have learned so far – its very convenient to beable to check my blood sugar, 5 minute by 5 minute, on my phone, if slightly addictive. The experiment has incentivised me to make a spreadsheet of all the carbs I eat and between the monitor and my monitor, I have been able to see what effect carbs have on my body. So not only have I reduced my daily intake to 168 grams per day, but I have been able to hone my meals to slower acting carbs thus avoiding big spikes. I advise anyone who is type 2 Diabetic, to give these sensors a go, even if, like me, it is only for a month – to gain insight…

9 – Weekly washing done and in the dryer or hanging up to dry…

10 – Made it to TTOF…

Have a great week everybody!

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Giving Birth

You write a novel lickety-split
the words pour out upon the page
the word count rising like a fountain
scenes fill chapters – chapters parts
That’s when the fun starts

What you have is just a first draft
send it to an agent, they would just laugh
assuming you even made it off the slush pile
rejection letters bring you down for a while
but you must pick yourself up
dust off your writing tool of choice
and launch your second, third and even fourth draft
polishing your bon mots, refine your voice,
flesh out your characters, channel your craft
That’s when the fun starts

Recruit a critique buddy
bully your friends and family into reading
confess to your partner you fear it needs a professional
count your pennies into tottering piles
it’s unlikely they will reach an editor ceiling
What the Dickens! Release your Kraken in blog-size bites
fret not at savage comments
don’t get into fights
enough opinions to make your head spin
That’s when the fun begins

At last your manuscript is done
but you must face one last and monumental question
to publish yourself or on great houses wait
or look for small and independent publishers
but are you sufficiently niche, do you fit a genre
and if you forge heroically through this labyrinth
That’s where the fun starts

Editors and graphic artists are but a few
wait till the sensitivity readers
get their hooks in you
blurbs written by the great and good
all these hurdles you should reckon
to jump and clear if write you would
and getting published…
That’s when the fun starts

Interviews and promotional tours
signing your book so much it bores
and after many hotels bland
your royalties pay for holiday sands
but just as you lie back sipping a drink
your editor ringtone and phone start to blink
No rest for the weary – up and at ‘em dearie
Success means your public seek for seconds
strike while the iron is hot she reckons
You face a blank screen…
That’s when the fun starts


© Andrew Wilson, 2024

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, Grace in OpenLinkNight invtes us to submit a poem of our choice! This poem, tongue in cheek, is not from personal experience but pure wishful thinking, and were it to come true, it would be, as somebody once said “A lovely problem to have…”

24th January: Ten Things of Thankful

Ten things for which I give thanks this week…

  1. – If you wondered why I didn’t post here last week, it was because I had a crisis at work! I work Tuesday to Thursday lunchtime but on my way home last Thursday, my immediate boss rang to say that Trading Standards had turned up unannounced and were not happy with our labelling of our products. This is one of the areas that I am responsible for but he didn’t ask me to come back in – which I would have done and would have saved him being made to feel like a naughty boy for the duration of their visit – the whole afternoon! My work, doing the things that others either can’t or don’t want to do, is also not always fully valued because it doesn’t generate revenue in the way that, say, sales or production itself do, but things like getting the details of nutrition right on labels are legal requirements and under the rapid growth in wholesaling that we have undergone in the last year, many products have been added to our system by people other than me and there are details missing. All of which is to say, that I spent every day of my 4.5 days off, going through all the data that creates the labels in order to fix the problem! Except for Monday when I only got up early and only did two hours work before a family emergency gained priority.
    I am grateful that the task is now almost complete, and checked and that going forward, the protocols I have been calling for around the introduction of new products, stand a greater chance of being followed after the rap on the knuckles…
  2. – On Sunday, the family grapevine was buzzing with the news that Barbara’s brother was in hospital and we had no way of contacting him since his phone was not responding and his partner was abroad. After some detective work by several family members, the hospital that Steve was in, was located and we got to speak to him. He had fallen and his iPhone was indeed not working, so I searched for an old phone to take to him, and on Monday, Barbara and I drove to the hospital just north of Manchester – an hour away, arriving just as he was waiting to be discharged. After a couple of hours waiting for his meds to be dispensed, we drove him home, got him settled in with the knowledge his partner would be home that night – he is doing well now…
  3. – Sunday had also been Barbara’s birthday and I took a break from my labours to bring us over to our daughter Beverley’s in the next village for afternoon tea with a few grandsons and one girlfriend (who is now in India for a couple of months to learn Yoga teaching). So that was a nice interlude…
  4. – A week later and the house is still awash with flowers, to Barbara’s delight, at our age, there are few material things we desire so flowers hit the spot…

5. – Normal service is now being resumed in all areas – I posted a poem, “The Cartography of Life”, for a prompt from the dVerse Poets Pub which I was glad to see was visited by our own Artmater – so nice when people explore the blog for the other things to be found posted here…

6. – After a repetition of the fault with uploading photos here and another round of consulting the tech guys at Bluehost – they finally said that they had tracked down the issue, which I presume was with a third party piece of software since they couldn’t give a timeframe for fixing it – however it now seems to be working as the picture above loaded without issue…

7. -I manged to pick up my ukulele(s) after Christmas, and now that the work crisis is over, I intend to play more regularly – I play all sorts of songs but I have a lot from the ’20’s an ’30’s and more recently some more jazz numbers. I didn’t make it to ten today but I leave you with a favourite rendition of Carole King’s “One Fine Day” by the lovely Sophie Madeline. Sophie made an album of songs as well as the 50 songs of which this was the first, that she posted in 59 days on YouTube before sadly retiring from the world of musical performance on health grounds…

Have a great week ahead, each and everyone of you Gratudinals (and anyone else who stumbles in here…)

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

The Cartography of Life

Though I am old with wandering
Through hollow lands and hilly lands,
I will find out where she has gone,
And kiss her lips and take her hands;

From The Song of Wandering Aengus
By William Butler Yeats

Happy the man who dreams his purpose
plots his course to achieve that very goal
marches to the beat of his own drum
and pity one forced to follow roads
laid down by parents’ aspirations
but I drifted into adulthood
with no pressure and no direction
and took many turns along the way
slowly grew into the man I am
Though I am old with wandering

Love life is the companion to work
the superficial couplings of youth
conducted with more vigour than sense
reaching the sunny uplands mid-life
settling into a career I thought
would last a lifetime, a love to match
but people carry pasts within them
like hidden rocks in a calm ocean
and accidents deflect one’s passage
Through hollow lands and hilly lands

To know another is a life’s work
the unity of coupledom is
illusion, we travel parallel
at best, learning the geography
of roads built across bogs of trauma
always ready to gently subside
and mire a person in buried past
and paths are hard to find in a slough
of despond and she has lost her way
I will find out where she has gone

Looking back at the path I followed
there is more coherence than I thought
skills grown and transferred in work and life
and love too, so much surer than in youth
and all the scars and breaks accreted
are the medals of experience
and trying not to look toward the end
but focus on the roadside flowers
the next generations we began
And kiss her lips and take her hands…

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse Poets Pub,  Björn Rudberg (brudberg) in FormForAllMeeting the Bar: Critique and Craft, invites us to writa a Glosa, a Spanish poetry form in which four lines borrowed from a poem by another – the cabreza, are expanded upon over 4 ten-line stanzas… I chose lines from WB Yeats, who I have loved since studying him at school, and whose poems still resonate with me today. In 1995, I went to live in Sligo, Ireland, where Yeats is from, and is buried beneath nearby Ben Bulben mountain. I was a signwriter and painted a sign and mural of Yeats and his work, for The Winding Stair bookshop there – you can see me working on it in this news clip

Colours of the Day

The light filtering through the shutters
picks up a little of their blue
on its predawn passage
into the white-walled
beige, marbled floor bedroom
sun rises swifter than at home
not quite the tropics
but tantalisingly close to Africa

The sun rises scarlet and
all-consuming of the sky
– silhouetting the island
dark purple across the bay
Red sky in the morning
doesn’t translate to Crete
where most days in this lockdown Winter
that is not like our Winter
begin with a red curtain raiser.
Soon blinding light floods the sky, the Bay
the mountains delicately bluing their shadows
and highlighting their tops
before the rising heat filters
everything with glimmering heat haze.

We sit in the shade of the terrace
beneath the deep green leaves
of the carob tree and count
the millipedes that have climbed
the delicately off-white walls
in the night dash, reaching for
who knows what insectile heaven…
A fallen comrade
dark brown in desiccation
is moving sideways
in unlikely reanimation
until we see that his body
is being carried back to the nest
by a tiny black ant a tenth his size
we sit astounded by this feat
but don’t forget to film it
for posterity or a rainy day reminder
when we are one day returned to England.

I walk down to town for market day
mixing with brightly dressed
younger women and black wrapped
older ones in widows weeds
with only an occasional male
to keep me company.
The azure sea is only feet away

The couple who live on the yacht
just out in the bay
are here, and we chat in the shade
of a vegetable stall loaded with
piles of black glossy aubergines
and ripe red tomatoes next to
bunches of wild greens, picked
from among the hundred or so
Crete proffers – if you know
what you are looking for.
Cyrille’s once blonde hair
is salt and pepper
tied back in a ponytail
their clothes too, faded with
exposure to sun and saltwater.

I spend some time chatting
with the banana man
who sells nothing else
and whose English is good
enough for a conversation.
I am English and so not averse
to discuss the weather –
he talks of the recent
thunderstorms whose hailstones
devastated his neighbours’ crops
but divinely spared his
while Barbara and I had been
enjoying the night of sturm und drang
from the safety of our covered balcony
the crackle and crash of it
ricocheting and rambling around
the mountains and – the ultraviolet
flashes turned into dark sound.

Walking back up the long hill
to the village, I pass the
white and ochre, black and grey
patchwork trunks of the group of gum trees
foreigners too – all the way from Australia
these strangers who fit in so well
people believe them to be native.

Home again in the cool of the flat
and after a siesta
I pick a bright yellow lemon
from the tree within reach of our balcony
and squeeze it into dark green olive oil
to dress the salad of tomatoes
and cucumbers I hauled up
from the market – dot it with
tiny Cretan olives – mostly grown for oil
and look out on the bonfires
ranged around in the olive groves
as farmers burn the prunings
of their trees.

Night falls quickly
colours fade to black…

© Andrew Wilson, 2024

Over at dVerse Poets Pub, lillian in OpenLinkNight invites us to submit a poem of our choice for Open Link Night…

11th January: Ten Things of Thankful

Ten things for which I give thanks this week…

1 – The Jasmine seems to be holding its own against some quite sharp frosts…

2 – Indoors, we have been enjoying the scent from this lovely basket of bulbs – a Christmas present…

3 – I sent off for a tapestry circle so that I could begin the Hooking Kit my sister Helen sent for Christmas – it is, as it says on the tin, most therapeutic…

4 – The named storm passed us by this week and we have had no snow this year…

5 – We were pet sitting young Winnie, our daughter’s Border Collie for a few hours yesterday, she is now old enough to travel in the footwell of the car calmly…

6 – Hereabouts, each Yorkshire stone quarry marks its dressed stone with a different marking – ours has simple parallel lines of dashes – photographed in yesterday’s welcome sun…

7 – The Poets Pub has started prompting again after the Christmas break – I typed up a poem from my writing group about “a time I was in danger” – a sailing story in which I wisely turned back – else I might not be here to tell the tale (for which I am grateful)…

8 – Grateful for the TTOF – especially on a dark, dank day like today…

9 – Grateful that I will be having my bi-weekly chat with my sister in Nova Scotia and trusting that even if Trump invades Canada, she will be safely remote there…

10 – Grateful that the tide of opinion seems to be turning against Trump and his dictatorship and crossing my fingers that the American people will find the right action to take to restore democracy and rebuild the damage at home and abroad…

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Ars Poetica Abecedarium

A poet is a person whose language
Becomes a special form of
Communication, a message –
Directed words with meaning for
Everyman in their world of “things”
Flinging out new ideas for the times,
Gestating a better way to grasp for
Hope that births a movement from
Individual to friends, to groups that
Jump to join a movement with
Kinetic energy that enjoins all to
Love, not hate, the poet sings
Metaphor, alliteration and rhythm and
No style or form is unsuitable to carry
Out the mission sacred, the
Poet’s role from print to poetry slam
Questioning, commenting, highlighting
Rights denied, inequity amplified
So the message – at first a pretence
Trickles, seeps, runs like a stream
Underground, which nobody can dam
Violence cannot hold back the flow of
Waves of awareness, rejection of the
Xenophobic in favour of the xenogogue
Young and old align in the new
Zeitgeist and the poet seeks new inspiration.

© Andrew Wilson, 2026

Over at dVerse,  Laura Bloomsbury in Meeting the Bar: Critique and Craft, invites us to write an Abecadarium Acrostic poem for the start of the year…