Kein Ende in Sicht

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

blood

 

an extract from the same novel by Jeremias Winckler

51.524453 Nord, 100.073991 Ost, Mongolei, 8.9.2017

Durch die einen Spalt breit geöffnete Zeltplane scheinen mir die ersten Sonnenstrahlen des Tages entgegen. Sie vertreiben die morgendliche Frische wie der Frühling den Winter. Unzählige wässrige Kügelchen, die sich an den Spitzen der Grashalme festhalten, rollen wie funkelnde Perlen daran hinunter. Es ist ein Spektakel der Natur und ich bin der einzige Zuschauer.

Ich reibe mir den Schlaf aus dem Gesicht. Die Rauheit meiner Hände kratzt an der feinen Haut der Augenlider. Mein Nacken ist steif. Wegen der Wurzeln und Steine, die unter dem Zelt liegen, habe ich in einer unnatürlichen Position geschlafen. Unter den Fingernägeln, an den Füßen und in meinen Haaren, überall hat sich Dreck angesammelt. Obwohl ich es selbst kaum noch rieche, umgibt mich der Geruch tierischer Verwilderung. Meine Klamotten sind durchgeschwitzt. Nur meine Unterwäsche wasche ich in den Bergbächen entlang des Weges. Mich plagt der Hunger, doch ich unterlasse es, nach Essen in der Satteltasche zu suchen. Vor zwei Tagen habe ich das letzte Stück Brot verzehrt und die Überbleibsel der Karotten abgenagt. Mein Proviant ist erschöpft. Ich stehe auf. Mir wird schwarz vor Augen und ich breite die Arme aus, um nicht zu stürzen. Seit gestern verspüre ich gelegentlich einen Anflug von Schwindel. So stehe ich da, schwankend, stinkend, hungrig und trotzdem auf eine sonderbare Art glücklich.

Es ist Zeit, das Lager abzubauen. Alles packe ich ordentlich zusammen. Die Gegenstände und Klamotten, die ich erst zum Abend wieder brauche, werden zuerst verstaut. Das Messer und mein Kompass klappern in der Hosentasche. Ghostbuster zupft an einzelnen Grashalmen. Ich nähere mich ihm. Er hebt den Kopf. Seine tiefschwarzen Augen folgen meinem Gang. Ich löse den Knoten, mit dem ich ihn an einen Baum gebunden habe. Da Ghostbuster von eher stürmischer Natur ist und sich leicht in Rage versetzen lässt, mache ich mich auf Gegenwehr gefasst. Ich ziehe den Hengst mit einem Ruck zu mir heran. Ohne den Kopf zur Seite zu reißen, wie er es die letzten Tage versucht hat, gehorcht er mir. Ich schmeiße die dicken Filzdecken über seinen Rücken. Der Sattel folgt. Inzwischen halte ich die Leine nur noch lose in der Hand. Er steht wie angewurzelt. Ich bücke mich und atme tief ein, greife entschlossen unter dem Bauch des Tieres hindurch, schnappe mir die auf der anderen Seite herunterhängenden Lederriemen und ziehe sie durch die metallenen Schnallen. Die Unberechenbarkeit tierischen Eigensinns bereitet mir immer noch einen ungemeinen Respekt. Was wäre, wenn mein Pferd sich erschreckt? Würde es sich aufbäumen und mich zur Seite schmeißen? Ich könnte unter die Hufe geraten. Ich ziehe die Riemen fest, Ghostbuster stöhnt auf, ein lang gezogener Furz entfährt ihm. Ich befestige die Satteltaschen und das Zelt auf seinem Rücken. Danach drücke ich Ghostbuster das Mundstück ins Maul. Alles ist bereit.

Ich schwinge mich mit einer fließenden Bewegung auf ihn und rufe: „Cho!“ Ohne zurückzuschauen, reite ich los. Unter den Hufen brechen Sträucher und Äste. Der Wind bläst mir durch das Haar. An den Waden spüre ich das rhythmische Pochen meines Begleiters Herz. Seine Muskeln spannen sich im Takt und mit jedem Steigen hebt sich mein Körper und landet im nächsten Moment sanft auf dem sich senkenden Sattel. Die frische Morgenluft durchdringt mich, als wäre ich ein Teil von ihr. Ich fliege durch die Ausläufer des Waldes, getragen von Gezwitscher und meinem trommelnden Puls. Ghostbuster will nach links und nach rechts ausbrechen, doch mit sicherer Hand halte ich uns auf Kurs. Ich visiere die noch schneebedeckten Kuppen Russlands an. Die Grenze liegt nördlich vom Kovsgol-See. Seit Wochen reise ich immer weiter in Richtung Norden. In nur wenigen Tagen werde ich die russische Grenze sehen.

Aus der Böschung trabend, dem Geäst entweichend, öffnet sich vor mir eine weite Steppe. Das satte Grün der Wiesen und der Geruch von Wildblüten entlocken mir ein Lächeln, das sogleich zu einem Lachen wird. Wie eine gigantische Schlange windet sich ein reißender Bach durch die Mitte der offenen Fläche. Die Wellen tänzeln in weißen Gewändern zwischen den Steinen. Wir nähern uns dem Wasser, Ghostbuster senkt den Kopf und trinkt. Ich steige ab und fülle meine Wasserflasche. Eine Herde Wildpferde hat auf der anderen Seite Rast gemacht. Auch sie trinken. Einige Fohlen tapsen unbeholfen im Bach herum. Nachdem Ghostbuster seinen dringlichsten Durst gestillt hat, wird er auf die freien Pferde aufmerksam. Er wiehert und reckt den Kopf. Ich will ihm und mir die Freude der Herdengemeinschaft nicht verweigern und drücke meine Hacken in die Flanken des Hengstes, um den Fluss zu durchqueren.

Unter den Hufen wackeln die Steine und die Strömung reißt an den Beinen meines Gefährten, doch wir leisten Widerstand. Mit sicheren Schritten, als wüsste er um die Beschaffenheit des Untergrundes, durchwatet er das Gewässer. Die Herde hat uns nicht aus den Augen gelassen und ist vom Fluss zurückgewichen. Ihr Wiehern hallt von den Felshängen wider. Die Neugier steigt in mir auf und ich will ihr Raum verschaffen. Wir nähern uns der Herde. Das Wiehern wird lauter und Ghostbuster reißt an den Zügeln. Ich muss ihn mit aller Kraft zurückhalten, damit er nicht vorschnellt. Ich wende mich zur Seite, betrachte eines der Fohlen, da entgleiten mir die Zügel. Mir rutscht das Herz in die Hose. Von Freiheit und Freude erfüllt, schießt Ghostbuster vorwärts. Ich klammere mich an den Eisenbügel des Sattels. Mein Körper holpert auf und ab. Ich finde den Rhythmus des Tieres nicht. Verzweifelt drücke ich meine Waden gegen die Flanken. Von der Hektik aufgescheucht, setzt sich die Herde in Bewegung. Wir hetzen auf den Wald zu. Die Äste schlagen mir ins Gesicht. Ich schmecke Blut. Das muss ein Ende haben!

An der Seite hängen die Zügel hinunter. Wir werden immer schneller. Die Kiefernnadeln peitschen auf mich ein. Ich versuche, nach den Zügeln zu greifen, doch ich kriege sie nicht zu fassen. Mich zur Seite lehnend, komme ich ihnen näher. Mein Körper fliegt auf und ab. Die Oberschenkel schmerzen. Noch ein kleines Stück. Ich beuge mich vorwärts. Ein Zucken. Plötzlich: Schwerelosigkeit. Meine Füße fliegen aus den Steigbügeln. Meine Hände schließen sich um die Zügel und ich halte mich mit Leibeskräften an ihnen fest. Ein Aufprall. Ich kann weder hören noch sehen. Ich werde über den Boden geschleift. Gerade will ich aufgeben, da bleibt die Welt stehen. Stille. Ich atme aus, krieche zu einem neben mir aufragenden Baumstumpf und schlage die Zügel darum. Es pocht in meinen Ohren und alles schmerzt. Ich schaue an mir hinunter. Unter der zerrissenen Hose sehe ich Blut. Ich betaste die Stelle vorsichtig. Für einige Minuten rühre ich mich nicht. Mein Pferd schaut sehnsüchtig der zwischen den Bäumen verschwindenden Herde nach.

Unter normalen Umständen hätte ich eine Pause gemacht und mein Lager an Ort und Stelle aufgeschlagen, aber mir fehlt es an Proviant. Ich weiß, dass ich weiter muss. Die nächsten Nomaden können nicht mehr weit sein. Sobald wir den Wald verlassen, werden wir welche finden. Wir müssen welche finden. Irgendwen. Von diesem Gedanken angespornt, stehe ich auf und ziehe Ghostbuster zu mir heran. Ich rücke die Satteltaschen zurecht, straffe den Gurt und steige auf. Jeder Meter des Weges schmerzt. Die schweißnassen Klamotten reiben an meiner wunden Haut. Mein Körper ist mit Blutblasen und Schürfwunden überzogen. Ich kann nicht mehr. Ich bin erschöpft. Aber ich muss weiter, solange ich noch die Kraft habe, mich im Sattel zu halten.

Icarus

a poem by Lukas Bartsch

Illustration by Jehan Ammar

I wander in phosphorescence,
not quite capturing its essence,
Tumbling falling through the aether,
high above yet still beneath her.
Ethereal realms thundering, colliding,
the heavens pondering still deciding.
Deep within the earth ascending,
in metamorphosis transcending,
the shining knight falls on the sword –
growing wings, becomes a lord.
In the light beyond the shades
freedom turns my fears to blades.
Roses drowning in the fog,
wallowing my mind does block
the comprehension of the form,
the wings the scales, the horn.
Hence, I’m trapped in waking hell,
my body but a tolling bell.

Gedankenkarussell

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

hospital

 

an extract from a novel by Jeremias Winckler

Hamburg, Deutschland, 22.10.2017

Ein weiterer Tag geht zu Ende. Ich schließe meine Augen und tauche ab in ein schwarzes Meer. Die Dunkelheit umhüllt mich. Hier liege ich nun also. Alleine mit meinen Gedanken. Die sich drehen. Immer weiter. In nie endenden Kreisen. Ohne Anfang. Und ohne Ende. Der Schlaf will nicht kommen. Das Kissen ist unbequem. Ich rücke es zurecht. Es ist ein wenig klamm und zu warm. Viel zu warm. Vielleicht drehe ich es lieber um. So ist es besser. Bevor ich einschlafe, sollte ich noch mal auf die Toilette gehen, auch wenn ich eigentlich gar nicht muss. Ich öffne meine Augen, drehe mich auf meine Seite und gehe zum Bad. Krankenhaus riecht unausstehlich, so steril. Insbesondere das Bad. Nachdem ich für einige Minuten untätig auf der Toilette gesessen habe, gehe ich zurück zu Bett und decke mich zu. Eine Krankenwagensirene ertönt, gedämpft. In Wirklichkeit ist der Krankenwagen ganz in der Nähe. Doch das merkt man nicht. Die Fenster sind schallisoliert. Der Raum fühlt sich beengend an. Mein Zelt war mir lieber. Da konnte ich nachts die Geräusche des Waldes hören. Das Rascheln der Blätter. Das Schnaufen und Stampfen. Doch jetzt ist alles still. Ich versuche, mich auf meine Atmung zu konzentrieren. Das soll beim Einschlafen helfen, glaube ich. Vielleicht lenkt es mich ab. Von den Gedanken. Langsam fülle ich meine Lungen mit Luft. Sekunde für Sekunde. Und leere sie wieder. Mein Körper fühlt sich schwer an. Vielleicht schlafe ich endlich ein. Wenn ich viel schlafe, geht die Zeit schneller vorbei. Hoffentlich. Denn ich bin es leid. Wann kann ich endlich das Krankenhaus verlassen? Wann wird es mir endlich besser gehen? Wann wache ich aus diesem Albtraum auf? Ich kneife meine Augen zusammen. Tränen laufen mir übers Gesicht. Ich spüre, wie die salzigen Tropfen über meine Wangen laufen. Langsam. Konzentriere dich lieber auf deine Atmung. Das ist weniger schmerzhaft. Weniger beengend. Als der Gedanke. Der Gedanke des vergehenden Lebens. So dramatisch ist es gar nicht. Ich bin kein akuter Notfall. Ich habe ja nur Fieber. Mein Körper funktioniert und bekämpft das, was auch immer es ist, was ich in mir trage. Bald schon wird es mir besser gehen. Ich atme wieder aus. Langsam und kontrolliert. Dann streiche ich mir die Tränen von den Wangen. Dabei drücke ich etwas zu fest zu. Kleine weiße Punkte erscheinen in der Dunkelheit. Wie farblose Mandalas. Sich drehende Lichter in der Dunkelheit. Fluoreszierendes Gedankengut. Das mich umgibt, während ich falle. Immer weiter. Hinab in die Dunkelheit. Wie ein Stein unter Wasser, der dem Abgrund entgegentrudelt. Oben sehe ich das Lichtspiel der Sonne. Strahlen piercen die Oberfläche und erhellen das Nichts, bevor sie sich in der Endlosigkeit verlieren. Immer weiter. Immer tiefer. Schwerelos. Lautlos. Angezogen von der Finsternis in mir.

Compound Eyes

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

cancer, death, depression

a short story by Luc Salinger

Jessica and Mark were sitting on a bench in the park. The weather was scorching hot. A perfect summer’s day. Besides them, the park was completely empty, as if they were the only people who were aware of how great the weather was. A couple of bees were there, occupied with burying their heads in flowers. Birds were ploughing the ground for worms and occasionally, a mosquito tried to test its luck with the couple, gently flying to their exposed legs to ram its snout into their flesh.

Jessica’s breath was irregular. She was panting, and tripped over her words, clearly excited about something she had in mind. Her friend Mark stared at her, patiently, expectantly.

‘There is something I want to pitch to you,’ she said, her breath shaky, her eyes glistening with excitement.

Mark smiled at her. Knowing her, it was probably something stupid. Last time she started a conversation like that, she told of crossbreeding pigs and ducks to develop a special bacon that stays crisp and doesn’t get soggy once she heard that ducks, even when spending time in water, don’t get wet. As she got older, getting her own apartment and her own responsibilities, she developed the habit of completely obsessing over things that only Mark was willing to put up with. She knew that Mark was the only one who listened to her, so she was always excited to talk with him about her ideas.

‘What’s the pitch?’

‘You know…’ She stared into his eyes. ‘You know, how we have all sorts of pictures at school for things like the solar systems, atoms or those sliced up bacteria cells?’ She waited for him to nod.

‘Yes?’

‘Nobody took those pictures. Those are just concept pictures! You know that?’

Mark tried not to laugh. ‘Course I do. They aren’t photographs. They are illustrations. Everyone knows that.’ He put on a look of suspicion. ‘Is that all?’

‘That is not all!’ She put her finger up. ‘Consider this now…’ She leaned a bit closer forward. ‘All those illustrations have been made with the sole intention of helping humans understand the universe.’

Mark still had no idea what Jessica was rambling on about, but her tone was building up to something. He remembers her bacon pitch, too, being like that. Picture this, she had said, you’re swimming in a pool and crave a crispy slice of bacon, but oops, it falls into the pool and now it’s not enjoyable anymore. Reason for that is the hydrophilic nature of the bacon strip itself! It had been hard for him to visualize the scenario at all, but she had a way of gripping Mark as if the things she was saying were really sound. Even if she was completely delusional.

Mark nodded now and she continued. ‘I ask you this now: have you ever seen such a visualisation for any other species?’

‘I guess not. No. Those pictures are for humans because they are the only species that studies the universe in such a way.’ His eyes trailed off from Jessica.

He thought Jessica looked really cute when she was getting riled up by her ideas, even if they felt like she was just sharing her shower thoughts with him, as opposed to really interesting concepts worthy of discussion. She had little bags under her eyes whenever she pitched him an idea, as if she mulled over it for the entire night beforehand. It drew attention to her eyes. Those eyes, with their verdant tinge. So tired. So beautiful. He smiled.

Jessica put her hands on her thighs and looked at him smugly. ‘I don’t think that’s quite fair now, is it? For example, you have those colourful pictures of DNA. That would be so useless for a dog because they don’t see the colours that well. We are in the position that we know better. And gatekeeping our knowledge is just plain cruel. Don’t you think?’

Mark thought back to the time Jessica was at his place. Back when he still had his dog. She’d seemed so gleeful and giddy at that moment. His big mastiff tongue had caressed her cheek like it was vanilla ice cream on a hot summer’s day. Back then, she’d never told him of ideas in her head. She seemed so close, but also not as talkative as she was now. He couldn’t help but shake his preference for the old version of her, back when he still had his dog.

‘I don’t think dogs would care.’

‘Some might,’ she quickly responded and a daring smile crept on her face, as she looked into his eyes. ‘But my idea doesn’t pertain to dogs. I need to start somewhere else. How do you think a fly sees the world?’

‘With compound eyes?’

Jessica jumped up from the bench, putting her palms in the air as if she was balancing an invisible cheerleader on top of her. ‘A huge tapestry of eyes. Like a kaleidoscope. And if that fly would see a picture of the solar system, it would see hundreds of thousands of planets in its view.’ She adjusted her glasses. ‘And that’s not scientifically correct.’

Mark remembered the time when she hadn’t worn glasses. She broke them. It was in the summer, must be seven years ago, back when it took her parents over a year to replace them because they had to spend a lot of money on some stupid stone, as Jessica had put it, for their son. So many emotions inside her, she didn’t know what she was saying. Back then, she was upset that she was so dependent on others. She saw everything blurry. It was the only time that Jessica had said to Mark that he looked beautiful. He knew it was meant as a joke, but he remembered it.

‘I don’t think flies care about the accuracy of their conception of the universe.’ Mark said, now. He stared too much. He shouldn’t look at her this intensely. He should break eye contact once in a while, he thought.

‘You can be such a hater sometimes.’ She nudged him a bit with her shoulder as she sat down on the bench next to him again.

      Mark smiled. ‘I’m not a hater. I just don’t think your idea is feasible. I can’t even begin to understand how you would conceive a picture, where a fly, with its hundreds of little eyes, could see a single image as we do. If you turn the solar system into a kaleidoscope, then it would just see the kaleidoscope in its own eyes, multiplied again.’

Jessica rubbed her chin. ‘My hypothesis was that two negatives make a positive and the kaleidoscope and the compound eyes would cancel each other out.’ She looked at him. ‘Did you know that flies can see UV light? Maybe that’s the key.’

He began to yawn. If only Jessica could see how annoying she was being. Back when they were still at school together, it wasn’t draining, talking to her. Ever since that one summer, when his dog was diagnosed with cancer and Jessica’s brother Dylan had drowned in their swimming pool when she was supposed to be watching over him, their relationship changed. Jessica used to talk about real things during that summer. Not crispy water-bacon or fly-friendly pictures. Things felt more real.

‘Is something wrong?’ Jessica asked him. ‘You tired?’ she added with a teasing undertone.

‘Yeah, the weather is getting to me. I think I should go.’ He stood up from the bench. They used to hug each other when departing but this time, Mark didn’t feel like it. He waved to her and left, leaving Jessica wondering why.

When Jessica went to her apartment, the idea she had just talked about with Mark was still in the forefront of her mind. She felt excitement coursing through her and immediately got to her working station. When she sat down in her chair, an army of fruit flies flew from the partly empty yoghurt cups on her desk. The entire working station smelled like rotting cheese or spoiled milk, depending on which yogurt cup was closest and able to overpower the others.

She opened up her photoshop app and worked throughout the day. The smell of the yogurt served a practical use of ruining her appetite whenever she took a breath, so she never felt the need to eat as she diligently worked. Hit the Save-as button, printer on and out came a kaleidoscope, where every little hexagon was a small image of the solar system. It filled the entire page and with pride she held it up in the air.

Jessica rushed towards the kitchen, paper in hand. Once she opened the door. Her ears were filled with buzzing noises. On the kitchen counter, the flies living with her couldn’t have been happier with the accidental hospitality of the hostess. Opened cans of fruits, black bananas, fish bones, half a pack of minced meat that had turned completely brown and served as a maggot kindergarten.

Whenever she stepped into her kitchen, it was a stark reminder to her just how hard living alone was. She hadn’t seen her parents even once since she was kicked out, at eighteen. They hated her guts for letting her brother die. They never used the pool after that. Not even on the hottest of summers. Careless. She didn’t care about anything, her father had said. It stung, and he was wrong. She did care. She put the paper she designed on her kitchen table.

After a couple of seconds. A lonely fly landed on the image and it was the first time a fly got an accurate representation of the solar system. It tapped its trunk on the paper, still warm from the printer. Rubbed its tiny little hands and flew away.

Burning

a poem by Lea Köster

It’s the future we cannot escape that we dread.
It’s the past we cannot change that we fear to repeat.
It’s the present we cannot enjoy that we wish to be something else.
It’s life we forget to live because we think we have time.
It is us, us, that we lose in in the process of trying to fit in.
It is myself that I am trying to find in this world that is burning to ash.
It is a fight, I fear, will never end.
A fight we cannot escape.
An end
An inevitable end
Of burning ash.

Hidden Away

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

drugs

a short story by Paula Solterbeck

By the time I first saw her, I had stopped counting the days. I remember how little she fit in my world then, with her hair still all shiny and this weird look she gave me, almost a grin. In contrast to the dark, colourless barn, where it stank of horses you never saw nor heard. The dryness of the south, and the dust that reached every corner of any lung. Surrounded and trapped by all the wood, wood that offered splinters when pushed up against. No, Anya didn’t belong here.

He sat, no, rather pushed her down into my little coop and clicked the newly-bought handcuffs around her wrists. Then he said something about her being my new friend or something. At the time I thought that was some sick joke, but ironically, he would be right about it in a way. No, I’m actually not going to think about him. I want to think about her. Anya. My Anya.

Anya wasn’t the first, obviously, but neither was I. Now that I think about it, I don’t know who it was. I had kind of always assumed that it was Holly, but she was merely the first I knew about. I honestly don’t really remember how I got here, when it was still her place, Holly’s place, or how many days I was unconscious; that’s how drugged up I was and to be fair… that wasn’t all him. I know my way around those kinds of things. Drugs.

Anyway, when I woke up all those nights ago, Holly was there. Watched me in my misery of the withdrawal. This sweet girl I went to middle school with, all dirty and broken, you could see that from miles away. I knew then and there, as soon as my senses started to clear, that she was not the same girl I met as a child. That girl with the thoroughly-combed blonde hair, straight As, and all the talk of future husbands and shit – that girl would never come back home. That was what I first thought, after I had recognized her under all the dirt.

She didn’t really talk, other than trying to soothe me, the first few days, just prayed. Perfect girl. It is kind of an awkward reunion, right? At least, that’s what Anya said about it later and she wasn’t wrong. When Holly finally talked to me, she mainly repeated that they would find us soon. Probably more for her own sake than mine.

Now, I didn’t know who they were supposed to be, with almost everyone in town thinking she ran away, after some bad breakup with her fiancé or boyfriend or whatever. Apparently, she had also become some kind of theater kid in high school, at least her friends said something about her dreaming of Hollywood, I guess they hoped that was where she went. Maybe that was wishful thinking. I was unsure about her parents, but with her Christianity and her perfect-ness, I guessed that they were still looking. But, still, no one has found me and the others, even after he took Holly away from the barn and didn’t bring her back. Instead, he replaced her. Twice. And we remain hidden away. Maybe they stopped because they found her body or something, but wouldn’t they start looking for that asshole then?

Although, no one out there would be looking for me, I don’t have to be delusional about that. I had been away for weeks at a time, high on some shit a friend of a friend of a stranger had sold me. The folks were used to it and I didn’t really have any friends before I met Anya. Oh yes, Anya.

After she arrived, she had nervously laughed sometimes, and I thought the psycho had caught himself one of his kind and hoped they might kill each other. Honestly, I get it; while crying would have been the more appropriate choice, I, too, sometimes laugh in absurd situations. Though I have never been in a situation this absurd before. That was something we joked about too, because she seemed so collected (aside from the laughing). She didn’t really need my advice, didn’t let me be her teacher. I guess that’s why we felt like equals, except that she still smelled better than me back then.

‘I’ve never seen you around town, where are you from?’ I had asked, while cleaning the wounds he had given her and her eyes had widened a little. When she answered, I understood why.

‘Which state are we in?’ she had asked in her silly West Coast accent. San Fransisco was where she caught it, she told me later. The sad expression on her face didn’t look right. Unnatural. Not fitting in that beautiful face. I wanted to cheer her up – after all we would be here for a while.

‘Sweet, sweet Louisiana, honey.’ I leaned into the accent with this one and to my surprise, she actually laughed about it. That was when I knew she wasn’t like my other companions. ‘Why would a Cali girl come down here? Family matters?’

‘Passing through,’ she had answered and her expression told me to leave it alone. In hindsight it feels like fate, right? Had he never brought her, we would never have met. Of course, I wish she didn’t have to endure the things he did to us, but selfishly I’m glad that she is the one here with me. For the sake of our moments together, not his. Maybe I’ll share these moments one day, but for now, they belong to us and us only.

In the time with her, my face hurt in a way that I can’t easily describe. The muscles meant for the happy kind of expressions which hadn’t been in use for a while, and the intensity of the soreness, made it clear that I was here for longer than I had imagined. She made me smile so much, she even made me laugh sometimes. Occasionally, I even thought I was happy to be here. After all, this was the place I fell in love.

Mein Herz ist eine Leinwand

a poem by Myra Sophia Dedekind

Mein Herz ist eine Leinwand und du malst sie an
Rosa das Interesse, die Hoffnung, ein Anfang
Orange die Panik, das beengende Gefühl,
dass ich plötzlich meine Leinwand an jemand anderen verlier’
Gelb die Freude, die du mir täglich machst,
Lila die Blumen, welche du mir zuerst brachst
Blau die Tränen, dass Gefühl, wenn einer geht
Grau die Angst, die in mir lebt
Grün die Zukunft, Hoffnung, Träume
Rot die Wut, welche nie aufschäumte
Wein die Abende, die wir gemeinsam verbringen
Schwarz die Sicherheit, dass wir alles bezwingen
Braun die Ruhe, Sicherheit, Frieden
Bedacht lässt du meine Leinwand wiegen
In wechselnden Höhen, Intensitäten
Bemalst du
Mein Herz

Memories Keeping Me Awake at 3 am

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

death, funeral, sexual harassment

a collection by Jehan Ammar

Mondays, Am I right?!

It’s 7:50 am on a Monday. My eyes feel tired as I stare at my phone again, waiting for the bus to arrive. I look up, taking in the sun as I see a grey Smart pass me by. I worry about my seminar and how my group is so far behind. They better show up or else I got out of bed at 6:30 for nothing. I did not know at the time that they were still peacefully sleeping in their beds, dreaming and snoring. The Smart passes me again. The man looks confused. I remember when I first moved here, getting lost in the narrow streets and being too shy to ask for directions. He looks fifty, bald, possibly without family. That much I can tell from the car. I take a step forward, hoping to provide help. I can see the fast movement of his arm, and then something pink. It is his dick. In his hand. He looks at me and continues. I step back.

***

Goodbye

My mother next to me smiles. I feel unsure about this and stare at the camera lens and my reflection within, black ruffled blouse matching my hat in color. My father’s face is telling me to smile as well, which I find weird and strangely out of place. Almost the whole family is here, only one member missing. What a chance to capture this moment. I shift in my seat and look at my mother. I hate being here and I hate my father for taking pictures now, even though I don’t really hate him. I argue and argue and never quite smile. The camera shutters. We leave the restaurant and make our way to the funeral.

***

The good, the bad and the medium

I remember your death more than I remember your life.

But when I do, I think of mostly the good.

How the thriller we were writing had so many twists that, by the end, not even we knew who the killer was. Maybe we never did. Maybe it was never about the ending anyway.

But I also remember the bad.

Sometimes.

The moment when you came out as queer. I told you I’d support but never told you how seen I felt in that moment. How that moment mattered. But it mattered only to me because you declared it a joke an hour later. But you were perfect and beautiful and as long as you looked at me, no joke could take away words unspoken.

I also think of the medium occasionally. The moments when you felt on top of the world while climbing a tree, happy and carefree while I stood chained to its roots in worry. We were 13. How we were both failing math at 14 but you didn’t care at all while I cared too much. Now you’re eternally 15 and I’m 22 but a part of me isn’t. I wonder if it’s a piece of me you took to the grave or a piece of you, I keep carrying every day in the depths of my heart.

Your birthday is coming up. We barely knew each other, just a fleeting moment passing by, long gone. I miss you. Sometimes. In the good, the bad and the medium.

Passed On

Content warning. May contain spoilers.

depression

an extract from a novel project by Lina Ketelsen

Monica’s mother had been staring at the wall for about an hour now, whilst Monica was staring at her. She wondered if her mother even registered her gaze, if she even noticed the desperation hiding behind it. Monica was holding a cup of tea in her hands, the print of a white kitten sitting in front of a pink window peeking out between her fingers. It was her favourite cup; her mother had gotten it for her when she was only eight. The tea had gone cold. She had only drunk half of it.

I wish you would still care about me. I care so much about you. She kept her thoughts to herself, as she did often these days. The only person she ever shared them with was her husband. He’d always listen and she felt as though he would never judge her for thoughts she herself would deem as cruel coming from a daughter about a mother. She didn’t want to be cruel about her mother, but there was only so much a person could handle, even if that person was a daughter.

Monica was staring a hole in the back of her mother’s head, completely lost in thought. She grabbed her red, clothbound journal and a pen out of her bag and started writing.

***

When did everything get this bad? You haven’t left the house in weeks and I can barely get you to eat anything. I wish I could go back and pinpoint where it all went wrong. I guess no one’s to blame, really. Could I have stopped your depression from getting this bad if I had just gotten you help earlier? I was just a kid and back then there was barely any help available, and I didn’t even really know what was wrong with you. But still. I wish I could go back to the days of me and you sitting in your bed, with you telling me stories about your childhood, while we cuddled until dad came back home. Everything was better then. I barely see him anymore. I guess it’s just too much for him to handle, too. You know, sometimes I blame him for your sadness. And sometimes, if I look closely, I see the same sadness in his eyes. I wonder if Rob will ever look into my eyes and find it in them too. The terror I feel at such a thought. I would never want to do that to him. He deserves to live a life full of happiness and laughter and I will make sure to give him just that. Not just for him, but also for me. I promised myself I will get help as soon as I start to notice the same signs you had shown once everything began. I still remember how you used to take care of me, Mom. You took me to get birth control when I was only thirteen because my cramps were so bad I could barely get out of bed. Everyone in our neighbourhood judged you for it but you never cared. Now I’m not sure you care about anything at all. I wonder what you will say when I tell you about the baby. The baby that I will give birth to because I forgot to bring that birth control on my honeymoon. Rob just said that whatever happens happens and if we do conceive a child it must simply be meant to be. I hope you’ll love your grandchild. I’m sure deep down you will, even though you might not be able to show it. I promise to make sure that my child will know how much you love it. Mom, I am so scared of becoming a mother. I am so scared of becoming you.

***

She put the pen down and got up to make her mother dinner she probably wouldn’t eat.

A week later, Monica had an appointment at her gynaecologist to check up on the baby. Rob had taken a day off from his job at the bank to come with her. Aside from some nausea, the pregnancy was going very well, and everything had been fine at her other appointments, yet Monica was overcome with anxiety every single time.

As she lay down on the bed, Rob sat down on the chair next to it. He squeezed her hand, looking at her with his warm brown eyes and giving her a small smile. It was the same smile Monica fell in love with the night they met in that Jazz Club, and she still got that same warm feeling inside of her chest whenever she saw it. His leg bounced up and down quickly, but his thumb drew comforting circles on the back of Monica’s hand.

Her nurse walked in, greeted them, and began the examination. Monica sighed in relief as soon as she found out that the baby was fine and everything looked exactly as it should.

She thanked God in her head and flashed her husband a wide smile who promptly reciprocated it.

Then, the nurse asked, ‘Do you want to know the gender of the baby?’

‘Yes.’ Monica and Rob replied in union. They had talked about it beforehand and had decided on satiating their curiosity instead of waiting until the baby’s birth. Now, with the answer to the question being so near, Monica felt her heartbeat quicken and her grip on Rob’s hand tightened.

‘Congratulations, you’re having a girl!’

Monica had gotten a little quiet on the car ride home, while Rob did his best to console her worries. He had calmed her racing thoughts down a bit by talking about all the options for the nursery they had been working on and the dresser he was planning on building for their baby girl. As soon as they arrived, she told her husband she needed some time for herself and sat down on their terrace. She closed her eyes and took a moment to feel how the sun tickled her skin and, as she breathed in, she smelt the scent of freshly cut grass. Rob must have mown the lawn earlier this morning while she was paying her mother her daily visit. Monica remembered her journal entry that she wrote a week ago and decided to return to it, overwhelmed with emotions and desperate to make some sense of them.

***

How is it possible to feel so happy yet so scared at the same time? I’m so glad that my baby is fine, but I am also a little scared. A mother is more likely to pass her depression onto her daughter than her son. Will I lay this burden upon her that has been throwing shadows over my life ever since I was a little girl? Is it my fault if she will be haunted by the same fate as my mother? If I know that it cannot truly be my fault, then why do I still feel guilty somehow? Sometimes, I feel myself waiting for the day when it’s my turn and I start to feel my mother’s depression creep up on me. I’m scared of it. But all I know is that I cannot pass the fear onto my daughter, I cannot, and I will not make her experience the things I have had to go through with my mother. I will do anything I can to show my baby that the world is a beautiful place and that she is unconditionally loved by her parents, just like any child deserves. Just like I deserved it, too. I cannot wait to give birth to her, I’m sure the sight of my girl will clear my worries, at least for some time.

***

Monica closed her journal, took a deep breath, and put her hand on her round belly. Just then, Rob walked out on the terrace holding a tray with tea and cookies, smiling at the sight of his wife. She smiled back at him and felt that everything would be alright as long as they had each other.

Author’s note

This piece is going to be a part of a coming-of-age novel spanning the sixties through to the early 2000s. It centres around the issues of womanhood, mental illness, motherhood, and love. It follows the protagonist Monica, whose story is based on my own family’s history, as she grows into womanhood, finds love, and navigates life with a depressed mother while becoming a mother herself.