UK based neurodivergent writer Jane Ayres re-discovered poetry studying for…
Previously published online in (mac)ro(mic), May 2021
Each doorstep-thick slice impaled on a long fork licked by flickering orange flames,I toast bread over an open fire while Nan fetches butter from the pantry meat-safe.
Cut from stoic cloth, she raised fifteen children in this tiny house, witnessed two World Wars with milky-eyed, mustard-gassed Grandad, now long-wintered, like blackbird song on window snow.
Now, she stoops when she walks, coarse brown stockings encasing thin pale flesh. Now, her pinned ash-grey plait is wound round her head like a Cumberland sausage. But when her hair flows loose and free – a silver waterfall – crowning her shoulders, she becomes a girl again.
I ask what life was like, then. Her reply always: What’s past is past. It can’t be changed. Life goes on. Then it stops.
Yesterday, blue tits pecked through foil-topped bottles for the cream, and the wildflower posy I picked – yellow-bright celandines, purple clover – takes pride of place in a repurposed jam jar on the mantelpiece, where the clock ticks loudly. The fire is slowly dying, pale embers dimmed, like a decaying peach.
Nan takes the knife, bone handle worn, deftly slices a knob of yellow butter onto hot toast, watches it melt golden. Sprinkles salt on top. Together we sit. Eat. Stare into the fire’s star-spitting crackle. Sharing warmth.
UK based neurodivergent writer Jane Ayres re-discovered poetry studying for a part-time Creative Writing MA at the University of Kent, which she completed in 2019 at the age of 57. In 2020, she was longlisted for the Rebecca Swift Foundation Women Poets’ Prize. In 2021, she was nominated for Best of the Net, shortlisted for the Aesthetica Creative Writing Award and a winner of the Laurence Sterne Prize. Her first collection edible was published by Beir Bua Press in July 2022. Her micro-chapbook my lost womb still sings to me is published by Porkbelly Press in 2023