Friday, 7 September 2012

To My Boyfriend Owen.....x


You'll never know how much I love you, 
I can never find the words to say 
And A simple babe I love you, 
Is nowhere near ok

It's been 10 years you've loved me
And four baby's should we bore
But god decided that was not to be
With all Your strength you loved me more

You've lifted me when I was down,
Held me when I've cried
Protected me when all those around me,
Left me, hurt me, lied. 

Your the father of my children
My best friend and lover too
And the simplest way I can sum it up
Is simply ~ I love you. 

Love waits within

Silently still,
In the cold airs chill
the old man he wanders alone
He sees the warm lights
In the eve of the night
And yearns for a home of his own

For his family are gone, 
The Lord called them on, 
And from the nest, the rest they have flown
So he wanders the night
As the street lights shine bright
And no one can hear him moan

For the home it is cold
Yet made for the old
No warmth does it give him at all
As he sits in his room
Full of sadness and gloom
As he waits for his final call

He dreams heaven will shine
When it's finally his time
And his wife she'll be waiting within,
Only then will he know,
That loves loving glow,
Was always at home waiting for him. 

Backwards. Always Backwards.

Where does the Railroad go?

She shuddered as the freight train tore past the little stations windows. The bare waiting room with its cold metal seats that were painted a beat up black, they looked more like something you'd find in a prison waiting room than a train station but then again in port talbot what more would you expect? "Hardly the land of dreams is it" she thought to herself.

The wind howled through the open doors as the station staff scurried about undertaking their day to day duties, "do you ever hear me calling?" Bruno mars sang in her headphones as she surveyed all that befell her. Yeah right. She was sat in a cold and miserable train station, that's banisters we're painted different colours, no heating, the uncomfortable metal chairs and a hideous brick floor that had some sort of retro design that again she didn't care for. 

As she craned her neck to see the tv screen, the announcer reminded her for the 4th time not to leave luggage on the station. She got the hint. Manchester Piccadilly. 9.13. On Time. "for once" she thought.

The door gently clicked as 3 women joined her in the waiting room. A mother and two daughters she presumed although if they were simply friends or sisters even one had had a very hard life. They laughed and giggled, telling stories of their week, I didn't care much for any of them. All sat arms crossed, legs crossed, dressed in their day out finary, and they oozed a snobbiness that was unpalletable.

The door gently clicked again and a man joined them. He was of average height, overweight dressed in cheap jeans, and a green fleece that he'd zipped to the top. Not surprising with the delightful welsh weather though. His glasses were round and perched on the edge of his nose, he reminded her of an unshaven penfold from danger mouse. It made her smile to herself but then things like that always amused Her.

As she sat people watching, making her own little stories in her head about the people's lives she heard a familiar sound. Another freight train was approaching, as she turned to look for it out the window she caught a glimpse of herself. She wondered what people might think her story was? She bet they couldn't guess. 

I was 27. My father was an RAF Sargent who's first detachment was when I was 2 weeks old and I don't remember him being a regular person in my daily life until I was at least 15, my mother had abandoned her maternal duties when I was 5. Palming me off on whoever would take me so she could have her life back (not surprisingly I was a daddy's girl) . Life later fell apart when my mothers infidelity was discovered. Needless to say I came home from school one day to find out my dad had thrown her out. I couldn't even look her in the face. It took me nearly a year to talk to her again after I was left at 15 to pick up the pieces, run a household and look after my younger sister Abigail. In later years Abby would suffer the likes of drug addiction, domestic abuse from her partner and spent her milestone birthdays in the local police station but for the time I had her she was in line, doing well and getting top marks in school despite the circus at home with bickering parents, bickering grandparents and a horrid divorce battle that we were merely pawns in.

Was it any wonder I lost myself in a world of fantasy? Day dreaming was my past time with whichever beau at the time took my fancy, dreaming of various lives from superstardom as a multi million selling popstar with a hunky celebrity boyfriend, to dreams of the simple life as a little country wife and a handsome cowboy husband. The one thing that helped me escape  was always music. From country, to classical, to pop, to rock, to emo, to rap.....music in all it's ways comforted me because there was always a song to ease me

After that first year, I found out my mum was in financial difficulties, her housemate - a lesbian called Angie who ironically had helped hide the affair - had run off with their friends wife leaving my Mum to pay everything so she'd been living off biscuits at friends houses. Despite my hate of her for all the pain she'd made my dad suffer, she was still my mother. And that's how I saw it. She'd given me life despite her lack of interest. In high and sight this was probably a mistake but one i will never regret. This view of my mother however, was later to haunt me. 

She bet noone could of guessed that.

As she boarded the train, she found a seat and made herself comfortable. 

Backwards. Always backwards. 

It seemed everyone else was destined to go forwards but no she was a backwards kinda girl. Seeing where I'd come from made me feel I'd seen the whole journey and not really put things behind me so much as they'd faded into the distance.
The short ride to bridgend went by in a blur and she was met with a slight pang of relief to see the little coffee stand open.
A cappuccino and a flake. What more could a girl need.
She took a seat in the little waiting room, scoured the board for the 1A and tucked into her flake. It's odd taste was the first give away, her second hint that somethig wasn't quite right was the Best Before Date 11-01-12. January 2012. We were in June 2012. Yum! but she ate it anyway. It was chocolate after all and she had never been a best before watcher, unless it smelt funny, then that was a no go. A rancid chicken had forever made its mark on her some years before.

The announcer called and off she bimbled (bimbled is slightly faster than a bomble, but not as fast as a wander - in layman's terms she walked!) she scurried through the carriages to find a seat, she eventually found one in a lonely little corner, she sat down and quietly sipped her coffee. 

Backwards. Always backwards. 



Angels Never Die

Angels Never Die.

Don’t let them say you weren't born,
that something stopped your heart

We felt each tender squeeze you gave,
We've loved you from the start.


Although our bodies you can’t hold,
it doesn't mean we're gone,

This world was worthy not of us,
God chose that we moved on.


We know the pain that drowns your soul,

 what you are forced to face,
You have our word, We'll fill your arms,
Someday we will embrace.


You'll hear that it was meant to be, 

God doesn’t make mistakes.
But that won’t soften your worst blow,
or make your heart not ache.


We're watching over all you do, 

another child you'll bear,
Believe me when We say to you,
that We are always there.


There'll come a time We promise you, 

when you will hold our hands,
Stroke our faces, kiss our lips,
and then you'll understand.


Although We've never breathed your air

Or gazed into your eyes,
That doesn’t mean We never were...
Because angels never die.



In Loving Memory Of My Twin Girls Jennifer and Jamie  ~  17 - 08 - 2009


After our heartbreak of losing you, me and your father decided to put off trying for another baby, so we didnt. 

Then Christmas Eve, I joked with my friend in work about feeling butterflies in my stomach but put it down to the excitement of Christmas, we had a beautiful christmas day with your brother Ben, and that night I felt sick and nauseous, a symptom I had with your brother. Boxing Day I did a predictor pregnancy test and found out I was 5+ weeks pregnant. On January 18th we went for a scan expecting to see an 8 week old baby on the screen, imagine our shock when a beautiful fully formed 16 week baby appeared. The midwife didnt know what to make of it and neither did we. Its almost as if you knew and let her have her chance by leaving us. The midwife joked that it was the biggest date miscalculation she'd ever seen but we had no idea we were even pregnant again and they concluded that she must of been conceived just 2 weeks after we lost you both.

On February 18th, exactly a month after finding her we found out we were having a little princess. 

Your beautiful little sister, Holly was born 14 days late on July 14th 2010. We decided to name her Holly after the Christmas blessing you gave us, and her middle name May  (not only is it the month her brother is born in, but in Sanskrit means 'illusion')

I still have your scan photo on the kitchen cupboard and Ben still says Hello to the cabbage butterflies.