celebrating and creating our own LGBTQI+ history in honour of Sheila McWattie

Archive for February, 2021

Day twenty eight FINALE

How Julie Andrews might have responded to news of the end of lockdown

Bookshops and tea shops and days out with besties

Hugging with parents and no fear of nasties
Bright days of sunshine with no daily tolls

These are the days I want the most of all


Chip shops and seaside and drives out with no fines

Old country gardens not straddling tier lines

Life’s simple pleasures like they used to be

These are the thoughts that now fill me with glee

When my date comes

When the jab works

When I’m feeling sad.

I simply remember the pre-covid times

And then I don’t feel, so sad.

Lel Meleyal With humble and respectful apologies to Rodgers and Hammerstein.

Day twenty eight

Ageing in 2020 – An Unexpected Year

12/11/2020

HIV activist Susan Paxton, PhD, reflects on the year.

Ageing in 2020 – An Unexpected Year

Back in 1999, I was looking death in the face. I didn’t think I would see my son finish primary school, let alone be around for over 20 more years. I had gone through the ‘normal’ trajectory of a person who had lived with HIV for ten years: my CD-4 T-cell count was down to 50 cells per cubic mm and my viral load was over 4 million particles per ml. That was the year I started taking anti-retroviral medication, began to return to ridiculously good health, and survived the HIV pandemic that had killed so many people I loved.

Soon afterwards, I ran in the Sydney Olympic Torch Relay, went public in the media and completed a PhD. I began to work extensively in Asia and the Pacific as a public health consultant to governments and NGOs, United Nations agencies, and networks of people living with HIV. I conducted peer-based research into discrimination against people living with HIV and assessed HIV programs in many countries. I also conducted training in human rights, public speaking and facilitation skills. This was an exhilarating time in my life. Once again, I was part of the changes I wanted to see happen in our region. After years of depleted health, I was productive, energetic and able to relish life more fully than I had been able to for so very long.

A few years ago, I retired from formal employment, my son left to work in London, and I anticipated the next years filled with painting and travelling to visit the friends I have made around the world. And then 2020 hit us.

How many of us living with HIV ever imagined that our entry into the second decade of the second millennium could be so dramatic? In February, my son arrived in Melbourne to visit me (how lucky was I?) and on the drive from the airport he was shocked to see the reddish-brown smoke that lingered in the air after the bushfires that marked our apocalyptical entry into 2020. Covid-19 was just making news and I realised it would impact my life and the lives of millions of people around the world. I told my son I would need to hibernate for the winter and I began to stock up my cupboards with protein-filled goods such as baked beans and tuna.

Although I knew, intellectually, that a global pandemic was about to be unleashed, and I had to protect myself, I had no idea of the emotional impact it would wreak not just on me, but on so many people around me and so quickly.

During this year, I have journeyed through the five stages of grief many times (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance). Sometimes I have done this over a period of days, and sometimes I have whipped through them in a few hours. Perhaps having lived with HIV for 30 years prepared me with the resilience I needed for this year. Within 20 years, I lost more than 100 friends and colleagues from HIV-related illness. I never imagined I would live through another pandemic, just as indiscriminate as HIV, but this time one that most of us has had to go through alone, without the contact of friends or family. I was disheartened but not surprised when I saw on the news in April, a shot of a garage door in western Melbourne on which somebody had spray-painted “Die Chinese Covid-19”. Immediately I recalled a terrible day in the 90s when my late friend Sonja found scrawled on her fence “Die AIDS Bitch”. Stigmatisation happens by frightened people.

Throughout the HIV pandemic, we have been there for each other, able to hold and comfort each other, but with COVID, those of us who live alone have no ability to hold a loved one in our arms. I did not see or hug my niece and her two daughters for nine months and I found that very difficult.

When the pandemic first started, like many people, I was virtually immobilised. I had many things I could have done – reading, writing, painting – but I had no motivation. The enormity of what was happening was too much for me. Emotions became unpredictable. Two wonderful women I knew died early in the pandemic, both amazons … Dr Gita Ramjee, a South African academic who for decades did great work in HIV prevention among women, and Dolores Dockery who had lived with HIV since ’94, ran the Hyacinth Group in NYC, and had visited Melbourne during the AIDS2014 Conference.

I adopted a two-year-old stray cat (from the Lost Dogs’ Home, where else), and she has been a lifesaver. She is a short-haired, grey tabby, now named Venus – my shining star. She curls up next to me each night and her beating heart and deep purring console me.

I did eventually get motivated, and managed to get into some crafting and painting. In June, I had planned to take my grandniece to Fiji, but that quickly had to be postponed for at least 12 months. So, I decided to bring the tropics to me and painted a mural outside my bathroom window. I also ran a couple of Zoom workshops for women living with HIV, which was great to enable us to feel more connected during these strange times. I had hoped to see my son again within the next year, but this will become the longest time I have ever been away from him. As 2020 progressed, I became more at peace with how radically life has changed, albeit with occasional moments of overwhelming sadness about what has happened in the world.

A decade ago in 2010, I travelled to 15 different countries in a single year, most for work. I am trying to accept the sad thought that if a successful vaccine does not eventuate, I may not be able to travel again to England, my birth country and where I still have three dear cousins and a handful of lifelong friends.

It’s not easy for any of us, but maybe because I have been through such challenging times in the past, I can cope more easily. I cry and I am robust. We can be both. I am a sociable person and at the same time, I have realised the inner strength to ride this one. I have allowed myself to play … spending 24 hours making a two-roomed box cat house for Venus, and decorating it inside and out. I have smashed crockery to make a mosaic and I have woven and felted a massive COVID particle. During my life, I have been unlawful at times, for reasons of politics or pleasure. This spring my unlawfulness amounted to standing in the middle of my road at 4am, unmasked, looking at the moon and listening to the dawn calls of blackbirds.

Having spent most of this year in one of the longest and toughest lockdowns in the world, I have reflected on how grateful I am for so many things in my life. I feel so lucky that my parents emigrated to Australia when I was a child. I am lucky to have safe, warm, secure housing and I don’t live hand to mouth. I have sufficient income to cover my needs and my modest desires, and my health is good and enables me to live independently.

Despite this horrible year, I have now lived long enough to know that everything changes and nothing stays the same forever. I have no idea how I will feel next time I am in the company of dozens of people. Many of us need easing back in. Congratulations to all of us who continue to contribute to arresting this virus. We are not going to get to a new normal for a while, but hopefully we will emerge with greater resilience.

Day Twenty seven

Covid Come, Covid Go

Covid come and Covid go
Covid deal it’s mighty blow
Covid sleek and Covid slick
Covid slow and Covid quick

Covid n-n-n-nineteen
Covid not quite what it seem
A mild illness, I’m fighting fit
A cold, a flu, I’ll deal with it

But Covid get me in it’s grip
Covid take me on it’s trip
Not the shiny kind I know
Covid never let me go

Covid here, here to stay
Covid take my breath away
All through spring, crippling fatigue
Covid! Covid! I can’t breathe!

Fog descend, fill up my head
Can barely, still, get out of bed
We lie, together, all through summer
Covid, Covid, what a bummer

Friends have had it, Mums have died
I’m thankful that I’m still alive
Still, it beats it’s dreadful drum
Covid – when will you be done?

Earworm driving me insane
Covid not a friendly game
Covid short and Covid long
Release me from this savage song

Covid here, Covid gone
Finally, it’s on the run
December come, Christmas cheer
Covid’s knocked me down all year

Covid comes, Covid goes
Lockdown’s back with painted toes
Never mind, I feel well
At last, I’m free of Covid hell

January, a fresh new start
Happy health lift up my heart
Energy begin to rise
Immunity, for 2 nd Prize!

But wait! I need a Covid test
Stand in line with all the rest
Results back, too much at stake,
Covid! Again! For fuck, fucks’ sake!

Covid cough, Covid fever
Covid I don’t fucking need ya
Covid fever, Covid cough
C’mon Covid, I’ve had enough!

But second time, not as shit
Like a bad flu, I deal with it
Covid come and Covid go
Covid deal it’s mighty blow

Covid gone, Covid been
Worst havoc I’ve ever seen
Covid, this time you’re too slow –
Fuck of Covid. Off you go……

Karen, aged 51, Brighton

Death came to many of us last year

Death comes to many of us

everyday and everywhere

Death is a constant

Death is a must

Once one has gifted life

L Devo Child, (age 50’ish) Bristol

Day twenty six

One year, we went to theatre. 

Another, a Gin Palace in soho. 

This year for our anniversary we put out the bins. 

It’s one of the few trips you can still take, since they took away shopping together in Sainsburys. 

The bins. 

They might not seem like the best allegory for a relationship. 

Leftovers. 

Unwanted remnants. 

Actually, it wasn’t that at all. 

The bins contained the reminders and the remains of last night – a leftover crust of Beef Wellington, a wine stained cork (or three), the rind of the lime from the cocktails, an empty envelope from a card expressing affection and dedication, and the crinkly cellophane from the roses. 

And crammed at the bottom of the bag – 

the receipt. 

You don’t need a receipt if don’t plan on giving back what you’d purchased. 

If you plan to keep it for ever. 

For longer than lockdown. 

And as we clasped hands walking back from the bins, the sun caught a glimpse of the diamond on her third finger of her left hand. 

Locked down for life. 

The best kind of lock down.

Serena Roxy Gilbert (age 43 ) Kent 

The Limitations of Zoom

We are not bone.  We are not flesh. 

We show an unembodied face, 

display a dislocated base;

minds tangle as we breach the miles,

the shy rapport of distant smiles,

to guess what more-than words express

across the bridge of consciousness, 

and try to read the signs.

Yes I am here, yet I exist

alone within my separate frame:

 and you apart in yours.

Can tendrils reach across this space,

transmit the warmth of fond embrace, 

the subtle brush of gentle lips, 

linguistic play of fingertips 

as your hand touches mine?

Based on only what is seen,

can eyes still speak between the screens? 

Can we still reach the tender place 

that lies beneath the carapace?

How can we connect without

collisions of the tangible,

 the sweet kiss of the visceral,

without corpor-reality?

Those who crave the mortal spark,

who hunger for the human balm,

the comfort of the calming arm, 

stare out with famished hearts.

How can we replace the grace

that feeds between the lines?

Find ways to share our sympathies

in these unfeeling times?  

Georgina Koubel (age 68) Walmer, near Deal 

Day twenty five

Gay Men Are Dads (Even when covid is around)

12 months since I joined an online network of gay dads.

Adoption, surrogacy, shared care and other.

The driving force behind all of them was a domesticity that society left floating around for so long like the 1950s housewife.

These men exude love, caring, loving smiles, domestic ups and downs, nappy talk, sleepless nights, home schooling, and the tribulations like I have only experienced gaggles of mums doing on the playground.

However these men take nothing for granted in their crusade to be fathers. Mother Nature didn’t select us to be straight, get hitched and reproduce. 

Through lock downs and waves of covid shared all their amazing support for each other and all the diverse things they were doing with their babies, toddlers, small people and teenagers.

These men, of a similar age, grew up without the ability to form their relationships into marriage, naturally conceive, access the world without prejudice and couldn’t even adopt.

The options were not there for us.  We were without a womb so that was a non self starter.  However I can only describe all of these dads exuding as maternal…not paternal qualities.

I chose my label for my relationship with my own son as a maternal father.   Saying anything else just isn’t fitting because I wish I could have carried him. So right back at your Mother Nature! …I take back the mother label. The housewife is still very much alive. In me, as a man!

We are well on our way to fulfilling our dreams as men but many with the mother in us all.

Adam Lott 41 from Kent.

Father of three.

Day twenty four

Trigger warning: thoughts of suicide/self harm.

As tears fall down her cheeks like hot tar and the pain of her insides turn to knots, she longs to be swallowed up by her mattress, to stop existing. Her body feels heavy, bones made of lead. 

Why won’t it stop?” she asks herself, “I just want it to stop”. She knows how, but last time it didn’t work. Last time she was found, blood soaked, drifting in and out of consciousness. This time it will have to be more definitive. No room for error. 

The thoughts consume her as she lays looking at the ceiling. Her tears fill her eyes and she feels like she’s drowning. A weight on her chest, paralysed by the fear of her own thoughts. She thought she was better, she thought this wouldn’t happen again.

Telling mum and dad she’s a lesbian was probably not a great idea whilst stuck in lockdown with them. Nowhere to go, stuck in a cage, a captive audience for the abuse hurled at her from those who once gave her so much love. 

It will make her plans even more difficult but fortunately, they’re both still leaving the house for work. Fortunately, she is left alone for a few, miserable hours. A tiny reprieve in this new world. A world of hate, confusion and homophobia. “Not our daughter” they say “how could you do this to us?”.

Complete silence. Alone with her own mind. Something she never thought she would or could appreciate. She absolutely hated being alone and despised her own company. But now in lockdown, it’s different, it is heavenly. 

As her thoughts turn ever darker, in desperation she turns to the trusty search engine that knows all. “There has to be something that will really work…”. She picks up her phone and a message pings through. It’s from Her:

“Hey you, just checking in. Hope you’re ok. Miss you. Xx

Two kisses, she’s never sent two kisses before. She feels her face flush and her cheeks turn from pallid to peach.

Before lockdown they saw each other every day, she made her realise her true self. She rolls her eyes at how much of a cliché she has become, but she likes it. They text back and forth all day, with every message she feels her body lighten and her sadness begins to melt away like the last remnants of snow outside. 

That night they fall asleep texting, when she wakes she actually feels rested and her first thought isn’t how badly she longs to stop living, instead she feels a determination to start. She scrolls through the news, the PM finally announces “Lockdown is over and you can go about your lives as normal.”

An unfamiliar feeling rushes over her body. Is this what happiness feels like? She thinks to herself and she excitedly checks her phone, alas her texts have gone unanswered. She can’t still be asleep? What did I say? Was I too honest? Her mind goes into overdrive, maybe she shouldn’t have asked her on a date once lockdown is over, she didn’t realise it would be over so soon. Self doubt and worry creep in like a rolling dark cloud on the horizon. She decides she needs snacks. Distraction is key.

Mum and dad have gone to work, she’s alone. She searches but realises there are no snacks. She hasn’t been out of the house for a few days so forces herself to get dressed for the shop. A shower is pushing it so she scrapes her hair back and throws on some joggers and an oversized jumper. Checking her phone; still nothing. 

Searching for her house keys a message finally pings through. Mum: “can you do some laundry today“…she doesn’t reply. Psyching herself up for this trip to the shop is taking all of her energy right now. Deep breath. You can do this. She turns the lock and the door cracks open, the sun makes her squint like a mole emerging through the grass. She nervously opens the door all the way and as her eyes adjust to the light she sees something in front of her. 

Hey you” says the figure “I’ve missed you“.

Natalie Frater, Kent 

Day twenty three

Covid Pondering

The Samaritans shop still has its Christmas window display in February and I wish someone could go in and change it.

I have never been in a Weatherspoon’s pub in my life, but I see the curling up posters on our local’s window. I can appreciate that the cost of their full English breakfast is a bargain.  Do people go in pubs for breakfast?  I never noticed before, but you notice the emptiness.

Nearby there is a Georgian square with a fish-pond full of huge golden fish.  The trees in the square are bedecked with lovely twinkling lights but they stopped working a few weeks ago which is a shame.  I hope someone is feeding the fish.

There are incredible bargains to be had in Poundland and Greggs vegan donuts are really good. When the high street is closed, you make do.

Two of my neighbours get up really early in the morning, I don’t know either of their names’, but I wonder if they notice that I get up before dawn too.  I don’t know why I wonder this.  I make up stories about it in my head.

I find video calls a clumsy and unsatisfactory way to communicate.  I cannot navigate the spaces between spontaneity and pause. Sometimes I barely recognise even my closest people because I need their smell and the closeness of their eyes. Keeping ‘in touch’ is becoming a distance promise.

I have seen a goose tongue. The goose on the pond, let me know I was in his manor with a loud call and its fat pink tongue waggled at me. The snowdrops have started to peep out of the grass by the pond.  When stimulation is limited, you notice more.

I had to go to the bank and take my own pen because they don’t share now. Masked up, queue outside, freezing cold.  I don’t really want to go anywhere anymore.  COVID Stockholm Syndrome.

Lel Meleyal (Age 61) Scarborough

Day twenty two

Spicing up Lockdown

I’m bored. ‘Lockdown’ is booring; that’s my opinion; most people’s opinion to; nothing to do, nowhere to go, can’t visit your friends, and the Mother in law can’t come to call, (that’s one good thing I suppose). But we can’t do any shopping, not even supposed to go for a drive! ‘Lockdown’ is a real right royal bore.
I’ve sorted out the garage; the storeroom’s sorted out as well; and now I’m embarrassed to say it, the spice draw’s been sorted too!
A
‘All Spice,’ is good in your fruit cake.
B
‘Bouquet garni,’ I use in a stew.
C
‘Chilli powder,’ always spices up curries.
D
‘Dill,’ for a little zing in a yoghurt dressing; so good if you’re having some fish.
E
‘Evening primrose,’ makes a lovely bed time tea.
F
‘Fennel,’ is related to carrots! I never knew that, did you?
G
‘Garam masala,’ a versatile spice. Use it in cakes, use it in curry, use it when you’re making some marmalade; just watch out there’s not Paddington about!
H
‘Herbs and spices’ are one and the same; tho’ different in so many ways.
‘I,’
‘Italian herbs,’ beef up a good Bolognese.
‘J,’
Ever had a flavourless Gin? To give it a little more flavour, drop a few crushed juniper berries in.
K
‘Kawakawa,’ is something I never have used.
L
‘Lemongrass,’ gives a touch of class to a Chinese marinade.
M
‘Mint,’ butters up your peas and new potatoes.
N
‘Nigella seeds,’ knead a few into your white bread dough, or sprinkle a few on the top.
O
‘Oregano,’ enlivens any tomato or pizzas.
P
‘Pepper,’ my favourite pepper is freshly ground, it’s tastier and smells oh so good
Q
Well here’s a funny thing! There’s not a spice I can think of here…
R
‘Rosemary,’ this is the Queen of the herbs for me. We’ve even got some bushes in the garden, planted there by me.
S
‘Sage,’ we use in our stuffing, try it with oregano too.
T
‘Tarragon,’ was the dragon, in the children’s program; ‘The Herbs.’
‘U,’
Use your imagination; but use only a little at first.
V
‘Vanilla,’ put some pods in some sugar, you’ll appreciate what it does to your cakes.
W
‘Wassabi,’ is used by the Japanese, when making some sashimi or sushi.
X
‘Xcuse me,’ but here I halt.
There’s hundreds of herbs and spices, try a little with this and that, but remember when using some chillies, try not to blow off your hat! 

Peter C-Hill (60’ish) Whitstable

I’m so fucking angry

It’s an excuse to make money

To give jobs to the pals, the relatives

I’m so fucking angry

None of it works, benefits the populace

Just lines the pockets of the slime

I’m so fucking angry

I can’t see my family 

My friends

I’m so fucking angry

I can’t see a band, a film, an exhibition 

I’m so fucking angry

I can’t eat in a restaurant 

A cafe a pub

I’m so fucking angry

The predictions have come true

There was no need for this slaughter if the science was followed 

I’m so fucking angry

Chrissie (60’ish) Cardiff

Day twenty one

Wave watching – a lockdown moment 

A sharp wind whips up

white surf 

on wave tops that crash on

the wet 

black skin of the rocks that

lie flat 

as sun-basking seals,

And chatter through

the pebbles 

as the sucking sea draws

back into itself,

Ready to rise again,

To crash, again.

Protected from the squall, 

I sit in a sheltered cove,

My face to the setting

September sun 

And I watch, 

And listen,

And wait

Val (72) Herne Bay

September 2020

Day twenty

My world is of three

Sleep work eat, walk, cycle sleep

Three post codes only

Ece Ozdemiroglu (40’ish, London)

Once upon a time

There was Dykes and Dogs and Vans

Now they ALL have them!

Jacqui Soo (age 59) Proud Scouser

Brighton gold
Awash your city brocade lines
Weary endings for all we achieved with locked down summer glow
Drifting down in shades of change

Janet Jones (age 56) Brighton