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

Archive for February, 2026

Day four

Heron Road

We three stand in a photograph

creased at the corners,

A cramped city garden.

Our hair cropped close,

dykes, not gay girls.

Hands in pockets, feet planted wide,

leather and denim,

claiming space with confidence.

We did call it butch then—

and we knew we could be butch and women,

unafraid of being seen.

The photograph does not show

what came next.

The lovers who stayed,

the ones who left,

the ones we buried too early.

Now we look at it

our faces changed

by grief, by weather, by joy.

Some of us are thicker, slower, greyer.

What surprises me most

is not how much we have changed,

but how much we remain the same.

The tilt of a chin.

The defiance in the eyes.

Time has not erased us.

It has strengthened us.

It has taught our love new verbs:

to endure, to forgive,

to remember who stood where

when it mattered.

And in the photograph,

young, lit from the side,

we are still waiting

not for approval,

but for someone to look long enough

to see what was always there:

women who knew who they were,

and never needed permission

to take up space.

Kate, Ceredigion

Day three

The old photograph.

My two sisters and me. 8, 7 5 years of age. Yes, that’s our photograph. In black white, grainy with brown edges curdled up by the passage of time. Little by little as the clock ticks we grew apart. Boyfriends became husbands for them. One had children the other did not. I married to and left them. Time passes, ties loosen and those remembered childhood days recede into the tunnel of the past. Yet my brotherly love endures. Until that is, until, it became a sisterly love. 

The summer days that year of the photograph were filled with the joys of being with my girlfriend. Little like me, of age 5,  she wore a white bow in her blond hair and the prettiest of gossamer dresses.  As the summer wore on the rows of potato plants grew and outstretched their leaves toward the blue skies of memory. We would walk among them, row by row holding hands. That old photograph, such happy memories of my first love. 

School days came between us and my memory is jogged to a curious event. It is clear, vivid etched in memory. The days when cars of the very rich were invariably black, stupendously large, not a car as we know it today but a magnificent four wheeled carriage. Such a car stopped beside me. Remember this is the old photograph days. I was little, vulnerable. The door opened to reveal a portly gentleman his face deeply creased by time. He wore a top hat. He admirably suited the car. Both being vintage. This gentleman of all things pulled from his pocket, to my absolute delight a small white paper bag. In those days a child would instantly know the bag held boiled sweets. Sold loosely, and dispensed from an array of large glass jars in a “sweet” shop. I held my breath, he sat and tapped his walking stick impatiently. I didn’t step into the car (l now realise to have been a Rolls) as my mum stated never to accept anything from a stranger. I remember being terribly disappointed. l wanted those sweets  My mum had instilled in me a fear of strangers. Yet, I thought of myself as being cowardly ..

One day during those old photograph days my father brought home an old alarm clock. From this innocent beginning l was to be discovered. My life long yearning was already in place. Needless to say, l loved bright things, colours, flowers all together these “feminine” traits which were so apparent. My father called me sissy. I suppose l was. So it seemed of much and great importance to have my hair cut to as short as possible. This upset me greatly yet my father, it seemed to satisfy him a great deal. I digress, you see the alarm clock became mine. I was to contract a life threatening illness from it. It’s former owner suffered from Scarlet Fever. A very severe disease in those days. I was quickly dispatched by ambulance to an isolation ward at Nottingham City hospital. 

My recovery was long, painful and boring. That is until the day of my discovery. I simply wanted to dress as a girl. I wanted to be one. I wore my mum’s clothes. I lay for a long time in bed at home wearing her dresses. While still recovering from the illness l was brought to new level of awareness about who l was, what l was meant to be. It frightened me, yet it brought about, years later, the new me.

Yes, the old photograph. It recalls my brotherly love.

That new photograph of the three sisters replacing the old has yet to be made. There is great doubt that it ever will. 

Patricia Thompson, Nottinghamshire 

Day two

OUT OF THE FRAME: The holiday snap.

Beyond the rectangle of that joyous moment: the celebration, the harmony and familial joy,

We might see –

If only light could bend around the corner…

that fast approaching darkly-laden cloud;

the ugly cabled pole,

As well as:

litter,

Car parks,

Mobile homes

And the general mess of man.

And in that concentrated moment,

The grimace from two minutes past

 Has now transformed into a beaming smile,

Where all the accumulated tensions from six hours of barely speaking

Have now evaporated.

And so this glossy little record 

now belies the enduring anxiety that this is:

our holiday,

our marriage,

our lives?

It belies the harsh realisation that this has been our only shot at life,-

And if we do not smile and posture

Then others might glimpse the inner fear

That  maybe, we have got it all so very wrong.

Ian, Powys.

Day One

Mostly….it was enough

I find the photograph in a box
that smells musty and of winters long finished.
There we are, balanced on the edge of becoming,
smiling as if the world was ready for us.

We thought we had discovered everything.
Love was a warm jacket passed between us,
friendship an infinite room
where no one ever had to leave.
History had not yet learned our names –

We were sure it would.

We posed without armour.
Naive, yes, but luminous with it.
Innocence that is not ignorance
but belief, unguarded.
We imagined photographs were nets,
that nothing precious could slip through

Though some did. 

Where are they now I wonder?

I study those faces,
how fiercely we carried our bodies,
how desire hovered like breath on glass,
seen only if you knew how to look.
We were young lesbian women
just as the phrase began to feel truth in our mouths.

What I miss is not the youth itself
but the way time had not yet cursed back.
The future was a blank notebook
and we wrote in it with laughter.

The photograph does not know what came next.
It cannot warn us or forgive us.
It only keeps us there,
bright, foolish, brave,
holding each other as if it would always be enough.

Lel Meleyal