Don’t look now

Writers – and researchers – as Siri Hustvedt argues, ‘circle our wounds’. We have a sensitivity to areas of recollection and connection. We know the familiar triggers, in the news, in the loud voice of an enraged man on a tram, in the escalation of tension in an argument between loved ones. But there are times even when we are groomed and on alert that we can be surprised. 

I avoid horror movies. I’m amazed by people who deliberately look for the escalation of their fear. Life itself is fearful enough for me.

When I was in my twenties I saw the movie Don’t Look Now. I was distressed by the opening scenes when a couple’s young daughter drowns in the pond on their sprawling estate in England, later juxtaposed with the beauties of the main character – played by Donald Sutherland – restoring ruins in Venice, as part of his job. His wife played by Julie Christie encounters a blind and pupilless woman who warns her that her dead daughter Christine is in touch and warning them of danger. Then there’s the tongue-poking gargoyles who leer from the tops of buildings to the flashes of a funeral ferry through the canals, the widow in black mantilla. I should have seen the signs, but I did not. 

After the film, when I caught any glimpse of a crazed dwarf in a red hooded coat like the one the apparent daughter Christine was wearing on the day she drowned, I was reminded of the horror of Don’t Look Now. The father chasing a red coated figure across Venice up and down bridges through dark tunnels convinced his daughter has returned. Only to discover in the dark of a church where he cornered the red coated creature who turned to reveal the hideous face of a freakish person and then plunged a sharp knife into our hero’s neck. After the dwarf and that hideous face streaked across the screen, I could not sleep for days. 

I made myself watch this film again in my forties to come to terms with the memory and this time, the horror was more manageable this time, but still it lingers.

Linked I suspect to a fear I held as a child. A fear I remember with all the clarity of a fact. I could be on the bus with my mother on our way to the shops in Camberwell, walking back home after school with my sisters, He will kill us all. Starting with my mother. The thought popped into my head unbidden in the same way this monstrous murderer pounced onto the screen in Don’t look now

On washing

‘Oh, let there be nothing on earth but laundry’.  Richard Wilbur

The before and after of laundry. The way it starts off soiled and can shift. 

It can stink, filthy, battleship grey, red rust blood spots, the stains of spilled food, 

The dribbles of a baby, the toothpaste smudge of an overused towel.

Oh, let here be nothing on earth but laundry.

The agitation in the cylinder making peace with soap suds,

The soft water by osmosis gripping each fibre, taking away the load of life’s grime. 

Oh, let there be nothing on earth but laundry.

The final rinse, a Baptism.

The water as clear and crystal as a stream. All dirt washed away.

The load heaved from the machine ready for its journey to the clothesline. 

Oh, let there be nothing on earth but laundry.

Flapping in the wind, sails on a yacht, flap and sway and through the turbulence of this storm come new beginnings.

The smell of a newborn baby’s head. The smell of a new day. The earth on a hot day after rain. Its petrichor.

Oh, let there be nothing on earth but laundry. 

Let us rejoice in the universal labour that comes from our efforts, not only as women, not only as children, not only as men and boys, but all of us, take up our load of soiled laundry like Lazarus rising.

The Saturday night bed with fresh sheets and pillow slips, the cleanest sleep of the week.

The luxury of life in readiness for death. And when we die, may our tired worn bodies be wrapped in the white shroud of a life lived well and carried by our loved ones to some place quiet where fibres, tooth, hair and bones, can sink, turning back into laundry.

Back in the day…