Showing posts with label Chameleon Reality Collapse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chameleon Reality Collapse. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Chameleons and Stars

This morning at Bank station a middle-aged businessman has collapsed. He is curled on the platform, pale and vulnerable, like a shell-less snail. A woman is stroking his arm and station staff are hovering with radios; paramedics are on their way. Everything is in hand, there is nothing I can offer. But as the tube slides out of the station, I can't get the image of his face out of my mind.

The actual chameleon .  The actual road. 
A week ago I was on a Greek island, reading, meandering and snorkelling. I stared at stars, counted bats and saw a chameleon cross the road (ten fantastic minutes of crazy chameleon gait, rocking backwards and forwards like a VHS tape on pause).

Readjusting to normality has been uncomfortable. But I can still read. The weather is pretty good at the moment, and I relish autumn anyway. No snorkelling or chameleons, sadly. But the thing I miss above all else is the soft freedom to be as I want; not having to please anyone else or dress a certain way. Not having to prove my worth. I couldn't sleep on Sunday night, facing a day at the Cabinet Office on Monday. Watched as the hours crawled by, knowing that I needed sleep to be on my game, and knowing that thinking like this would only push it further away. A dog resisting a bath.

Optional
I'm over the adjustment now. I can feel my shell growing back. And I think that's why the man this morning strikes me. On that busy platform, amidst the hard carapaces of suits and job titles and trolley bags, he is a moment of unguarded humanity, soft and exposed and real. I wish him well, and am grateful for the reminder that the shell is a choice.

More chameleons, stars and snorkelling. Actual and metaphorical.