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When I think back now to when I was little (to when I was young) The words "I love you" I don't think were ever spoken, not in our house anyway (now I could be wrong) It would have been something silly to say That was something you'd only hear in a Hollywood movie Between glamorous movie stars, glamorous people It wasn't part of our reality If you were feeling anxious about something and needed comforting You'd be told not to worry, that you were being silly You'd be given a hug maybe or 'a treat' something nice Usually something sweet, a biscuit and a hot cup of sugary tea or cocoa A chocolate sweet if there were any You'd be allowed to stay up late and watch the late shows on TV Me! I was always a terrible worrier just like my Mom Food most often was the comforter, the soother, the remedy to all (Some say our relationship with food is the closest relationship we ever have in Life). Yea! I don't think the words "I love you" were spoken where we grew up Our parents they loved us as best they could But they didn't have the words, the words to say it It was strange...it was almost like they were forbidden to. Of course, you could love your neighbor alright and your neighbor's neighbor And your neighbor's neighbors neighbor's neighbor And all the feckin' neighbors in the whole feckin' world But the one thing you couldn't, you mustn't do Was love yourself, this was the Big No No, the Big taboo, the Great Evil It was the one thing you must never do, And every Sunday at church, the priest way up on his pulpit He'd never tire of telling us How evil and selfish and bad the Self was And all the bad things it got up to Yea, your neighbor was always better than you were Put your neighbor above yourself always Love your neighbor and you'd be alright That was the message loud and clear.                                2 So, so we got treats instead of words of love when we were little On Friday nights when Dad would come home from work and the pub He'd always have with him lovely Apple Turnover buns And a bag of crisps for each of us And so, we'd all sit there together in the evening in front of the telly After the maelstrom of the school week with  its lessons and scary teacher Trying so hard to understand and get your homework done, And despite all we'd laugh and enjoy the TV shows And this... this was Love, us all just sitting there with our buns and munching our crisps just watching the TV together Knowing we belonged and that we were loved kind of...as best they could And that we had a couple of days off, days of freedom Before we'd have to go back to school again, It didn't get any better than this. And when we'd be going down the country to see our Uncle John My Dad would always stop off to visit a pub And he'd get us a Club orange and a packet of crisps It couldn't get any better than this... this was Love The lovely sweet taste of that fizzy Club orange juice And those wonderful salty cheese and onion flavoured (potato) crisps or maybe salt and vinegar flavour Or later on, lovely smokey bacon flavour, As we'd sit there Dad would be talking to the barman or some of the locals But we didn't care what was being said, it didn't matter to us It didn't get any better than this This was heaven... this was Bliss. Sometimes during the summer months before we could get summer jobs Maybe it'd be raining outside and we'd be stuck indoors and bored But then Mum would up and say "I know I'll make some chips" Now Mum's chips were really something special, they'd be lovely big chunky potato chips, hand cut And maybe she'd have beans in tomato sauce with them, And maybe there'd be a good film on in the afternoon Well, this was it, nothing could top that, a good film and a plate of Mum's big chunky chips and beans Sometimes she'd even make these lovely mince beef pies With minced beef and flour and onions, salt and pepper on them And they were really something else It couldn't get any better than this... and this... this was Love (I can still remember the kind of meals we ate And my Mum in the kitchen, and my Dad).                             3 It's how people grow up in the end I suppose They find someone inspiring, some teacher or book that makes a strong impression on them (if their lucky) Or a partner who broadens their horizons, makes them question things and expands their vision of life and all its wondrous possibilities But what if you don't find those good books, those inspiring teachers Those voices that'd offer you a better vision of tomorrow and what this life could be What if you only found bad books, bad books purporting to be good That'd rob you and leave you lost and desolate, fearful and confused What if some of your teachers turned out to be alcoholics That some even done away with themselves What if the people you met were even more lost than you were yourself... And you'd go to a job interview and the man, he'd look at you and say "So, what are your aspirations in Life, what are your values, your goals, where do you see yourself a few years from now ?" And you'd look back at him blankly, Aspirations! Values! Goals! What are these words, what's he talking about... What am I looking for in Life ? To have some fun I suppose...maybe (if having fun was still legal now as an adult) Fun!!! Whatever that was now ? Or to get drunk and stay drunk, escape this grim world I'm in somehow What am I looking for ? You tell me...I don't know, what is there For all I knew I may as well have said "A Club orange and a packet of crisps".                               4 Now the faces they have all faded away, the voices too, have all gone There's only me here alone in this room It's Friday evening and I've got a readymade dinner from the supermarket Just need to pop it in the oven for a few minutes And I got a Dvd from the Dvd store, So I sit there and eat my dinner, I savour every bite But still it doesn't last very long And I can lick my plate but it doesn't make any difference I can lick it all I like But I can't make it last, and I can't bring them back again Those people that are gone; And the food, it doesn't taste the same, doesn't taste as good as it tasted back then And the movies too, their not like the ones we used to watch... When I die it'll probably be like that movie Citizen Kane, at the end his last words "Rosebud" The name of his beloved childhood sleigh He used slide on in the snow, I'll say on my death bed "I too have a memory of Love and Joy, Yea! A Club orange and a packet of crisps".
0
Aug 16, 2021
Aug 16, 2021 at 12:07 PM UTC
A Club orange and a packet of crisps
When I think back now to when I was little (to when I was young) The words "I love you" I don't think were ever spoken, not in our house anyway (now I could be wrong) It would have been something silly to say That was something you'd only hear in a Hollywood movie Between glamorous movie stars, glamorous people It wasn't part of our reality If you were feeling anxious about something and needed comforting You'd be told not to worry, that you were being silly You'd be given a hug maybe or 'a treat' something nice Usually something sweet, a biscuit and a hot cup of sugary tea or cocoa A chocolate sweet if there were any You'd be allowed to stay up late and watch the late shows on TV Me! I was always a terrible worrier just like my Mom Food most often was the comforter, the soother, the remedy to all (Some say our relationship with food is the closest relationship we ever have in Life). Yea! I don't think the words "I love you" were spoken where we grew up Our parents they loved us as best they could But they didn't have the words, the words to say it It was strange...it was almost like they were forbidden to. Of course, you could love your neighbor alright and your neighbor's neighbor And your neighbor's neighbors neighbor's neighbor And all the feckin' neighbors in the whole feckin' world But the one thing you couldn't, you mustn't do Was love yourself, this was the Big No No, the Big taboo, the Great Evil It was the one thing you must never do, And every Sunday at church, the priest way up on his pulpit He'd never tire of telling us How evil and selfish and bad the Self was And all the bad things it got up to Yea, your neighbor was always better than you were Put your neighbor above yourself always Love your neighbor and you'd be alright That was the message loud and clear.                                2 So, so we got treats instead of words of love when we were little On Friday nights when Dad would come home from work and the pub He'd always have with him lovely Apple Turnover buns And a bag of crisps for each of us And so, we'd all sit there together in the evening in front of the telly After the maelstrom of the school week with  its lessons and scary teacher Trying so hard to understand and get your homework done, And despite all we'd laugh and enjoy the TV shows And this... this was Love, us all just sitting there with our buns and munching our crisps just watching the TV together Knowing we belonged and that we were loved kind of...as best they could And that we had a couple of days off, days of freedom Before we'd have to go back to school again, It didn't get any better than this. And when we'd be going down the country to see our Uncle John My Dad would always stop off to visit a pub And he'd get us a Club orange and a packet of crisps It couldn't get any better than this... this was Love The lovely sweet taste of that fizzy Club orange juice And those wonderful salty cheese and onion flavoured (potato) crisps or maybe salt and vinegar flavour Or later on, lovely smokey bacon flavour, As we'd sit there Dad would be talking to the barman or some of the locals But we didn't care what was being said, it didn't matter to us It didn't get any better than this This was heaven... this was Bliss. Sometimes during the summer months before we could get summer jobs Maybe it'd be raining outside and we'd be stuck indoors and bored But then Mum would up and say "I know I'll make some chips" Now Mum's chips were really something special, they'd be lovely big chunky potato chips, hand cut And maybe she'd have beans in tomato sauce with them, And maybe there'd be a good film on in the afternoon Well, this was it, nothing could top that, a good film and a plate of Mum's big chunky chips and beans Sometimes she'd even make these lovely mince beef pies With minced beef and flour and onions, salt and pepper on them And they were really something else It couldn't get any better than this... and this... this was Love (I can still remember the kind of meals we ate And my Mum in the kitchen, and my Dad).                             3 It's how people grow up in the end I suppose They find someone inspiring, some teacher or book that makes a strong impression on them (if their lucky) Or a partner who broadens their horizons, makes them question things and expands their vision of life and all its wondrous possibilities But what if you don't find those good books, those inspiring teachers Those voices that'd offer you a better vision of tomorrow and what this life could be What if you only found bad books, bad books purporting to be good That'd rob you and leave you lost and desolate, fearful and confused What if some of your teachers turned out to be alcoholics That some even done away with themselves What if the people you met were even more lost than you were yourself... And you'd go to a job interview and the man, he'd look at you and say "So, what are your aspirations in Life, what are your values, your goals, where do you see yourself a few years from now ?" And you'd look back at him blankly, Aspirations! Values! Goals! What are these words, what's he talking about... What am I looking for in Life ? To have some fun I suppose...maybe (if having fun was still legal now as an adult) Fun!!! Whatever that was now ? Or to get drunk and stay drunk, escape this grim world I'm in somehow What am I looking for ? You tell me...I don't know, what is there For all I knew I may as well have said "A Club orange and a packet of crisps".                               4 Now the faces they have all faded away, the voices too, have all gone There's only me here alone in this room It's Friday evening and I've got a readymade dinner from the supermarket Just need to pop it in the oven for a few minutes And I got a Dvd from the Dvd store, So I sit there and eat my dinner, I savour every bite But still it doesn't last very long And I can lick my plate but it doesn't make any difference I can lick it all I like But I can't make it last, and I can't bring them back again Those people that are gone; And the food, it doesn't taste the same, doesn't taste as good as it tasted back then And the movies too, their not like the ones we used to watch... When I die it'll probably be like that movie Citizen Kane, at the end his last words "Rosebud" The name of his beloved childhood sleigh He used slide on in the snow, I'll say on my death bed "I too have a memory of Love and Joy, Yea! A Club orange and a packet of crisps".
A strange write this, life through a foodie's eyes. Another rather melancholy write (or wonderful delicious melancholy write LoL). I love the sad ones, they crack me up every time, take me to deep places within, they take you on a journey. Club orange is a lovely brand of fizzy orange juice over here (like Fanta) and a bag of crisps are potato chips fried wafer thin that'd come in different flavors. Very sugary and very salty and bad for you LoL.
Written by
62/M/Ireland
Aug 16, 2021
Aug 16, 2021 at 12:07 PM UTC
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