Lumbago awakened me in tears of pain and fear of intensifying acuteness, worsening condition compelling mind to impose
therapeutical distraction, persuading fantasy to create spontaneous cuttings of pictures, papers, magazines, old national
geographic dreams scopelessly selected waiting on ideas to sparkle a theme from coffee, cigarettes and analgesics. Human evolution standing behind bars,
as I ponder on the meaning not of the artwork but its making, for I have no walls to hang the sticky assemblage and haven’t
had them for a while. Used to clothes in suitcases, books on other people’s shelves, memories in shoeboxes, the essence of my being in a body.
Oh walls! So longed for by humanity urging to *****, building distance one brick at the time, compartmentalising individuals looking for pseudo shelter
under roofs, spurious safety behind ramparts, four to enclose shame for their actions, inconsiderate behaviour of the willingly blind.
Yet what if there weren’t any walls?
People unable to neglect the sorrow of their neighbours for they’re standing, just by them, no drawing the curtains no locking the doors, no closing
the gates. People inhabiting open landscapes, bonded by necessity to engage in living together, for unity is strength. No wonder why our kind is so fragile today.