Home is an old red rucksack that my mother took round Chile filled with my baggiest trackies for months where home is trains and tubes and my headphones on coaches Home is the rain when it batters the outside of a humble caravan Home is a little wood burner, and a long green coat that was gifted unintentionally and worn by many
Home is waiting for the triangle bus Home is a cup of coffee in the right shaped mug Home is a cigarette, shared with my sister in a pub Home is our brother owning the pool table, modest and silent Home is now the sea, but not in summer mid-November waves, rough and lonely
Home is the river, the flow and the feeling the fish and the constellations of a shared celling Home is mums’ casserole and fresh bread still warm but under proved Home is a shed, strangled with ivy Home is tea and malt milk biscuits Home is magic stars pasta beans and cheese and Netflix Home is my duvet Home is crumbs creeping into a lumpy mattress
Home is the day, lazy and underwhelming Home is grandmas own tomatoes Home is a laugh from an inside joke Home is her long red hair, her stumbles and soup Home is hazel eyes singing, by light from candles in old gin bottles
Home is a spoons breakfast with zero sleep Home is a sink full of washing up Home is cobwebs and a faded hoodie stained with paint and the smell of hash Home is sharpened knife that can nicely slice when I am cooking to the bass my mini rig creates
Home is in the woods a maze of plot twists mapped in childhoods haze of coordinates Home holds smiles from guests and strangers who become family Home is vats of marmalade, in sticky jars that collect dust they sit for so long Home is the chorus of a Finley Quay song Home is the journey I am on
Home is the field the mud when its ripe beneath my toes the grass worn with love Home is a guitar (sandy with stickers) I am home in her lyrics that swirl through the air captivate by this Home we created and our feet know the pattens of the beat Home is the taste of freshly smashed melon Home is a cluster of tents around a fire and a tarp of scribbles
Home is the purr of Roo Her velvet fur and trills of love Home is an overgrown garden I used to tend to Home is holly leaves transformed into wishes Home is memories of butterfly kisses Home is a hug when words aren't needed Home is where I'm not alone
Home is him, the smell of his car and comfort of his arms Home is his orange overalls Home is a rhetorical question when I’m looking at his face