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#mystreet
I watch the rain as it washes away all the sidewalk chalk the smeared paintings floating away in a stream of beautiful color a vibrant rainbow on a rainy afternoon fuchsia pink swirling around my naked toes children running and laughing in the hot streets the smell of fish and spices makes my belly rumble hot white rice upon a bamboo plate an old woman scooping boiled fish and smiling her toothless smile her soul filled with liquid sunshine as we sit cross legged and laugh like kids
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Aug 18, 2016
Aug 18, 2016 at 8:49 PM UTC
Thai Afternoon
The Road That Made Me *** Cavendish Road, my street, my home. My first memories— Stanley Road school, then Westdale Juniors. The training started early, walking that steep hill on Cavendish Road, age six, legs burning on the way up, freedom flying on the run back down. Back in the ’60s, the road was our playground— full of adventure. Through twitches and alleyways we ran, racing push bikes from the Cavo Pub to the hilltop, then tearing back down— no helmets, no pads, just bare skin and courage, scrapes and bruises the prize. The good old days, we say. Knock knock on doors, everyone knew everyone— and it didn’t take long for Mum and Dad to know. And back then, it wasn’t a soft talking to— body armour was comics down the back of your pants. Wednesday nights were swimming, and in summer, Brickyard ponds. Pirates and Redcoats— until we lost George. He just disappeared. We didn’t understand. Time and resilience brought us back, but we never played pirates again, never swam those ponds. The teenage years came fast. Off to Cavo secondary— good years. Not much time in class, always somewhere else— gymnastics, trampolining, cross country running. Anything but sitting still, writing page after page about history, science, or the English language— something I’m still learning. I liked the girls though. Then came a time they liked me. What a street I lived on— everything I needed. Life was full. At fifteen, I joined the Army— Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Artillery. A life of its own. Coming home on leave, back to my street— at first, nothing changed. Then slowly, people I knew moved away. Years later, back in the Cavo Pub— the Cavendish, to give it its name. Old school friends, old times, banter, darts, pool. But shock hit hard— so many of the lads and gals lost to drugs of every kind. I loved my street. I loved what it taught me— love, joy, pain, loss. But life moves on, and so did I. A new home, twenty-six years lived— but the games were real now: real pain, real fear, far too many losses. Still— resilience, and the pull of memory, brought me home. I still love my street. Cavendish Road— my foundation. still that boy, from my street— with a life of poetry within. By Paul Baldry (LongJohn)
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Mar 31
Mar 31, 2026 at 6:47 AM UTC
My Street - The Road That Made Me
The Road That Made Me *** Cavendish Road, my street, my home. My first memories— Stanley Road school, then Westdale Juniors. The training started early, walking that steep hill on Cavendish Road, age six, legs burning on the way up, freedom flying on the run back down. Back in the ’60s, the road was our playground— full of adventure. Through twitches and alleyways we ran, racing push bikes from the Cavo Pub to the hilltop, then tearing back down— no helmets, no pads, just bare skin and courage, scrapes and bruises the prize. The good old days, we say. Knock knock on doors, everyone knew everyone— and it didn’t take long for Mum and Dad to know. And back then, it wasn’t a soft talking to— body armour was comics down the back of your pants. Wednesday nights were swimming, and in summer, Brickyard ponds. Pirates and Redcoats— until we lost George. He just disappeared. We didn’t understand. Time and resilience brought us back, but we never played pirates again, never swam those ponds. The teenage years came fast. Off to Cavo secondary— good years. Not much time in class, always somewhere else— gymnastics, trampolining, cross country running. Anything but sitting still, writing page after page about history, science, or the English language— something I’m still learning. I liked the girls though. Then came a time they liked me. What a street I lived on— everything I needed. Life was full. At fifteen, I joined the Army— Junior Leaders Regiment, Royal Artillery. A life of its own. Coming home on leave, back to my street— at first, nothing changed. Then slowly, people I knew moved away. Years later, back in the Cavo Pub— the Cavendish, to give it its name. Old school friends, old times, banter, darts, pool. But shock hit hard— so many of the lads and gals lost to drugs of every kind. I loved my street. I loved what it taught me— love, joy, pain, loss. But life moves on, and so did I. A new home, twenty-six years lived— but the games were real now: real pain, real fear, far too many losses. Still— resilience, and the pull of memory, brought me home. I still love my street. Cavendish Road— my foundation. still that boy, from my street— with a life of poetry within. By Paul Baldry (LongJohn)
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