Thursday, 11 October 2012

Memories of British Rail

Thursday. Less than a week to go. Seems like a long, long time.

British Rail Sandwich

I feel like an old fashioned British Rail sandwich. Curling up on myself. I wake up in the night and find I've gone into a tight foetal ball. When I force my legs to stretch out, my knees and ankles click, and I think that I've been locked into that protective position for far too long.

I know I should be thinking up and out and tall and elegant, like the AT teacher I am, but I don't have the energy. I'm scrunched, and round, and small and tired. My feet drag when I walk, and I measure my passage across Liverpool St Station by tiny little landmarks. Just get to the ticket barrier. Just get to the information booth. Not far to the steps. Now to the tube entrance. Just up these stairs. Now down. Find somewhere to lean. Wait for the tube.

I'm weary.

Sadly, not sleepy though. At night, when I try and uncurl myself in bed (I lie on my stomach to flatten myself out, as if I were a piece of carpet that's been rolled up too long) my thoughts start rattling around inside my head like ballbearings in a pinball machine: never going anywhere new and never resting anywhere long enough for me to make sense of them.

Years ago when I was young and stupid we lived in Clapton. I commuted through Liverpool St Station every day. In those days station managers used to play marching music during the morning rush hour (like "The British Grenadiers" or "Colonel Bogey" or "God Bless the Prince of Wales") and the game was to try to not walk in time with the music.

Liverpool Street Station

But the best bit about Liverpool Street in those days was the holes in the roof. Such fun! You got to know where they were along the platform. On a showery day, you could stand confidently beside a roof hole knowing that some newbee would stand next to you thinking you knew where the carriage doors would be: then when the rain came pouring through the hole the newbee would get all wet! Tee Hee! Or better yet, stand right under them on cold winter evenings and the soft, beautiful, gentle snow would fall on you and you alone: it felt like being kissed by angels.

The roof has all been fixed now, and I'll be fixed soon.



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