
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to
the only comedy show where the jokes
forget themselves mid-sentence.
I’m the wheelchair-bound warm-up act,
forty-four, paralysed,
and prone to the occasional involuntary fireworks display,
and Mum is the headliner
with a brain full of unplugged lamps.
-
She shuffles past my bed,
testing my name like a password
she half-remembers from a dream.
Some days it unlocks the room.
Other days she promotes me
to “that kind young woman,”
because apparently immobility
reads as good manners.
-
Above the TV,
my brother’s photo hangs smug.
Mum watches it the way you watch
a balloon slip from a child’s hand—
that slow lift,
those traitor wings flapping,
caught for a heartbeat
in her unraveling harvest
before wriggling free
through yet another hole in the net.
-
The dreamcatcher beside him sags,
and I swear I can see
the things it trapped for me:
-
Mum teaching me to braid my hair
though my fingers shook like loose wiring.
Dad spinning her in the kitchen
like he’d never leave.
Mum cursing the washing machine
in three languages,
all of them sinful.
Me at seven, eating bread dough raw
because I misunderstood “treat yourself.”
Her grip on my hand in the ambulance,
telling me nothing bad
gets permanent residency in this family.
The look she gave the neurologist
who recited inevitability,
as if she could tear his diagnosis
in half with her teeth.
Dad’s last laugh rolling across the house
like a coin that fell
somewhere you can’t reach.
My brother promising to visit
“next summer,”
three summers ago.
Mum slipping extra sugar in my tea,
arming me for battle
with sweetness alone.
-
All of it tangled
in that tired little web,
still holding on
even though the universe
keeps pitching stones through it.
-
Evenings: stand-up reruns.
She laughs early,
in the wrong places,
and I sit beside her,
silent,
letting punchlines fall into my lap
like stray seeds
I don’t know how to plant.
-
Bath time is prophecy.
Her hands trembling
as she lowers me in,
steam curling around us
like a ghost checking its watch.
Sometimes her gaze goes blank—
a stage light blown—
and I feel the future arrive:
quiet, punctual, merciless.
-
A day she’ll wander in,
find my body still,
submerged in water long cold,
long forgotten,
slumped in its own silence,
and squint, annoyed,
trying to figure out
which neighbour
dumped this strange,
stinking thing
in her tidy bathroom.
-
Ladies and gentlemen—
what a hoot.
.
About the Creator
Iris Obscura
Do I come across as crass?
Do you find me base?
Am I an intellectual?
Or an effed-up idiot savant spewing nonsense, like... *beep*
Is this even funny?
I suppose not. But, then again, why not?
Read on...
Also:


Comments (3)
Thanks so much, honey.
You describe each piece of experience powerfully and leave the feeling lingering. "Dad's last laugh...you can't reach" is an amazing way to say "Dad left and it felt like..." You are able to make us feel it with you, using tiny familiar bits of life, like losing a coin, to describe a life changing event. Such intensity!!
This is fantastic