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This is the true story of my 2nd-year flat in Oxford, shared with 5 unsuspecting friends. A story that the postgraduates of Corpus Christi College are tired of hearing. A long, infamous story of infestation, flooding, deadly gas and acoustic torture in a flat that left us sullen and sleepless for an entire year. A flat of unrelenting horror. A door down from an inoffensive pub and a simple church. Alas, any God had turned a blind eye to the happenings on St Mary's Rd.
Like every resident in Oxford's underbelly of Cowley, we had our fair share of crime and harassment; Three locked bikes stolen from our front garden, and in their place once huddled a cosy pair, together enjoying the sweet sting of heroine; Lulling screams of 3am street brawls through our unglazed eastward windows, which left us freezing in winter and blistering in summer; Our trash searched and thrown about nightly, and on the fateful rugby evenings at the Black Swan, we additionally enjoyed every square inch of our street-front being coated in the spirituous piss of armies of drunken men. Yes, we were truly knee-deep in Cowley culture.
Indoors was no respite; we soon learned not all previous tenants had vacated. Something burrowed up through the fireplace at night, spreading ash across the floor and scattering unwelcome surprises along the basement staircase - a basement near impenetrable due to a ceiling-high stack of old furniture and garbage charitably left behind for pests to shelter in. A rat the size of our (soon to be feces-covered) toaster chased us away and to the letting agent, who begrudgingly had the basement cleared and the house baited with poison. From inside the walls, the now decomposing rat corpses unleashed the second plague upon the house; black flies, the size of marbles and emerging hundreds in number every day despite a fierce battle fought with insect spray and a Henry Hoover. The ordeal made the early pigeons cooing from within the walls a soothing morning delight.
That the flat stood upright (unlike the backyard fence) was itself a miracle. Beyond snow-season-ready unclosable sky-windows and quick-detach doorhandles that threatened to lock us in our rooms, the plumbing left much to be desired; An anonymous pipe dripped something sinister and unidentifiable onto the basement floor, which pooled beneath a ceiling hole and soaked the groundfloor bedroom carpet with the unyielding stench of piss; The washing machine, perhaps being fed water from the upstairs toilet, infused our clothes with the pungent aroma of human shit, which followed me in-suitcase to Japan and back; The temperature of the upstairs showers was impossible to adjust from absolutely scalding, except inexplicably by the divine hand of Patrick Inns (God bless).
And my God, what Godless showers. They were barely more than spout and floor. The drain was clogged daily with arm length hair, which had worked its way through the pipes and become indestructible. After mere minutes, shower water was flooding out of the basin, over the bathroom floor, down through the tiles and exploding dust-soaked through the kitchen lights. Gallons of bleach and Drano were poured down in vain, which on one auspicious evening, erupted into a hot yellow cloud that pierced the eyes and left us short of breath. Only after did a flatmate warn us a visiting plumber had treated the drain with sulfuric acid, and our acid-base reaction had filled the bathroom and upstairs corridor with deadly chlorine gas. At last our letting agent was persuaded to mechnically unclog the shower pipes, which was attempted on my birthday, and the day my last remaining flatmate left for Christmas break. To celebrate my new loneliness, the plumber burst open the waste pipe, gushing grey water water down through the kitchen ceiling and walls, and over the counters, appliances and crockery. Anything sent from the upstairs toilets would arrive neatly through carved holes onto the servery.
Yet, home invasion, dilapidation and a shit-stained kitchen were the least of our agonies. Our true haunting came from the neighbour's property. An incessant torment which drove us to the brink of insanity, and to war with the council; The neighbour's off-balance boiler fan. It rumbled. Every few minutes, it switched unpredictably between two modes; 'loud whirring and grinding' and 'low hum of a car idling on the roof'. It vibrated our walls seemingly at resonance, creating an acoustic torture chamber that left our middle floor bedrooms uninhabitable. Drowned out by traffic in the day, the drone of the fan crept upon us at night and made sleep impossible. We rolled around restlessly in cold sweat, cursing aloud each time the fan changed modes. We tried industrial earplugs, moving our beds around to find quiet nodes among the standing waves, and swapping bedrooms when our sleep deprivation bubbled over. Flatmate relations were breaking down, and we begged each other for just one more night away from the worst afflicted rooms.
The neighbours ignored our pleading letters for weeks, then did their landlord, then did our letting agency. The Oxford City Council were reluctant to intervene, citing that the neighbour's engineer had deemed the fan 'functional', and demanding video evidence of an auditory phenomenon well below in pitch what any smartphone microphone could hope to pick up. After months of angry emails, phone calls and frustrated meetings at the council, two workers visited our flat in an after-hours emergency appointment. We stood hushed, them in uniform and us in our pyjamas, intruding Andrea Vitangeli's messy bedroom. We held our breaths, practically frothing at the mouth, as the fan quietly hummed. Finally, the younger worker's whisper punctuated the silence; "that'd drive me crazy - no, I couldn't sleep through that". Alas, the older half-deaf and half-brained worker was unconvinced, and indignantly insisted we must apply to rent a special low-frequency microphone from the council if we wanted any hope of help. This proved an elusive microphone with a long waiting list, which never graced our flat.
Tired and defeated, we fled St Mary's, joining the wailing choir of damned souls whose mail turns up in stacks of hundreds on the doorstep daily, never to be opened nor returned. Now far from Cowley, and the ordeal having long ago become a stale and irritating talking point, I still sometimes wake in fright from dreams of unending stench, blisteringly hot showers, blood curdling screams of crack addicts and monotonous rumbling. I very much doubt that Patrick Inns, Robert Laurella, Andrea Vitangeli, Lisa Schut, Hannah Estcourt and myself will ever fully recover.
Let this story impart upon you these valuable lessons three:- Avoid College & County and NOPS like the plague (hit me with Libel you negligent, defrauding fucks).
- Never mix bleach and acid.
- When the sun goes down, and a shimmering moon casts its menacing gaze upon Cowley, stay far far away from 70 St Mary's Rd.
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Sometimes one feels poorly.
For days, then weeks, then months.
The torture is littered with little reprieves; sunny afternoons; days when hope, productivity and distant measures of self-worth come flooding back and convince one that their sorrows, already blurring in memory, were just fleeting artefacts from some undiscovered but insignificant hiccup in lifestyle. Maybe one wasn't eating properly. Ho hum, more fruit to come. Maybe the neighbour's fridge was vibrating the bedroom wall in just the right way to foster bad dreams and feelings of dread. Thankfully their latest renovation has moved the fridge away, so today's morning feels a little more like one remembers it ought to. Feet first out of bed, and to the shower, with no lying on the floor. Or maybe the troubling feelings had come from work. Some small dissatisfaction snowballed into a great lethargy because insufficient effort was made to separate work and life. Did one merely burn out? Oh well, today's work is more enjoyed, so work hygiene is a precaution for next time. Maybe instead it was a lover; a whisper in the ear, which despite all the hugs and reassurances, couldn't outweigh what must have been an unconscious but ever growing discontentment. Had the relationship always been parasitic? No matter, they've been pushed away now, scorned for their perniciousness, and this morning's cloudless sky has convinced one it was the right thing to do. Perhaps instead a lover was missing. Recent affairs were fickle and fleeting, and the loneliness had bubbled over, spilled into daily routines and doused the ego. But a new pixelated face has sparked fresh optimism. One could never lie in bed all day with such inspiring beauty at peril. And they like all of one's favourite bands!
But parry to protest, one is suddenly thrust back. Into the bare, the blank, the black. Toppling down the cliff face, plunging unto the depths. Somersaulting clumsily in cause unclear as all before. Had one been struck by something sinister and stealthy, lain awaiting by the edge? Or were it plain to spot as it barrelled onward cliffside, if not for the waning delirium of its previous sting? Why had one even strayed so close to the precipice? Woe, maybe one pulled themselves down in self-sabotage, destined by an inscrutable ballet of genes and neurotransmitters, orchestrated by a crescendoing cacophony of pirouetting molecules whose one in a trillion had heavy-footedly damned the ensemble to a spiralling disarray and a panting heap of tripped feet. One can't know; the black box never budges.
So one stares helplessly to the rushing sea. Prepares to cry through waterlogged lungs. And whether by the currents on the seabed, or the splashes on the shower floor, one is extinguished. Silent and still. Lips askew with head, heavy, unblinking. Though embers flicker when the flames lick; Gears whir when the coin drops; Cheeks drawn smiling and frame propped when friends animate; Alas when the pull string settles, one lies still and quiet. Sluggish thoughts beg the knees to press and the elbows to straighten. Still, still. Until next struck, the TV is static. The shaded leaf wilts and the root withers. Something is festering on the sea floor. The frets chip as the strings wane and mute. The limbs droop limply. The wheel slows and stops.
From that vantage, one cannot feel very well at all. But newer days roll in somehow, and new air with them. And just as suddenly, one feels fine coasting their slopes, wind in hair and a familiar shrug upon the brow. A quiet comfort has replaced that which was numb, and polished boots; the hulking, dark stain at the bedside. How did one permit such a slump? Surely streaks of lowly spirits are as natural as a short spell of cold, or a Sunday under the weather. The missing mornings and swollen nights seem all accounted now in a bout of reckless but incidental indifference to sleep schedule. Understandable, if one isn't properly stimulated. After all, one's duties flittered like their appetite. In fact, hadn't some progress been made notwithstanding; an assuredly impossible effort while crawling beneath the crushing press of a great, melancholic beast bearing down upon the back? Then the affliction couldn't be so great; couldn't be more than a brief strain on the shoulders, unworthy of the faintest alarm, unneeding of cold labels and prescriptions, and overturned at the lightest push. Indeed, through today's clear lens, one can confidently dismiss yesterday's torments, already half buried. How foolish to have let a poor mood spill into the recesses of one's mind, one's ego, and one's floor. How near-sighted to let a fanciful whim extrapolate beyond the measure of one's evening temper, to the space of patterns and trends, into the world of muffled moans and sprawling letters. How embarrassing to have tugged at the hair and starved the mouth. To have begged the pen and torn the canvas. To have teased the bottle and tempted the river.
There's little to learn lingering on all that now. It too has passed. And soon enough, erased. With the floor swept and the curtains drawn, the looking glass is ready to smile back. So one ties their laces all the way, fastens their topmost button, and assumes all the stage positions where one hopes friends still expect to find them. No thought spared for what was missed; what was atrophied; what was lost. Nor what could be described with long, unfeeling, scientific words. It is enough to have reached the spotlight, smiling convincingly. The smile is carried even into the wings. Sometimes passed the sightlines, and sometimes further.
Sometimes one is convinced they feel okay.
For days, then weeks, then months. -
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A wince-inducing poem about an ex-lover. We all owe one, right? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Some context to explain the embedded imagery: Living in the same university dormitory, I came to know a unique knock on my bedroom door, and their pitch-perfect whistling down the staircase. Like all passionate relationships among emotionally unequipped teenagers, it ended. Beds, to phones, to nothing. For good measure, I was tormented by unwelcome, nostalgic dreams which threatened to keep me hung up, and keep me awake in protest. And this went on far too long for an adult supposedly not fond of being miserable every other day. This poem began as a codified plea to my closest friends to keep her name unheard and unspoken, but during writing, became itself an attempt at catharsis. I like to think it worked.From cheek-filled smiles, tight embraces,
gentle tapping through the door
to teary telephonic vying
voices pleading "are you sure?".
No more would waking mean mistaking
morning yawns for song; forsaking
venturing beyond; taking for
granted every soft kiss planted.
Now, instead, upright in bed, two
tight clenched arms outwardly reach
and in the darkness, wrangle, strangling
ghostly necks of ghouls beseeched
to haunt and rouse from drowse hijacked;
invading gentle taps attack;
unhouse my dozing narrator and
render me insomniac.
I'm sleeping lightly; weeping nightly;
leaving lately lit lamps throwing
shadows over weary walls and
eyes, fixated; searching glowing
screens for scenes which in between
each whimper, simpler sorrows bring
a brief relief from greater grief,
beneath preparing morning's sting.
Then up, ensuring bags don't show.
Unsure of woe's kept camouflage.
Assuring though, to every new
relationship's ult sabotage.
Enduring wistful wandering,
distracting day dreams. Squandering
each chance to re-evoke romance,
and none for mopey maundering.
Enough! If help of poltergeists
is priced at five years yearning, earning
undiscerning poems, turning
bedmates back to unconcerning
strangers; scrap the whole affair.
I'll damn my dreams myself, and daren't
sleep if creeping in, come illeg-
itimate concessionaires.
Expelling treasured portraits, over-
seeing cherished film's erase
and from my mind, expunging every
trace of the offending face.
Declaring war when aired, are more
nostalgic propogandas, scored
by perfect whistling choirs, screening
nightmares shot in sophomore.
Each time her name, in stupor, came
clumsily tumbling out, begetting
tearful ends, dear friends, amend
through surreptitiously forgetting.
Blue outbursts; to bury. Longing
sighs; decry. Flogging to follow
every woeful wallow. Sorrow's
wrenching grip to firmly pry.
And soon enough, once toughened, sturdied;
curing of the curse contracted.
Fervent feelings fettered; poems
ended 'bruptly; names redacted.
When at last, a peace - with every
longing part deceased - at least
by then I can pretend again
I've forgotten -
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Working hard with the talented Suguru Endo in the Oxford office. Yes, we scrubbed all the important research secrets from the whiteboard first, and no, you shouldn't treat your classical guitar this way.