the boy











































                                                                                                                            Book lands face down on carpet.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                               Pen, pencil, ruler                        fly.
                                                                                                                                 and anything else to hand...
                                                                                                                   Fresh black rubber marks on table tops
The boy gets angry!                                                 and chair legs protruding upwards through the tension.
The boy is angry.                                                                                              Thrown punches and spat out insults.
As angry as a boy
with nobody in this world                                                                                                             Around the class
but his part-time mother.                                                                                     eyes sparkle with contained laughter
                                                                                            and shock paints the teachers face.
So he comes to school.                                                                        But underneath this hostile and guarded exterior,
His emotions balled up                                                                                                   the sweetest of young boys;
in his chest like a giants fist.                                                                                      well mannered and well capable.
Push him too hard
and the fingers spread                                                                                                      And so I have to remember
releasing the tension and fear.                                                                              that he brings his home life to school
                                                                                       because he doesn't know how to leave it behind.
Which manifest themselves                                                                                             That he doesn't hit out at me
as a reluctance to do work                                                                                                      he hits out at the world.
which soon becomes a defiance                                                                                                 And most importantly
and I raise the stakes                                                                                                          I have to try to understand
and lay down an ultimatum.                                                                                           but remember that I never can
                                                                                                because I had great a childhood
Get up off the floor                                                                                                           and I am privileged enough
and sit on your chair properly                                                                                                 not to know how it feels.
or I'm going to have to tell mummy                                                                                    To have a part time mother,
how badly behaved you have been.                                                                                working as a weekend prostitute,
I know the boy better, how did it get to this?                               from the house... you are supposed to be able to call home.

                                                                                                                                           © Anthony Hett (2011)





   sheet lightening










































It happens every Tuesday,
every Thursday
and sometimes on a Wednesday.                                                              He hears me, my voice penetrating his dreams,
Darion - the too tall for his age,                                                                              he doesn't wake but he talks to me.
can't stop talking ten year old - has epilepsy.                                                            "I can see you. You're in my dream."
They say it's like sheet lightening going off in the brain                                       "Who else is in your dream?" I ask him.
I don't know anything about that                                                                     "Lots of people," he replies. "My family."
I only see the external pain.                                                                                                 A smile washes over him,
                                                                                                                                   but the serenity is soon lost,
At the back of the whale blue classroom                                                                     as his face wrestles with a grimace
he tells me, that the whole of his upper body hurts                                                                                  and I ask him:
but that he was trying to keep it a secret                                                                                        "Where are you now?"
because he didn't want to disappoint anybody                                         "I'm in a dark cell," he tells me. "Everyone's gone."  
Part of me feels like crying as I tell him
nobody is going to be disappointed in you                                                                  I reassure him  that he is not alone
you are unwell and none of this is your fault.                                                               and that I am sat right next to him.
                                                                                                                                       But it's nearly one o'clock.
I walk him down the atmosphere-less corridor                                                                                   The end of my day.
to the clinical stench                                                                                               So as he struggles to wake his legs,
of the white medical room                                                                                           I tell him "have a good weekend"
uncaringly placed next to the boisterous dinning hall                                                   and I leave him with somebody else.
where the nursery – the noisiest of them all - dine on fish and chips.
It must be Friday.                                                                                                          I leave the school grounds and
It doesn't normally happen on Fridays.                                                     think about how we'll do this all again next week.
                                                                                                                                                             I go home.
Darion lies down on the bed                                                                                               but I don't leave him behind,
heavy eyed                                                                                                                         I think about him all night.
I tell him to close them                                                                                                                            He'll be fine.
and instantly he's asleep                                                                                                                  all puppy dog eyes.
I read the only Roald Dahl book I've never read before                                                       Waiting for me Monday morning
and wonky lines of fresh faced children stream by                                                                                all puppy dog eyes.
some point, laugh and stare                                                                                                    But I can't help but worry
“look the boy's fast asleep” they say “in school”                                                              about what's going on in his brain
                                                                                                                      the increased frequency of his "moments"
It's time that he woke up                                                                                                                 the cause and effect
he's had a full hour                                                                                                              his mixed up emotions and
and although he could probably sleep all afternoon                                                          the repercussions on his confidence 
he either needs to go home                                                                                           but most of all I just sit and think
or have some dinner and go back to class.                                                     about the sheet lightening going off in his head.


                                                                                                                                             © Anthony Hett (2012)







To Anthony. OR (The day I watched an 18 year old boy with 
Down Syndrome give birth on the living room floor.)












































For three hours each Friday
for the first school year I was in London
you were the only friend I needed.
I still often long for those carefree afternoons.

The hours we spent together,
circling the small 3rd floor playground
on identical bikes, blue three wheel trikes.
That you loved so much,
your step dad bought you a black one for Christmas.                                                  But the one thing I never liked
Playing bus drivers: you Mel and me Margaret.                                                      The one thing I could never miss          
The only way we would refer to one another                                                            The times the games got serious
and the only way you would introduce me... to everyone.                                              when you became so emerged
                                                                                                                that the games and reality merged and
The first time I watched you give birth to a baby boy,                             no amount of reasoning could stop you, from,

on the living room floor of the flat                                                throwing chairs across the playground as a wrestler
designed to help you become more independent.                                and hurling abuse as an overly camp Jeremy Kyle.
I didn't know where to look, but
jumping right into the make believe.                                                 Or the day the heavy traffic holding up our buses
I knelt down beside you and held your hand,                                                           had been caused by your only son
as you pushed with all your strength                                                            being knocked down in the road up ahead
and screamed with all your lungs.                                      and the very real tears you cried, for his very imaginary death  


                                                                                                                                      © Anthony Hett (2012)





For John... 










































The room is alive with                                                                                                                          silence
chit chatter, chit chatter, chit chatter,                                                                                      my words falter
but amongst the word hungry mouths                                                                     but my heart skips to take over
spitting out thesauruses
two do not speak.                                                                                                    a lot can be said about you
                                                                                                                      by the people who surround you
Dry lipped John lies dormant,                                                    and you have surrounded yourself with great people
a mind fully active                                                                             and I believe that speaks volumes about you
but unable to will it as he once had                                                                                       and for who you are”
a body no longer his own
                                                                                                                                the last word drops - cold
I sit in the background.                                                                                a stone gob stopper landing at my feet
stitched to my seat                                                                                                                       my eyes well
I translate                                                                                                                  and John shuffles to speak       
semiquaver thoughts                                                                               only his arid throat withholds permission
that hang in the stale air - between us                                                                        but... he doesn't need to speak.
and interpret that he wishes he could mirror me                                                                     As the room overflows
I watch the voices dance over him                                                                                              with a cascade of
but he remains the unwanted centre of attention.                                                                     newly familiar voices,
Writing myself from the scene                                                                                          I decipher the harmonies
conversations fall short of my ears                                                  that distil from his eyes, like painful parched tears
and as I daydream                                                                                                                 and as warm bodies
one by one                                                                                                              cool the emotion in the room,
arrogant voices are resettled down hall                                                                                 I fade back into my seat.
and a silence howls through the room                                                                          This is the last time we speak.
manipulating my stillness
somebody needs to speak                                                                                           © Anthony Hett (2011)
and that somebody has to be me                                                                                  
only the words don't come so easily

I wet a cotton bud on a damp sponge
before gently dabbing at
the earth scarred deep
where ancient tributaries once flowed
that are his cracked lips
I hope this is what his distant eyes wish
but more than this he wills me to break...






All rights reserved
Photography by Noel McLaughlin (www.noelmc.com)
    & words by Anthony Hett (www.anthonyhett.co.uk)