Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Shadows in the Spotlight

 All too often, a moment will turn up that I think worthy of a Chesterton-style write-up. And I let it float by, its magic left somewhere in the inter-dimensional heap of subconscious sparks.

I wonder do other people experience these seconds of hyper-awareness. Like, a haze descends over a scene, making it seem very significant. Is that the universal subconscious informing me of somebody’s life turning upside down? An omen of some sort? Or just my own partially damaged brain fogging over, while the excitable mind reads too deeply into it?

---

One of these meaningful moments was waiting for a delayed train with everybody including the operators completely clueless about the correct platform for the next departure. It creates a real sense of camaraderie to share exasperation and work out an immediate problem with a nearby stranger. I still remember the quirky ginger lady with a determined look in her twinkling blue eyes as we took our seats in the train on Platform 2.

“You look like you’re poised to run across the platform,” the bearded man behind her told me with a grin.

“I have an odd feeling it’s actually going to be that one,” I replied. “What do they know that we don’t?” For more than half the punters had remained on Platform 1 when the confused voice over the loudspeaker had said the Platform 2 train would be next to leave towards London.

“No, they said it was this one,” the redhead said irritably. “Those people may be going to Brighton or something.”

I had my doubts that fifty people would be heading from Luton to Brighton on such a day as this, bypassing the much more obvious King’s Cross, but held tight until the Platform 1 train did indeed turn up.

We all ran across to it, whereupon a black man inquired, “is this just going straight to King’s Cross? Is it a fast one?” of the general public, none of whom knew the answer.

He decided it would be quicker for him to rearrange his journey via King’s Cross anyway.

People are fed up when public services go wrong, but they suddenly realise everybody else is as lost as them. 

I still see those passengers’ faces clearly in my mind from the simplest interaction. How easy it is to forget that all these bodies taking up our coveted seats are individuals with personalities we had not yet imagined!

The combination of character traits is infinite. It may be a chore to launch a conversation with a stranger, taking a gamble on the cut of their jib, ending up potentially dragged into a time-wasting exercise. This is why discussing the matter at hand is a great opportunity to realise we’re all as helpless in this world as the next man, cool though he may look in his Ray-Bans and salty-pepper beard.

As the Platform 1 train ambled between fields and industrial units, I no longer recall what I was doing aside from grinding my jaw as it slowed to bicycle pace through north London on its way into King’s Cross Station, spitting on every passenger’s schedule with its lumbering chug.

I no longer recall whether I was reading or writing or planning the next move to reduce my inevitable tardiness. 

One thing I do recall is that redheaded woman exclaiming, “just go already!” from her seat nearby me in the idling beast. I wished I had some quip to follow up her outburst, a sense of entirely unnecessary guilt rising up inside for leaving her hanging. So I remember her, but will she remember me and my bland silence? Was the guilt towards her or myself?

I am naught but a shadow flitting between stations. When no attention falls upon me, I disappear, unaware of my face and body. When it eventually comes, every inch of me burns with self-importance. Caught by surprise in shadow form, the fire takes time to ignite, and the mind struggles to think fast.

Is everyone just a shadow until another puts the spotlight on them?

Let us all shine lights on each other to keep our minds in practice and our bodies alive.

Sunday, July 14, 2024

Bye Bye Crack Den

 The crack den across from my flat is finally up for demolition.

Walking past it this sunny evening, I observed a variety of different objects in its front yard.

To begin with, my eye was caught by the simple yet complex beauty of the spring-fresh flowers blooming in the overgrown yard, daisies laughing towards the sun and butterfly bushes flopping dozily at passersby.

The grass, largely concealed under the rubbish, was long, electric green. Nature knows not the concept of “wrong neighbourhoods”.

Among duller items like an unused roll of bubble wrap or a castaway glass coffee table, lay a kick drum from the nearby gospel church and a long pink wig, possibly worn by the sex workers – or were they slaves? - who had been using the building for their business. Or was it someone else’s business?

I half-expected to see human excrement but it may have been buried under the well-fertilised lawn.

The demolition men had set up a conference table and chairs just outside the entrance door, through which I recall watching members of the underworld passing day in and day out for various nefarious purposes.

On the day the developers had boarded it up, I remember hearing local junkies gossiping about it in their unmistakable, aggressive tone: “how are people supposed to get in there now? All their stuff’s in there!”

I wondered whether junkies really were constantly on edge or if, like the Russian language, simply sound pissed off to those who don’t speak it.

There was a tinge of humanity to that man’s exclamation of sympathy for the squatters who had lost access to their home. But they hadn’t lost access, they were just being more discreet about it. One of the doors was left uncovered and people were using it carefully, albeit more nefariously. I’m pretty sure I saw an old man accompanied by a younger one sneak into that yard one night for a blowjob.

One morning some men in balaclavas came out of there, body language hyper as could be. Upon hitting the high street, I walked through a small gathering of men of which one spoke on the phone: “phwoar man, it’d been months since I had some pussy … fifteen!”

The last word ominously echoed through my mind as I reached the train station unscathed.

I also once saw a hooker with a Picasso face walk angrily out of there with her large Polish client, clearly having been thwarted by the newly concealed entrance.

Another image that springs to mind was that of a man easing a rubbish bag, evidently filled with his belongings, through the first floor window on a string down onto the lawn days after the boarding-up. I was out on my porch smoking a joint that night, and I caught his eye. He glared at me and I nervously waved, to which he disappeared into the depths of the room. The paranoia that swept through me that night… well, I imagined only the worst – he knew I’d made them board up the building, he knew where I lived, he hated the comfortably homed, he’d vandalise my flat or beat up my partner or rape me …

What had driven me to the police for the first time in my life was waking up one morning to a furious crackhead screaming someone’s name and throwing rocks through the windows. He had been pacing like a wild animal in his black tracksuit and cap, aiming accurately at every single pane from 6 to 9a.m. as I shivered in fear that my building would be next. The angst of having purchased a flat so ill located next to such feral inhabitants wound my innards ever tighter.

Anyway, now they’re gonna pave paradise, and put up a parking lot.



Thursday, April 18, 2024

Acquaintances on a train

 It was an apocalyptic spring evening in London. The wind blew harsh cold air in everyone’s faces outside. Barney dropped his wallet on the way out the electronic gates of his City building. Ruby dropped her keys as she struggled to unlock the rusty chain of her bike, locked up outside a chain restaurant. Faces looked grey, not all of them of course. Barney and Ruby both knew that their mental state tainted the outer world they witnessed. The knowledge made it look  no less frightening, though, when a healthy-looking homeless man with blood down his front came to beg for food money in the train carriage.

Ruby offered him a full pack of cigarettes; she was trying to quit, she said. The man made an off-colour joke about it not helping him to eat! She immediately regretted choosing him as the beneficiary of this actually quite expensive gift. Twenty-packs cost something like 20 quid nowadays, and he gave her barely a thank you. He’d probably beaten the last guy up for his last hit of whatever it was. She returned her face into her book, and Barney averted his eyes as the threatening young man passed him by.

The trained wizzed past green and yellow fields rendered grey and blue by the English evening light. People stared emptily into their phone screens, proverbial “do not disturb” signs plastered over their faces, many of which would have been beautiful to look at. 

Barney was particularly drawn to the look of a sporty young woman with long hair pulled back in a half-pony and an outrageous fake tan. He was initially disappointed with the usual British habit of hiding one’s beauty under millimetres of fakery, but her hands were so dainty, the pink fingernails so gently pointed as she scratched her nose, that he lost himself staring. She was watching mindless videos on her screen with the little wireless earbuds feeding noise into her delicate young ears. He wondered what the depths of her soul would have to say about the vapid filler she was feeding it, both through the phone and through the syringes which had ever-so-subtly enhanced her lips.

Though she had the lithe body of a mare, she removed a can of Pepsi from her bag and nearly dropped it. Barney thought of Sigmund Freud and the way he attributed minor errors to the very intentional reign of the subconscious. Something inside her knew this was not a good habit, but she absent-mindedly proceeded to open the bottle and glug its contents, one eye following the insignificant events on the screen.

Ruby meanwhile had been observing a young mulatto in a black hoodie and tracksuit bottoms. He had very white trainers. His face looked exactly like something out of a nineties children’s cartoon she had loved. He was so endearing, and he was least of all absorbed in his screen. Such people were a minority in these times. She rested her eyes on his childish yet angular face, his one-inch afro, his big black eyes and his lanky figure. He never once returned the look, though Ruby was not bad to look at herself.

Men who returned women’s looks were a minority by then, too. 

She wondered what he had on his mind that kept him so disinterested in the world of his phone. It seemed serious, or maybe he was just a zen guy. Was that such an impossibility, Ruby? Why don’t you get off your damned phone?

Barney had returned his gaze to the hole in his sleeve which had opened up throughout the work day, as he had picked at it in a state of stress. He had had to issue two corrections, one of which was his. Usually a genial chatty type, he had cursed at his screen for hours, having to stay behind after everyone else had gone. Ruby had tried to engage him in conversation but only managed to awkwardly say the wrong thing, so she had gingerly moved on and whispered a goodbye to the empty office.

They did not know they were on the same train, but Barney lived a couple stops before Ruby, in a fancier part of the suburbs. Ruby was on her way to the same place the hoodie guy was getting out at. London had been apocalyptic: Ruby’s house was already in purgatory.

She stepped out the train to quiet minority onlookers and was pleasantly surprised to see a few healthy young faces in the station. It was always a double-take when London seemed to crop up so far out in the Styx; a young hippie with hip-length hair and dreamy doe eyes? A sprightly couple deep in conversation at the station entrance? These must be passers-through. She rolled along to the main road, greeted by the more characteristic alcoholics cursing the rain from underneath the parking roof. This is the ___ I know, thought Ruby.

Barney meanwhile had already made his way through the elegant rows of Victorian houses, not a tossed-out bin in sight (Ruby had had to walk through a pile of used nappies to park up her bike) and came in through the front door of his own. His wife had made dinner and she was upstairs taking a bath. All was well and nobody needed know of his day at work which had affected him so much but somehow all stayed inside that little box in his bag, He shook himself off, hung up the day’s gear and shuffled to the bath with his wife Barbie.

“Daddy!!” screamed one of his small children. This he had not seen coming: they were supposed to be at their grandmother’s.

“What are you doing here Celia?” he asked, bewildered.

“Daddy! Mummy says you need to eat yesterday’s leftovers, the food is for grandmummy!!” Celia informed him.

How utterly rude, he thought. He opened the bathroom door only to get it sharply in the nose: both the door and the smell from inside. Barbie was not bathing, but defecating. He apologised and headed to the kitchen with Celia tailing him closely.

“You can heat up the chicken and the rice but you can’t touch the rabbit stew, daddy!” she was thrilled to announce, knowing it was his favourite.

“Why on earth not, Celia darling?” he said bemusedly.

“It’s for grandmummy! She’s gotten ill,” Celia explained.

“Oh dear.”

He felt serene and ready to comfort his wife for the rest of that evening. She always fretted so for her mother, though he had never quite seen the person behind the wrinkles. It seemed to him that ever since he’d first met her all those decades ago, she had been just a skinny lump of wrinkles. Like a Swiss cheese, somehow more air than substance. But Barbie adored her, and Barbie was spoiling her with her best recipe and far be it from Barney to impede on that decision.

Celia ran back upstairs as he lobbed the leftovers on a plate and into the microwave. It was not all bad. He was home.

---

Ruby meanwhile had been dragged into a conversation with one of her local ruffians. She’d tried to give him her other pack of cigarettes, and this had had quite the opposite effect. He took it extremely seriously, for he knew the value of this gift was more than two days’ work for him. He thanked her so much that it had attracted the attention of all his friends nearby and they, unlike the youth in the train, were not afraid to look a handsome woman in the face.

“It’s OK, really, I’m trying to cut it out,” she was saying.

“You’re lovely, you know that?”

“Think she meant it?”

“I’d give her a bit if she asked.”

“Not every day you see one up close.”

“Nice one, that,” they gossiped like Tuscan nonnas. 

The one who had been lucky enough to receive her offering was following her, much to her chagrin. This meant she would need to operate a detour, remaining in peril’s way for longer but keeping him ignorant to her place of residence; the more effective long-term choice.

She politely said she hoped he would share it with his mates back there, to which he expectorated, “those cunts? Not a fucking chance! Who’m I, mother Theresa? Fuck.”

This was a frightening outburst for a girl alone in the street with a grateful but angry homeless man. She did her utmost to hide the fear, but like dogs they could smell it. 

“You’re a lovely girl.”

“You’re following me.”

“What you mean?”

“I would like to be alone, please,” she explained.

“I’m going that way, too,” he said lamely. “But you’re beautiful, you know that.”

“I do know, thank you.”

“You ever go out with a bloke like me?”

“I’m very happy where I am now, thank you.”

“That wasn’t the question.”

“No, I haven’t.”

They were still walking in tandem, he a half-step behind her.

“There’s more to us street rats than meets the eye, you know.”

“I’ve no doubt about that.”

“Why don’t you give it a try, lovely?”

“Because I’m very happy where I am now and do not seek to change my life.”

“Well darling. I’m quite keen to change mine, and didn’t you mention stopping smoking? That’s a change.”

She had been lying about that. She had actually picked up a cheap ten-pack from an airport on her way back from holiday a few months prior and wanted to get rid of them.

“It’s… not really relevant…”

He took her arm, “I’m joking, darling, don’t panic.”

The touch was the border between calculation and panic, veering sharply towards the latter.

Ruby turned pale and stopped in her tracks. “Are you going to abduct me, sir? For giving you a pack of cigarettes?”

The question stalled him. He did not see himself as an abductor. He was only trying to charm a young woman who must have taken a liking to him, if she was to be so generous.

She continued, “please may I go ahead alone? Can you let me go.” 

Ruby knew that tears would either release her from the situation or make it ten times worse, so she fought them back and attempted a straight, detached expression.

“You look like you’re gonna cry,” taunted the jilted lover.

“Give me a cigarette,” said Ruby in a spark of inspiration, “and leave me alone. And if  you don’t leave me alone, you are actually hurting the one person who helped you all day, if not all month or year. And I’ll be a victim of your cruelty. And we’ll both have to live with that.”

A cigarette graced her fingers. “Don’t give up what you love, babycakes,” said the alcoholic with a grin. “It’s all I was trying to teach you.” He lit it for her and walked away to his whooping entourage.

Monday, March 11, 2024

DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 9 Oct 2020

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 I handed it all in today, and well, I am as always torn between deep foreboding of being ever the jobless wonder dependent on loving men, and being joyfully secure in said dependence.

I fear, of course, the pursuit of musical accomplishment, as it has always failed me before due to severe insecurity. However, I have clearly made great strides and must continue along the good path. Enough said on that topic, for this is the diary of journalism.

I will now reflect on the job I did for such a short time and yet gleaned so much from. I see this reverence for old and experienced journalists is beyond me – N--- is certainly experienced, but still makes glaring typographic and accuracy errors on a regular basis in his copy. Is that carelessness due to old age? Perhaps he would indeed have been mellow and permissive, making the job easier than I made it in my own mind.

But the constant feeling that I am not doing the job right would have irked me constantly. This is the problem with solitary and self-motivated work. I could just choose not to run after a poor grieving mother for comment and tell the boss there had been nobody at the inquest, and maybe get away with it, but my work ethic would clash with such an approach. Meanwhile, harassing somebody who doesn’t want to end up in the papers clashes with my life ethic.  

I found myself siding with petty criminals and normal folks in so many cases, but as reporters we must always err on the side of the authority and the law. There is no such thing as calling the status quo into question. And that just proved my suspicions from the very beginning. Over and out!

DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 8 Oct 2020

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 And so, today, I quit. I called the boss and I said, you know how I was already thinking about it before, well, I have been thinking about it again, and well, I quit.

He said he would probably be able to convince me again, but it wasn’t worth the fight every fortnight. He said I might regret it in a month’s time. He said it’s what I trained for.

Thing is, music is what I trained for well before this, and it is what I keep coming back to. I think through these jobs I have been building up confidence on a world level, proving to myself that I am no worse but also no better than any other career-climbing shmuck and I should just get over myself in every which way and just pursue what is within me, which is art, which I have always felt to be art and have always repressed through pure insecurity and, paradoxically, huge ego.

So I found this week too hard. Fumbling around for a story that’s not there, twisting someone’s pain and misery into a cheap sell? and then pretending like it’s for the greater good… no… it’s not. I want to hold the powerful to account, and if that involves crawling over the squirming bodies of the poor dusty folk at the bottom, I don’t want it. Perhaps I am doing some of my own virtue signalling here, but I have sufficient confidence that this will remain for my eyes only for the rest of time.

Life is too short, and I don’t want to be looked at like a filthy bug on the bottom of people’s shoe; some ugly sight at the back of the room that nobody wants to see or hear; an intruder, a paid gossip, a hideous troll. No! I am young, beautiful and I like positive attention, is that so bad? Only one life…

I have observed the obvious flaws in the system now, as more and more lockdown-related tragedies come to light and I have begun reporting them. It’s good to see myself proven right, as to how terribly isolation takes a toll on human life and sanity, but I don’t need to be in the midst of this, so powerless and constantly infuriated. I want to be able to delete my Twitter account and see no more of it.

Today’s story was one of two gay guys who lived together – a sorry-looking landlord of about 40 and a young ruffian off the streets, his tenant. The third tenant seems just to be an innocent bystander. The two characters in this play seem to consider each other great friends, but I think it’s a real opportunistic relationship going on there. And even though the older one takes pains to affirm that there was no romantic involvement whatsoever, I’m sure there was at least infatuation on his part, or why would he do all this for the poor street rat? He takes him in to his home at intervals and puts up with his drink and drug addiction, writes him into his will. The love is deep. The street rat is a lucky little bugger. But lockdown comes and sends him rabid.

So while the older friend is all up in arms about the new rules that have just come into effect two weeks ago, the young man just wants to get off with his new boyfriend. The stickler is all uncomfortable about any outside people coming into the household, and so his little friend has to set up a distraction in order for the boyfriend to get in through the back and into his garden flat. Landlord disbelieves the foolish distraction and, annoyingly, checks his doorbell camera. 

Might I suggest that the advent of ubiquitous cameras into our lives have been a source for more harm than good? The camera proves the distraction was false, but the culprit has indeed snuck a foreign body on to the premises. 

He sends an irritating, passive aggressive message: ‘Only person I see is your boyfriend. Have him leave now, please.’ Understandably, the defendant gets irritated to fuck and smashes his phone against the wall. Somewhat more insanely, he gets a cool vintage razor out of his bedside table and heads into the house and up the stairs into the landlord and best friend’s room, says ‘I’m so sorry’, asks for a hug, then slashes the shit out of him and keeps trying to do so until the landlord grapples him down with a duvet, blood still pouring out of his throat.

All the parties involved refuse to acknowledge the sheer annoyingness of such sticklery for completely ridiculous, arbitrary rules put in place already two weeks earlier with no hint of letting up. They are all, including his defence lawyer, flouting the idea that ‘there simply couldn’t have been the slightest reason for such anger. For some reason, Mr Landlord’s text sent him into a blind rage. Well, yes. Blind it most likely was, but is it so incomprehensible that the guy can no longer bear the restrictions and needs a good shag? At least, at the very least, acknowledge that the ageing, snaggle-toothed landlord was a bit of a cowish, docile stickling motherfucker who clearly wanted to fuck the cute and vulnerable young boy he had fallen in love with. Couldn’t bear the thought of him having another man on the property, especially breaking **gasp** god forbid! The unquestionable lockdown!

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DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 29 Sep 2020

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 Something I’ve learned: neither politicians nor journos care about the social distancing measures they all screech to the public about day in and day out. After seeing hordes of journalists swarming round a police station blatantly undistanced and unmasked, I felt a combination of relief and frank disbelief. As they peddle these fears onto the ever-more-suspecting masses, they themselves enjoy exemption from the so-called rules. Same, we know, as those in power, who flaunt their disregard for the restrictions that they not only forcefully impose but create.

It was cute today to speak to the police officer, saying he really liked sitting in court and listening to all these well-spoken people, with his genuine smile and wry blue eyes. A loveable cop, paired with a clever prosecutor who got me to keep mum about most names in the story. To be honest, I would have done so anyway, though N--- would have squeezed it out of me.  But here I had to be firm as I had promised. It seemed truly needless to publish names of people who were victims of a crime and who might become victims of even more serious ones through publication of such information.

Also I enjoyed the Sunday outing to this odd part of Surrey that had a sort of rich gypsy vibe to it, littered with derelict buildings and strange half-houses that are probably expensive but seem shanty-like.

People with flat caps and joyful billy goats and intense black eye make-up, complaining “they’ll blame it all on the travellers, I just know it” and “an explosion!? What about the horses down there? The poor things will have been spooked to death!” - something, I won’t go into what, has put me off horse ladies. They really are slightly mad, and some horses are too fragile, overall useless creatures in our day and age.

And a completely random cozy little pub in the midst of it all, unsuspecting and quaint though not without an unfortunate modern veneer – all but inevitable with modern expectations. The Daily Mail man and I bemoaned the mask that covered the face of an adorable, keen young blonde waitress who was practically shivering with the desire to please and do well.

I suppose the Sun and the Mail aren’t really the ones peddling the fear so much, and they have been the most chilled I’ve met so far. The Sun woman actually shook my hand, which was a real joy to hold and behold. She was called Francine, too!

It is truly time I handed in my social media subscriptions and started to live in the real world. I used to, back in the pub times, now it’s just all about politics until the vomit comes out through my nose.

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DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 24 Sep 2020

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“Every good reporter starts out at a local paper. Then you build your way up until they trust you with the big stuff.”

This is what I was told upon disclosing my qualms regarding the job. All I can hear in my mind is “careerist… careerist… careerist...” and who is meant to be trusting me, with what precisely?

It’s to avoid misinformation, I suppose. Sigh, but what if the official info is also mis-...

All we do is write down stuff the authorities tell us we can, with some wriggle space when it comes to regular folks in court and maybe kids. There is no diving deep into the system as a journalist unless you really try, and that is when shit goes down – see Assange.

At least, I think it is. I suppose that’s why I’m doing this, to see precisely to what extent the system is corrupt and phony, and to what extent my dad and Chomsky and Jimmy Dore have been correct all along.

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DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 18 Sep 2020

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 Today the defendants that marked me most were both least and most newsworthy. 

The non-newsworthy were a couple of petty criminals who had apparently stolen someone’s wallet from his home and then gone around buying stuff with his card.
The man was a tall, hot-blooded Mediterranean creature with a long face, salt-and-pepper hair, and a black goatee. The woman was a large blonde with a messy clip holding half of it up, a mocking expression on her sour face as the bureaucrats scribbled and typed away, deciding her fate. Audible snorts and ‘pff’s came from the dock to the rhythm of my own inner sighs of exasperation. 

This judge was quite nice though, not too much gobbledegook. Always lovely, the lovely Irish. Quite red-nosed, he was too.

The petty criminal pair exchanged a passionate smooch as they were torn away from each other, the woman sent into custody and the man on bail with an express interdiction to communicate with each other – until the poor woman’s hearing in like, three months.

That broke my heart. All they did was steal someone’s wallet and use it in a Sainsbury’s.

The other one was a very cool, innocent-looking Indian fellow in a nice cotton red-gray jumper and black thick-rimmed glasses. He had beautiful, glossy black hair long enough to cover his ears and an absent yet somehow cheeky expression on his face. I heard from the local court reporter he was a regular punter in court hearings, always getting himself into trouble. This time did not disappoint.

The lawyer, sitting a mere three metres from the university student in the dock, mockingly told the prosecutor the guy’s defence story. As I looked between the lawyers and the bloke with great concern that the cap-and-robe-clad man hadn’t realised the defendant had come in, he said, “the defendant’s right behind us, but he’s off his head on drugs anyway.”

The guy didn’t seem “off his head”, maybe he’d smoked a joint or something. He seemed very much lucid enough to plead not guilty to both strange charges.

They say he tried to frighten the lights out of a pack of estate agents at their place of work by “singing his way through the door with an item with wires and duct tape, with intent to induce belief it would ignite, causing personal injury or property damage” - Because despite the immense post-lockdown backlog of cases to get through, we still have an inordinate amount of time to give to overly populating our sentences with redundant and repetitive clutter, speaking a language only we know fluently and the other peasants in the room sort of catch the gist of if they really focus.

Mr Defence stood and clarified that actually, the defendant had just shoplifted a couple aftershave bottles, nipped in to the Sainsbury’s for some free duct tape, and sauntered into the letting agency by accident. The confused property man made a mistake and panicked needlessly, probably because it would get him out of work that day, or possibly racism.

...Defence man didn’t actually say that last bit. But he did say the quiet glossy-headed man was holding his trousers up with a shoestring, that’s the “wires” bit I suppose.

It’s good, now the guy has to wait in prison until February. The real punishment is the insane waiting period for hearings and trials.

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DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 17 Sep 2020

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 Little to report today. I have already vented my misogynistic spleen to C----- and P---- both, probably a bit too much to P----, maybe I ought not be so anti-woman, but why have I been having such terrible experiences lately? Since A-----, it has only gotten worse. She must have cursed me, must have.

I reported on a homicidal 14-year-old today. A cute little bug with a black button head looking curiously at me with his big eyes. He’d already punched and kicked a man to a heart attack and broken neck, and punctured some poor guy’s eye socket. This time he stabbed two teens, puncturing one’s lung. He needs to be a mafia hitman, he is clearly a cold-blooded killer. Although he would probably be a single-use hitman considering his terrible record of subtlety… but at his age, I am sure he will learn verrrry quickly from all the experienced guys in jail.

It’s hard to say what is the solution with people who are pathologically violent.

The dirty look that woman, apparently his very white stepmother? gave me on my way out of the court is burned into my mind. I’ve never been glared at so evilly. Hatred oozed out of her every pore. I know my profession is low. But is it that bad? Would I feel the same if a press person was at my child’s hearing? Probably. I didn’t really need to be there and intrude on their family time. I am finding it hard to imagine how I would feel, because I don’t think I know anybody who would be in such a situation that it would warrant a reporter to visit their trial or hearing. I think I would probably just ignore them. Not likely that I would read the story anyway or even think to. Also in this case, he can’t even be named, surely it is OK?, although it may now be prejudicial for him in the crown court.

I am starting to understand why the judges and lawyers adopt this confusing language. It creates a barrier between them and potentially violent families of defendants. It forces the regular folk to respect their authority, giving that authority a sort of untouchable quality. If they kind of banteringly said, I sentence you to five years behind bars mate, good luck in there, the defendant or his father might be tempted to fight back, whereas the judge can escape the room while they are still making their way through the thicket of words camouflaging the actual information.

All the criminals I’ve seen and their families rise when the judge rises with reverence. This barrier is probably what keeps that respect a-rolling.

I also heard that a judge had seen one of his harsh sentencees’ family members in a shop, who failed to recognise him for lack of a hair-cap and robes.

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DIARY OF A COURT REPORTER IN COVID TIMES - 16 Sep 2020

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 The more I frequent these insufferable court hearings, the more frustrated and disgusted I get by this utterly weird language which has so blatantly been put in place to separate the wheat from the, as they would have it, chaff.
 
More and more it appears to me like some cultish code the upper echelons speak in to make sure the plebes struggle to understand them. It is weird beyond belief to see some of these people, actually nice people, who work in this system, force their way into this character and then promptly fall out of it with an almost audible sigh of relief when the interaction is finished.

Because god forbid the court recording device catch you speaking like a normal person while addressing a judge, who probably can not speak in any other way at this point.

It’s things like “the personal mitigation that I rely upon is chiefly age, character and passage of time”; “his fiancee is no longer going to be his fiancee as a result of the proceedings”; “it appears that so far as the gas canister is concerned, I am asked to sentence you on the basis that that canister is there and would be used by you as directed by others”; “having regard to both the facts of the case and matters in mitigations, the starting period for the drugs case is seven years imprisonment. That will be reduced by 30 percent, blah blah blah. That might be marked by a consecutive sentence but that sentence will be reduced very significantly to allow ...”

This is, remember, a massive, life-changing, devastating moment in a man’s life and that of his family. The judge runs rings round them with supremely ugly speech that takes far too long to get anywhere. The sentencing process reminds me of Who Wants to be a Millionaire when the host purposely makes his guest sweat before they can find out whether their wild guess was correct.

I believe it is an integral part of the distinction between common people and educated elites. Problem is, these elites are in no way distinguished in cleverness. Their choice of infuriating language has no bearing on their intelligence – only that they have re-educated themselves to be what in their mind looks like “adults”, while remaining oblivious to real world that surrounds them which is positively crawling with interesting and forthright people.

Forthrightness is seen as a problem in more and more situations nowadays, I think it is precious and not something to be spat upon. While maintaining certain tact, it is so important to see past the bullshit. By god, is there a lot of it.

I am starting to learn that all these adults who intimidated me with their university studies and impossible language are no longer adults in my eyes. They are boys and girls conditioned to their status, a type of communication alien to everybody else in the world but a select few. In more familiar situations these purple speakers sometimes seem to relax though the elitist twang remains.

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