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Everything All at Once

Page 3

by Steven Camden

I want to stroke it like a cat

  And make it purr for me

  I’ll build a world

  I’ll pen a song

  I’ll fill it with my mind

  I’ll pour out so much magic stuff

  I’ll make the pages shine

  You either get it

  Or you don’t

  So don’t bother trying to moan.

  This brand-new empty English book

  Is mine

  So get your own.

  What do you want to do with your life?

  Asks the well-dressed woman sitting

  in her comfy chair

  behind her desk with the perfect rubber plant and the flat screen computer

  with her special coffee mug from home and

  photograph of her nice new family.

  I’m not sure

  Says the girl in loose uniform sitting

  still, hands under her thighs, looking across

  at the woman wondering whether this person

  who seems so sure

  about everything was ever ever

  in her life

  fourteen.

  As Miss Finch holds the test tube up

  to show us how it’s done right

  I watch particles of dust float up

  a tractor beam of sunlight

  Each tiny speck could be a world

  a microscopic GALAXY

  a multiverse of possibles

  from happiness to tragedy

  In every world a different me

  a different life to lead

  which version am I living now?

  And does this me succeed?

  A billion different me’s out there

  living, breathing, ageing

  how many of them sat in science

  lost inside a daydream?

  There is a me, right now, who’s painting flames

  across a ceiling

  another me sits penning songs to cope

  with how she’s feeling

  Another me was born a boy

  raised by a different family

  the possibles are infinite

  so many me’s there can be

  I’m sure there must be one of me

  whose mind is truly gifted

  who’s capable of magic thoughts

  Imagination whizz kid

  But I just sit and stare

  at the dust trapped in the sunlight

  as Miss Finch holds the test tube up

  to show us how it’s done right.

  He’s younger than the others. Looks about my brother’s age.

  He speaks like people speak, not like he’s reading from a page.

  He asks you actual questions, lets you talk and not just write.

  He makes you want to tell him things about your actual life.

  He sometimes rushes into class, looking rough, but kind of cool.

  He’s the only one you can imagine living life outside of school.

  He gets proper hyped when talking about characters and story.

  He didn’t laugh when Jacob said his favourite film was Finding Dory.

  He seems to love his job, like he’s doing what he’s made for.

  He makes me want to try my best to show him that I’m grateful.

  He held me back yesterday when everyone was leaving.

  He said he liked my work in class and asked me what I’m reading.

  He didn’t seem to mind when I told him I don’t read.

  He said he never read himself until he found the need.

  He handed me a book he said he thought that I should try.

  He told me I should take my time and read it by July.

  He smiled and said, ‘I’d love to talk about it when you’re done.’

  I think I’m going to try and read it later when I’m home.

  Right now,

  in a bunker

  somewhere in the world,

  there are man-made nuclear weapons with

  enough destructive power to decimate

  the entire planet several times over, primed and ready to be

  launched at the touch

  of a button by self-serving government idiots in

  unfair positions of power that give them

  the ability to wipe us all out in the blink of an eye

  and you want me to concentrate

  on Shakespeare’s use of alliteration in Act Two?

  I know he hasn’t noticed me

  watching as he stares out

  sitting in his bubble

  he rarely speaks in class

  I wonder what he hopes to be

  watching as he stares out

  it’s like something is calling him from

  outside through the glass

  There’s something washes over me

  watching as he stares out

  a feeling that we could be close

  that never seems to pass

  He’s hypnotized me totally

  watching as he stares out

  I’d love to ask him what he sees

  I’m just too scared to ask.

  I see cracks

  in the skin

  next to my fingernail

  in paving stones

  and bus windows

  my galaxy screen

  In the voice that I use

  with other people and

  the space between

  breaths.

  I see cracks

  in the ponytails

  of girls turned away from me

  in tight circles

  around a dancing blue Bunsen burner flame.

  I see cracks

  in clouds

  of shouted words

  in the looks my mum gives my dad

  the soles of my brother’s shoes

  in the faces of clocks that don’t move

  I see cracks in shiny faces

  under crooked headlines

  about crooked people

  And no matter how these teachers

  try

  to cover them with paper smiles

  I know I see cracks

  in my chances.

  You look for yourself

  with every new group

  you stand

  in front of

  you scan for that face

  the one you remember

  looking out from

  lost

  but hopeful

  scared

  but strong in ways

  yet to blossom

  telling yourself

  it is your job

  to water and feed them

  pull back the curtains

  and cover in sun

  and when you find

  yourself

  in the midst of the others

  yourself stares back

  and reminds you

  that all the others

  are you too.

  If caring was measured

  on

  a clock

  would midnight be

  the most

  you could care

  or not

  caring at all?

  Hey

  Hey

  You good?

  Yeah. You?

  Yeah.

  Cool.

  I didn’t want / I’m sorry about

  What? Sorry. You go.

  No, it’s OK. You go.

  No, it’s fine, seriously. My fault. What were you gonna say?

  I don’t know. Doesn’t matter.

  I wasn’t sure you got my message

  I did

  Yeah, I figured. When I saw you, that you got it, I mean, thanks. For coming

  It’s OK.

  Did you tell anyone?

  No. Did you?

  No.

  People are talking.

  I know. Are you OK?

  I think so.

  Good. I didn’t want you to not be OK

  I’m OK

  You look OK, I mean, you look better than OK. So
rry

  It’s OK. What’s wrong?

  Nothing. No. I just. I.

  Me too

  Yeah?

  Yeah

  Wow

  I know.

  So do we say anything?

  I don’t know. Do you want to?

  I want to if you want to. Do you want to?

  I don’t know

  We don’t have to. Not right now.

  OK

  OK.

  Seven years on this ship

  routine

  repeating

  going through

  motions we

  grind through the days

  We walk the same steps

  hands in

  our pockets

  skirting through

  trouble

  searching for praise

  We dream of the future

  our own

  independence

  the freedom

  to choose

  what we do with our time

  We’re sure that we’re ready

  we’ve studied

  and practised

  we’ve sharpened

  our tools

  and focused our minds

  Then all of a sudden

  the rocks

  of the real world

  crunch into

  the hull

  tear holes in the bow

  We’re cast off aground

  in the land

  of our futures

  and the only two words

  we can think are

  what now?

  This will probably sound weird

  to you

  but

  I love it.

  It’s like school but

  not

  It’s quieter.

  No shouting. No stares. No stupid giggling about nothing.

  Just you and a couple of familiar nameless faces

  in silence

  writing

  an essay about why what you did was wrong

  and sitting here

  thinking in between

  the lazy clock’s ticks and a tired teacher’s breathing

  it really feels

  like

  the best lesson there is.

  There are crowds inside the crowds

  So many people

  All these people

  There are shouts on top of shouts

  Giant people

  Scary people

  There are laughs that sound like knives

  Different people

  Angry people

  As we scurry round like mice

  Little people

  Tiny people

  Will we ever not be scared?

  Growling people

  Shouty people

  Will the space ever be shared?

  Cliquey people

  Guarded people

  Where am I supposed to stand?

  Confused people

  Nervous people

  Look for smiles that understand

  Find my people

  Breathe my people.

  They give us a map

  and our own

  private journal

  like they think that

  we’ll never

  be heard from

  again.

  Years from now they’ll find

  fossils

  of scattered Year 7s

  buried under the feet

  of Years 8

  9

  and 10.

  We sit in assembly

  a hall full

  of strangers

  the cast of a film

  where nobody’s

  the star.

  The ground underneath us

  completely unstable

  as each of us tries

  to work out who

  we are.

  The Head beams a smile

  like she’s selling us something

  welcomes us

  into

  this family

  of school.

  Together and separate we look

  at each other

  scanning for danger

  searching for cool.

  The bell is much louder

  the building’s enormous

  there’s so many people

  it’s hard to keep track.

  Last year we were biggest

  now we’re the smallest

  trying not to slip through

  corridor cracks.

  We’re put into groups

  and meet our form tutor

  he’s dressed like he works

  in an office

  or bank.

  They show us how everything’s

  on the computer

  when asked to choose passwords our minds draw

  a blank.

  We pay for our lunch

  with a fingerprint scanner

  like the food is some top secret

  government plan.

  We still have to queue though

  same shuffling and chatter and nobody knows

  what to do with their hands.

  Outside we feel tiny

  surrounded by giants

  who just carry on like we’re not even there.

  It’s like we’re gazelles in a field full of lions

  who’ve already eaten

  so don’t really care.

  We meet a new teacher

  who gives us a book at the end of the lesson

  we’re all supposed to read.

  Some of us groan

  as she hands us our copy

  some of us hide our excitement

  and leave.

  Walking along

  to the week’s final lesson

  a few of us laugh when a boy starts

  to cry.

  Some of us hang back to check

  what’s the matter

  the gap stretches

  into a proper divide.

  We’re supposed to write down

  our end-of-week feelings

  what we think of our first days of secondary life.

  Nobody says anything very revealing

  we’re basically glad that we’re all still alive.

  Then the bell goes

  and saves us

  we look at the people we’ve chosen to sit with

  just as the week ends.

  We pack up the journals and maps that they gave us,

  ‘I’ll see you on Monday,’

  we say to new friends.

  Tiny Year 7s swim

  past me

  like fish

  Funny to think

  I was ever

  that small

  But now

  that we’re leaving

  I do kind of wish

  I could go

  back in time

  and

  restart it all.

  Steven Camden is one of the UK’s most acclaimed spoken word artists. He writes for stage, page and screen, teaches storytelling and leads creative projects all over the place.

  He has performed his work all around the world from Manchester to Melbourne and Kuala Lumpur to California. He moved to London for a girl, but Birmingham is where he’s from.

  He also has a thing for polar bears.

  For you,

  holding this book in your hand right now

  You are brave and you are brilliant

  Remember that always

  First published 2018 by Macmillan Children’s Books

  This electronic edition published 2018 by Macmillan Children’s Books

  an imprint of Pan Macmillan

  20 New Wharf Road, London N1 9RR

  Associated companies throughout the world

  www.panmacmillan.com

  ISBN 978-1-5098-8004-1

  Text copyright © Steven Camden 2018

  The right of Steven Camden to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act 1988.

  Pan Macmillan does not have any control over, or any responsibility for, any author or third-party websites referred to in or on this book.

  You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

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