Friday, 5 June 2026

 

In theory, every loss is for our own good; 

in practice, though,

that is when we question the existence of God and ask ourselves: 

What did I do to deserve this?



Neil Gaiman: The Problem of Susan

 

In the dream, she is standing, with her brothers and her sister, on the edge of the battlefield. It is summer, and the grass is a peculiarly vivid shade of green: a wholesome green, like a cricket pitch or the welcoming slope of the South Downs as you make your way north from the coast. There are bodies on the grass. None of the bodies are human; she can see a centaur, its throat slit, on the grass near her. The horse half of it is a vivid chestnut. Its human skin is nut-brown from the sun. She finds herself staring at the horse’s penis, wondering about centaurs mating, imagines being kissed by that bearded face. Her eyes flick to the cut throat, and the sticky red-black pool that surrounds it, and she shivers.

Flies buzz about the corpses.

The wildflowers tangle in the grass. They bloomed yesterday for the first time in, how long? A hundred years? A thousand? A hundred thousand? She does not know.

All this was snow, she thinks, as she looks at the battlefield. Yesterday, all this was snow. Always winter, and never Christmas. Her sister tugs her hand and points. On the brow of the green hill they, stand, deep in conversation. The lion is golden, his hands folded behind his back. The witch is dressed all in white. Right now she is shouting at the lion, who is simply listening. The children cannot make out any of their words, not her cold anger or the lion’s thrum-deep replies. The witch’s hair is black and shiny; her lips are red.

In her dream she notices these things.

They will finish their conversation soon, the lion and the witch…. There are things about herself that the professor despises. Her smell, for example. She smells like her grandmother smelled, like old women smell, and for this she cannot forgive herself, so on waking, she bathes in scented water and, naked and towel-dried, dabs several drops of Chanel toilet water beneath her arms and on her neck. It is, she believes, her sole extravagance.

Today she dresses in her dark brown dress suit. She thinks of these as her interview clothes, as opposed to her lecture clothes or her knocking-about-the-house clothes. Now she is in retirement, she wears her knocking-about-the-house clothes more and more. She puts on lipstick.

After breakfast, she washes a milk bottle, places it at her back door. She discovers that next-door’s cat has deposited a mouse head, and a paw, on the doormat. It looks as though the mouse is swimming through the coconut matting, as though most of it is submerged. She purses her lips, then she folds her copy of yesterday’s Daily Telegraph, and she folds and flips the mouse head and the paw into the newspaper, never touching them with her hands. Today’s Daily Telegraph is waiting for her in the hall, along with several letters, which she inspects, without opening any of them, and then places on the desk in her tiny study. Since her retirement, she visits her study only to write. Now she walks into the kitchen and seats herself at the old oak table. Her reading glasses hang about her neck, on a silver chain, and she perches them on her nose, and begins with the obituaries.
She does not actually expect to encounter anyone she knows there, but the world is small, and she observes that, perhaps with cruel humour, the obituarists have run a photograph of Peter Burrell Gunn as he was in the early 1950s, and not at all as he was the last time the professor had seen him, at a Literary Monthly Christmas party several years before, all gouty and beaky and trembling, and reminding her of nothing so much as a caricature of an owl. In the photograph, he is very beautiful. He looks wild, and noble. She had spent an evening once kissing him in a summer house: she remembers that very clearly, although she cannot remember for the life of her in which garden the summer house had belonged. It was, she decides, Charles and Nadia Reid’s house in the country. Which meant that it was before Nadia ran away with that Scottish artist, and Charles took the professor with him to Spain, although she was certainly not a professor then. This was many years before people commonly went to Spain for their holidays; it was exotic then. He asked her to marry him, too, and she is no longer certain why she said no, or even if she had entirely said no. He was a pleasant-enough young man, and he took what was left of her virginity on a blanket on a Spanish beach, on a warm spring night. She was twenty years old, and had thought herself so old…. The doorbell chimes, and she puts down the paper, and makes her way to the front door, and opens it.

Her first thought is how young the girl looks.

Her first thought is how old the woman looks. “Professor Hastings?” she says. “I’m Greta Campion. I’m doing the profile on you. For the Literary Chronicle.”

The older woman stares at her for a moment, vulnerable, and ancient; then she smiles. It’s a friendly smile, and Greta warms to her. “Come in, dear,” says the professor. “We’ll be in the sitting room.”

“I brought you this,” says Greta. “I baked it myself.” She takes the cake tin from her bag, hoping its contents haven’t disintegrated en route. “It’s a chocolate cake. I read online that you liked them.” The old woman nods, and blinks. “I do,” she says. “How kind. This way.”

Greta follows her into a comfortable room, is shown to her armchair, and told, firmly, not to move. The professor bustles off and returns with a tray, on which are teacups and saucers, a teapot, a plate of chocolate biscuits, and Greta’s chocolate cake.

Tea is poured, and Greta exclaims over the professor’s brooch, and then she pulls out her notebook and pen, and a copy of the professor’s last book, A Quest for Meanings in Children’s Fiction, bristling with Post-it notes and scraps of paper. They talk about the early chapters, in which the hypothesis is set forth that there was originally no distinct branch of fiction that was intended only for children, until the Victorian notions of the purity and sanctity of childhood demanded that fiction for children be made …

” . . well, pure,” says the professor.

“And sanctified?” asks Greta, with a smile.

“And sanctimonious,” corrects the old woman. “It is difficult to read The Water Babies without wincing.”

And then she talks about ways that artists used to draw children as adults, only smaller, without considering the child’s proportions, and how Grimm’s stories were collected for adults and, when the Grimms realised the books were being read in the nursery, were bowdlerized to make them more appropriate. She talks of Perrault’s “Sleeping Beauty in the Wood and of its original coda in which the prince’s cannibal ogre mother attempts to frame the Sleeping Beauty for having eaten her own children, and all the while Greta nods and takes notes, and nervously tries to contribute enough to the conversation that the professor will feel that it is a conversation or at least an interview, not a lecture.

“Where,” asks Greta, “do you feel your interest in children’s fiction came from?

The professor shakes her head. “Where do any of our interests come from? Where does your interest in children’s books come from?”

Greta says, “They always seemed the books that were most important to me. The ones that mattered. When I was a kid, and when I grew. I was like Dahl’s Matilda.… Were your family great readers?”

“Not really … I say that, it was a long time ago that they died. Were killed. I should say.”

“All your family died at the same time? Was this in the war?”

“No, dear. We were evacuees, in the war. This was in a train crash, several years after. I was not there.”

“Just like in Lewis’s Narnia books,” says Greta, and immediately feels like a fool, and an insensitive fool. “I’m sorry. That was a terrible thing to say, wasn’t it?”

“Was it, dear?”

Greta can feel herself blushing, and she says, “It’s just I remember that seq
uence so vividly. In The Last Battle. Where you learn there was a train crash on the way back to school, and everyone was killed. Except for Susan, of course.”

The professor says, “More tea, dear?” and Greta knows that she should leave the subject, but she says, “You know, that used to make me so angry.”

“What did, dear?”

“Susan. All the other kids go off to Paradise, and Susan can’t go. She’s no longer a friend of Narma because she’s too fond of lipsticks and nylons and invitations to parties. I even talked to my English teacher about it, about the problem of Susan, when I was twelve.”

She’ll leave the subject now, talk about the role of children’s fiction in creating the belief systems we adopt as adults, but the professor says “And tell me, dear, what did your teacher say?” “She said that even though Susan had refused Paradise then, she still had time while she lived to repent.”

“Repent what?”

“Not believing, I suppose. And the sin of Eve.”

The professor cuts herself a slice of chocolate cake. She seems to be remembering And then she says, “I doubt there was much opportunity for nylons and lipsticks after her family was killed. There certainly wasn’t for me. A little moneyless than one might imagine, from her parents’ estate, to lodge and feed her. No luxuries …”

“There must have been something else wrong with Susan,” says the young journalist, “something they didn’t tell us. Otherwise she wouldn’t have been damned like that, denied the Heaven of further up and further in. I mean, all the people she had ever cared for had gone on to their reward, in a world of magic and waterfalls and joy. And she was left behind.”

“I don’t know about the girl in the books,” says the professor, “but remaining behind would also have meant that she was available to identify her brothers’ and her little sister’s bodies. There were a lot of people dead in that crash. I was taken to a nearby school, it was the first day of term, and they had taken the bodies there. My older brother looked okay. Like he was asleep. The other two were a bit messier.”

“I suppose Susan would have seen their bodies, and thought, they’re on holidays now. The perfect school holidays. Romping in meadows with talking animals, world without end.”

“She might have done. I remember thinking what a great deal of damage a train can do, when it hits another train, to the people who were travelling. I suppose you’ve never had to identify a body, dear?”

“No.”

“That’s a blessing. I remember looking at them and thinking, What if I’m wrong, what if it’s not him after all? My younger brother was decapitated, you know. A god who would punish me for liking nylons and parties by making me walk through that school dining room, with the flies, to identify Ed, well … he’s enjoying himself a bit too much, isn’t he? Like a cat, getting the last ounce of enjoyment out of a mouse. Or a gram of enjoyment, I suppose it must be, these days. I don’t know, really.”

She trails off. And then, after some time, she says, “I’m sorry, dear. I don’t think I can do any more of this today. Perhaps if your editor gives me a ring, we can set a time to finish our conversation.”

Greta nods and says of course, and knows in her heart, with a peculiar finality, that they will talk no more.

That night, the professor climbs the stairs of her house, slowly, painstakingly, floor by floor. She takes sheets and blankets from the airing cupboard and makes up a bed in the spare bedroom, in the back. It is empty but for a wartime austerity dressing table, with a mirror and drawers, an oak bed, and a dusty applewood wardrobe, which contains only coat hangers and a dusty cardboard box. She places a vase on the dressing table, containing purple rhododendron flowers, sticky and vulgar.

She takes from the box in the wardrobe a plastic bag containing four old photographic albums. Then she climbs into the bed that was hers as a child, and lies there between the sheets, looking at the black and white photographs, and the sepia photographs, and the handful of unconvincing colour photographs. She looks at her brothers, and her sister, and her parents, and she wonders how they could have been that young, how anybody could have been that young.

After a while she notices that there are several children’s books beside the bed, which puzzles her slightly, because she does not believe she keeps books on the bedside table in that room. Nor, she decides, does she have a bedside table. On the top of the pile is an old paperback book it must be over forty years old: the price on the cover is in shillings. It shows a lion, and two girls twining a daisy chain into its mane.

The professor’s lips prickle with shock. And only then does she understand that she is dreaming, for she does not keep those books in the house. Beneath the paperback is a hardback, in its jacket, of a book that, in her dream, she has always wanted to read: Mary Poppins Brings in the Dawn, which P. L. Travers had never written while alive.

She picks it up and opens it to the middle, and reads the story waiting for her. Jane and Michael go with Mary Poppins on her day off, to Heaven, and they meet the boy Jesus, who is still slightly scared of Mary Poppins because she was once his nanny, and the Holy Ghost, who complains that he has not been able to get his sheet properly white since Mary Poppins left, and God the Father, who says, “There’s no making her do anything. Not her. She’s Mary Poppins.” “But you’re God,” said Jane. “You created every body and everything. They have to do what you say.”

“Not her,” said God the Father once again, and he scratched his golden beard flecked with white. “I didn’t create her. She’s Mary Poppins.”

And the professor stirs in her sleep, and dreams that she is reading her own obituary. It has been a good life, she thinks, as she reads it, discovering her life laid out in black and white. Everyone is there. Even the people she had forgotten.

Greta sleeps beside her boyfriend in a small flat in Camden, and she, too, is dreaming.

In the dream, the lion and the witch come down the hill together. She is standing on the battlefield, holding her sister’s hand. She looks up at the golden lion, and the burning amber of his eyes. “He’s not a tame lion, is be?” she whispers to her sister, and they shiver.

The witch looks at them all, then she turns to the lion and says, coldly, “I am satisfied with the terms of our agreement. You take the girls: for myself, I shall have the boys.”

She understands what must have happened, and she runs, but the beast is upon her before she has covered a dozen paces. The lion eats all of her except her head, in her dream. He leaves the head, and one of her hands, just as a house cat leaves the parts of a mouse it has no desire for, for later, or as a gift.

She wishes that he had eaten her head, then she would not have had to look. Dead eyelids cannot be closed, and she stares, unflinching, at the twisted thing her brothers have become. The great beast ate her little sister more slowly, and it seemed to her, with more relish and pleasure, than it had eaten her; but then, her little sister had always been its favourite.

The witch removes her white robes, revealing a body no less white, with high, small breasts, and nipples so dark, they are almost black. The witch lies back upon the grass, spreads her legs. Beneath her body, the grass becomes rimed with frost.

“Now,” she says.

The lion licks her white cleft with its pink tongue, until she can take no more of it, and she pulls its huge mouth to hers, and wraps her icy legs into its golden fur…

Being dead, the eyes in the head on the grass cannot look away.

Being dead, they miss nothing. And when they are done, sweaty and sticky and sated, only, then does the lion amble over to the head on the grass, and devour it in its huge mouth, crunching her skull in its powerful jaws, and it is then, only then, that she wakes.

Her heart is pounding. She tries to wake her boyfriend, but he snores and grunts, and will not rouse.

It’s true, Greta thinks, irrationally, in the darkness. She grew up. She carried on. She didn’t die…

She imagines the professor, waking in the night, and listening to the noises coming from the old applewood wardrobe in the corner: to the rustlings of all these gliding ghosts, which might be mistaken for the scurries of mice or rats, and to the padding of enormous velvet paws, and the distant, dangerous music of a hunting horn. She knows she is being ridiculous, although she will not be surprised when she reads of the professor’s demise. Death comes in the night, she thinks, before she returns to sleep. Like a lion. The white witch rides naked on the lion’s golden back. Its muzzle is spotted with fresh, scarlet blood. Then the vast pinkness of its tongue wipes around its face, and once more it is perfectly clean.

Wherefore in such efforts, O Chaldean ghouls,
Whiten ye the earth with the salt of your sweat?
—Therein we find ineffable pleasures always:
Odors of the ripe dead, and ancient spices,
Embalsam our sweat.


Mary Poppins Brings in the Dawn

 

Mary Poppins Brings in the Dawn, which P. L. Travers had never written while alive.

 Jane and Michael go with Mary Poppins on her day off, to Heaven,

 and they meet the boy Jesus, who is still slightly scared of Mary Poppins because she was once his nanny, 

and the Holy Ghost, who complains that he has not been able to get his sheet properly white since Mary Poppins left, 

and God the Father, who says, 

“There’s no making her do anything. Not her. She’s Mary Poppins.”

 “But you’re God,” said Jane. “You created every body and everything. They have to do what you say.”

“Not her,” said God the Father once again, and he scratched his golden beard flecked with white.

 “I didn’t create her. She’s Mary Poppins.”




 

The witch removes her white robes, revealing a body no less white, with high, small breasts, and nipples so dark, they are almost black. The witch lies back upon the grass, spreads her legs. Beneath her body, the grass becomes rimed with frost.

“Now,” she says.

The lion licks her white cleft with its pink tongue, until she can take no more of it, and she pulls its huge mouth to hers, and wraps her icy legs into its golden fur…


 

She finds herself staring at the horse’s penis, 

wondering about centaurs mating, 

imagines being kissed by that bearded face



 

Now all the mountains had been conquered and astronauts had walked in space. 

There were no more islands on earth—no matter how small—left to be discovered.



 

We always want to cast blame, something to fear and avoid. 

But the only thing to blame is everything. 

We often place blame because it's easier than taking responsibility. 

If you always look outward, you never have to turn inward.

 But progress only comes when you shine a light on yourself.

 What do you think? 

How do you feel? 


Ask the questions and the answers might surprise you.



 




 you have to know the rules in order to break them.

With time and experience, you learn all the caveats and exceptions.


 So you can break the rules but you better know what you're doing.

Doing the wrong thing for the right reason doesn't always pan out.

But it's not the end of the world.

Keep going.

Find a way.


One day, the stars will align.



 

In order to be designated a Level 1 Trauma Center, hospitals must meet a variety of requirements. They must maintain usable ORs within 15 minutes, employ a minimum number of certified specialists, and admit at least 1200 trauma patients a year. 

Hospitals in big cities pass the test easily. But the farther away you get, hospitals are Level 2, 3, even 4, and sometimes all they can do is transfer people to get the care they need and hope they hang on. 


No matter how remote you are or isolated you feel, there's hope.

 And help is usually closer than you think.

 It's not always easy to ask. 

But with a little courage, if you look, you'll find what you need. 

Your family, your friends, your community, lifting you up.



 

Before the 20th century, drug safety studies were not required. 

Narcotics were sold under the counter. 

Teething babies were given serums laced with morphine. A medicine for strep was made with anti-freeze. 

No one was responsible for distinguishing between medicine that heals and medicine that harmed. 

No one studied side effects or adverse reactions. 

All you could do was roll the dice. 

Recommendations, rules, guidelines.

 Ideally, they exist to save you from unnecessary pain. Have fun and stay safe while doing it. 

But rules only work if you follow them. 

But sometimes the rules you've been following turn out to be flawed. 

All bets are off. 

You're completely on your own.


 

In the 1940s, while stuck in bed with tuberculosis, biochemist Karl Link read a book on rodent control.

 Karl created a rat poison from an anticoagulant he'd discovered while trying, but failing, to treat sick cows. 

Later, a soldier trying to end his life ate Karl's rat poison, which, unexpectedly, helped lead to its use as a blood thinner in humans. 

From multiple failures, the compound warfarin was born, and it's been used to treat and save millions of people. 

Whether in science or life, the road to discovery is rarely a straight line. 

We take two steps forward, then fall three steps back. 

We veer off course and have to find our way back. 

Surprise detours lead us to unsuspected places. 


Places we never imagined were possible.



 

James Harrison, an Australian blood donor, was nicknamed the "Man with the Golden Arm."

 His blood contained the rare antibody necessary to make a life-saving medication: anti-D. 

Anti-D injections were given to pregnant mothers whose blood was incompatible with their unborn baby's. 

James donated over 1,000 times. 

What he could survive without saved over 2 million lives.

 What we find important to keep in our lives changes over time. 

Things break, hobbies age and dreams evolve. You learn from experience to narrow down what really matters.

 And who you want standing by your side at all times.


 And once you do, you hold on as tightly as you can.



 

The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite, 

and He bends you with His might 

that His arrows may go swift and far. 

Let your bending in the archer’s hand be for gladness; 

For even as He loves the arrow that flies, 

so He loves also the bow that is stable



Thursday, 4 June 2026

 

 insanity is the inability to communicate your ideas. 

It’s as if you were in a foreign country, able to see and understand everything that’s going on around you but incapable of explaining what you need to know or of being helped, 

because you don’t understand the language they speak there



Wednesday, 3 June 2026

 

 you can waste your life drawing lines

... or you can live your life crossing them


 

Even if you cannot change all the people around you,

 you can change the people you choose to be around


 

We were never being bored 

Because we were never being boring 


 

There is one who remembers the way to your door.


Life you may evade, 

but Death you shall not.


Tuesday, 2 June 2026

 

people become fascinated with pictures and words,

 and wind up forgetting the Language of the World


Monday, 1 June 2026

June

 












 

In early June 

the world of leaf and blade and flowers explodes, 

and every sunset is different



Summer

 If June was the beginning of a hopeful summer, and July the juice middle, August was suddenly feeling like the bitter end.


Summertime. It was a song. It was a season. I wondered if that season would ever live inside of me


Everything good, everything magical happens between the months of June and August


What good is the warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness


And so with the sunshine and the great bursts of leaves growing on the trees, just as things grow in fast movies, I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer



June

 

  • “June is the pearl of summer, shining with warmth and joy.” —L.M. Montgomery
  • “And since all this loveliness can not be Heaven, I know in my heart it is June.” —Abba Louisa Goold Woolson
  • “June is the gateway to summer.” —Jean Hersey
  • “June is a love song written by nature.” —Patience Strong
  • “There are two seasons when the leaves are in their glory, their green and perfect youth in June and their ripe old age.” —Henry David Thoreau
  • “If a June night could talk, it would probably boast it invented romance.” —Bernard Williams
  • “Spring being a tough act to follow, God created June.” —Al Bernstein
  •  “June has never looked more beautiful than she does now, unadorned and honest, vulnerable yet invincible.” —Marie Lu
  • “At midnight, in the month of June, I stand beneath the mystic moon.” —Edgar Allan Poe
  • “In early June the world of leaf and blade and flowers explodes, and every sunset is different.” —John Steinbeck

  • “It was June, and the world smelled of roses. The sunshine was like powdered gold over the grassy hillside.” —Maud Hart Lovelace
  • “June suns, you cannot store them.” —A.E. Housman
  • “I realized June had never been just a month.” —Sanober Khan
  • “To read a poem in January is as lovely as to go for a walk in June.” —Jean-Paul Sartre

  • “I wonder what it would be like to live in a world where it was always June.” —L.M. Montgomery
  • “If June was the beginning of a hopeful summer, and July the juice middle, August was suddenly feeling like the bitter end.” —Sarah Dessen
  • “Everything good, everything magical happens between the months of June and August.” —Jenny Ha

  • “And so with the sunshine and the great bursts of leaves growing on the trees, just as things grow in fast movies, I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.” —F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • “June is the time for dreams to take flight and soar into reality.” —Emma Racine de Fleur
  • “June is the time for being in the world in new ways, for throwing off the cold and dark spots of life.” —Joan D. Chittister
  • “And what is so rare as a day in June? Then, if ever, come perfect days.” —James Russell Lowell

  • “Green was the silence, wet was the light, the month of June trembled like a butterfly.” —Pablo Neruda
  • “Summer is a promissory note signed in June…” —Hal Borland
  • “It is the month of June, the month of leaves and roses, when pleasant sights salute the eyes and pleasant scents the noses.” —Nathaniel Parker Willis


June

 

Behold, now, where the pageant of high June
Halts in the glowing noon!
The trailing shadows rest on plain and hill;
The bannered hosts are still,
While over forest crown and mountain head
The azure tent is spread.



Now have come the shining days
When field and wood are robed anew,
And o'er the world a silver haze
Mingles the emerald with the blue.


Why was June made?—Can you guess?
June was made for happiness!
Even the trees
Know this, and the breeze
That loves to play
Outside all day,
And never is too bold or rough,
Like March's wind, but just a tiny blow's enough;
And all the fields know
This is so—
June was not made for wind and stress,
June was made for happiness;
Little happy daisy faces
Show it in the meadow places,
And they call out when I pass,
"Stay and play here in the grass."
June was made for happy things,
Boats and flowers, stars and wings,
Not for wind and stress,
June was made for happiness!



I gazed upon the glorious sky
And the green mountains round;
And thought, that when I came to lie
Within the silent ground,
'Twere pleasant, that in flowery June,
When brooks sent up a cheerful tune,
And groves a joyous sound,
The sexton's hand, my grave to make,
The rich, green mountain turf should break.



These things I remember
Of New England June,
Like a vivid day-dream
In the azure noon,
While one haunting figure
Strays through every scene,
Like the soul of beauty
Through her lost demesne.



White as a lily moulded of Earth's milk
That eve the moon bloomed in a hyacinth sky;
Soft in the gleaming glens the wind went by,
Faint as a phantom clothed in unseen silk:
Bright as a naiad's leap, from shine to shade
The runnel twinkled through the shaken brier;
Above the hills one long cloud, pulsed with fire,
Flashed like a great enchantment-welded blade.
And when the western sky seemed some weird land,
And night a witching spell at whose command
One sloping star fell green from heav'n; and deep
The warm rose opened for the moth to sleep;
Then she, consenting, laid her hands in his,
And lifted up her lips for their first kiss.




 June is the gateway to summer



 

At midnight, in the month of June, 

I stand beneath the mystic moon. 

An opiate vapor, dewy, dim, 

Exhales from out her golden rim, 

And, softly dripping, drop by drop,

 Upon the quiet mountain top


 

June is a love song written by nature


 

Forbearing the night
with its growing brilliance:
the summer moon.


 

June was not made for wind and stress,
June was made for happiness;


 

I wonder what it would be like to live in a world where it was always June.


 

June was made for happy things,
Boats and flowers, stars and wings,



 

June is the time for dreams to take flight and soar into reality


 

It was June, and the world smelled of roses. 

The sunshine was like powdered gold 

over the grassy hillside