Vertigo: My Strange Bedfellow
I sit here, staring at my webcam,
Under blue skies stretched above.
The mercury rests below ten degrees;
Spring is blooming, indifferent and cold.
Yet I remain, a silent observer, Watching the world go by from the glass.
Vertigo is a strange bedfellow.
It arrived as a souvenir from Rome—
Now I long for that Italian realm,
The golden light, the warmth, the Buongiorno.
Yet here I am, anchored in the Manor,
Sizzling and fading in the sudden glare;
The sun is a weight too heavy to bear.
Pavements tilt and the traffic spins dizzy.
Vertigo is a strange bedfellow.
I read, I write, I repair my life,
Clearing the clutter, one byte at a time.
It is a quiet ache, this restriction—
Physically mobile, yet visually bound.
Vertigo is a strange bedfellow.
So I will wait for the velvet of dusk,
Before I dare to emerge from the hall—
Unfolding my wings like a bat in the Spring,
Finding my balance when the shadows fall.
Comments
Post a Comment