http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber4
Covid-19 has been stressful for everyone, no less so for young people, free spirits who feel trapped by various degrees of lockdown imposed around the world. While most young people find creative ways of dealing with stress, tragically some turn to drugs.
This poem first appeared on the
blog in 2014, and can still be found in my gay-interest poetry blog
archives. Although feedback suggests
that few straight readers visit my gay blog, yet again someone who describes
himself as a “regular reader of all three blogs” has asked me to post a poem
here that he found there while browsing. It appears that this reader's brother died
from an accidental drug overdose only a few years ago, after being encouraged
by a group of ‘friends’ to try a heroin fix; he was just 21 years-old.
I once had a friend who became a
heroin addict in his late teens and died from an overdose in 1967.
My friend was 22 and happened to be
gay, but same sex relationships were illegal in those days and the stress this put him under was almost certainly a contributory factor. Drug abuse is a tragedy for too many young people - gay, straight,
male, female, from all kinds of backgrounds - and there is still an element of 'taboo' preventing them accessing help. Now, I can’t say I'm particularly enamoured with old age (I will be 75 later this year) but I make the most of each day as it comes, and am glad to be alive to tell the tale.
I felt compelled to write this poem years ago, in remembrance of a great guy who took a wrong turning and was found
lying in a gutter one day ...
Tragically, there are still those to
whom taking hard drugs is socially acceptable, a trait encouraged by a drugs-friendly
celebrity culture frequently in the media spotlight and setting an appalling
example.
BETWEEN FRIENDS or SHADES
OF LIGHT AND DARK
Under a halo of sudden light,
a familiar figure beckons;
looks, sure to win the Devil over;
designer gear any angel would give
their wings for
Laugher lines in the classic brow,
enigmatic poise teasing me
even now as into the clinging dew,
I run barefoot,
hug anew this pouting saint
to a sobbing breast…
Laughter, through tears for years
parted,
broken hearted…
Catching my breath, no nearer it
seems
to this golden-haired god
in jeans I’ve borrowed times
before,
reaching out a hand,
indulging me a bitter-sweet smile
that means so much I’d give my all
to touch…
Lark into dawn skies, vanished;
a bitter-sweet song,
no listener (ever) left unpunished;
lives as fresh and hopeful as
spring rain
till you tried heroin
[From: Love and Human
Remains (under the title, Between Friends) by R. N.
Taber, Assembly Books, 2000]