The Second Coming in Cathcart Road

statue of a woman with two children by her side

Turning and turning in the streets of Govanhill, I can hardly hear a thing.

Not Falcon Terrace in Maryhill, nor Falcon Court in Newton Mearns.

Things fall apart, the centre cannot hold, but if I fix the boiler and sort the floorboards I can worry about the plasterwork later.

New windows, new radiators, full re-wire too.

Surely some revelation is at hand.

Surely the Second Coming is at hand.

Keep walking, round and round, lacking conviction, passionate intensity. 

Mad Tracy with lion body and the head of a man.

Rab fae Torrisdale Street, gaze blank and pitiless as the sun.

Watch me go as I slouch towards Bowman Street to be born.

Apologies, Yeats.

Back to stony sleep.

Cheers.

Less than real

section from a stained glass window, showing the back of two figures and an industrial worker in foreground

We don’t remember the past, we only imagine it.

Paint pictures, tell stories, sing songs, of someone, somewhere, at some point in time.

But which memories are important, what past do we remember, whose lives matter?

Our heads used to be full of future possibilities. Mine was, anyway.

What’s for tea, how long till pay day, three points on Saturday. How history repeats itself, first as tragedy then as farce.

Now we sit at home and think of things we used to do and look forward to doing them again.

The future will take care of itself as long as we take care of the past. It’s all we have, the past.

Imagine an industrial heyday, a city once the fourth largest in Europe after London, Paris and Berlin. A quarter of the world’s ships launched on this very river.

City of industry, heavy industry, with factories and docks and foundries, steel mills, gasworks and chemical plants. River of two hundred ship yards, of tug boats, warships, cruise liners and titan cranes. City of soot and smoke and heat, city of noise.

Screaming weans and women at windows shouting at men in crowded streets or voices raised in rowdy pubs or football grounds or music halls, on railway platforms and subway carriages or at the top the bus, all the way home.

That was a place, once upon a time, in the long ago.

Derelict brick buildings, covered in graffiti

But sometimes history speeds up, sometimes you wake one morning to find a city destroyed overnight.

Closed factories, abandoned buildings, vast acres of empty land.

There used to be places where there aren’t any now.

A hollow city, city of ghosts, people and communities demolished.

No more units of work and place and of who we are.

The visible carnage of rotting wood and dead masonry, burned-out holes in the ground. Invisible carnage of contaminated land, chromium, cyanide wasteland.

Weeds as high as trees, rats the size of dogs, black water lapping against stained walls.

That was a place, that derelict place. City of fog and thunder. Gale force winds again. Good later, not now.

The empty self is at home in this dead place.

Glass frontage of a modern office block

But new places can be built, new cities can appear, less than before and less than real.

Places of industry become places of consumption. Retail park shopping centre drive-thru strip malls.

Or affordable housing, maybe a bus garage, a new campus for a rebranded further education college.

A city of digital and finance and creatives and tourism. A low carbon, high-quality, cost effective location. A great place to live, work and invest.

Maybe that’s what Govanhill is now. An innovative place, whose people make it. Maybe that’s how we were invented.

Because we know better than anyone how things can change.

Remember the demonisation of Govanhill, the fear and loathing, when no one loved us and we hated ourselves?

Look at us now. Creative hub, development trusts, social enterprises, gentrification, the coolest place in the UK. 

A city of darkness moving into the light, is that it?

We were never sustainable before. Not white enough, or vegan enough, and far too working class.

Thank goodness being so poor made everything so cheap so the right type of person could move here.

Why not Bidgeton or Yoker, even Clydebank or Greenock? They might be innovative places too. Springburn, Rutherglen, Parkhead. Post-industrial, cosmopolitan, inexpensive.

Our story is the story of a city, a city longer and wider and deeper than anyone understands.

City of the past, a famous past, an illustrious past.

Slums, poverty, illness, alcoholism, violence, death.

We love you, the past. Don’t leave us, the past.

Cheers, mother Glasgow. You too, Govanhill.

Always changing, always the same.

empty street with rail bridges overhead

Every city has its wilderness, even a new city.

Places no one goes, paintings no one paints, sounds you never listen to, stories we won’t tell.

A city no one imagines. City of dust, of vacant land under motorway bridges, disused railway lines near the waterfront, empty spaces which used to be more.

Sometimes land for future use, perhaps a retail opportunity yet to be fulfilled.

Non places which are always around. Forgotten parts of an invisible city.

You can still walk in these places, though you’re really not supposed to, past light industrial units or garage forecourts, muffled engine exhaust fumes from somewhere overhead.

Wholesale cash and carry warehouse, car tool hardware stock room.

But no one belongs here and nothing much happens.

Can I help you?

Leave me alone.

You can’t go in there.

Wasn’t going to.

You shouldn’t be here.

I know.

Everyone is a non person in this non place.

So you keep walking. A scratchy path and gravel underfoot, a fence with a razor wire crown.

The tracks of other wildlife, fag ends and crisp pokes, even droppings. Invading undergrowth reclaiming concrete, weeds growing from walls.

And then you sit down, open a can and start to meditate, contemplate, listen to the music of the non place.

It might be repetitive, monotonous, like a passing train or an industrial drill.

Bury yourself in that distant ever-present rumble.

It might be the sound of the past, ghosts of the past, a forgotten place in an invented imagination.

A hollow city, phantom city, zero miles, becoming gone.

The silence of the past.

The sound of empty rooms and deserted streets.

A past and a future running away from us.

colourful abstract mural featuring human shapes

But now. Now. Everywhere is a non place now and everyone a non person, an almost person hiding at home from what can’t be seen.

We look through our windows at half places, frozen and empty. Closed places which won’t re-open, more abandoned, emptier still.

Maybe we walk from room to room, flitting round the house in our bare feet, hair sprouting, clothes unwashed.

Time doesn’t pass in this place, might not exist at all round here.

Black clock, dead hours, un time in a non place.

The drinking, insomnia, desperation, mental violence.

Everyone sounds like such a prick on social media too but it’s the only thing there is, the only place we exist, along with the past.

Wherever you are, Govanhill or Madagascar, Mesopotamia or Andromeda, Narnia, Zion, or Never fucking Everland, the past is all you have left.

So you think back to the good times, your best times, when you went places, met people, did things.

Paint that picture, sing that song, listen to the stories you tell yourself.

Young, good looking, unstoppable you. Confident, upbeat, employable you. Maximum you. Telling it like it is-slash-was.

And as you sit and remember and think of that time the past pulls you back to the present, the here and the now at the centre of you, the stillness and silence and the emptiness there.  

Half a person, less than real.

Staring at the wall, drinking too much, tired all day, not sleeping at night.

But if history repeats itself, first as tragedy, then as farce, then what went around might come back again.

Fingers crossed, Govanhill.

The future will be colder, warmer too.

Ballistics will go ballistic

A 'stand here' sign on a pavement to help social distancing

So I was with my brother in Paddy Neeson’s and I might have been dreaming but I can’t really remember.

Maybe it was the Victoria, or the Café or the Hampden, there’s so many around here.

Penny Farthing, Star Bar, Bell Jar, they’re everywhere.

Heraghty’s, Rum Shack, Allison Arms, know what I mean?

Titwood, Prince Regent, the Bungo, there’s only so much you can take.

Or maybe it was somewhere that’s no longer there, like Kelly’s, Sammy Dow’s or McNee’s.

The Albert, Maxwell Arms, Pandora, remember?

Or even the Govanhill Bar, which was really in the Gorbals.

Wherever it was, we might have been there and we might have been talking that way brothers do.

Got any painkillers?

Nah.

Bastard.

I know.

I think it was my brother, but I wasn’t really sure. He was keeping his distance so I could hardly make him out, you know how it is when you’re asleep or you’re drunk.

You look like a chalk outline.

Like a dead body at a crime scene?

Aye. You’d better get the results to the lab.

The DA will be on my back.

Ballistics will go ballistic.

We both laughed and were getting up to leave when I saw a fat bluebottle throwing itself at the window again and again.

I thought these dafties had six pairs of eyes, but I went over and opened the window anyway.

Here’s your chance, big world out there, go wherever you want.

But it stayed on the inside, banging its head on the glass.

Remember, Govanhill. It might have been a dream.

Cheers.

Daddy, Haystacks, Nagasaki

A person dressed in black sitting on a couch with a hat pulled down over their face

So I was sitting at home keeping my distance, staying indoors, not going outside.

Thought I’d put on a mask, help keep me isolated from my own face and head.

Kendo Nagasaki himself would be proud.

You’d wear a mask too, if you were me. You know you would.

At least there’s no chance of me looking in the mirror now. Wouldn’t see much if I did.

I don’t trust mirrors, with their double meanings, twisted reality and sleight of hand.

There’s one in the bathroom. I don’t like the infinity of it, that something so small contains the whole world, the universe reflected in just one piece of glass.

Plus it makes me look like I have a fat belly and a tiny cock.

I remember cutting my own hair the night this photo was taken.

Didn’t even have to take off the mask, just worked round it, bowl-cut style.

Lost the end of my beard at the front and the tip of my pigtail at the back.

It was a good night, a Saturday night, and I might have been drunk but I can’t really remember.

I was taking a break from learning a language and baking a cake and practising yoga on the mantlepiece.

Alone in the kitchen, cans from the fridge, the sun was shining, even indoors.

New hip hair, haystack affair, high heels on. Wrestler’s trunks, light strappy dress, don’t need a mirror to make you do your best.

No time like the present, no place like home, it’s all we can do.

Here we fucking go, Govanhill. Cheers!

Turns out I pure love you all

very blurred and put of focus picture of people in a row

Brothers are great, aren’t they? Sisters too. Parents and that.

I know I said some things before about my brothers. How it’s like listening to my own stupid self all the time, how I can’t live with them, can’t live with them.

Turns out I was only joking, lads.

Turns out I pure love you all. I love you to bits, so I do.

O brothers, where art thou? Stuck in the hoose, like everybody else.

Take care, you complete set of bastards. Stay indoors, wash your hands, stand two metres apart, and will you stop talking shite for one second and get a round in please?

Oops. Thinking about the past there, back when we were together, having a drink, down the pub.

It’s hard not to think about the past, isn’t it? It’s all we have. We know there’ll be a future – there must be – but the past is much clearer, much easier to see.

Naw, Willie O’Neill was the thirteenth Lisbon Lion no big Yogi, okay, get a grip.

Sorry, there I go again, looking back to the old days, the good old days, a happier time, a simpler time.

You can’t help it. You think back to things that are gone and wonder if you’ll ever see them again and then you think of course you will, you know you will.

Anyway, never mind all this bollocks, where’s that twenty quid you owe me? 

See? Business arse usual.

Told ye, Govanhill.

Cheerio.

This pish used to write itself

close up of a lilac flower

So I’ve been writing this blog for about a hundred years and I’ve seen a lot of changes over that time.

World wars, moon landings, vegan sausage rolls.

But not this. No one’s ever seen anything like this.

Think I might need to shake up the blog in these difficult times.

This pish used to write itself. Not any more.

I need to raise my game, improve the standard, step up to the mark.

More dramatic openings, for a start.

Once upon a time.

Woke up this morning.

It was a dark and stormy night.

Maybe some kind of cliff hanger or weighty dilemma faced by the main protagonist, ie me.

Lentils or barley, White Lightning or Eldorado, Lionel Messi or Henrik Larsson.

Larsson, obviously, but the point is I could still do with well-rounded characters, sharp dialogue and a consistent sequence of events.

Maybe I should bring in a grizzled detective, a maverick cop who doesn’t play by the rules but who gets results.

Recovering alcoholic, probably. Still in love with his ex-wife.

Make it all like a rollercoaster where you fasten your seatbelt and enjoy the ride.

So, aye. Good luck with that, me.

Anyway. Your rubbish football team, those bloody roadworks, strolling hipsters who get on your tits, none of them matter any more.

Now it’s your future, my future, the nature of love and the foundations of the universe.

So, aye. Cheers, Govanhill.

Govanhill will

close-up of empty cans of beer

I often feel there’s something missing in my life, something I lack.

I don’t want that to be cans.

So I started panic buying years ago. Not because there’s a shortage of cans, just a shortage of time in which to drink the cans. I don’t want to take the risk.

But I’m only drinking as much as is sensible, of course.

I am a responsible adult, after all.

I’ll know when I’ve had enough.

Until then, there might not be any toilet paper but don’t worry, there’s sixty cans in the fridge. Whisky, rum, vodka, gin, tonic wine too.

No, I don’t have fifteen bananas or eight loaves of bread but I’m sure there’s some kind of peach schnapps thing back there. Probably Ouzo as well. Cointreau, Tia Maria, Midori. Must-haves, all of them. And what’s that coconut one again? Aye, Malibu. Classy.

Anyway. I only drink to keep myself safe.

And the best way to do that is by getting drunk, instead of being drunk.

Getting drunk, you know what I mean, the best part, the bubbly part, the first, second or third. Loosening tongue, flush in the cheeks, fresh air in your head.

Better than being drunk, the clumsy part, when your eyes have gone and your balance is gone and you repeat yourself over and over, again and again.

So keep on becoming and it might start being better or it might stay the same or it might not be either, but whatever goes on it will come to an end then we’ll think about starting all over again.

Let you know, Govanhill, but we will, Govanhill, cheers.

That front door is going nowhere

a mural in govanhill of singer Scott Hutchison

It’s still there, the outside world. I know it is. It must be.

There are murals out there, like these ones, on the streets of Govanhill.

Paintings on gable ends, the side of buildings, underneath a bridge.

Colour, imagination, messages of hope and wonder and a future we can believe in.

mural in govanhill of a village in India

Sometimes I like to paint murals on the walls of my flat.

I might be seeking enlightenment or practising mindfulness, or we might have lost another late goal at home and dropped two more points in the league.

Or I might just have been pished one night and got tore in with the felt tip pens.

You know what it’s like. We’ve all been there.

Helps hide the gravy stains down the wallpaper and curry sauce on the skirting boards too.

mural in govanhill, hip hop style

I tried drawing a map on the floor once, an easy-to-follow guide for the mice, with arrows and directions and clear signposting all the way to the traps in the kitchen.

But it didn’t work. Their knowledge of cartography was poor, they blatantly ignored stop signals, didn’t even know their left from their right. Idiots.

two abstract murals in govanhill

But the longer I stay at home, the less likely I am to find my way from the couch to the front door.

It’s still there, the front door. I know it is. It must be.

Buried behind mattresses, old newspapers, fax machines and computer monitors, or underneath garden equipment, stray dogs, a wheelbarrow, a tumble drier, a motorbike, probably a forklift and has anyone seen my glasses?

We’ll find that door. I know we will. We have to.

Cheers, Govanhill.

You are not alone and you are not unique

A nice historic building in Govanhill with some tenements in the background

A man who doesn’t spend time with his family can never be a real man.

So said Mary Queen of Scots or Darth Vader or Saint Paul in his letter to the Romans or Vito Corleone or whatever.

Me, I have my brothers. I share everything with my brothers. Facial expressions, character flaws, personality defects.

I love them, love them like brothers in fact, but it’s like listening to my own stupid self all the time.

I get enough of the mood swings from me, don’t need it from that mob too.

Can’t live with them, can’t live with them.

But it makes me perfect for staying in Govanhill.

Coming from a big family means I’m used to lots of strange people hanging around and saying things I don’t understand.

We remember bin strikes too, piles of rubbish two storeys high, so the odd black bag on a pavement in Govanhill is fine.

Grew up with multinational neighbours, made a lot of noise when we were kids and had nowhere else to hang out but the streets.

So remember, Govanhill. You are not alone and you are not unique.

You are part of a city, a big city, bigger than it looks, with the crunchy and the gallus and the loud and the drunk.

We are not exceptional. Things just seem to change faster round here, that’s all.

Cheers Pollokshaws east, Pollokshields west, Cathcart circle, Queens Park (Glasgow).

Margaret Thatcher and her union jack nipple tassles

tenements in Govanhill and a nice blue sky

So I was with my brother in the Victoria Bar and we might have been drunk but I can’t really remember.

I was telling him how Govanhill was Scotland’s most diverse neighbourhood, home to a wide variety of people from pure everywhere.

Johnny Cash, Malcolm X, Germaine Greer, Mahatma Gandhi, Siouxsie Sioux all come from round these parts.

He told me to stop talking shite but I said it’s true, I’m telling you.

You see famous people in Govanhill all the time. Muhammad Ali, Michelangelo, Eminem. That’s just the Ms. Don’t start me on the Ps. Penelope Pitstop, Pablo Picasso, Pelvis Presley.

Pol Pot?

No. He was from Queen’s Park or Langside or the Bungo. So was Vlad the Impaler, Adolf Hitler, Donald Trump and Cliff Richard.

Margaret Thatcher?

Aye. Her too. Apparently she got the jail one night for taking her tap aff at the old Cladda club and shaking her union jack nipple tassles. I know, I could hardly believe it myself when I made it up at first.

They say Rabbie Burns once had a shite in Govanhill too. He invented Burns suppers. Or was it haggis suppers? I can never remember. I know he wrote I Belong to Govanhill, though. Or was it My Old Man’s a Dustman?

Anyway, when you get a couple of drinks on a Saturday Govanhill belongs to him.

How pished are you?

This much.

It’s your round, Govanhill.

Cheers.