Now, I'm not a photography freak and my skills are limited but I spotted this little canon last year and just fell in love!

With 14mp, 14x Optical Zoom and some manual control it certainly was an upgrade to my previous compact digital cameras. Like a shadow, I am rarely without my camera and I have been keen to develop my skills with the hope of taking some unique pictures so after much consideration I decided to spoil myself yesterday and bought it! *big grin!*

Watch my space for pictures of my experimentation...

The rustle of sheets
accompany the ensemble of clocks:
an echo of my emotions.

I toss and I turn,
The light slowly tickles my feet.
Smile, it begs.

Months pass,
days are swollen up in black holes-
unnoticed.

The creeks of the house gradually dim,
The moon shines her light upon the sleeping figures-
Her light exposes my red-rimmed eyes.

She transcends into my vaulted safe,
Her hooded eyes weep.

A movie plays through my mind,
Forgotten days of days spent together.
The cycle of life moves on…

© Heather R Ellis
March 2010

Today I found myself sitting in Ninewells and bored! ( My brother was seeing a doctor and I was the designated driver) So, like I often do when I get distracted,  I began to watch the people as they dashed, stomped and trudged by. People watching is something that fascinates me, watching how each one does certain things and how each react to another. Society is an interesting network of relationships, principles and beliefs. These are all key factors that socialise us in order to shape us into our perception of what society wants us to be.

Anyway, as you can expect a hospital holds a wide selection of people. There were the little old couples who were dressed up with their swaying skirts and bundled up in all their winter garments, the nurses who were swapping gossip on their break whilst trying to keep their crumbs off their tunics and the distressed relatives who are waiting on loved ones as they repeatedly glance up the corridors...

Then there are the medic students. Now, this group of people stands out, drawing my attention from the little old couple I was watching. Although like myself they are students armed with notepads and pens, they carry with them an air of superiority. Badges of pass swinging, the group strides in relentless pursuit of their career. Although any degree is competitive, Medicine is particularly competitive. And this group knew it. These students will be the future doctors and GPs of our cities, and it's rather nice to know that a) they have to know their facts or they would fail and b) that they, like me, did once start off as a student....

Our honeymoon. Nothing special, just a modern hut in a complex at Victoria Falls, where every morning we rose to the lilac rays of light falling across the red polished floor as the sun filtered through the Jacaranda trees. It was paradise: the beginning of our new life. We were staying at the cottage for a week, enjoying each others company before returning home to Salisbury where I would be packing up my possessions to move into our new home in Northern Rhodesia. The ten-hour drive to the breath taking sight had prevented me from ever seeing the falls previous to my honeymoon; it was our wedding present from my parents. The peacocks wandered towards us, their confidence hardly surprising when we had the braai going; I had already collected at least half a dozen of their glamorous feathers that were left stranded around the cottages from the local party. I wasn’t too fond of the gudos though, they had a tendency to surround me whilst I surrendered, forced to call on Jeremy, my clumsy knight, to rescue me. Our second meal as husband and wife was a traditional meal of steaming sadza with stew and marrow bones the size of a toddler’s fist, served with a bottle of chilled white wine. It was a pleasant week, but as the end loomed nearer I began to get flutters about the upcoming months’ trials…
James worked in the mines in Northern Rhodesia in Chingola, at the Nchanga Mines Open Pit and we would be starting our new life together in that area. At the young age of twenty-two I was well accustomed to the sheltered lifestyle of a fairly affluent family in a community I had lived my whole life. Next week, however, I would be migrating to an area entirely unknown to me. James reassured me that the women there were welcoming, describing our enticing new home. But the daunting event of moving still made me falter; would I cope in my new role? Packing up our belongings from the cottage, the houseboy loaded our bags into the car. His young eyes well accustomed to the arrival and departure of newly weds, brandishing bags heavier than most of his meagre possessions added together. Warmly smiling I awarded the child with a tip, his eyes glowing with gratitude, tatenda chikwashuro.
*
Dressed up in my navy linen suit, James and I drove to Chingola and our new life together. The six-hundred miles lead us to a foreign area, an isolated community of expats from all over. As we crossed the border into the country that was later to become known as Zambia, we pulled up along the road where James captured my youth as I stood in both Southern and North Rhodesia. The next time I would pass through the border the countries would be know as Rhodesia and Zambia. Passing through the town that was then known as Broken Hill, I wondered about my new home, with my new responsibilities as a wife. Idly, my mind questioned my ability to provide and make James pleased. Of course, I wasn’t going to suffer myself to merit his happiness but I would try at least. As we neared our new life the trees became denser, the road bumpier as we left the Great North Road. Parts of the ground slithered menacingly, thin waves hissing dangerously. I was a relatively outdoorsy person but those vindictive legless beasts could make me collapse just crossing my line of sight. Ian, my elder brother, frequently teased me and once tortured me with a dead one. He cut the lights, carelessly flung the limp body into my box room and shot a blank bullet outside my door. The echo created the illusion that I had been shot sending me into a fainting spell. Awakening I saw the long cadaver hanging over the bed, inches away from my exposed face. Screaming, my heart momentarily stopping, I passed out. Ian was severely punished for his devilish act, since then I panic at the simple thought of the deadly hiss and venomous fangs.
As the sun transcended the equator allowing the moon to fill the sky we drove into our new life. The electric lights flickered, declaring the community a modern imitation of the city life from which I had come. We had passed through some primitive towns on our way up where the few lights were run by generators. At least Nchanga was a modern mine, not the archaic village that I feared. My exhaustion level high, my energy seemingly siphoned by the car, I stumbled into my new home blind to its beauty and promise. Tomorrow I would explore, introduce, unpack, and set up my new residence….
*
Rising early to Jame’s soft snoring I began to acquaint myself with the house. As Mrs. Rowena Parker I was in charge of directing the servants-two maids, a cook, a gardener, and a houseboy- and handing out tasks. It was the lady of the house’s responsibility to manage the house, a role I was unaccustomed to. Isolated in the bush, with only the community to socialise with I was anxious of introducing myself badly. Stepping into the spacious kitchen, its floor icy on my naked feet I squinted into the half lit room, curious about the black puddle on the floor. A selous mongoose skittered out the room, its presence unnerving. Flicking the switch, I bathed the room in light, screaming as the puddle transformed into the deadliest African Snake, the rovambira. Thankfully the mongoose had killed the creature; otherwise I would have been instantly paralysed by the fifteen foot assassin, whose single bite would have killed me in a matter of hours. Welcome to the bush, home to even more murderers than the African city of my childhood.
As I adapted to my new surroundings and attended socials at the local hall I began to familiarise myself with marriage life. We had Scrabble nights at each others’ houses, shared stories of bad experiences with servants and riots and formed a bond to our neighbours who were experts at our new roles in society. Limited media coverage sheltered us from the riots and grenade attacks in major cities in Sothern Rhodesia, hiding us from the two legged killers. I learnt to control the household with the grace of years of experience, hosting small parties and discovering full independence. Being married to a mine worker provided me with opportunities to learn of cultures from distant countries, the chance to discover the simple joy of being one’s own person in a new world.
Married life was different to childhood and adolescence; it demanded stamina and perseverance as husband and wife learn to negotiate lifestyles. James and I passed its audition, surviving the civil wars of our country; the changes of government, saw Southern and Northern Rhodesia change their names as they divorced. We remained united, watching our faces age as we weakened. It was on our sixtieth anniversary that the bush overpowered civilisation and destroyed our seemingly eternal bond. James surprised me with a pair of diamond earrings whilst we were on our daily walk. Catching the moonlight they shimmered, lighting up my face. It was my fault, everyone always says that afterwards but in my case it was true. Brushing my silver hair behind my ear I knocked one earring from my ear-I hadn’t put the hoop in fully. The delicate gem jumped to the ground in murderous descend. Sneaking into a large pile of decaying leaves, the diamond twinkled teasingly.
“My earring, I’m sorry Jeremy.”
“It’s okay. Let me get it, it’s just leaves-“
His knees creaking he knelt over the bundle, smiling his contagious smile he pulled faces at the slime and faces drawing laughter from my frail lips. Giggling I playfully nudged his foot accidentally knocking him into the pile. He laughed, eyes lighting up. A black blur touched his arm knocking James to his back as the murderer indifferently slithered away.
*
That day James passed away, the venom had instantly paralysed him and within twelve hours killed him. Last week I went to the complex where we spent our honeymoon and said my last farewell to him as I sprinkled his ashes over the falls. His death was a turning point in my life, rather than flee from the legless beasts I had taken to standing boldly in their path determined to overcome my fear. James would have been proud.

Meanings
Chikwashur--miss                                    Rovambira--black mamba
Braa--barbeque                                          Sadza--a meal made out of maize
Gudos--baboons                                        Tatenda--thank-you

© Heather R Ellis
November 2009

2

All the others are together, only I remain.
Then I see you- and everything changes.
I’m bound to you by despair and hope,
I’m caged by magic, Fate’s cruel joke:
I can see but never touch.

Others discover my hidden truth,
Shake their heads with pity, their eyes mocking my attempts.
Why can’t they see that I’ve no choice-
To break my heart trying is easier than to do nothing.
My life is not mine to control:

Destiny is the captain of my ship,
The course was set when first I saw you.
His orders are clear to all-
Harsh, unjust, non-negotiable-
I can see but never touch.

The Sea shifts, Fate’s lover is near.
She softens, hope arises, this could be the day,
She caresses Destiny; he too is turning a blind eye,
Time torpedoes me to you, heart beating,
so close, I can feel your breath…..

Bang!

Wickedly the lovers laugh.
Arms embraced, as one, they mercilessly taunt me
Always will I be their hostage, they snigger
Gleefully reinstating my boundaries:
My life is not mine to control.

You wander past, barely a glance at my broken heart
Slowly I am giving up the fight.
Why fight when there is no chance of hope?
Puppet, that’s my name in the show presented by Destiny and Fate.
Come one and all to this circus that is me.

© Heather R Ellis
January 2009

Today the dam burst,
its wall crumbling
as the ladybird’s wings fluttered.

I am exposed.

Futile attempts to seal the cracks,
I rebuild the wall with a sponge.
But they see through the holes;
judging.

As soon as I knew
a protective barrier encircled.
The quakes come now,
their pressure forces the shield to erode.

The sand blows away,
dissolving my mask.
I stand alone.
Vulnerable
when the others come,
with their concerned flood of emotions.
I try to tell them, but

My teeth weld shut,
my tongue freezes over,
drowning the words in ice.

Others survive the ceremony of goodbyes,
why can’t I?
It’s only a natural disaster,
The cycle of life.

My broken mind erases the day,
the pain eventually subsides.
Unnoticed,
the pressure gauge builds up.

© Heather R Ellis
December 2009

Light but darker,
green or blue,
the pull of seduction enthrals me.

His muscles ripple, his voice lures me-
temptation struggles with guilt,
dreams laced with infidelity.
I do not deserve his love.

Internal wars blossom,
what are the consequences?

Embraced by one, yet drawn to him.
He loyally waits, he watches…
I attack.

I mark my territory, the animal is released.
Sensations explode-
I am helpless to my desires.
I have to help him, whatever the cost.

Flirtatious greetings…
public displays of faux distance.

Privately the ram tops the knowing ewe.

The flip of the coin decides.

© Heather R Ellis
February 2010

I walk to the isolated ice hole and
jump, the air freezing the pain.

This land is my own.
I am Queen of this frozen wasteland.

The steps to freedom are invisible-
Slippery and scheming they taunt me.
It’s my fault I confess,

Get over him they reply.
The echo listens, talks, cries-
Dissolves.

A week passes, a month, a year.
His memory subsides, my heart flickers-
Coughs, and dies.

His voice lures me,
drawing me in
staining my skin-

I am branded.
He is my master.
Always, obedient and loyal.

This is my home,
My life and heart.
He is Hades.

© Heather R Ellis
December 2009

Chess with Callum,
Scrabble for me,
A quick laugh and joke in between,
My loving and attentive father.

Flowers and cookies just because,
Lifts to friends and clubs,
Nothing was too much for him when I asked
My selfless and adoring father.

Kites, fishing and endless cards for Callum,
Sitcoms he hated but I loved,
Frequent random questions always diligently answered
He was my compassionate and devoted father.

Spontaneous treats,
Supportive eagerness to help me study,
Dedicated attendance at all school functions
My loyal and dutiful father.

Hugs and kisses when needed
Always he was there:
3.39 on the dot,
My proud and caring father.

Happy memories of days well spent,
Of quiet, secret expressions of his devotions,
A life well spent,
His legacy will live on in the tears of joy he left behind.
My proud and caring father.

© Heather R Ellis
March 2009

Wisps of blond hair,
his entrance a spark of heat-
he twists the tapestry of those in his path.
A Machiavellian nature creates hallucinations,
self-assurance rises-
a myth is born.

Stamps of suppressed fury,
eyes corrupting initially insignificant scenes.
She walks to him,
each step exiles her further-
she kisses his deadly lips,
the poisonous pact is complete.
He is her owner;
the slave master of her emotions.

With a temporary loosened lead she flies,
a glimmer of her previous sparkle is seen.
A past acquaintance smiles-
but jerked into place by the faux altruistic character, she reflects distaste;
the broken mirror in the funhouse.

Negativity is a virus, fed by the suspicious minds.

The sugary pestilence
seeps into her mind, the puppet master-
creator of malicious havoc gleefully gloats.
Sought after for motiveless destruction,
he charms those he needs.

He is Iago.

© Heather R Ellis
March 2010