- Light Switch: Write about coming out of the dark and seeing the light.
It descends, it does. Slow and gentle-like. Lay yourself flat in the grass, with the sun bright overhead, with the clouds gone all puffy like little bunny-rabbits and shreds of white against the blue. Let your mum lift the sheet over you. The way she waves it from bottom to top in a sure flick of her wrist, now that's how it is. The way the white cotton undulates -- now there's a word, proud of myself for that one -- in slow motion, with the bright sun a bright barely yellow disk up behind it as it moves. The shadows play across your face too, rising and falling and falling with the breeze of the fabric to kiss your nose, right there. That's how it comes down, so soft you hardly ever know it's there until it kisses your nose. When you take in that breath and catch the scent of a warm summer day from the washing hung out, and you know you'll still find it hiding there when you bury your face in that sheet in your own bed... that's what breathing it in feels like, too. She's laughing, your mum. Real quiet-like, laughing from the joy of knowing you're there, laughing because you're laughing, and isn't it all the better for the two of you together. You can close your eyes when she settles down on top of the sheet next to you, separated by that slip of cloth. Her breath says she's there, you can hear it now, can't you, and you know she's looking at the shape of you, the child, her child, pretending to hide under the sheet. You'll pull yourself out in a second to say boo, and won't she play-pretend she's surprised then, she will. That golden moment, that's what it is. They ask me what I'll pay and the answer is anything and everything, just to have that moment back again.