Attends LGBT+ poetry competition at the Green School and shares the winning poem
LGBT+ poetry is not my specialist subject in any respect,  but I was very pleased I attended the event. A really excellent short speech  from a L schoolgirl from the Green School, who I believe has won awards and she  certainly belied her young age – 14 I think – with a really assured, mature and  captivating speech.
        
5 poems were shortlisted and all were good, as far as this  very poorly qualified listener could ascertain as they were recited by the  authors, but the winning poem was really moving, referring to a young gay  friend of the poet who took his own life, and a very worthy winner written and  (only partly, worst luck) recited by 25 year old Patsy Fryer:
closet  killer
        
        out. in.
        why the hell does it matter?
        love is love they say
        so why should it matter
        how I label myself?
        gay,
        bi, straight, 
        'she swings both ways' they say
        but why should it matter who I  date? 
        wrapped in the arms of a man
        add a wo, it's the same feeling.
        arms are still arms
        and safety and home are still
        safety and home,
        regardless of what sits underneath
        the clothes 
        of the person
        that's healing,
        all the empty parts of my  heart. 
        as I lay my head on their chest,
        or on their breast,
        the echo of their beating life  ripples 
        through my soul at a hundred miles
        per hour...
        it is the exact same.
        if I closed my eyes
        and either of them placed  their 
        lips upon my lips,
        or their hands on my hips,
        how would I know
        who was a woman or a man? 
        the only thing I can
        say is, the after glow 
        and tingle of their lips leaving  mine
        would feel the same. 
        love is love.
        under the skin 
        of each person I see is a soul of  an
        endless story waiting to be  read. 
        waiting to be lived and shared.
        and loved.
        whether black, white, brown,
        however people identify the  pigmentation of people's exterior 
        that they undecided to  grow into, why 
        should it matter?
        nothing defies love.
        nothing should matter when it  comes
        to love. 
        but we as a society are so  concerned
        with labels,
        so we can fit into a box
        and be locked 
        inside preconceived ideas 
        and expectations
        and reflections
        and then worst of all...  rejection.
        why does it matter 
        whoever in this world
        can make you smile,
        make your world spin when you  didn't
        even want it to spin at all, 
        recovers your landing
        every single time you fall,
        WHY? DOES? THIS? MATTER? 
        love is the one thing that  survives of 
        us when we're gone,
        so why can't it automatically be  accepted? 
        why are kids 
        cutting themselves
        drugging themselves
        hating themselves 
        even KILLING THEMSELVES...
        just for the fear of simply being  rejected,
        for an emotion towards a certain
        someone that is out of their the  control.
        something is seriously wrong.
        the tracks of my tears
        and the tracks of my scars, on my  arms
        tell a story of how I was the  lucky
        one 
        who learned to love herself
        enough to come so far,
        to love endlessly.
        in. out.
        life shouldn't be about
        having to label yourself
        and come out
        to cure the doubts of those
        who questioned who you are.
        I love who I love.
        love who you love. 
        love secretly.
        love openly.
        don't deny yourself of happiness
        in the fear of being judged,
        because honestly 
        it doesn't matter who it's from,
        there is no better feeling than  being loved.
I hope I don’t breach copyright by reproducing it here, and  I hope it’s not too much culture for my reader(s) who are used to more mundane  fare. Anyway, it moved me again re-reading it so I hope it moves others too.
        
        Leaving West Thames College I went to untether Pegasus from  the railings and found someone had been interfering with his saddlebag. The  Sainsbury’s bag I keep there to keep my bum dry when the saddle’s wet was  hanging out of the pannier, and it turned out that Osterley’s answer to Ronald  Biggs had nicked the other bag in which I keep a spare inner tube (cost ~£3,  resale value ~1p) and tyre levers (cost ~£3, resale value ~2p). I hope he has a  generous fence. I was moved to write to the 55th Mayor of Hounslow  to ask what he was going to do to protect us sensitive Brentonians when we  venture forth into the barbarian wilderness that is Osterley and Spring Grove.
        
        As it happened, we had the Brentford Police Panel that  evening, ably chaired by the Cock of Hen Corner, Andy Ward. Ok, that could be  misinterpreted. The public spirited and very capable husband of the equally  valued leader of Hen Corner :D.  I was therefore able to bemoan my status as a victim of heinous crime to the  local cops  and they restrained  themselves from saying ‘what were you THINKING, going to OSG without a  bodyguard?’ I decided not to apply for compensation from the review body as a  young man from the Brentford FC Community Trust generously donated a set of  tyre levers he happened to have in his pocket. I examined them closely, but  they were not the ones nicked earlier. Anyway we have crime here and there and  around and about (I’ve been reading Damon Runyon) and we identified one  particular hotspot for the boys in blue to target, but there is nothing  especially worrying in the ward at present. People had witnessed some crimes  actually being committed and the cops stressed – just dial 999 in those  circumstances.
        
      On Friday morning I set out, a little late, for Vicarage  Farm Road in Heston where we were carrying out one of our joint enforcement  days  with Hounslow Highways, Recycle360  and enforcement teams. Phone rang outside Brentford library and it was Genghis  Todd himself. Together with Steve Curran he had finally managed to persuade the  homeless party who had  been the subject  of a lot of attention from the local community and about whom I wrote a couple  of weeks ago to go into Hounslow House and get help from the council. The  upshot is they are no longer homeless on the street, and it’s an example of how  the community can pull together – the local community, local councillors and  even Conservatives from Chiswick – can work together to bring about something  really good that really matters. Gives a good feeling, even if Steve Curran  remarked that if I had any charm about me the problem would have been solved a  week earlier: let’s hope that one life has really turned around. Sadly, I  spotted a new rough sleeper yesterday and Steve C reported 2 of them. The  council will house them at least temporarily, if they are willing – if you see  someone report the sighting to Street Link. 
Anyway, the phone call meant I was a bit late to catch the enforcement event but I did see Hounslow Highways pothole team doing a temporary fix to the carriageway in Vicarage Farm Road with steaming new tarmac (and making people grumpy because there were temp traffic lights. Can’t win!). They’ll have to close the road and divert buses to do a permanent fix.
 
             Saturday morning I’m a couple of minutes late for my surgery  at the library and there are 4 people waiting – a record. Of course The  Melvinator gets Real Madrid type gates at his surgeries at the Mission Hall but  I’m usually lucky to get one. Turns out two of them are from Syon Ward: people  who live in Brentford who mistakenly believe they live in Brentford. I must not  talk about the idiocy of the Boundary Commission who have made the situation  even more idiotic from 2022 so I’ll shut up now. Slaps himself. Anyway, a parking  issue, a benefits/council tax issue, a street scene issue and a Freedom Pass  issue, the winter of their discontent, hopefully made glorious summer by this  son of the Wirral (probably not).
       
        I had cancelled my planned litter pick, partly because of  Storm Dennis and partly because I’d forgotten to publicise it, and we again  decided not to go through with our canvass so another quiet coffee in Rada, who  I was pleased to hear are no longer having ASB problems.
       On Monday morning, down to the Watermans centre to meet with  a consultant who is preparing evidence for the public enquiry due in April into  the Watermans relocation. He is a quite prominent person in the arts world and  a former senior officer of the Arts Council, and was earlier a writer and  director of plays and opera. I explain that I think Watermans is really  important to Brentford and should be a central component of the spirit of the  place as it regenerates. Moving it from the riverside is controversial but in  the town centre the café would likely not be completely deserted on a Monday  morning as it was, and other people than me would mosey in to look at the  exhibition.
       
       The present exhibition is about online dating and you have  to be over 16 to go behind the curtain (I qualify, narrowly). The weird sculpture  thing needs the accompanying explanation. 15 minutes very well spent, for free.


       
       In the afternoon I have a long phone call with the Hounslow  CEO, focused primarily on the Watermans but expanding to talk about the future  of Brentford, with all its changes and development. A good discussion, and  quite fruitful I think as we seem to see things in a similar vein – need to  work to protect and enhance this town’s special character, not just build  stuff.
       
       Tuesday morning at 8.30 I’m out at Quakers Lane in Isleworth  to talk about various issues in this unadopted road, together with a selection  of locals, Quakers, and 55th Mayors. Unfortunately the other people  had read their diaries and turned up at 9.30 and it was only after I rather  grumpily returned home that I realised I had to head straight out again.  Anyway, a constructive session  and I  need to set some things going.
       
       In the afternoon, an update on the financial performance of  the Lampton 360 companies – all steady  -  and then a Foodbox trustees meeting. There is now a cool little interview room  in the middle of the Foodbox premises because we have always wanted Foodbox to  be more than a foodbank, and provide people with support in other aspects of  their lives. So we have created a private space for counselling, for a  forthcoming partnership with the CAB and perhaps financial advice, also a space  where NHS people can do some specialist counselling. We hear that when we  collected quite a bit of money from generous Brentford FC supporters we picked  up comments that people didn’t know what Foodbox meant, and mulled over whether  we should change the name but the others didn’t like my idea of Food and Lurve.
       
       Wednesday morning, Melvinator and I meet the project manager  of the development of Watermans Park which will eventually bring an ‘official’  marina. They have started work in earnest at the Eastern end where they will  build a store at river level (well, we hope, a bit above the river) and a car  park and bin store at road level. It will not be a multi storey car park as  some feared, nor will it cut off access to the river but people are concerned  to see (and hear – especially those very near) development here. The PM is  already talking to the Friends group and he seems very amenable to do his best  for locals, obviously within his commercial constraints.
       
       Later I (and Mel) have a coffee in McDonalds with a local  resident. I realise it’s the first time I have actually sat down in there (yes,  I confess, I have used the Drive thru and even the cycle-thru on occasion) and  it was half term bedlam. I have discovered via the Mayor this week that the  Melvinator has another monicker – Melvin ‘Bad Boy’ Collins – coming from what  he got up to a few years ago https://amok.fandom.com/wiki/Melvin_Collins 
       His looks have changed a bit though
On Thursday I have a reasonably early stint at the ‘Steering  Group’ for the council companies, so I’m doing this on Wednesday afternoon to  give myself a bit of time to prepare in the morning.
      
See yous both next week.
Cllr Guy Lambert
February 20, 2020
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