Leith

Yearning for the summer I had last year

yearning for a person who I know is not a good man, not anymore

memories of him float around my brain like decaying leaves on the water of leith

blurred and distorted

no longer an entity I can claim to know

Searching for ghosts among the living

the old routes I used to take

memerly a memory etched in my brain

you rolled your eyes at my nostalgia

associating streets with memories and twisted words you said

imagining a world with me that was purely imaginary

all my doubts were confimed with your cruel and careless words

the streets we walked are just streets now

‘Too Much’ review

‘Am I the Meghan Markle of, like, fat white bitches?’

Lena Dunham is BACK! With the Gen Z answer to the post millennial-depression that the lack of ‘Girls’ left. Too Much follows Jess through her anti-Emily in Paris move to London to reconnect with her passion for work after a tumultuous break up. The ten episodes were far too easy to binge watch in two sittings; Dunham can go from punchy one liners that will have you giggling for days to come to the most gut-wrenching scenes (no spoilers but prepare yourself for episode five). Dunham’s ability to write powerful (and realistic) dialogue shines through in Too Much, with Megan Stalter’s performance as Jess being the cherry on top of the fabulous show. Too Much explores workplace/creative burnout, the complexities of a messy break up and the emotional fallout that comes with it.

Although Jess moves to London temporarily for work, the focus of the show is on her love life; she meets musician ‘Felix’ on her first night in London and falls into a whirlwind romance whilst dealing with the trauma from her ex-boyfriend. Dunham beautifully and hilariously depicts the chaos of meeting someone new and unexpected whilst dealing with a breakup and all the ‘love-bombing’ from previous relationships. From Jess’s secret online diary where she uploads ‘letters’ to her ex’s new fiancé to googling ‘red flags to look out for’ whilst at work, the show exemplifies the all too relatable feeling of simply wanting to be loved and respected whilst dealing with the many hurdles that life throws at us.

My favourite element of the show (very difficult to pick just one) was the depiction of complicated, “messy” women. Since Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s ‘Fleabag’ I feel that modern TV has been seriously lacking a somewhat unlikable and imperfect female main characters. Too Much depicts men, whether they are partners, peers, fathers or father figures; trying to quieten the female experience or take away the sparkle from a bold, wonderful woman. The show is unapologetic in depicting the “messy” misunderstood woman, who is more often than not, just a human trying their best in this messy modern world.  

what a bland goodbye

I cannot erase the memory of laying in your room
Candlelight burning as we whispered sweet nothings
Limbs entangled with smudged mascara
I didn’t care about my messy hair
The memory of your room haunts me
Your ghost doesn’t care that I’m not there
Nothing is ever casual to me
Never ordinary
Never just a feeling
Never just a fling
I feel everything to it’s full extent and I hate that you know that about me
You showed parts of me that I’ve never seen before and I am grateful but so angry that you aren’t around anymore
Nothing about what we had was ordinary
But god what a dull goodbye
You hugged me and I didn’t shed a tear until you were no longer in sight
The reality that I will never lay peacefully in your bed again kicks in and I am alone walking home to the place I know I don’t belong

brown eyes blue

Your “truth” pierces my heart on a Sunday night
Sweet nothings whispered gently in the early hours of the morning now mean nothing
Feelings I can only feel with you
Erased from my brain in an act of self preservation

Your gentle eyes see right through me
I know my heart feels more
I know yours is far from mine
The eyes I once admired in the depths of the night have made mine blue

I should have woken up in your arms this morning
Instead I woke up in a state of denial
The pain lingers as I lie in the bed where I ended it
I would rather lay in my bed of pain healing my wounds
Instead of lying in your bed of lies, denying the lack of love for a sense of warmth

You replaced me before I was even gone
Shadows of the man you used to be pass through my mind
Perhaps your act was all too good
The second you laid with another I was gone
Perhaps that was your goal all along

this is the end

I kiss you, just to kiss you
Not because it will lead to sex
I want you, I do
But I want all of you
I kiss you to feel every part of your mouth
To savour the taste of you
Because I know this too, is temporary
We will make love
We will entangle one another with affectionate words
I allow myself to feel it all
We play husband and wife and kiss goodnight
I want to dive inside your mind
Discover every pain and heartbreak and pain you have ever felt so I can heal you
I know that ultimately you simply don’t like me much
So I will kiss you again
Just to kiss you
Just to feel you
And you will kiss me
You will feel me
But you will not have me

Hopeless romantic with a hopeless lover

I’d let you ruin my sleep

I’d let you kiss me with morning breath

But when I am by your side

You hold me like a temporary being

 

I’ll put on my make up to make my eyes pop

But they light up when I see you anyway

I wish I could hide that from you

You don’t see yourself in my eyes

 

I see you from across the room

In my eyes you are a mirror ball, lighting up the room

You do not see me and I know that is for the best

But I wish I knew what changed

Why do I not shine for you like I used to

In love with my melancholy

I cannot argue with your ghost
Cannot reason with the dead
I take your silence everywhere with me
I carry it like a wounded bird

It is likely that you do not think of me fondly
I split my emotions at the bar and became the thing you feared
Arrogantly, I stand right where you left me

Priscilla – Review

‘What are you, a junior? Senior?’

‘9th

‘9th what?’

‘9th grade”

Sofia Coppola’s ‘Priscilla’, based on Priscilla Presley’s book; ‘Elvis and Me’ explores the infamous relationship between Elvis Presley and his wife, Priscilla. We first meet a fourteen-year-old Priscilla who is approached by Elvis (twenty-four at the time) while he is stationed in Germany for military service. Coppola makes no attempt to shy away from the uncomfortable ten-year age gap and the evident power that Elvis held over Priscilla. We first meet Priscilla as a young, impressionable schoolgirl. Cailee Spaeny portrays Priscilla beautifully, first as the baby-faced schoolgirl, enamoured by the spectacle of Elvis. Later we see Elvis’ influence as well as his manipulation over Priscilla as he chooses her clothes, hair, and make-up, curating her into the perfect wife. In classic Coppola montage style, we are given a makeover scene with yet another iconic soundtrack. Priscilla is branded with her iconic winged eyeliner and dyed black beehive hairstyle. Priscilla essentially becomes Elvis’ doll, loitering around Graceland with beautiful outfits and perfectly styled hair and make-up, awaiting a call from Elvis while he is on set or having affairs with other women. It is evident that Elvis wants Priscilla to exist solely for him and be the perfect wife according to his way of life.

We watch the breakdown of the Presley’s relationship through a variety of tabloid headlines, articles, and letters. Coppola highlights the relevance of the celebrity spectacle, a common theme in Coppola’s filmography. The absence of Jacob Elordi’s Elvis in these key moments of marital breakdown highlights this importance of the “image” of Elvis as this untouchable, unattainable figure whereas the reality of the situation is clear as Priscilla attempts to navigate the end of girlhood and the start of womanhood with the supposed man of her dreams. Coppola navigates the subject of evolving from girlhood in a way that is almost universal to every woman watching Coppola’s films. Priscilla starts off as a teenage girl with a crush and a dream and ends the film with the courage to leave the life curated for her by a man who she knows is not right for her.

Elordi’s performance as Elvis is subdued yet powerful, capturing the essence of Elvis whilst allowing Priscilla’s narrative to be the one of importance. Other reviewers have suggested that Priscilla “destroys” Elvis’ reputation, I would argue that it simply shows the reality of the relationship between the couple as well as the difficulties of being one of the most famous couples in America. Coppola often plays with the subject of fame and the power it holds over her characters, showing both the highs and the lows.

Sofia Coppola’s Priscilla is a triumph, once again showing her incredible ability to capture the pain and beauty of girlhood and womanhood.

cool girl

Oh how she longs to be the cool girl
Instead she will replay every moment that went wrong
Every word, every glance, every interaction at the bar

She will wear perfume in her hair
She will hope the smell lingers and reminds him of her
But instead it will bring him bitter memories
Of the girl who could no longer play it cool
She felt too much
She said too much
She was too much

always the poet, never the poem

I wash my hair for the first time since you left
The traces of your cologne are erased permanently
The last love bite you left is fading away
The first snow has fallen and you weren’t there

I stand at the bus stop you walked me to on our first date
The air was warm when we met
Now I stand in the same spot as the snow pierces my skin with no lover to hold

I stare blankly at my phone
Waiting for your call
I know nothing will come
I know my words were too strong
My feelings too much
I long so much to be the poem and not the poet