Last week a poem I wrote 5 years ago popped up on twitter. It was originally posted on a now defunct blog, the forerunner to this one, and written after I had spent time on the Camino De Santiago with a mighty group of activists.
We were there as part of an extraordinary collective campaign called Justice For LB. Connor Sparrowhawk, or Laughing Boy as he was known online, was a young man who died in the most hideous of circumstances, drowning in a bath whilst in a a treatment and assessment unit. It was a shoddy place with shoddy care. The world was robbed of a wonderful dude and his family were robbed of their son.
As we walked we followed paths where for centuries before us, pilgrims had trod. Each one jostling, no doubt, with their own personal demons, their particular causes, seeking answers, seeking peace,requesting justice or simply finding space away from their ordinary existence.
Their presence hung in the air. In the monastery where we slept in dark dormitories, I was moved to sit in the cloisters under the starlit night and scream. In the morning I walked to the small chapel where the community of monks gathered to pray. The candles were lit, the psalms sung and the hoods up. The air was still and the incense hung.
It was an extraordinary few days full of laughter and tears, old ladies, wild dogs, high climbs, long views, tall stories, deep hearts and very sore feet.
When I reread that poem 5 years later I cried.
So why do I write? I write to remember. I write to hold on to what’s important. I write to capture a moment, a time, a movement. I write not to forget and I will never forget.
Here’s to you, Laughing Boy

