I Remember Erewhon
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I remember Erewhon. I remember the crenelated turrets, towers and
spires overshadowing a city of unheralded bends and unexpected
corners and alleyways. I remember the cobbled streets, the gaslit
esplanades, the flint-studded churches, the winding river, and the
expansive city square. I also remember the soaring modern edifices
that truly scraped the sky and which reflected one on another; the
multi-lane highways-sometimes slow and congested, occasionally
empty and open, and most often dense with speeding sports cars-
that radiated outwards in ever-widening rings from the city's hub
alongside elegant apartments, decrepit slums, shadowy lanes
illuminated by brightly-lit curtained windows, and towards endless
rows of suburban streets dotted with bus-stops, corner shops and red
post boxes.
And weaving about the city, snaking beside the roads, diving
through the tall buildings, above crossroads and emerging from and
disappearing into mysterious dark tunnels of promise and dread, were
railway lines on which chuffed steam trains and sped electric trains,
diesel trains and trains levitated by the magic of magnetism several
centimetres above the rails. This spaghetti of railway track
transported me and everyone else who chose to board the train past
advertisement hoardings, above dark sinister streets, beside
monotonous rows of semi-detached and mock-Tudor suburban
houses, beneath rivers and through ornate, wooded and open-lawn
parkland that were as integral to Erewhon's enchanted appeal as
anything on the streets. And it is to the parks-as much as to the
shopping malls, the cavernous railways stations, the motorway
intersections and the overarching concrete bridges-that my thoughts
so often return.
When I was a young boy, racing about with my red toy
balloon, blue rucksack and silver sneakers, it was Erewhon's parks
that were most important to me. Only the zoo, the museum and the
red-and-yellow fast food outlets offered competition to the attraction
of the varied and always spacious parks that were never far from the
perambulations of a boy whose greatest source of pleasure was to
climb the steps and then descend the metal slope of the park's slides.
But roundabouts, swings and see-saws were only a few of the
distractions on offer at Erewhon's extensive parkland. There were
hedges, paths, fences and fields stretching in every direction: from
the imposing gates that threatened to close at some mysterious
mythical hour to the bandstands that sometimes presented the .latest
pop sensation to a remarkably small audience and onwards to statues
of commanding and impressive figures of authority of which the
most disturbing feature was that none of the men these statues
represented, in a sense barely understood at all by me, were any
longer living: in fact they were in a state of incomprehensible non-
being known as death.
And amongst these statues-some with a noble gaze set to a
far distant horizon, some abstract in form and at all times both
pregnant with and absent of meaning-there were statues of women
startlingly different from real-life women. These statues were of
women who were not the pink, brown or black skinned women with
handbags, open-toed sandals and a ready supply of tissues that a
young boy might otherwise encounter in Erewhon. Nor were they
like girls who differed only from boys in that they played with dolls,
didn't watch the same cartoons on TV and never tired of reminding
you whenever you did something wrong. The women represented by
these statues were clearly not real people because they were all
marble-white and almost never wore clothes.
This last observation was of little significance to me during
my early visits to the city of Erewhon, which in those days was a
magical place in which a train ride towards playing fields and swings
and zoos and museums was the chief attraction. But as the years went
by, these statues that were at first barely glimpsed became
increasingly centre-stage. The idea of what a woman might be
became steadily more important to me and the mysteriously austere
and classical vision of nudity represented by these statues that made
them seem so distant and unobtainable became increasingly
irrelevant. Instead, a more lurid, fleshly, Technicolor vision had
become more prominent. Indeed, everything about women was now
something altogether different. There was no longer a divide between
those girls that were much the same age as me and therefore
inherently uninteresting, and those older than me whose main
purpose in life was to provide sweets, medicaments and lunch-boxes.
There was a new species of woman that I was becoming aware of
and, like everything else that was important to me, this woman also
inhabited Erewhon.
Her name was Ydobon. And, of course, she'd always been
there in Erewhon: I'd just not noticed her. She was the girl or the
woman (probably either and possibly both) I had always glimpsed
from the corner of my eye. She was like the naked women statues
because she displayed what the other sex might offer, but different
from them insofar as her skin was pink, brown or black; her hair was
in many colours and shades and styled in many different ways; and
she had a way of smiling that unlike the girls and women I'd known
before had an impact not between the ears or even in the beating
heart but more fundamentally and more significantly below the belt
and above the knees.
I don't remember the time when I first spoke to Ydobon. And
I don't remember where. It might have been on the sixty-fourth floor
of the tall buildings that I so often visited simply to stare at the
vertiginous view below. It might have been in the oddly rural crinkly
orange wheat fields that interspersed Erewhon's cobbled streets and
tarmac highways. It might have been on the ferry that crossed the
broad rivers of Erewhon so quickly traversed by underground train
but so difficult to cross by other means. And I'm sure that my first
remarks were stumbling, boastful and embarrassingly juvenile. I'd
probably attempted to interest her in Star Wars paraphernalia. Maybe
I'd discussed the intricacies of Premier League Football. Perhaps I
thought she'd be as interested as I was in the latest Marvel
Superheroes movie. After all, what girl wouldn't be interested in
Ironman or the Mighty Thor?
Curiously, Ydobon was always interested in, even fascinated
by, me and our early encounters very often climaxed in a warm kiss
or a tentative grope that left me with an acrid-smelling damp patch
between my legs that disturbed me when I first became aware of it
between sheets that otherwise had the odour of conditioner and fart.
As time went on, these relatively innocent encounters became more
adventurous, but never proceeded far beyond the bounds of my
ignorance. There were opportunities for nudity and even an early
fumbling between the legs, but these were always short-lived and
curtailed by the increasingly frequent release of warm dampness on
soft linen that so swiftly became crinkled and stiff.
I would meet Ydobon in so many strange places. At first, they
were in my more familiar haunts, such as parks and playgrounds and
woodland paths, but with fresh interests came new and seemingly
more exciting rendezvous points. These might be shops in the mall:
as often as likely to be a computer games shop or comic book store as
a clothes shop or department store (but never, these days, in a toy
shop or other such childish venues). Sometimes I was with friends
who would mysteriously fade into the background whenever Ydobon
came into view. Just as often, we would meet in train compartments,
multi-storey car parks, public squares (beside imposing statues of
lions, dragons or horses) and all the other places one could meet by
chance rather than by design.
Sometimes, Ydobon recognised me. Sometimes it was as if it
was for the first time. Sometimes we'd been close friends since time
immemorial. Sometimes it was a brief kiss and tell. And Ydobon
changed so often. Her hair changed colour and style, as also did, but
less frequently, her skin-colour, plumpness and height. Her clothes I
barely remember except where they best allowed vantage of an ankle,
a knee, a shoulder or even (and this was guaranteed to dampen the
sheets) a belly-button or the heave of her bosom.
But it was also I who was changing. My voice first cracked
and then deepened. My awareness of details such as a girl's choice of
clothes, shoes and hair-style was growing at the same pace as I
became conscious of my own choice of shirt, trousers, shoes and
jacket. Ydobon became less generic and more concrete. She had a
definite twinkle in her eyes. A memorable dimple in her cheeks. A
slender wrist and long fingers with bracelets that clattered as she
brushed a hand through hair that was brunette or blonde (and no
longer merely brown or fair). An ankle that was pleasingly slender
and a knee that was impressed on my memory as firmly as if it were
impressed on my groin.
And the time came when Ydobon changed no more. Or only
by increments. Her hair-colour; her complexion; her small pursed
lips; her wide-open eyes; her signature phrases: these remained more
or less the same. She was a more constant companion on my frequent
visits to Erewhon, whose absence would be a matter for comment.
And, bit-by-bit, little-by-little, my focus of attention shifted from her
nose to her lips, from her blouse to her bra and then to her breasts,
from her knees past the thighs to her crotch, and then, divesting each
onion shell of feminine vestment to pure, simple nakedness. And
never before (and never since) had sheer nudity been so exciting, so
enticing and so desirable.
And I couldn't get enough of it.
It didn't matter where we were in Erewhon. We could be on a
busy pavement jostled by hurrying commuters, high above the city
streets on the top floor of a tall building or, most often, in an open
field of wheat under a blue sky and our skin baking under a yellow
sun. But wherever we were, there was nakedness; accompanied often
by fumbling and thrusting and, more often than not, premature
release.
But these golden days of sunshine and simple sexual craving
and satisfaction couldn't last forever. Just when it seemed that my
life with Ydobon would stay the same until the end of eternity, all
changed. Ydobon became more harshly delineated; she became less
compliant and more argumentative; our encounters became as likely
to end in conflict and tears as in tender moments of prenuptial bliss:
until such a time they were never anything other than occasion for
anger and sorrow and regret.
And then Ydobon as had I known her at that time vanished.
But Erewhon didn't vanish with her. It was still there: a city
of turrets and towers and cobbled streets, of highways and byways
and railway sidings, of malls and night clubs and coffee shops and
pubs. More often than it used to, the weather would change from the
constant sunshine of my childhood and my happiest early days with
Ydobon to overcast and drizzly and the city became more gritty,
neon-lit and sometimes forbiddingly ominous.
It was inevitable that Ydobon would return. But her return
was hesitant and sputtering. And her new look was more diverse than
it had ever been before. Her lips were pursed or full, with large
square teeth bursting forth or a pencil-line of barely glimpsed
enamel. Her flesh became sometimes opulent, sometimes emaciated,
sometimes dark, sometimes white tinged with blue. Her eyes were set
under eyelids that fluttered or barely moved, with irises from blue to
brown to a scary black. And her body was sometimes easy to take
(perhaps far too much so) or otherwise unobtainable and therefore the
more mysterious and desirable. Her bosom rose and fell. Her wrists
and the arms to which they belonged swelled and withered. Ydobon
was a woman who pursued me in many guises as Erewhon's
landscape steadily mutated to provide space for university halls of
residence, night clubs and concert halls, cafeterias and pubs.
Sometimes she would be glimpsed through the shadows of the night
or brightly illuminated by the lights of the night club (only to be
obscured as the lights swivelled and their attention swerved
elsewhere).
In those days, there was a chaotic fragmentary dissonance
associated with Erewhon that spilt over into my encounters with
Ydobon. Shapes were brighter and more clearly delineated like a
painting by Gustav Klimt or a sculpture by Jeff Koons. Or they were
scattered into shards like a Cubist painting. Occasionally, shapes and
sounds were as abstract and unfocussed as a Jackson Pollock or Mark
Rothko canvas soundtracked by Peter Br”tzman on saxophone and
Cecil Taylor on piano. But just as often, the city of Erewhon
reasserted itself in strong primary colours that Roy Lichtenstein
might favour and accompanied by the bright and bouncy rhythms of
Ti‰sto and David Guetta. And where there was chaos in Erewhon, so
too there was in the many and varied apparitions of Ydobon: who
somehow managed to move from the Pre-Raphaelite beauty of her
earlier years to something more like the subject of an Egon Schiele
painting. She was now a woman of flesh and pungent perfume:
armpits, crotch and chipped toe-nails. My penetrations into Ydobon
were now characterised by sweat and struggle. I might focus on the
metal stud through her tongue or the similarly metallic taste of her
fillings. I might dive again and again into a pussy that mewed rather
than purred. I might renounce the front entrance altogether and
sometimes come to regret my decision, even in Erewhon, where the
damp warm spot that was once my close friend and companion
became sullied with other less pleasurable associations.
However, Erewhon was a city that continued to give. The
wide avenues and narrow streets, the towering modern buildings and
the ancient mediaeval relics, the railway lines that threaded through
tower blocks, tunnels and open fields: they still provided plenty of
opportunities for nocturnal secretion.
Ydobon became steadily less mutable and more reliable. Her
hair colour became more solidly brunette and had a definite curl to it.
Her eyes took on the steady green-brown they've remained ever
since. Her skin settled on a slightly olive pink. Her voice became as
memorable a part of her as every other feature and in a sense less
prone to shift and vary. Compared to the Ydobon I'd once known or
the many versions of her that I'd got to know as I'd frequented the
night clubs of Erewhon, she was perhaps less exhilarating. These
days, Ydobon was not the kind of girl (or even the kind of woman)
who would shriek in triumphant recognition as a tune by the Swedish
House Mafia or Avicii stormed across the dance floor and pushed
aside all the other contenders for my attention. She wasn't the kind of
girl who'd start the evening with a line of coke, follow by a tab of E
and finish with a potent mix of skank and whiskey. She wasn't the
kind of girl who, even when we met in Erewhon, would tear off her
clothes literally in wild abandon, grab my erect penis between her
teeth and pummel me into total and absolute submission. She was no
longer as intoxicating as strong liquor, as electrifying as a DJ's break
or as numbing as a legal high.
But on the other hand, however relatively unexciting Ydobon
might now be, however much even in Erewhon she would now no
longer let herself loose, she was a steady reliable anchor which
moored me to a less chaotic version of Erewhon.
There were fewer streets I chose to roam in the city now. I
steered clear of the dark alleyways, the lurid lights of the night club,
and the sticky table surfaces of the city pubs. I favoured a different
kind of shopping experience in the city's malls. I discovered clothes
shops in Erewhon I'd never known existed before. I took more
pleasure at sitting by Ydobon on a bench on the station platform
where we'd watch the trains go by but most of all talk with the
woman who I now recognised more as a wife than as a girlfriend or a
brief encounter.
And it was about that time that Erewhon began to fade. I still
visit it on occasion, of course, but I am more likely now to visit other
places that are less thrilling for a younger man and more suited to
someone with children, a mortgage and a steady but secure job. And
the Ydobon I've got to know so well is now no longer a nobody in
any sense of the word and no longer to be seen in Erewhon and
probably was never meant to even visit. She is more likely to be
found in other places that my younger self could never imagine
visiting (even in my dreams). These are places that are child-friendly,
provide healthy options and may even offer family discounts.
But Erewhon is still there. It is always waiting for me to
return should I ever feel the need. And, of course, no one can be sure
what the future may bring.
But if I should ever visit Erewhon as often as I once did, the
city would be a different place. It would be less magical, less
fantastical, more mundane and much more slow-paced. It might be a
place for chance encounter as it once used to be. It might be a place
for adventure and wonder and exploration. But it would be full of
women who (like the ones I meet on my relatively infrequent visits)
are older, wiser, less excitable and whose voices are more prominent
than their physical features. And Ydobon would now be a very
different creature to the Ydobon I once knew. She would be scarred
by life's experiences. She would be wise in her ways and
understandably wary of chance and fortune.
But as I roll over under the sheets and gaze lovingly at my
wife as she breathes softly beside me, I hope that I need never again
have to get to know the Erewhon I still remember so well.