Francesca Bossert's Blog, page 40
May 13, 2024
GOLF

I think the fun of playing golf is all about the buggies,
Those suntanned people whiz around, grins splashed across the faces!
High on fresh air and camaraderie, they swing and chat and giggle,
They arch their backs, stick out their bums, then do a little wiggle!
They speak a language of their own, have handicaps, love birdies.
Their balls land in the ruff at times, which could be rather painful.
It seems “tee-off” is not a curse, and bogeys are not juicy,
While double-bogeys kind of suck, a foursome’s nothing kinky.
I wish I had my own buggy to whizz around the golf course,

I’d wear cute outfits, shorts and skirts in techno-posh material.
My watch would do real fancy stuff (according to the manual),
My golf-bag would be aqua-blue with daisy golf-club cosies.
My suntan would be golden brown, I’d wear a coral lipstick,

My cap would be the holy kind, my head gets really sweaty.
I’d arch my back, stick out my bum, I’m really good at wiggling!
I’d take my swing, and hit the ball, and pray for random… pigeons!
May 11, 2024
SUNBEAM

Today a special sunbeam
With a gentle velvet touch
Came sparkling through my window
And danced upon on my cheek.
It wasn’t just a sunbeam
I know because I peeked
I saw that sunbeam’s shadow
Get funky on the wall.
That sunbeam was quite cheeky,
It shimmied around the room,
And used my sparkly bracelet
To ignite a disco ball.
That sunbeam saw me peeking
Its shadow turned around
And said “Why, hello Madam,”
Then giggled and was gone.
And then a million sunbeams
Burst in through my window,
And found all sorts of sparkles
To bounce their beams upon.
I miss that special sunbeam,
I think of her each day,
She sparkles in my heart-space
In her unique sparkly way.
THE OTHER MAN: LUSCIOUS LIAISONS

My husband knows I have a crush
On someone else who’s really lush!
I’ve never hidden my liaison,
He’s not a twit, he’d soon catch-on!
I see this other man a lot,
He’s super nice and mega hot.
I know I’m not his only one,
But I don’t care, he’s so much fun.
Some people think I’m rather odd,
A goofy blonde, a silly sod!
I wrote a book based on this man,
What can I say, I’m a huge fan!
I wrote it to amuse myself,
And to entertain my friends.
Who’d wait impatiently each day,
For that nice ping in their in-tray.
Someone at ELLE enjoyed my book,
ELLE USA, there’s a review!
I came across it quite by chance,
I wish they’d told me in advance!
So, if you need to lighten up,
Pick up this book based on my crush!
It’s filled with sunshine, romance and laughs,
I think you’ll really have a blast!
Oh, and before I let you go,
I must reveal his name, I s’pose!
It’s Ricky Martin, did you guess?!
I still think he’s the very best!
May 10, 2024
THE NEXT BIG THING

“It’s looking really positive, and he’s talking about promoting you as the next Jackie Collins.”
I’ve already written about my mental health issues in relation to writing, and I apologise if this feels a lot like same same but not so different.
But I wanted, no I NEEDED to sit down and write about it again because the other day, when I replied to a post on Substack and mentioned the “Jackie Collins” thing, the person who had written the initial essay about women’s fiction and romance asked me how the “JC thing” had affected me. I have thought a lot about feeling like a failure in relation to writing, but had never pinpointed anything in particular. And I tend to make sense of things by writing them down...
When my agent called from London with that news, my confidence should have soared. My creative confidence especially. My agent had just received feedback on my book, which is now published as Just Like A Movie, and at the time was called Mucho Caliente, from one of the biggest names in American publishing. He had absolutely loved it, and couldn’t wait for everyone else in his team to read it and get back to him.
When a few weeks later, his sales team wobbled about the deal, he told my agent they wanted to have a second book in the pipeline before they took me on.
“Make sure the next one is just as good,” she said, aware that I was already working on something. “In fact, make it even better! Keep me posted.”
I was terrified. I knew I couldn’t afford to stumble. I had to up my game. I had to deliver. I had to do better. I couldn’t let my agent down. I had to show that legend of publishing in America that I was worthy of being the next Jackie Collins. I couldn’t let him down. I couldn’t let my husband down, nor my family, my dog, my hamster, my friends, the neighbors…
You get the picture.
Anxiety sent my brain into the washing machine, the tumble dryer, the pressure hose, the KitchenAid, the vacuum cleaner. I couldn’t write a single sentence without overthinking it, undressing and re-dressing it, over and over and over. Pink knickers? No, blue knickers! No, green. Maybe just beige... In the end, I turned my beautiful, epic story into a boring, greige sludge. For over two years I floundered in that sludge. Eventually, exhausted, stressed out and at a loss, I sent the manuscript to my agent knowing full well that compared to the giggle-fest and romantic fireworks of Mucho Caliente/Just Like A Movie, the only thing going for this overwritten dud was its lovely title, and the wonderful premise.
Well, she hated it. I left her London office in tears. She hadn’t been unpleasant, she’d just told mewhat I already knew in words that might have needed a teeny bit more sugar-coating for me to be able to cope with my profound shame. I should have asked her for help, for some guidance. I should have explained what my brain had been doing, not pretended that everything was absolutely fine.
Instead, I just flew back home to Switzerland feeling like a fraud, and tried to move on to writing something else, only to find that merely sitting in front of the computer gave me vertigo. I had constant nausea. I know now that I should have spoken to a doctor, that I should even have sought psychological help to deal with my predisposition to always put far too much pressure on myself. But twenty years ago, it seemed like only people with serious mental problems saw psychologists or psychiatrists. I told myself there was nothing wrong with me; I just wasn’t really a writer. The entire thing had been a fun-filled, short-term, exciting fluke.
But I missed it like crazy.
For twenty years the weirdest thing happened to my brain whenever I tried to write anything creative: I felt as though my thoughts trailed off into an ellipsis. They didn’t go anywhere. It even happened when I was trying to make sense of something important, of something that worried me.
I couldn’t join the dots. I felt broken.
This feeling terrified me, yet I never spoke to anyone about any of it because it seemed pathetic. It also frustrated me no end, because I felt as though a part of me was missing.
I now know that a part of me really wasn’t really missing, I’d just buried it very deep in the icky corner of my brain reserved for the rest of my shortcomings, such as not being able to do math, which I know now comes down to being extremely dyscalculic, but which throughout my childhood and early adulthood only made me feel incredibly thick. There were other things too, such as quitting university six months before the final exams because I was terrified of failing the orals. Or when I didn’t get a job because I’d badly failed the typing test because I had a very sore middle finger that was all bandaged up like baby Jesus in swaddling clothes, and the lady told me I was a catastrophe, but I didn’t show her the finger to explain why I’d bungled the test so badly! Or all the times I forgot my dressage tests during competitions because I couldn’t think straight because I hadn’t slept all night worrying about all the things that could go wrong, and how upset my trainer would feel when all those things did go wrong, and how upset my husband would be, because horses are a huge expense and...
Ellipses!
And then there’s the guilt linked to being prone to depression while having nothing but first world problems. But that’s a whole other essay, which probably will contain a lot of ellipsis!
When I first joined Substack, the literary talent on there overwhelmed me. I called my account “Just For Fun” partly because that was what I’d lost in my writing for so many years, but also because it felt safe. It made me feel a little invisible. Not too serious or important. You know?
I still battle with fears of not being good enough, of not living up to people’s expectations, and – more importantly – not living up to my own very high expectations. But I’m showing up more. I’ve written something almost every day for months now. I’m writing a novel. I write poetry. I’ve started recording audible versions of my poetry, something I would never have done a mere few months ago. I’ve filmed myself reading my poetry on my website and on Instagram. For someone as shy as me, this is huge!
I know myself better and can usually recognize my destructive thoughts and jiggle myself back on track. My brain still does the weird ellipsis thing at times, but it’s ok because I’m now aware it’s just anxiety, and that my brain isn’t broken. I recognize a panic attack when I feel one coming on. I know that I need to talk to my therapist if my mind really starts running away with me.
I wish I’d figured all this out twenty or thirty years ago, but with age comes wisdom, right? I had the gift of the goof, but no confidence. Now, most days I have a bit of both. And it’s really nice.
Can you relate to these emotions? Has your brain ever done something similar to the “ellipsis” thing I describe? How do you take the pressure off? Talk to me about it! If there’s one thing I know I’ve always been, it’s an excellent listener.
Thank you so much for reading.
Francesca xx
May 9, 2024
SPACE CADET

My sister is a space cadet,
An astronaut slash majorette,
She twirls batons in outer space
To help the planets levitate.
She monkeys with astrology,
Plonks Gemini in Mercury,
She plays with moons and houses too,
Sets constellations all askew.
She lives in a space-caravan,
Together with a hot spaceman.
They met while picking out space suits,
He liked her cute majorette boots.
They cook together, love to bake,
They’re famous for their great space cakes!
Their spaceman friends line up at night,
They buy space cakes to reach new heights.
They then hop in their big spacecrafts,
And loop the loop, get really daft!
They buzz the great space-station tower,
At five-gazillion miles an hour!
My sister loves her funky job,
Up there with her spaceman heartthrob.
She told me I should go there too,
Her spaceman’s friend is really cute!
What do you think? What would you do?
Would a cute spaceman interest you?
And if he did, what would you wear,
To meet a spaceman way up there?
May 8, 2024
IDEAS

Ideas
Float like feathers,
Landing.
To be held.
To be considered.
Mucho enjoyed.
Imitation is the best form of flattery.
But you know what they say about Coca Cola! It’s the real thing!
Right, Ricky?!

May 7, 2024
SLEEP

I look just like this when I wake up!
For years sleep wouldn’t come to me
I twirly whirled, became angry,
Bed became my anxious place,
White all-nighters commonplace,
Nothing worked, not sheep, not wine,
Melatonin a waste of time.
Heavier stuff just made me spaced,
As though my brain had been erased.
It’s hormonal, my girlfriends say,
I’m sure it is, big hip hooray.
Most men just hit the sack and snore
Their snot vibrating, such a bore.
I spoke with doctors, for heaven’s sake,
I can’t spend every night awake!
I’m miserable, I cannot think,
I feel like crap, please do something.
They hummed and hahed and shrugged and mehed,
A useless lot, it must be said.
Eventually, one bright young spark,
My psychiatrist, has hit the mark!
Now I love to go to bed,
I sleep all night, wake up refreshed.
My goof is back, my silly too,
I’m bright eyed, happy and sixty-two.
May 5, 2024
CURRANT AFFAIRS

I have a problem by my pool,
Caused by rampant rabbit stool.
Those monkeys picked the perfect spot
And labelled it their chamber pot!
They marked it out, nibbled it bare
Then spread their currants everywhere.
Those sundried droppings are a pain,
They go all mushy in the rain.
Those tiny poops beside my pool,
Force me to make a small detour,
Carrying coffee, book and phone,
Who can I call to have a moan?
I need assistance, a pool boy,
Someone to carry all my toys:
My rubber ring, my floating weights,
Bring extra towels for my mates.
I know it sounds like first world woes,
But I get currants in my toes!
It’s just as well that Jimmy Choo
Designed the perfect poolside shoe.
They’re in the mail, they’ll be here soon,
I got the last size 42!
I’m rather proud of having solved,
This currant problem on my own.
I’m no damsel in distress,
This issue will be laid to rest!
I’ll plough right through that rabbit pooh,
Clad in my pooh-proof Jimmy Choos!
May 4, 2024
HOURGLASS

Let’s fun-flip the hourglass,
Hopscotch through hodgepodge.
How I love our funky baggage
From which the cat escaped long ago!
We groove with time as it trickle-treats through our fingers,
No dirt-dissing, just fairy dust sprinkling,
Cheek-to-cheek in cheeky chuckles.
May our life-lyrics bathe in the grace of kindness,
Our melody forever whirling in the mandala
That sparkles in our blue eyes.
May 3, 2024
WAKE UP!

Wake up!
Whoosh your curtains back,
And sparkle your wow,
On the washed wonders of this morning!
Wake up!
We must giggle our babble,
Through lively sunny streets,
Or sea-scented coastal paths!
Wake up!
The air fizzes green after the rain.
Fresh jasmine awaits our swoon,
And my blackbird wants to tell ua all about the view!
Wake up!
I can’t wait for our shiny day,
For our silly selfies,
For you and me, still giddy after all these years!