At Dartford station a huge metal building is artfully disguised with rainbow-coloured spraypaint. Red and white tape is twined around a section of churned up tarmac. They've knocked down the old railway pub.
This is my home. I grew up here on the edge of town, went to school here up on the hill, and even worked here for a small time in the local pub. My parents both work in town. I meet dad in the Costa Coffee for a chai.
"When did everyone in town get so fat?"
"Ugh I know. You should be down here on market day. It's like, 'Loserville'"
I know what he means. Jogging bottom clad "Yoofs" slouching along the high street. Overweight mothers screeching cursewords at their kids. A beige coated, withered pensioner pushing a shopping trolly, wild-eyed, like she might be robbed at any moment . The high street itself is a collection of horrible chain shops: KFC, Cashconvertors, Savers, an arcade of fruit machines with a tanning salon upstairs, the Pawn shop, Greggs. There's nothing here based on enjoyment and everything to do with necessity and habit. More specifically bad ones.
I have a look at the beautiful crumbling building that used to be 'Upstairs Downstairs Discounts' with its rusting Victorian lead lantern outside. This grand building has been unoccupied for decades. The council are letting it slowly rot so that they can bulldoze it to make way for a more profitable edifice.
I start the slow walk up the hill to my more suburban family home with an empty feeling of loss. How long before the old church is bulldozed for a new Tesco and central park is concreted over for its sprawling new parking complex?
As I slouch up the hill my eye catches a huge bramble bush in the entrance way to some garages. It's covered in fat blackberries, some ripe, some still red, glinting in the sun. I pull on one and it comes away easily in my hand, perfectly ripe. It smells sugary-sweet. I decide to pick a few; they're wild so fair game. Sometimes it's easy to forget you live in Kent, the garden of England, and that fruits will grow as readily here as anywhere. Even through concreted driveways.
I take as much as I can carry in my palms and take them home. Sticky juices run down the edges of my fingers. Mum and I eat them on top of our porridge.
This is my home. I grew up here on the edge of town, went to school here up on the hill, and even worked here for a small time in the local pub. My parents both work in town. I meet dad in the Costa Coffee for a chai.
"When did everyone in town get so fat?"
"Ugh I know. You should be down here on market day. It's like, 'Loserville'"
I know what he means. Jogging bottom clad "Yoofs" slouching along the high street. Overweight mothers screeching cursewords at their kids. A beige coated, withered pensioner pushing a shopping trolly, wild-eyed, like she might be robbed at any moment . The high street itself is a collection of horrible chain shops: KFC, Cashconvertors, Savers, an arcade of fruit machines with a tanning salon upstairs, the Pawn shop, Greggs. There's nothing here based on enjoyment and everything to do with necessity and habit. More specifically bad ones.
I have a look at the beautiful crumbling building that used to be 'Upstairs Downstairs Discounts' with its rusting Victorian lead lantern outside. This grand building has been unoccupied for decades. The council are letting it slowly rot so that they can bulldoze it to make way for a more profitable edifice.
I start the slow walk up the hill to my more suburban family home with an empty feeling of loss. How long before the old church is bulldozed for a new Tesco and central park is concreted over for its sprawling new parking complex?
As I slouch up the hill my eye catches a huge bramble bush in the entrance way to some garages. It's covered in fat blackberries, some ripe, some still red, glinting in the sun. I pull on one and it comes away easily in my hand, perfectly ripe. It smells sugary-sweet. I decide to pick a few; they're wild so fair game. Sometimes it's easy to forget you live in Kent, the garden of England, and that fruits will grow as readily here as anywhere. Even through concreted driveways.
I take as much as I can carry in my palms and take them home. Sticky juices run down the edges of my fingers. Mum and I eat them on top of our porridge.